True Blood: Lost Cause Review
This week's True Blood had two storylines. Were either of them good? Here's our review about the hijinks in Bon Temps...
True Blood tonight was the tale of two shows: the one that Lafayette aptly calls the âeveryoneâs falling in loveâ soap opera of a partying Bon Tempsâjust hours after their vampiric population slaughtered their guns ân redneck constituencyâand the high gore/camp of Eric and Pamâs secret assassination mission in Dallas (everyone loves a classic, I suppose), aimed at slaying the littlest monster of all.
âŠIâm not sure either was good. But one was definitely more entertaining than the other.
The primary one involved the fallout over the last several episodes. Alcide is dead, Tara is dead (hopefully), and half the town died in or outside Fangtasia, save for Arlene, Holly, and Nicole. This of course means itâs time to boogie!
Honestly, I have to side with Nicoleâs rude but accurate rant from later in the night. When Sookie comes down after a night of grieving over her dead boyfriend, even if she didnât really love him, and discovers that she is hosting a party supposedly in his name, it goes from making Lafayette seem caring to clearly overstepping his boundaries. , this is a man who took seasons to overcome the horrors he suffered himself in Fangtasia and then the death of Jesus. Of course, itâs only the beginning of his newfound boldness, but weâll get back to that in a moment.
Overall, the storyline of a Bon Temps social, which much like the season premiere party that got half the cast captured or killed only three days ago in show time, serves as a great storytelling device to get all the characters in one place. And once there, we are supposed to marvel at their peeling layers. But this one just rang false throughout the night.
Half of the town is dead. Half of them were killed by people at this party. Hell, three of the people at this party just witnessed dozens of others killed by Vombies before narrowly surviving, and theyâre talking about marriage proposals and new boyfriends. In short, in a show where the dead mingle with faeries, this might have been the most absurd fantasy sequence in the showâs seven-year run.
Amongst those fleeing into life-affirming denial joy are the couples seeking to shake up their relationship status quos. The most syrupy and endearing of these was Andy proposing to Holly. He even gets to use Granâs ring when Jessica just assumes that itâd be perfect for her newly BFF sheriff. These Stackhouses really are accommodating! Just 24 hours after Andyâs deputy led a raid that got one of his other deputies killed while she was pursuing vigilante justice, Andy acts like the world is safe by getting down on one knee to marry Holly. Sure, why not? Theyâre a cute couple, awkwardness and all. Plus, it gives Jason one of his two scene-stealing lines of the night (to Andy and Hollyâs respective teenage kids): âWord to the wise, I donât know if the two of you are fucking or not. But thatâs going to have to stop right now.â
Next, was the most bizarre love triangle (or is it a quadrilateral?) on a show that once featured werepanthers as an apple of Jasonâs eye. Thus re-enter Lafayette. And James. And Jessica. And Jason. And Violet. Okay, fine, itâs a pentagram. And just like that five pointed star, it is a poor omen for True Blood.
Obviously, Jason and Jess are end game for this series, but how weâre getting there is messier than the red stains Tara made on Bellefleurâs backyard. First, James, who ittedly was a non-entity as âVampire McDreamyâ last seasonâand whose recasting made no difference for the lackluster characterâis now apparently a little bit gay. Itâs Bon Temps, they all try it once in a while.
Even Jason, who is having his own vampire Grinder dreams, hypocritically dings this with his other great line of the night: âYou mean with all that sensitive musician shit, it never occurred to you he might be gay?â No, Jason, but Jessica seems to be as distraught as my apathy when she winds up in Jasonâs arms for more than comfortâmore than just canoodling too. At this point, itâs like a weird detour into a cul-de-sac and thatâs just leading us back to where we started with Jessica and Jason. But unquestionably the oddest thing is that Violet overheard the fang-banging and didnât in the fun with a stake. Itâs even crazier than seeing Lafayette point a judging finger at Jessica moments earlier, not unlike an antelope lecturing a cheetah about its feelings.
But the absolute nadir of the night had to do with Sookie and Bill. Now, I have gone out of my way to defend the showâs painfully obvious intention of tying a knot between these two wacky kids. I even it, all things considered, since HBOâs Sookie never had as strong a connection with Eric or Alcide. However, they literally whitewashed Bill of his whiteness tonight. And I gagged a little.
