On the Playing Fields of Hogwarts and Other Veronica Mars Thoughts
Looking over the TWoP forums, it seems that the general reaction to the episode of Veronica Mars I've seen last week, "My Mother, the Fiend", has been a negative one. I can see where some of the complaints are coming from (Veronica develops a selective sort of intelligence that, for instance, leaves her blind to the 'friend'-'fiend' connection, and there's no denying a certain soapiness to the episode's plot--abandoned babies, secret paternities, multi-generational grudges), but as a whole I think this episode actually harkens to many of the show's most important themes.
I've written before about the way Mars uses investigation as a metaphor for self-discovery and the process of growing up. I've also drawn comparisons between the show and J.K. Rowling's Harry Potter books, which also posit that in order to fully understand themselves and achieve maturity, young people need to understand their past, specifically their parents' own childhood and maturation. "My Mother, the Fiend" draws the show and Rowling's books even closer together. We've got an emphasis on the adolescence of the parent generation, a large number of people who seem never to have left school, adolescent secrets that turn out to have significance years after graduation, and teenage grudges that not only persist into adulthood but plague the lives of the younger generation. It's hard to escape the conclusion that Neptune High is Hogwarts.
In general, I dislike this sort of approach (it's one of the most troublesome aspects of the Harry Potter books, as far as I'm concerned), which suggests that high school is the pinnacle of our existence, a defining experience that determines how the rest of our life is going to turn out. Especially given Veronica's caustic attitude towards her school, which she regards as something to be endured and overcome, it's hard to believe that this was something the Mars writers intended for us to take away from the episode, which makes me hope that they'll steer clear of multi-generational school stories in the future. But in this particular case, I think the emphasis on the past works, precisely because of what the writers leave out.
"Your mother was rather vicious"
"Really? I was thinking I was something else, less flattering."
"Thanks to your grandma, I have a 50% chance of becoming an alkie!"
"When I look at your face, all I see is your drunk slut of a mother!"
The question that hangs in the air throughout "My Mother, the Fiend", unacknowledged even by Veronica herself, is the question of generational parallels. How much of Lianne exists in Veronica, and is this genetic and environmental legacy responsible for Veronica's strengths or for her faults? It's the very first indication we get that Veronica is deeply conflicted about her nature, and that she may not like her most prominent qualities. Some variations on this theme have already been spelled out for the viewers--"Who's the mean girl now?" Veronica wonders after making a blackmail tape of Trina, and of course the season's entire theme, normal is the watchword, has to do with Veronica trying to change herself--but the darkest manifestation of it is something Veronica won't say, or even think, out loud.
This use of silence to say a thousand words is one of the show's most powerful tricks. We can also see it in use when we look at Veronica and Duncan's relationship. Like most fans, I predicted that the show's second season would open with Duncan and Veronica together, and that we'd see an implosion of that relationship soon after. I admit to some frustration on that last count, at least during the beginning of the season, until I understood that, once again, the important things about the romance between Duncan and Veronica were the ones that weren't being said. The seeds of the relationship's destruction are in the way that Veronica expends ten times as much energy on Wallace and even Logan as she ever does on Duncan, in the way Duncan never talks to Veronica about what's going on inside his head, in the way that a teacher has to point out to Veronica that Duncan isn't in class, and in Duncan's subconscious fear of the changes that Veronica has undergone. In a show that gives us preternaturally mature and adult-like teenagers, it's refreshing to see a relationship falter precisely because neither partner can see that it's failing.
So, for all its faults, I really do think that "My Mother, the Fiend" is going to turn out to be one of the most important episodes this season, and not just because of the revelation at the end (which I totally called, by the way).
Which is not to suggest that everything is sweetness and light in Mars-land. It's a common joke among Buffy fans that with all the absent, neglectful, domineering, and downright abusive fathers on that show, Joss Whedon must despise his own father. I'm beginning to wonder what we might conclude about Rob Thomas' relationship with his mother. Has it occurred to anyone that the best mother we've seen on this show left her baby on the doorstep of a man who then turned around and dumped her in a bathroom? There's Lianne Mars, of course, who even before she became an alcoholic was an adulteress who let her husband raise a child she knew might not be his, and eventually abandoned her family and stole from them. Celeste Kane, apart from being a hateful shrew to Veronica, domineered her daughter and manipulated her son. Lynn Echolls consistently abdicated her responsibility to her son, first through pills and booze and then through suicide. The first Mrs. Casablancas won't even let her sons live with her after their father flees the country to escape prosecution, and, of course, both Logan and the Casablancas boys are unlucky in their maternal substitutes, Rode Hard and Put Away Wet. Terrence Cook gets his daughter to behave herself by threatening to send her back to her mother, and then there's the litany of scary mothers Veronica babysits for in "Nobody Puts Baby in the Corner"--obsessive-compulsive Mrs. Goodman, micro-manager Mrs. Fuller, and all around lousy parent Ms. Hauser. Mothering skills is also one of the few fields in which Neptune's poor and middle-class residents don't have an automatic advantage over their wealthier neighbors--Alicia Fennel lies to her son, and Ed Doyle's wife relieves her frustrations by yelling at her tearful young son.
