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That's right, a jump-in-time in order to leave the season on a cliffhanger, and create more questions than had been built up over the previous four years.
The problem with this kind of televisual gadget, though, is that it can give a little too much freedom to the writers and exectuives working on a programme. I say too much freedom as though it is a bad thing: in a way, it is, if that freedom is only going to allow said writers and execs to tie themselves up in knots; or, to employ a more apt metaphor, use the rope to form their own nooses. The problem I think I really have with Desperate Housewives is that though the programme is still aesthetically good - production values, costumes, set and techinical elements are all just as high-quality as ever - the standard of story as well as its telling has noticeably dropped. I suppose I should take the opportunity to warn any readers who have yet to watch season 5 that I will be writing quite a bit about the storylines and major plot points which may spoil the experience of watching it.
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Bree has become a successful businesswoman, having set up a catering business with her best friend Katherine and written a cookbook. However, she has stolen recipes, become harder and colder to Orson, and has pushed her friends away. Once again, she is effectively alone and suffering self-confidence issues, turning briefly back to her alcoholism.
Lynette has to deal with her sons' increased delinquency, and when one is faced with charges of arson and manslaughter, she goes to some shocking lengths in order to secure his safety.
Katherine's daughter has married and moved away to Baltimore (clearly never having seen The Wire), and has a child. Katherine's sense of redundancy has overtaken her, until she takes up with Mike, Susan's ex-husband.
Which leads into the final "shock". Once again, Susan is incapable of holding onto any type of relationship, and is with another man.
So, more mysteries, or pretty much putting characters back to square one in order to secure the continuation of a series which semed to have run its natural course? For me, it's definitely the latter. Firstly, the season mystery this year wasn't much of a mystery. I worked it out at the end of the first episode, and had my suspicions confirmed in the pre-titles sequence of the halfway episode. Next, the scenarios presented at the end of season 4 were not completely followed through in the beginning of the fifth season. In fact, I'd go so far as to say there were lazy inconsistencies. In the above clip, Katherine's daughter has only just been proposed to. We're supposed to expect that a few months later, they've been wed, moved halfway across the country and had a child? Of course, it's possible, but not very likely. And why are Gabby's children different? I'm not just talking about the obvious recasting, I mean the differences in the names.
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With all my moaning about "it's the same as in season 1", one might confuse this for misguided complaints about a show which flew slightly out of control by the fourth season. Not so, though: this is not a case of "back to basics". I mentioned earlier that the quality of the writing had slipped. No longer have we any subversion of expectations (Orson's Evil Mother: I should have smothered you in your crib when I had the chance!), but a resort to every character having nothing to say but bitchy epithets (Gabby to Susan: It's not my fault you haven't taught your son to grow a pair and fight back!). The dead narrator Mary Alice's observations at the beginning and end of each episode have gone from being subtle references to each housewife's struggle with broader implications, to blatant summarising of the episode's story, as if we needed a recap of the past forty-five minutes.
One final observation is the lack of minority representation in the programme. We all know suburban America is a haven of WASP ideals, and in one can't really expect too much from a series set in its midst. However, the original parody of the series was its inclusion of the Solis family: the "token Mexicans" who are rich, successful, and just as suceptible to the trappings of their white counterparts. Even the gays have gotten their oar in, with the development of Bree's son, Andrew, and the introduction of Brad and Lee. But not since season 2 has there been a black family in Wisteria Lane. Presumably this is because the impact of the Applewhite family has turned the Lane's residents against anyone remotely brown: after all, Betty Applewhite was imprisoning her mentally-ill six-foot monster of a son in the basement, while her other son was a salacious girlfriend-murderer. After having that kind on your doorstep, who wouldn't invite the KKK round to tea...?
In short, the problem with the decline of this once-sublime satire is that it has too many characters to deal with (extended family members and marginal neighbours making constant recurring appearances) and it has slowly become the very genre it set out to satirise: Desperate Housewives is just another glossy, stupid soap opera. Sex and the City for the suburbs, and that is a real shame...
Gosh... an indictment indeed. I can't really comment, having never followed the series, other than by proxy through the MelBot. Your assessment sounds evenhanded and pretty conclusive.
ReplyDeleteMaybe I have a one tarck mind, but all I can think is:
1). How pretty is Lynette's redhead boy?
2). Wasn't the Applewhite boy hot as hell?
1) She has three redhead boys, and two of them are TWINS!
ReplyDelete2) which Applewhite boy are you talking about? The "mentally-ill six-foot monster" or the "salacious girlfriend-murderer"?
Oh.
ReplyDeleteShows how much I pay attention.
1). The overly pretty one who was dating the older woman.
2). The Salacious Girlfriend Murderer, of course.
I waited, and waited, and waited for him to take off his shirt.
But no.