Well, I did it. It took me longer than I expected, and I stopped writing serious reviews about two and a half seasons ago, but I've sat through every episode of what used to be my favorite television series all over again.
And did I ever mention that I sided with the majority who hated the finale? Because, well, yeah. The show spent an entire season dedicated to Robin and Barney's wedding, and to build them up as this great couple who are going to accept their faults together, only to split them up in what equates to about ten minutes of screen time after the fact. What can I say, that has to take a lot out of the audience.
And it did. Many were, and still are pissed that the show sidelined all of the character building it had done for Barney and Robin, how Bays, Thomas, and crew attempted to have Barney grow up and to have Robin trust and be happy, for something as banal as Robin spending too much time traveling the world.
At the same time, though, is that not reasonable? Couples drift apart all the time for reasons such as this, and while it's clear that Robin and Barney do and will always still love each other (just look at their glances to each other during Ted and Tracy's wedding), maybe that just isn't enough. Sometimes love, no matter how strong and passionate, can't be enough. There needs to be some force pushing any two people together to make a relationship work, and Barney and Robin didn't have that force at this point in their lives.
Just as Robin and Ted didn't have that force in their lives a few years prior. Maybe they really did need a couple of decades apart to make it work. That's what the show wants us to believe, anyway.
I won't lie, I did not watch the broadcast ending. I don't think that I ever could. Especially with the alternate take being available. After finally seeing the alternate ending for the first time, I think that it's a steady improvement... but if anything, it feels a little short. And some of the things that rubbed myself and many others the wrong way still exist, such as Barney and Robin's divorce, Ted and Tracy's stalled marriage, how Barney went back to gross womanizer to an overbearing father all thanks to the power of dem womenz, the depressing tone, etc.
It's still there, and in a way, this finale will never work in the way that Bays and Thomas wanted it to. Especially if you watch it as they intended, with the return of that damned blue French horn.
But in some way, it's hard to not respect their desire to try something so different from convention, and to pull what seems like such a 180 on the show. But then, How I Met Your Mother always had a touch of sadness to it that made it feel a little more real than a lot of other sitcoms. While the message of Friends was that you can handle your transition into adulthood as long as you have a steady support group with you, HIMYM made it clear that while having friends and loved ones to lean on is nice, nothing is permanent.
But damn, the moment where Ted and Tracy meet is nothing short of magic. Radnor and Milioti have perfected their chemistry by now, and make this scene come out as beautifully as possible. Easily some of Fryman's best framing in the entire series.
In short, "Last Forever" is ambitious, but fails under its ambitions. And it does knock the season's rating down as a whole, to a B-. At its best, there are some incredible episodes here that bring the whole show together, but enough misguided decisions and subplots to put it in the middle, overall. Still, this is far from the worst last season of any series ever made.
And now, I think that I'm burned out on How I Met Your Mother. I guess that only means one thing- it's time to watch it in full again.
No comments:
Post a Comment