Showing posts with label Their. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Their. Show all posts

Downton Abbey Review: Wherein Everybody Changes Their Mind About Thomas

Downton Abbey S03E07 / S03E08: "Episode 7" / "Episode 8" (or S03E06/"Episode 6," according to PBS)

OH. OMG. IT'S HERE. IT'S #FREEBATES TIME, YOU GUYS. IT'S #FREEBATES TIME!

Bates emerged from prison looking pretty freaking dapper for a dude who spent THE ENTIRE SEASON in the slammer. The. Entire. Season. Yes, technically, the Season 3 finale aired tonight. What we're getting next week is actually the Christmas Special because... I don't know. I'm sure PBS has its reasons. But anyway, the point is, Bates is finally free, even if it took entirely too long to happen and frankly, just watching him and Anna paint walls was more exciting than anything else the couple did this season.

Except for when Bates got all, "I know what you did two seasons ago with the soap, you awful human being" with O'Brien in order to save Thomas's ass. I like to think that this means Thomas and Bates can be friends now, but I doubt it. Why can't those guys just get along?

So let's talk about O'Brien. Ugh, O'Brien. Ugh. I can't even make words, just the sound my brother's cat makes when it coughs up hairballs. The woman really doesn't have anything resembling an off-switch does she? You'd think she would have learned her lesson that time she, you know, CAUSED A MISCARRIAGE, but no, she remains fairly content with biding her time destroying lives in response to non-life-destroying slights. All season long, we bore witness as she played handsome flirty straight James and handsome sad closeted Thomas against one another, manipulating James for maximum discomfort at Thomas's intimacy and convincing Thomas that James liked it and wanted to reciprocate. Talk about an HR nightmare.

And yet, considering the time period, the location, and the culture Thomas has found himself stuck in, I thought the response from (most) of the rest of the house was surprisingly gracious. Carson had the harshest words, and the horsewhipping comment was totally uncalled for (not to mention the "revolting" bit and the... well... everything), but he was prepared to give Thomas a decent reference up until O'Brien pulled a few of her strings. He wanted Thomas out of his hair, out of the family's hair; but he didn't want him in prison or on the streets which was kind of decent of him. BABY STEPS, CARSON, BABY STEPS TO THE FUTURE. You made it through telephones, man. You can survive anything.

The most unexpected of the "Thomas is gay and that's okay" responses came from Robert himself, who continued running and hiding from the future between throwing tantrums regarding Edith's decision to write for the paper and Matthew's ongoing campaign to save their conveniently inherited fortune from landing in the toilet. Again. OH, and his granddaughter got christened into the Catholic church so he was good for some dignified scowling and passive-aggressive digs on that "foreign" institution. El-oh-el, those "bobbing Catholics." SO FUNNY.

But when it came to Thomas jumping in bed with James beneath Robert's very traditional and proper and god-fearing roof, Robert honestly couldn't have cared less. He went to Eton. You don't think boys tried to kiss other boys at Eaton? It was no big. "Thomas does not choose to be the way he is," he said, matching the sentiments of a large chunk of the house's inhabitants. That's an impressively progressive stance for a population that just a few decades earlier sincerely believed that pulling one's pudding led to blindness and insanity because the doctor said so. Also Jesus. Or something.

But hey, it's 1920. It's the modern world. We have JAZZ now. AND BLACK PEOPLE OMG BLACK PEOPLE. Lady Rosamund almost had a stroke walking into that club. Edith looked a little green around the gills—but get over it, lady, you're supposed to be our substitute Sybil! Luckily Matthew had spent some time living on Earth before shacking up in Downton with his cousin-bride, so his fright stemmed mostly from all the dancefloor sexin', possibly a complication of Mary not letting him "make her untidy." You know, sometimes the quaint little euphemisms sound so much dirtier than just coming out and saying, "No, we can't have a pre-dinner quickie."

I like that Rose chick, though. At first she seemed like a brat, and she IS a brat, but she's a brat who's already grown on me. She's a walking scandal-waiting-to-happen with her drinking and her sexy dancing and her hooking up with married men. But "Mummy" sounds like a horrorshow, so trainwreck away, you frizzy-haired little monster. Kisses!

So it appears that Downton has reached new heights of modernity, with Robert eventually—though somewhat reluctantly—agreeing to Matthew's revitalization plans, and even taking on Branson as the estate's agent; Mary hiring a nice doctor to fix her faulty incubator with science; Thomas being allowed to stay on (and even earning a promotion) despite his perfectly natural sexual preference; and Edith writing about "man things" for the paper as though she has, and this is a really novel idea here, a BRAIN.

Unfortunately, Edith still has crap luck when it comes to love, having caught the eye of her awesome, charming, and attractive editor... who is stuck in a loveless marriage to a "lunatic." They're adorable and I love them but I'm really over Edith's habit of drawing the attention of generally decent guys who end up breaking her heart. Gregson's tale of woe about the wife he loves who no longer recognizes him and the laws that won't let him move on is sad and all, but I'm a little apprehensive after Matthew's tough-love rant to Rose at the jazz club about older men preying on younger women ALWAYS being married to "dreadful women." I really hope I'm over analyzing the parallel between Rose and Edith. But seriously, Gregson, you hurt her and I WILL cut you.

