I loved Community. It was the underdog show that lasted longer than
anyone expected it to, and, with the exception of (more than a few)
random chances taken that definitely fell short of the mark, it strutted
through three seasons, head high, and totally owned both its beauty and
its flaws.
That was then. This, as they say, is now.
[ You Might Also Like:2013 Midterms, Part 2: May The Force Live Long And Prosper. ]
So, Community Season 4. I was OK with the first ep, kind of
OK with the second & third (although… I’m actually having trouble
recalling the second one…) , but this last one bored me to tears. When
it wasn’t annoying me. And the problem with being bored (and annoyed)
on something like this is it allows you time to focus on the stuff, in
real time, that may have been at the back of your brain, nagging you,
that you’ve been able to mostly ignore.
Yeah. This episode may be the first nail in the Community coffin for me.
This one’s listed as the second ep of the season, which, since it’s
the fourth one to air, means they did a little shuffling with the order.
This is something that annoys the hell out of me (and, yeah, I know
Community has done this before. It annoyed me then, too). Continuity
isn’t only about plotlines, it’s about theme. And artistic growth. How
are you supposed to follow the through-line of a character when you’re
suddenly, unceremoniously thrust backward in time? Now, granted, we’re
not talking about a specifically linear storyline like Lost or The Walking Dead or Breaking Bad,
but, again, theme. Character growth. And, actually, all that said, I
didn’t know it had aired out of order until just this morning (in
retrospect, it’s obvious)… which maybe raises more questions about the
quality of the season. Probably still too soon to tell. I hope. But, I
digress. Anyway…
I almost feel like it was swapped out to be the fourth aired so that
this awkward (read: Dan Harmon-less) fourth year could have a few
“strong” (I use the word lightly) episodes right off the bat before
things got bland. But that’s just conspiracy theorizing, really.
Basically, as we move towards the middle third of this swan song season,
I’m feeling more and more like the show is now a “paint-by-numbers”one.
Which was sort of working at first, but is now degrading into stuff like “Obligatory Dean Pelton Cross Dressing Shtick” and “Changes
To Vocabulary Jokes.” That stuff was funny when it was special, not
when it’s thrust front-and-center at every unearned opportunity. Dean
Pelton has been a favorite character of mine from the get-go, and Jim
Rash totally owns it, the fact that his “thing” has become so obligatory
is making me actually start to dislike it. Never thought I’d see the
day. And that’s really the general feel I’m getting so far with
Community this year- they’re making the horse dead just so they can beat
it.
[ You Might Also Like:2013 Midterms, Part 2: May The Force Live Long And Prosper. ]
An even larger problem I had, specifically with this episode, is the
return of the Germans. Because it wasn’t really the return of the
Germans. It was the return of those two glorified extras with German
accents and some new guy playing the “brother” of Nick Kroll’s lead
German from the foosball episode. Really, if you can’t get Nick Kroll
to reprise his role (a head-scratcher, for sure- dude’s not THAT in
demand at this point), then why bring the Germans back at all? I don’t
ask just because I’m a Kroll fan, I ask because what’s the point? Does
the show need a callback to something that came before so badly that
they’re willing to just plug some dude in to sleepwalk through his role
with a German accent? It was funny last year because Nick Kroll is
funny. It’s not funny here because “ya, ve’re CHURRmun” will
only get you so far in comedy when there’s nothing to back it up. Like,
3-seconds far. I’m sure that Chris Diamantopolous dude is a good guy,
and all (I hear his “Moe” was pretty good in that Three Stooges movie),
but by the mid-point of the episode I wanted earplugs every time he was
on screen. Very, very annoying.
Anyway, the cast all seem to still be bringing their A-Game (well…
except maybe Danny Pudi. I’m feeling a real sense of “let’s just get
through it” from him), but what they’re given to do is just so… blah.
That’s when they’re even actually given something to do (remember when
Shirley was a character on this show?). It’s like they’re morphing from
dynamic characters to generic caricatures right before our eyes. All
of them. And don’t even get me started on the show’s emotional core.
It always had “heart,” but, like the aforementioned “unearned funny
stuff,” it has degraded into, “look, viewers, this show still has HEART™.” When we lost Dan Harmon to asinine executive decisions we lost nuance. We lost edge. We lost originality.
But maybe this is the point. These guys are supposed to be
graduating this year, right? Maybe the point is that people grow up and
lose some of these parts of themselves. I mean, there’s no way in hell
this is actually a planned theme, but maybe it’s an unintentional lesson- “things aren’t always going to be great, future graduates,” or something.
[ You Might Also Like:2013 Midterms, Part 2: May The Force Live Long And Prosper. ]
I went to a Community College, and, like these guys, I stayed too
long. And things certainly got a lot less colorful and a lot more
generic for me… but I wasn’t living in a sitcom, so my life was only in
danger of boring me, not 3.08 million viewers.
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