One of the most interesting things about Bill Compton is that he is a Civil War veteran. Southern Gothic loves vampires and immortal characters, but as decreed by Anne Rice, they always have to be from or Italy, or even Sweden for a certain Undead sheriff. But Vampire Bill is from that house on the hill in old Louisiana. There is something intentionally subversive about that, and even charming when an actual son of the Confederacy can sweet talk his way into the blindness of the Daughters of the Confederacyâs local charter.
But letâs not pretend during True Bloodâs last moments that since Sookieâs going to end up marrying this guy that he didnât fight for the Confederacy. If you want to make him the reluctant cynic who had startling prophetic visions about the âLost Causeâ like the second coming of Rhett Butler, fine. But to pretend that an apparent man of affluence and the planter class of Louisiana, as noted by his rival Charles in this weekâs flashbacks, is actually so against the War that heâd lead Charlesâ own slaves to freedom and deserted is the most absurd thing Iâve seen since Mel Gibsonâs 18th century plantation owner in The Patriot paid his black laborers a fair wage in the field. If you wanted to absolve Bill of the racial politics of the Civil War, it might have been best not to bring them up at this point. Especially when after being caught as escaping by Charles, with Charlesâ âpropertyâ no less, that he wasnât executed as a traitor.
I think Bill Comptonâs Civil War origin is a terrific one and Iâm all for exploring it more thoroughly than whatever vineyard ownerâs daughter Eric was feasting onâbut this was a bigger mistake than trusting your daughter with Eric Northman. Not even Stephen Moyerâs perfectly strong peformance could salvage the writing here.
All of this soapiness certainly overshadowed the equally silly, but far more entertaining B-subplot. As fellow Den of Geek writer Tony Sokol said to me at the 40 minute mark, âIf the next 15 minutes arenât a bloodbath, Iâm outtaâ here.â
Luckily for Tony, that could summarize how things wound up.
In the secondary, but far more gratifying, story of the night, Eric and Pam went back to Dallas at a location from True Bloodâs season two heights in order to kill Sarah Newlin. And the âKill Sarahâ subplot, right down to Ginger clinging to the coffin, was beautiful. Sadly, Eric let Willa go, thereby excusing her from any story of consequence for the rest of the series, but everything after that was on the up-and-up.
First, Eric found out that Sarahâs sister never died, she was just being paid off by Sarah to stay âdisappearedâ while Sarah gave her vampire sob story. Do I believe that the (falsely) demure, if foolish and nutty, Sarah from season two would have done that while she was crying on Jasonâs arm? Probably not. But do I think the hellion diva that is madness in high heels, and who saved season six from being a complete waste of time, might be possible of doing this? Hell yes, and Iâm glad to have her back!
Anna Camp is a secret treasure on this show, and its best villain after Russell Edgington. Seeing her flash her big Texan smiles in equal measure with her equally big puppy dog eyes when she mewls, âHi Mommy?â is the True Blood equivalent of Vader lifting his hand in front of a jabbering underling. Itâs obviously not about to go well, and weâre going to enjoy every moment of this massacre.
And rain blood it did at the episodeâs highlight locationâthe Bush Library, which is holding a fundraiser for Senator Ted Cruz. Seeing Yakuza kick down the doors of this locale and pull out Uzis and samurai swords is so over-the-top that itâs like the overflowing camp has filled back up to the tip of the glass from the outside. The only thing that would have made this gonzo satire better is if one of the âRepublicuntsâ (Pamâs words) had jumped out to say, âGuns donât kill peopleââ
And so it ended as quickly as it began for Sarahâs parents who met the same fate as everyone around her has. âBut Iâm not a monster, Iâm a Buddhist!â If so, she surely brought peace to her family this week. Meanwhile, Eric let Sarah slip through his fingers while he dealt with the Yakuza. But Iâm sure that heâll catch her, especially after the episodeâs last scene that revealedâŠBillâs got Hep-V.
How did Bill get the disease? Iâm not sure, but I suspect it has something to do with when Sookie exchanged blood fluid with him again. How did she contract the disease? Who knows. But on a show that clearly showed Arlene get bitten by a half-dozen Hep-V carriers last week, and now has her romancing a vampire who knows she must be infected (maybe he has a death wish?), and a series where âthe world is overâ but Ted Cruz is still having fundraisers in Dallas, itâs best not to think about it. Billâs sick, and he is going to die badly. Well, at least until Eric finds the magical cure that Sarah Newlin undoubtedly has or knows about that will save the lives of both vampires.
Maybe it can save the seventh season, too? I donât know though. After this week, that might be the biggest lost cause of them all.
Check out all our reviews and coverage of True Blood here.
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