06/13/24 - The News

Thursday, June 13, 2024

Bridgerton Just Can’t Pull Off a Climax

June 13, 2024 0



Three seasons into its run, Bridgerton has fallen into a pattern: great at foreplay, iffy on the climax. No one signs up for a romance with the prospect of an underbaked conclusion, and it’s frustrating when the momentum and groundwork of a slowly built relationship culminates in a finale that’s just … fine. Still, Bridgerton’s third season, with its expansion of bubbly minor characters and ample time spent on the other Bridgerton siblings, reduces the pressure on this underperforming high point, and there’s enough fun and anticipation in everything around the central couple that it almost doesn’t matter that the apotheosis of Polin is more of a gentle plateau.

Like its first two seasons, this installment of Bridgerton is a delightful romp with towering heaps of confectionary-sweet silliness, an overlay of Barbie feminism, and the occasional baffling structural flaw. Every season of Bridgerton has some amount of imperfection, but each season is imperfect in its own way: Season one, sexy and unrestrained, was a mess of racial politics and reproductive anxiety coursing beneath the show’s fantasy of the Regency period. Season two, which included a somewhat more careful approach to the racial aspects of this universe, got pushback for not having enough sex and failing to adequately navigate the emotional ins and outs of its sisterly love triangle. In both cases, the season started from a promising premise but could not live up to the complexities of its own emotional stakes in the back half.

Season three is built for success. Both Colin Bridgerton and Penelope Featherington had plenty of time for development in seasons one and two, and Penelope’s identity as Lady Whistledown, anonymous author of the ton’s most influential gossip pamphlet, gives the Colin/Penelope match-up an immediate source of tension and an obstacle to overcome. Nicola Coughlan’s performance as Penelope is much-loved by the show’s fans, and beautifully calibrated to accomplish the shift from awkward side character to stunning central love interest. Luke Newton’s Colin is endearing, gentle, and more than capable of staring at Penelope with both longing and dismay. Colin loathes Lady Whistledown because of all the mean things she’s said about him and his family; Penelope’s secret is a buried bomb with a guaranteed explosive release.

Until the last couple of episodes, everything appears to be ripping along like a brand-new two-horse phaeton on a bright spring day. Colin and Penelope, after dealing with the emotional aftermath of their devastating balloon-based trauma, have a carriage-based digital exploration that launches them into giddy matrimonial accord. The Lady Whistledown secret lurks in the background, even while Colin and Penelope have one of the show’s lovelier and more tender sex scenes in their unfurnished future home. Everything’s ripe for a big, passionate, highly combustible, and ultimately satisfying conclusion! Except there’s a concerning absence of important groundwork with relation to Colin. While Penelope has a whole hidden life and ambitious desire for social influence, Colin had one underwhelming trip to Europe where he got less mail than he hoped and had to soothe himself with the Regency equivalent of a buy-ten-get-one-free brothel-membership card. He wants to be a writer, maybe, an idea introduced abruptly in the premiere, but he struggles to actually write anything even though he’s a wealthy man with lots of free time and the ability to publish whatever he wants. He wears a big Mr. Rochester–esque great coat and walks around with an unbuttoned shirt to signal his flirtation with Brontë-style masculine angst, but his sadness is unpersuasive at best and completely laughable at worst.

This is not necessarily a flaw with Bridgerton’s chosen storytelling setting, or its tendency to focus on wealthy aristocrats; this is a fantasy world where money almost never matters and all the rules of race, class, aristocratic titles, and the plausible load-bearing capacities of any given hair accessory are invented and discarded on a scene-by-scene basis. The problem is entirely structural. Without money or class concerns, tragedy, trauma, ambition, unfulfilled sexual desire, poor health, or even a hobby he’s particularly devoted to, Colin has no obstacles. He loves his neighbor! She’s hot for him! He has ample resources, the social standing to survive a scandal, and almost no responsibilities. He’s the most-desired bachelor of the season — he’s doing great! So when the inevitable fallout of Penelope’s secret identity finally reaches Colin, the betrayal and sadness that should feel equal on each side instead feel obnoxiously lopsided. Ideally, when two romantic leads clash, the audience should be able to sympathize with both parties, understanding whatever perspective is keeping them apart even if they’ll clearly work it out. But because Colin has so little growth over the course of the season, the viewer is mostly waiting for him to get over himself.

