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Friday, May 30, 2014

Once Upon a Time: I may be losing interest in this show, but the creators sure do know how to convince me to keep watching (My thoughts on episode 3x21 “Snow Drifts” and episode 3x22 “There's No Place Like Home”)



I’ve wanted to write a review of the two-part season three finale, but for a variety of reasons, both in my control and out of my control, I’m just now getting around to it. That being said, here are my thoughts on the season three finale of Once Upon a Time.

As the title of this post suggest, I’m definitely starting to lose interest in the show, and not only am I starting to lose interest in the show, I’m also really starting to lose confidence in the writers. I’m starting to think that Edward Kitsis and Adam Horowitz don’t really have a long-term plan for the show, and perhaps they never have. The final scene of the season finale only added to my belief that Kitsis and Horowitz are just making stuff up as they go along. That’s something I don’t think that writers of a serialized show should be doing if they want people to view it as a good show, but I’ll talk about that more later.

Edward Kitsis and Adam Horowitz might not know how write the show in such a way that fills me with confidence in regards to their writing, but for the time being they sure do know how to keep me from giving up on watching the show completely. What’s kept me from giving up on the show completely at this point is the fact that there has been a lot of truly excellent material for Emma and Hook and the relationship between them this season in my humble opinion. Fortunately for me, both parts of the season finale revolved heavily around scenes between the two of them, with flashbacks of Emma’s past featured throughout both parts of the finale. Being someone who is a huge Captain Swan shipper, I absolutely loved that about the season finale.

At the beginning of the episode of the episode Emma was spending time with Mary Margaret, David and their new baby boy, who still didn’t have a name. Mary Margaret and David told Emma that they were planning to reveal his name at a makeshift coronation ceremony at Granny’s, saying that they would have had a coronation ceremony for Emma if they could have. Upon Henry showing up at Granny’s and accidentally spilling the beans to Mary Margaret and David that they are looking for an apartment in New York, Mary Margaret, David, Regina and Hook all stated their objections to the whole idea. Personally, I thought that Regina was a little out of line acting like the whole thing was her business. If I were Emma, I probably would have told Regina to piss off, but then again since she was the only mother Henry knew until he went and found Emma at the beginning of the series, it does make their whole family situation rather complicated. It’s especially complicated since Henry has said that he does still consider Regina to be his mom, or at least one of his moms now that he has been reunited with Emma.



I have to say that I have mixed feelings about the scene where Mary Margaret and David were reminiscing about how they met and fell in love as they were looking through Henry’s book of fairytales with him at Granny’s diner. For the most part, I found Mary Margaret’s behavior and Ginnifer Goodwin’s acting in that scene rather gag inducing as they were all talking about how she and David fell in love back in the Enchanted Forrest, and I’m saying that as someone who has always been a bit of hopeless romantic.

While I found Mary Margaret rather annoying in that scene, I thought the scene took an amusing turn when Hook and Emma arrived just as David was talking to Henry about how he had once been engaged to King Midas’ daughter, Abigail, who for those who might not remember is Kathryn in Storybrooke, back when they all lived in the Enchanted Forest. Hook’s reaction to learning that David passed up the chance to marry King Midas’ daughter when King Midas has the ability to turn anything into gold was absolutely priceless. Although, after seeing what an insufferable bitch Abigail was to Charming I can’t say that I necessarily blame him for choosing Snow White over her.

