(S06E04) Last season, I was ready to throw this show out the window. It was a sad, tired, droopy show, and I thought it had run past its time. I don't know whether they have a new pack of writers this season or whether they all just found a personal muse, but this season is already so much better than last season. The show seems to have regained some of the air of the first year, when I was so smitten with it. So, perhaps it was appropriate this episode revisited the very carnival of the first episode, the carnival after which J.J. was conceived. It was also very fitting that some of the revelations of this episode took place in such a setting.
Of course, outside of the fact that J. J. has started his journey toward sullen teen, I think the revelation spoken of in the previews was that J.J. is also beginning his journey toward developing Johnny's abilities. Before Johnny's stroke, he relied mostly on intuitions rather than the full visions he enjoys today. That is very interesting. We know that Johnny's brain injury gave him access to the dead zone of his brain, which gives him his visions. But I admit that it hadn't occurred to me that J.J. might have some of the same abilities. It makes sense though-- the first episode and the scene at the carnival demonstrated that Johnny had definite abilities before his accident, as well as after.
Part of what also makes this season so enjoyable to watch is the newly cast J.J. I don't remember much about the other kid who played him. He was fine. But this boy has some real nuance and talent, with makes it a real pleasure to watch him. And that kind of complexity was necessary for dealing with the fact that his mother and his father (yet not his father) are now living under one roof for the first time, not only with each other, but also with him. Watching Johnny and Sarah navigate Johnny's parental authority and the fact that they are in essence raising their son together now was very interesting-- and I am glad they aren't glossing over this issue.
But on to tonight's circus plot: Did anybody else yell at their TV screen, "He's DEAF!" When the newly minted sheriff was yelling at Duncan. Telling a deaf man that you'll shoot him, especially if you have specifically been told that he is deaf, is probably not going to hold water in court. Not the brightest bulb in the box, is she?
One of my primary complaints last season is that the episodes all seemed to exist in a vacuum that didn't further the characters in any way or advance the themes of the show. So far this season, we have the subtext of the new sheriff's investigation of Walt, Johnny's tentative peace with Stillson, and the awkward new family formed by Johnny, Sarah, J.J. and Hope. The plot in this week's episode accomplished great strides in propelling the characters forward and giving them growth, development, and the promise of more new and interesting storylines in the future. All of this is so much better than last year. Welcome back.















Reader Comments (Page 1 of 1)
7-09-2007 @ 12:34PM
Victor said...
They do have some new writers, one team of which are popular screenwriting podcasters Sam Ernst and Jim Dunn, who wrote last week's episode, "Re-Entry". Check out www.samandjimgotohollywood.com
After a couple of years of listening to them discuss the trials and tribulations of attempting to move to Hollywood and be screenswriters, this is the first time they've written something we've had a chance to see, so that was pretty exciting, even if there were elements of last week's episode that I really disliked, which for the most part weren't the screenwriter's fault.
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7-09-2007 @ 12:49PM
Joey Geraci said...
I definitely like the latest episodes, the only problem is it seems incredibly weird that Johnny is taking so much parental authority over J.J. so quickly. He has obviously always cared about J.J., but his speed in slipping into the traditional father figure is jarring. I also hate the fact that Bruce appears to have been written out of the series. I also really hated how they initially handled the death of Walt.
So
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7-09-2007 @ 1:56PM
LRS62 said...
Last season was sad, tired and droopy?
Well, at least they were dealing with issues bigger than a effin' circus killer. They seem to have totally tossed off the entire point of the show, with the Vice Prez becoming a "good guy". The movie and the book weren't exactly "feel good", so your comment comes across as rather dumb to me.
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7-09-2007 @ 2:04PM
Francisco said...
was there an episode about johnny father having vision which lead him to protect a girl, but in turn got him sent to an insane asylum.
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7-09-2007 @ 7:10PM
Jon88 said...
Deaf, and apparently a world-class lipreader. He certainly kept up with everything Johnny, J.J. and Monique had to say after the accident.
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7-10-2007 @ 12:12PM
Adam said...
Francisco, if I remember correctly at the end of that you find out the reason his dad new, was because Johnny had a vision.
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7-11-2007 @ 8:31AM
hub said...
Bruce is gone; he had that new job as a physical therapist that Johnny told him to take. He's no longer in the opening credits, either.
I got my first inkling that JJ might have Johnny's abilities when he had the dream about Walt's death and saw it exactly as it happened. I thought maybe they were just saving on production costs and reusing the footage, but now I think it may have been something more.
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