Unsurprisingly, this does not make for an ecstatic emotional reunion between the two. Penelope and Colin carry on with the wedding as planned, which creates the opportunity for even more heightened tension between them — they’re going to be stuck forever in this deeply miserable relationship! Except Bridgerton can’t fully commit to an angry wedding, and Colin smiles gently at Penelope as she walks down the aisle. This is lovely for two people who are trying to make it work and terrible momentum for a romance plot. Are they supposed to be fine now? Have they come to some sort of agreement? No, because Colin reverts to being furious with her after the wedding, and then everything is apparently solved once she publicly comes clean about Lady Whistledown in the finale. Even though they barely talk about it! And Penelope is clear-eyed about the problems still on the horizon! But there’s no reason for concern: They have a baby, Colin publishes his book, and everything is perfect in the end.

Despite this underwhelming conclusion for Polin, Bridgerton’s third season is still a compulsively enjoyable watch, in large part because the unfulfilled potential of the Polin plot is immediately passed along to engaging side characters and the promise of future seasons. Season three should be about Polin, but it really belongs to the Featheringtons, particularly Polly Walker’s Lady Featherington, who runs away with every scene she’s handed and juggles cruelty, pragmatism, fondness, exasperation, sadness, and love while also being infallibly funny. She and the two other Featherington sisters are the MVPs of this season, no contest.

Even without the Featheringtons, though, the Bridgerton siblings are given so much to do that as the Polin plot starts to cool off, their stories pick up the slack. The best and most outright absurd goes to Benedict (Luke Thompson), who engages in a sexual encounter that should win an improbable endurance award. And there’s lots of promise for Francesca (Hannah Dodd), as the finale introduces her love story with an intriguing potential shift for the future of the show. The Bridgerton world feels bigger than it has in the past, to its benefit: Story development for Cressida Cowper, Violet Bridgerton, and Lady Danbury and her newly introduced brother all bode well for new seasons. The expansion isn’t always successful, particularly for the Mondrich family, whom Bridgerton clearly wants to invest in but who, for this season, suffer from a near-fatal case of Colin Bridgerton Lack-of-Problems Syndrome. But these storylines are more than enough to counteract any potential Bridgerton fatigue. By the end of the season the overall sense is, “This was an unfortunate mess and I’d love to watch more immediately.”

In its efforts to build out the Bridgerton world, and to tell stories about more than one Bridgerton family member at once, the series has effectively embraced the narrative changes necessary to translate from a romance-novel series into a TV show. It’s also departed enough from Julia Quinn’s original books that it’s become completely its own work rather than a pale retelling of the original, which is always the most important standard for any adaptation. A Bridgerton series should be able to do both: embrace ensemble storytelling while also achieving the full satisfaction and painstaking structural balance of a romance novel. Season three does not pull this off, but Bridgerton remains too much fun to consider breaking up with anytime soon.

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There Will Never Be Another Jerry West

June 13, 2024 0

 Show up for work at 9 am, scan your social media pages to check up on your friends, and then begin thinking about an early afternoon exit to walk your dog. At least that was what was going through my mind when my boss, Michael Fragale, walked into the office to tell me that Jerry West had just died.



 
"Better get to work," he said.
 
Talk about having a basketball fly through your front window!
 
As someone responsible for writing obituaries for the department, oftentimes you have some things prepared in case one of the school's living legends passes. That was the case with Hot Rod Hundley and Sam Huff, both of whom had been experiencing declining health prior to their deaths. 
 
But Jerry West, the man who always exhibited such energy, vitality and vigor? 
 
Peter Pans just don't die, until they do.
 
Where to start with a man who accomplished so much? What do you include and what do you leave out?
 
It's impossible in a short amount of time to write about all of Jerry West's achievements from his 86 well-lived years on Earth.
 
How can you encapsulate all that he has meant to the people of this great state and those who love and adore West Virginia University?
 
Who do you talk to when he meant so much to everybody?
 
When you don't know where you are going, the best place to start is always at the beginning, and for me the beginning is a file cabinet of interviews that I've kept through the years, including some conversations with West. My interviews with him amount to about a half-dozen transcribed telephone calls spanning in length from roughly 20 minutes to a half hour.
 
Some people will give you 10 or 15 minutes of their time before their attention wanes and they want to end the interview and get on to more important things in their day. I've had people much farther down the pecking order do that to me.
 
But not Jerry.
 
He was always willing to spend as much time as needed to answer any questions I had, particularly regarding West Virginia, West Virginia University and his Mountaineer basketball teammates. I immediately realized the easiest way for me to get interesting responses from Jerry was to get him talking about his dear friend Willie Akers or his fellow classmates.
I recall once asking him why there were so many outstanding basketball players in the state in the mid-1950s when he was playing at East Bank High. 
 