Soon after that, everybody discovered that Zelena’s time portal had been reopened. Emma and Hook went to check on the portal, and Emma ended up entering the portal, prompting Hook to reluctantly go after her through the time portal. They ended up in the Enchanted Forest back in the past around the time that Snow White and Charming met for the first time. Unfortunately, their arrival in the Enchanted Forest made it so the moment when Snow White and Charming met was screwed up and didn’t happen like it was supposed to, because Emma accidentally made some noise, startling Snow White and prompting her to run off instead of robbing Charming and Abigail’s carriage like she was supposed to. After Emma made a reference to Marty Mcfly from the Back to the Future, who Hook assumed was some kind of time traveling wizard, Emma decided that they should go ask Rumplestiltskin for help getting back to the present. Despite the fact Rumplestiltskin hates Hook and blames him for his losing Milah, Emma and Hook got him to agree to help them, telling him that he and Hook would eventually patch things up between them. Before he could help them get back home to the present, they had to make sure that they got the timeline back on track and seeing to it that Snow White and Charming meet like they were supposed to.

This led to a lot of interesting drama and some great and rather humorous moments between Hook and Emma throughout the episode. One of my favorite moments during this part of the episode was when Emma was trying to seduce a past version of Hook on the Jolly Roger as a part of a plan to help get Snow White passage on his ship. Eventually Hook became overwhelmed with jealousy at the sight of watching Emma make out with his past self, so he knocked his past self out. Emma wasn’t too happy about that, but he reasoned that his past self would blame the whole incident on the rum he was constantly drinking at that point in his life.

Later that night, Rumplestiltskin used some magic to make it so they would look like different people to everyone at Charming and Princess Abigail’s ball, therefore helping to preserve the timeline. They also used the aliases Prince Charles and Princess Leia at the ball. Part of the reason they needed to go to the ball was so they make sure that Snow White stole the ring that she was originally supposed to have stolen when Charming and Abigail were on the carriage together. This part of their plan worked, making it so that Snow White trying to steal the ring from the palace during the ball ended up being how they met. Unfortunately for Emma, Snow White ended up dropping the ring and Emma was caught and arrested by Regina and her minions at the end of the first part of the episode.

Both parts of the finale were very Emma centric and featured several flashbacks to moments from her past, the main themes of these flashbacks were based around the fact that Emma had never really felt like she had found a real home growing up since she moved around all of the time, hoping to one day find a place that felt like home to her. This is something that she talked to Neal about in a flashback of a time when they broke into an amusement park when they were on a date at some point in their relationship.

During the second part of the episode, Emma met a woman who had been arrested for helping Snow White and was scheduled to be executed soon under orders from Regina. Emma managed to break both the woman and herself out of the prison cell using the same trick that Neal had used to break into an amusement park that they had once gone to on date. Hook objected to Emma wanting to bring the woman back with them to the present since there’s no telling how doing so would affect the timeline, saying that if she were to live she could end up doing something very bad like kill one of the seven dwarfs, but if she’s executed by Regina, then the dwarf would live. I’ve heard this argument before many times when it comes to discussing time travel. For example, SF Debris, who reviews Star Trek episodes as well as many other science fiction TV shows and movies, once posed the argument about what a person should do if they went back in time and encountered Hitler as a child. Should they kill him in order to prevent the Holocaust from happening, or do they take him and raise him to become a good and kind person who wouldn’t want to do everything that Hitler did? Personally, I don’t know which of those two scenarios is the best thing to do, but I think it’s a very interesting question to ponder and it’s something that I found myself thinking about as I was watching that part of the episode.

Anyway, Hook reluctantly agreed to bring the woman with them. With that done, they continued along with their plan to fix the timeline and continued to encounter a lot more problems along the way. At one point in the episode, Emma and the others were led to believe that Regina had managed to kill Snow White, but they soon figured out that Snow White managed to escape by using the dark fairy dust to turn into a ladybug. Thankfully, the Blue Fairy managed to turn Snow White back to normal, much to Emma’s delight. Emma’s joy over the fact that she was okay confused the hell out of Snow White though since as far as she knew, they didn’t know each other. This slowly helped to restore the timeline, because Snow White was able to return Charming’s ring to him and that ended up becoming the moment that the two of them fell in love with each other. As Emma and Hook were watching the whole thing, Emma got emotional, but Hook assured her that it was okay for her to be feeling emotional about the whole thing since not everybody gets to watch his or her parents fall in love.