It really is well past time that we saw more positive female characters on this show, and although there's been an inkling of development on this front when it comes to Veronica's contemporaries--Mac has prominently featured in the two most recent episodes, and now that Meg is awake she and Veronica might be able to overcome their problems--what I really want to see are some positive female role models. It's a cliché of shows that center around strong, independent women that these women achieve great things by following in their fathers' footsteps, and sometimes in spite of their mothers, and this is something I'd like to see this show overcome. I want to see women that Veronica can look up to, confide in, and learn from--the sooner, the better.
I've written before about the way Mars uses investigation as a metaphor for self-discovery and the process of growing up. I've also drawn comparisons between the show and J.K. Rowling's Harry Potter books, which also posit that in order to fully understand themselves and achieve maturity, young people need to understand their past, specifically their parents' own childhood and maturation. "My Mother, the Fiend" draws the show and Rowling's books even closer together. We've got an emphasis on the adolescence of the parent generation, a large number of people who seem never to have left school, adolescent secrets that turn out to have significance years after graduation, and teenage grudges that not only persist into adulthood but plague the lives of the younger generation. It's hard to escape the conclusion that Neptune High is Hogwarts.
In general, I dislike this sort of approach (it's one of the most troublesome aspects of the Harry Potter books, as far as I'm concerned), which suggests that high school is the pinnacle of our existence, a defining experience that determines how the rest of our life is going to turn out. Especially given Veronica's caustic attitude towards her school, which she regards as something to be endured and overcome, it's hard to believe that this was something the Mars writers intended for us to take away from the episode, which makes me hope that they'll steer clear of multi-generational school stories in the future. But in this particular case, I think the emphasis on the past works, precisely because of what the writers leave out.
"Your mother was rather vicious"
"Really? I was thinking I was something else, less flattering."
"Thanks to your grandma, I have a 50% chance of becoming an alkie!"
"When I look at your face, all I see is your drunk slut of a mother!"
The question that hangs in the air throughout "My Mother, the Fiend", unacknowledged even by Veronica herself, is the question of generational parallels. How much of Lianne exists in Veronica, and is this genetic and environmental legacy responsible for Veronica's strengths or for her faults? It's the very first indication we get that Veronica is deeply conflicted about her nature, and that she may not like her most prominent qualities. Some variations on this theme have already been spelled out for the viewers--"Who's the mean girl now?" Veronica wonders after making a blackmail tape of Trina, and of course the season's entire theme, normal is the watchword, has to do with Veronica trying to change herself--but the darkest manifestation of it is something Veronica won't say, or even think, out loud.
This use of silence to say a thousand words is one of the show's most powerful tricks. We can also see it in use when we look at Veronica and Duncan's relationship. Like most fans, I predicted that the show's second season would open with Duncan and Veronica together, and that we'd see an implosion of that relationship soon after. I admit to some frustration on that last count, at least during the beginning of the season, until I understood that, once again, the important things about the romance between Duncan and Veronica were the ones that weren't being said. The seeds of the relationship's destruction are in the way that Veronica expends ten times as much energy on Wallace and even Logan as she ever does on Duncan, in the way Duncan never talks to Veronica about what's going on inside his head, in the way that a teacher has to point out to Veronica that Duncan isn't in class, and in Duncan's subconscious fear of the changes that Veronica has undergone. In a show that gives us preternaturally mature and adult-like teenagers, it's refreshing to see a relationship falter precisely because neither partner can see that it's failing.
So, for all its faults, I really do think that "My Mother, the Fiend" is going to turn out to be one of the most important episodes this season, and not just because of the revelation at the end (which I totally called, by the way).
Which is not to suggest that everything is sweetness and light in Mars-land. It's a common joke among Buffy fans that with all the absent, neglectful, domineering, and downright abusive fathers on that show, Joss Whedon must despise his own father. I'm beginning to wonder what we might conclude about Rob Thomas' relationship with his mother. Has it occurred to anyone that the best mother we've seen on this show left her baby on the doorstep of a man who then turned around and dumped her in a bathroom? There's Lianne Mars, of course, who even before she became an alcoholic was an adulteress who let her husband raise a child she knew might not be his, and eventually abandoned her family and stole from them. Celeste Kane, apart from being a hateful shrew to Veronica, domineered her daughter and manipulated her son. Lynn Echolls consistently abdicated her responsibility to her son, first through pills and booze and then through suicide. The first Mrs. Casablancas won't even let her sons live with her after their father flees the country to escape prosecution, and, of course, both Logan and the Casablancas boys are unlucky in their maternal substitutes, Rode Hard and Put Away Wet. Terrence Cook gets his daughter to behave herself by threatening to send her back to her mother, and then there's the litany of scary mothers Veronica babysits for in "Nobody Puts Baby in the Corner"--obsessive-compulsive Mrs. Goodman, micro-manager Mrs. Fuller, and all around lousy parent Ms. Hauser. Mothering skills is also one of the few fields in which Neptune's poor and middle-class residents don't have an automatic advantage over their wealthier neighbors--Alicia Fennel lies to her son, and Ed Doyle's wife relieves her frustrations by yelling at her tearful young son.
It really is well past time that we saw more positive female characters on this show, and although there's been an inkling of development on this front when it comes to Veronica's contemporaries--Mac has prominently featured in the two most recent episodes, and now that Meg is awake she and Veronica might be able to overcome their problems--what I really want to see are some positive female role models. It's a cliché of shows that center around strong, independent women that these women achieve great things by following in their fathers' footsteps, and sometimes in spite of their mothers, and this is something I'd like to see this show overcome. I want to see women that Veronica can look up to, confide in, and learn from--the sooner, the better.
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