I repeated to him the story the late Eddie Barrett had told me about Virginia Tech coach Chuck Noe looking at the box scores of the high school games in Virginia and the scores being in the 40s and 50s, and then looking at the West Virginia box scores and seeing the scores in the 80s and 90s and Noe deciding that he wanted those West Virginia players.
 
That naturally got Jerry going.
 
"We played the Kentucky all-star team, and they were supposed to have the best players in America," he recalled. "Well, as it turned out we had the better players. We played them twice and beat them twice. It was just a very high-caliber group of guys that we had in West Virginia at that time.
 
"Style of play was a big part of it," West explained. "I think coaches were a little bit restrictive than some coaches in certain areas. Most coaches probably inherit their coaching philosophy from coaches that they played for. In that point in time, when I was being recruited for college, Maryland played a very slowed-down game, and I kind of liked that school a little bit, but I just couldn't go there and play that way. It just didn't look like it would have been fun for me to play like that."
 
At the time, West Virginia coach Fred Schaus had recently retired from the professional ranks, and with first-time assistant coach George King, they were still young and athletic enough to get out on the floor and give the guys some pointers and tricks that most other coaches couldn't.
 
King played on an NBA championship team with the Syracuse Nationals and West recalled going up against him many times in the old Field House.
 
"Maybe where I developed a little bit of confidence was because George King was there, and I used to play against him," he noted. "He was very experienced and very smart, and I found out that I could play against him okay, and that it wasn't going to be embarrassing for me.
 
"It was a great environment for any of us who wanted to learn, and more importantly, to engage two people that had played basketball at a different level than any of us had ever played."
 
Team building was the secret to Schaus' and King's successes in coaching, something Jerry clearly learned during his career.
 
The great things West accomplished later with the Los Angeles Lakers, Memphis Grizzlies, Golden State Warriors and Los Angeles Clippers as an executive had their roots in those well-rounded West Virginia basketball teams of the late 1950s. 
 
Schaus was able to convince Akers that he was better off being a supporting player to Jerry West at West Virginia University than he was being the leading scorer at Virginia Tech or Wake Forest, where some of the other top players in the state at the time were going.
 
Willie had one simple desire when he chose to sign at WVU and play basketball with his buddy Jerry West.
 
"I wanted to win," he said.
 
So, he came to WVU and teamed with Lloyd Sharrar, Bobby Joe Smith and Jim Ritchie to grab the rebounds and play defense while guards Joedy Gardner, Don Vincent, Bucky Bolyard, Ronnie Retton and Lee Patrone handled the basketball. It was Jerry who made the tough shots and rose to the occasion whenever it was required.
 
Every single player on the team would knock over their grandfather to get a loose basketball, that's how driven they were.
 
"We were very, very competitive kids," West recalled. "Just because some of them were fun-loving doesn't mean they weren't competitive. They were great people and for someone as quiet and shy and backward as me, it made for a completely different situation in terms of kind of getting out of my shell and making me laugh a little bit because I wasn't going to change my demeanor. I was much more serious."
 
I witnessed that Jerry West seriousness first-hand when I was once asked to be a part of a speaking program that included West in Lewisburg, West Virginia.
 
Jerry was promoting his new book and I had just written "Roll Out the Carpet," so the idea was for me to go on beforehand and warm up the crowd for a half hour before West took the stage.
 
After telling some funny Hot Rod Hundley, Wil Robinson and Levi Phillips stories, it was time for me to exit and head back to the Green Room. It was there where I crossed paths with West, shook his hand, and said hello in a somewhat flippant manner.
 
He looked at me, shook my hand and nodded, but his attention was already on the task at hand. He had the focus of a prize fighter about to enter the arena, partly because his book was so personal and revealing and he was about to answer some very uncomfortable questions. It was then when I realized that there are common human beings and there are elite human beings.
 
Jerry West was an elite human being. He was the one person we West Virginians aspired to be, and he understood the heavy responsibilities that entailed.
 
For everyone out there in the Mountain State (and beyond) reading this, do yourself a favor and study Jerry West's life. Study how he treated others with empathy, dignity and respect. Study how he always honored his commitments and conducted himself professionally.
 
The blueprint to a successful life is contained within Jerry West's personal story - the successes, the failures, the good times and the heartaches, all wrapped up into one.
 
He epitomized all the values we West Virginians hold so dear to our hearts, which is why it's so difficult for us to say good-bye.
 
In the meantime, lower your West Virginia flags until after West Virginia Day on June 20th in honor of West's memory because there will never be another Jerry West – ever.


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