With that done, Emma, Hook and the woman Emma rescued returned to Rumplestiltskin in the hopes that he could get them back to the present. Rumplestiltskin told them that only they can open a portal back to the present, and Emma succeeded in doing so using her own magic as Rumplestiltskin pleaded with Emma to tell him if he would be able to get Baelfire/Neal back. She told him that Neal died as a hero, so he shouldn’t take that away from Neal as she went through the portal back to the present with Hook and the woman.

Emma shared an emotional reunion with her parents, telling them that she wants to stay in Storybrooke after all, which seemed to make Henry happy. Mary Margaret and David also announced to everybody that they had named their son Neal in honor of Baelfire/Neal. Rumplestiltskin seemed to be saddened by this news, and honestly I think it’s kind of weird that they are naming their son after the man who was essentially nothing more than Emma’s baby daddy. Yes, I know that Emma and Neal loved each other, but I still think it’s weird that Mary Margaret and David did that given Emma and Neal’s history.

I have to say that I’m really glad that Emma seems to have realized that Storybrooke is where she belongs and is finally ready to truly embrace it as her home. I really hope that’s the case, because I feel like there’s been a lot of back and forth throughout the series regarding whether or not Emma wants to stay in Storybrooke, and it’s really starting to annoy me at this point.

After Emma had reunited with her parents and Henry, she shared another great moment with Hook where she asked him how he managed to outrun the most recent curse and find her in New York City. He told her that he had traded the Jolly Roger for a magic bean in order to get to her. Emma seemed truly touched that he would give up the Jolly Roger in order to get to her. If you ask me, Hook trading the Jolly Roger for a magic bean so he could get to her is probably the grandest romantic gesture that he could ever make to her given how important I know the Jolly Roger is to him. Emma FINALLY gave into her feelings for Hook after he told her what he had done, and they started sharing a very passionate kiss.

Based on how the writers left things between Emma and Hook at the end of the episode, it looks like they will be a couple next season. Personally, I can’t wait to see what Hook and Emma’s relationship will be like now, since Hook definitely doesn’t seem like the kind of guy that would do things like take her out to fancy restaurants for romantic dinners or make her breakfast in bed like I think a good boyfriend should do. Maybe they can watch the Back to the Future trilogy together since Hook had no idea what Emma was talking about when she mentioned Marty McFly earlier in the episode. I also can’t wait to see Mary Margaret and David’s reaction to the fact that Hook and Emma are romantically involved with each other now. I don’t necessarily see them welcoming Hook into their family with open arms if he and Emma end up getting married at some point in the future, even if Emma truly loves him and Henry seems to really like Hook too.

While all of the scenes between Emma and Hook in both parts of the season three finale were definitely the biggest highlight of the season finale for me personally, the season finale also featured some great moments between Gold and Belle, namely their wedding towards the end of the second part of the season finale. While I loved Gold and Belle’s wedding, I just wish the writers had featured a bit more buildup to their wedding. I know that this episode focused primarily on Emma and Hook, and I love the episode for that reason, I still think the writers could have given that plot development a bit more screen time leading up to their wedding. As enjoyable as Gold and Belle’s wedding was to watch, a part of me felt like that scene was just tacked onto the episode in order to fill screen time for the episode.

The two-part season finale had some really nice moments between Regina and Robin Hood as well, but much like the Gold and Belle storyline, this storyline didn’t get much screen time. That’s really a shame too, because I enjoyed the moments between Regina and Robin Hood much more than I enjoyed watching Mary Margaret gush over the new baby as they talked about how she and David fell in love with each other back in the enchanted forest. I’m a huge Ginnifer Goodwin fan, but her acting in that scene was just cringe inducing.