Seriously.

What did you think of Downton Abbey's Season 3 finale/not-the-Season-3-finale?

– Dowager Countess Sass of the Night: On Ethel cultivating her skills: "But you seem to have so many!" Hooker skills. She means hooker skills. Poor Ethel. Such an easy target.

– Shameless leering at the wardrobe time: So many lovely ladies in red! Also, it looks like Edith discovered lipstick in London. HUSSY.

– Lol, Charles Ponzi shout out. PLEASE DON'T LET ROBERT PLAY THE INVESTMENT GAME ANYMORE KTHNX.

– "I'm not foul, Mr. Carson. I'm not the same as you, but I'm not foul." This season has done a really great job of making Thomas likeable, sympathetic, and secretly awesome.

– "Now we can begin making babies!" Can you sound like any more of a creep, Matthew? The only thing missing was a suggestive eyebrow waggle.

– Ethel stuff: People were mean to her because of the whole prostitute thing. The Dowager placed an ad in the paper for her. She got a new job near her bastard child. And they lived happily ever after until Charlie turned 18 and his "parents" told him the truth about his "former nanny." Awkward.

– What do you think about everyone's treatment of Thomas? Was it a little handwave-y? On one hand it's AWESOMELY progressive of everyone, but isn't it also kind of WEIRDLY progressive? To the point of maybe being out of character for most of our characters considering the time period?

– The Adventures of Detective Anna, Super Sleuth: Mission accomplished. Time to pick out curtains. (And make babies?)


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News Briefs: NBC's Thursday Comedies Bombed in Their Return

BUSINESS TIME

... Good old reliable Must-See TV returned to NBC last night, and it was neither good nor reliable (but it was still old) for the network. The ratings for what was once NBC's best night of television were terrible, to put it kindly, even for the premiere of the final season of The Office. The night featured the returns the limited-engagement SNL Weekend Update Thursday (5.2 million, 1.6 adult demo rating, down 69 percent) as well as the season premieres of Up All Night (3.1 million, 1.3, down 46 percent), The Office (4.3 million, 2.1, down 46 percent), and Parks and Recreation (3.5 million, 1.7, down 19 percent). Right in mid-season form, guys! Keep in mind that among the other broadcast networks, only Fox aired new fall originals last night, so competition among the majors was minimal. However, there was a football game on the NFL Network, which could explain the low numbers. This comes after a fantastic start for NBC, led by strong showings from The Voice and a good debut for Revolution. You know what this means: The Voice 24/7! [TV By the Numbers]

... Lifetime's Army Wives has been renewed for a seventh season. Star Kim Delaney is not expected to return. Now your knowledge of Army Wives has increased 350 percent. [Lifetime via press release]

... CBS has dated the premiere for the fifth and final season of Flashpoint. Though it's already started airing up north, U.S. audiences won't get to follow Canadia's finest until October 16. Plenty of time to prepare some maple syrup moose stew for all your hoser friends. [TV Line]

... Fox straight-up LIED to you when it said it would premiere Kitchen Nightmares on September 28. Instead, Fox will air reruns of The X Factor on Friday nights at 8pm, because there's so much talent on the show that it just has to be shown twice! Kitchen Nightmares will be rescheduled for later in the season. [Deadline Hollywood]

... Battlestar Galactica honcho Ronald D. Moore is still looking for his next series after several failed projects. His next chance will be at ABC with a reworking of A Knight's Tale, the 2001 medieval action classic-rock-sounding film starring the late Heath Ledger as a knight. [Deadline Hollywood]

... The CW is developing Oxygen, an alien drama written by The Good Wife's Meredith Averill. The series would center on a space pilot training program that integrates humans and humanoid aliens that have been living on the planet District 9-style. Yes, there will be interspecies boinking. [Deadline Hollywood]

... Seth MacFarlane is giving live-action a shot with a new comedy at his personal bank, Fox. The single-camera sitcom is about two 30-somethings who have their lives messed up when their dads move in with them. How are people coming up with sitcom ideas these days? By going through all permutations of family members living with each other? [Deadline Hollywood]

... ABC is feeling some Middle Age Rage, a comedy in development about a mother who goes through some Falling Down stuff and starts speaking her mind and demanding that others respect her authoritah after a life of feeling invisible. [Deadline Hollywood]

... CBS is developing a very CBS-sounding show called Intelligence, about a man who is implanted with a top-secret microchip that makes him process information like a computer. And sometime around 4pm every afternoon he needs to be rebooted, I'm assuming. [Deadline Hollywood]


CASTING NEWS

... Anthony Michael Hall (the bully from Community) will guest-star on USA's Psych. He'll play a police consultant tasked with getting the SBPD running ship-shape and trimming the loose ends. [TV Line]

... Matthew Broderick will guest-star on Modern Family this season as an old friend of Phil's. Anything to get out of the house with Sarah Jessica, right? [ABC via press release]

Follow TV.com writer Tim Surette on Twitter: @TimAtTVDotCom

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