Maybe the reason the writers didn’t feature more scenes between Regina and Robin Hood was because they were both really happy together in the episode, so there wasn’t really any conflict present when it comes to that storyline, at least not until the end of the season finale. Once Emma, Hook and the woman they rescued had returned to the present, Emma introduced the woman to Regina in order to assure her that Regina isn’t necessarily evil any more. Unfortunately for Regina, upon being introduced to each other it was promptly revealed that the woman that they had rescued was none other than Robin Hood’s wife, Marion. Robin Hood had told Regina earlier in the episode that he had come to believe that Marion was dead and was therefore trying to move on with his life.

I know that Regina has done a lot of bad and evil things in the past, but I’m still rooting for her to find love and happiness with Robin Hood, or some other guy, if not him, so I feel really bad for her at the moment. Personally, I hope that the return of Marion won’t cause Regina to become full on evil again and she’ll be able to handle the situation in a mature manner next season. If Regina goes back to being evil again, I think that would destroy a lot of the character development and growth that Regina has undergone throughout the course of the show’s first three seasons. Who knows what will happen though? Maybe it will turn out that Marion is a very bad person that Robin Hood wouldn’t want to be with any more, and he’ll end up choosing to be with Regina instead. I guess only time will tell. In the meantime, let’s just hope that Edward Kitsis and Adam Horowitz didn’t learn how to handle character development on a TV show from the same people that the creators of How I Met Your Mother did, because as far as I’m concerned, Once Upon a Time already has enough problems to deal with.

Anyway, Regina was furious with Emma to say the least, saying that she was just like her mother in the sense that she doesn’t always think about how her actions have consequences. Regina also told Emma that she better hope that she and Hook didn’t bring anything else back from the past when they returned to the present.

This brings me to what I found to be the most upsetting part of the season finale for me personally. In the final scene of the episode, a jar was shown breaking open and a sky blue color gel type of liquid pouring out of it, which eventually turned into a woman that the producers have since confirmed is Elsa from Frozen. Once Elsa was out of the jar and had finished transforming into her human form, she strutted off to…somewhere, leaving an icy trail in her wake. I should probably point out that this scene was done with a stand-in for Elsa since the role hasn’t been cast yet.

(Sighs heavily in frustration)

I know that the movie Frozen has ended up being a huge hit, but personally I think it was a huge mistake on Edward Kitsis and Adam Horowitz’s part to decide to incorporate characters from the movie into the show. As far as I’m concerned the entire fan craze surrounding Frozen is nothing more than a fad. Fads come and go, and sooner or later people will become fixated on some other movie and probably won’t be thinking too much about Frozen once that happens. I definitely had an issue with Edward Kitsis and Adam Horowitz incorporating characters from Frankenstein, Peter Pan and the Wizard of Oz into the show since Once Upon a Time is supposed to be about characters from fairytales, and none of those stories are fairytales. I eventually learned to accept that they did that to varying degrees since those stories have all been around for many, many years and are considered timeless classics in literature.

Frozen, however, is not a timeless classic. It’s a movie that came out less than a year ago. I know that technically Frozen is loosely based off of the story “The Snow Queen”, which was published in 1844, but the producers have already said that this isn’t “The Snow Queen” that they are reimagining, it’s Frozen. I’ll admit that I’ve already been having a lot of doubts about whether or not Edward Kitsis and Adam Horowitz really know where the show is going in the grand scheme of things for a long time now, and deciding to incorporate Elsa from Frozen only makes me think of them as being like children with toys even more than I did before, constantly getting excited about a new toy that they play with constantly for a while until they get another new toy they become fixated on, largely forgetting about the older toy.

As far as I’m concerned, that’s not a trait that writers of a serialized show should have if they want to make a good show. I think that the creators of a serialized show should always have fairly concrete long-term plan for the show right from the very beginning when the show is merely in the development stage rather than just making things up as they go along. Otherwise, the writing for a serialized show will almost always suffer greatly down the road, only to inevitably fail and I feel like that has definitely been the case with most of the serialized TV shows that have come and gone over the past several years.

I recently started watching Babylon 5, which for those who aren’t too familiar with it is a science fiction show that was heavily serialized throughout its five year run. Apparently, the creator of Babylon 5, J. Michael Straczynski, already had a series bible and a five-year plan for the show already created when he was pitching the show to networks in the hopes that they would pick it up. It sounds like his plans for the show were so concrete that improvisation was often discouraged and always had to be approved by him beforehand since it could possibly interfere with his overall plans for the show.

I know this might make J. Michael Straczynski seem rather rigid and controlling as a creator of a TV show, but from what I understand he had trap door built into every character in the event that something would happen and the actor left the show for any particular reason. What that essentially meant is that it sounds like he had “backup characters” developed for each character that he could replace the departing character/actor with without having to alter his overall plans for the series all that much. He obviously did that because even he knew going into the show that sometimes things happen and situations arise that cause lead actors to leave a show. I think this would suggest that even if he did have a very concrete grand vision for Babylon 5 right from the show’s conception, he also knew that life doesn’t always work out the way people want it to, so he would have to be prepared to be a little flexible if a situation that required some flexibility arose. Based on what I know about Babylon 5 at this point, he did indeed have to use several of his “backup characters” throughout the show’s run, but I digress.

I’m not saying that all creators of serialized TV shows need to be that detail oriented when it comes working on a show like Once Upon a Time, but I do think having a detailed plan and a concrete vision right from a serialized show’s conception is very important. I just don’t think that Edward Kitsis and Adam Horowitz have ever given the show that same level of thought, and this latest plot development only makes me feel that way about the show even more than I did before.

I’ll be the first to admit that while I initially wasn’t very happy at all about all of the new characters (Namely Hook) that were added to the show in season two when the season began. I was especially bothered by the decision to make Colin O’Donoghue a series regular before his first episode even aired, because I felt like the show already had too many characters as it is, many of whom were being rather neglected. I still feel that way, however, I’m willing to admit that I ended up loving Hook as a character to the point where both he as a character and Colin O’Donoghue as an actor are one of the reasons why I keep watching the show despite all of my frustrations with the show at the moment. The Hook/Emma pairing is also another reason why haven’t stopped watching Once Upon a Time yet.
I say all of this because since I ended up being very wrong about how I felt that the addition of Hook/Colin O’Donoghue to the show was a mistake originally, I’m willing to at least try to keep an open mind regarding Edward Kitsis and Adam Horowitz’s decision to incorporate elements from Frozen into the show for season four. I’m not very happy with it at that moment, but I will try my best to keep an open mind about it.

One thing that I forgot to mention earlier in this review is that I found Princess Abigail to be rather insufferable in all of the scenes that took place in the Enchanted Forest. Given what a total bitch Abigail was to Charming, I can’t say that I blame him for choosing Snow White over her, even if she is King Midas’ daughter, but I digress.

All things considered, I loved both parts of season finale, mainly because it was full of great moments between Hook and Emma. I also enjoyed the stuff with Regina and Robin Hood, and I wish that there had been more scenes between them in both parts of the season finale. It was definitely very nice to see Regina be genuinely happy for once rather than being happy because something bad has happened to someone she’s upset with. The episode definitely could have used some more screen time between Gold and Belle leading up to their wedding, because that just felt rather tacked on with the way the writers handled it. Personally, I thought the whole thing with Hook and Emma having to work together to resettle the timeline so that Snow White and Charming would meet before the two of them could go back to the present definitely dragged on too much and was a tad tedious at times, but Hook and Emma’s interactions with each other throughout the whole process definitely helped make up for that. I know I’ve probably made my objections to Edward Kitsis and Adam Horowitz’s decision to incorporate elements from Frozen into the show next season pretty clear, so I won’t say anything else about that.

That being said, my final score for the first part of the finale (“Snow Drifts”) is 7 out of 10, while my final score for the second half of the finale (“There's No Place Like Home”) is 9 out of 10.

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