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Bones – The strength in the ensemble

High fives all around, 'Bones' fans! This episode was a return to the greatness that 'Bone's can be, and all thanks to the focus that was put on the fantastic supporting cast.

- Season 6, Episode 6 - "The Shallow in the Deep"

In the “profession” of blogging about television, there are a few things you almost never get to do; and one of those things is that you never get to say you’re right. Every time you write, you write out this opinion, and you think it’s really solid, and you check all your facts and feel really good, but you never get to really prove your point. And then there’s the suckiness, which is when people get mad at you for your point.

Like, last week, right? Last week I said I was sorry, but Hannah kind of sucks. And hoo boy, did I get yelled at. I was a terrible person!  I hated French Canadians! (For the record, this was a pretty funny accusation. I actually have a deeply-seated adoration for all stripes of Canadian accents. I watched curling last Olympics just to hear Canadian accents.) I’m a rabid Booth/Brennan shipper who hates anyone who comes between them! I am everything that is wrong with the fans of this show!

Now, criticism is part of what happens when you put your opinion out there, so for the record, I don’t care about that. If I did care about that, I would have quit CliqueClack within the first week of joining. People are free to disagree with me. Here’s what I will say — it is so rare that, when you put out an opinion on a show, you neatly get handed proof that you were exactly right the very next week. So I’m going to revel in this for a second. In the words of Liz Lemon, my personal hero, I would like to say the following to everyone who yelled at me:

Suck it, nerds!

This episode was totally awesome. It was awesome because it did what Bones is best at: it had heart. Now, you’ll notice that there was no Booth and Brennan stuff in regards to romance in this episode, and yet tonight’s episode still managed to be chock full of heart and soul. I won’t lie and say Booth and Brennan aren’t giant contributors to the emotional jaunt that Bones takes you on, which is what makes it different (and, I would argue, better) than any old procedural. But this episode, if it prove nothing else, proved a few things things. One, this season has been severely lacking in that warm and fuzzy spirit. It’s felt more uncomfortable and depressing. Which perhaps it should, as that is the state that Booth and Brennan’s relationship is in, but it’s not an enjoyable place for the viewer. And this problem is conflated a billionfold by Hannah’s presence. She’s like the physical representation of all the awkwardness and miserably repressed feelings and missed chances between those two. I’m not saying those two aren’t justified in having some trouble getting back into their old groove after so much time apart, but while they are what the show should be doing is focusing on the secondary characters, who are strong enough to make for a great show on their own.

Okay, so Sweets and Daisy kind of seemed gratuitous and depressing to me, but Sweets alone was magnificent. His romantic waffling and the glimpse into why he has such romantic notions (his troubled past as a foster kid) were fantastic. Hodgins and Angela are phenomenal as parents-to-be, and was I the only person who found it unspeakably romantic when Hodgins offered to name a pink slime after Angela?

And Cam. Oh, Cam. Enough cannot be said about the genius of Cam this episode, or, like, in general as a character. (I told you guys I’ve liked Booth’s girlfriends before!) Tamara Taylor‘s performance as an African-American woman profoundly affected by her family’s tragic past was perfect and moving without somehow turning scholcky. I think one of the things I appreciate most about Bones is that it doesn’t shy away from fumbling with tough issues like race or religion. The characters aren’t perfect and PC. Sympathetic people fumble and grapple with how best to be sensitive and caring and work it out by talking and caring about each other enough to correct when things go wrong, which is so much more productive and constructive than gingerly skirting big, harsh realities. The connection drawn between the slaves of the past and the young men who existed as nothing more than nameless cattle entertaining bored housewives was both creepy and thought-provoking. And I’m not one who is easily moved by this stuff. I grew up in a town that is beyond liberal and goes through what can only be described as white guilt pornography every year between Martin Luther King Day and Black History Month. And yet, despite spending my entire childhood inundated with emotional images of slavery to the point where I’ve become almost numb to it. And yet the ending of this episode still manged to be heartfelt, moving, and utterly new.

So you know what, hah! I was right! This show can be so much better than it is, and it can achieve that by getting rid of Hannah or at the very least, ignoring her existing. And the reason I say that is not because I hate anything standing in the way of Booth and Brennan together. I’m not saying that because I’m trying to be a bitch. I’m saying that because what I (and everyone else whose reviews I read, yeah, I wasn’t the only one who said this) love about Bones is the big, warm heart that keeps this show from being another forensic drama. So, nerds, as Liz Lemon would say once again, eat my poo.

I’ll accept your apologies in the form of comments. Or cupcakes.

Photo Credit: FOX

Categories: | Bones | Episode Reviews | Features | General | TV Shows |

9 Responses to “Bones – The strength in the ensemble”

November 12, 2010 at 2:12 PM

LOL Julia, I have to agree with you. I am not a Hannah hater or liker but I have to admit this episode without her was so much more than the episodes before it. It had warmth, humor and some sadness. I know there are Sweets haters out there also but I love his character. When he talks about being in the system, I always remember the episode when it was revealed that he had been whipped as a boy and there were scars on his back. The most powerful scene for me though was when Cam was trying to name the people from the ship. I had tears welling up in my eyes, Tamara Taylor played the part perfectly.

November 12, 2010 at 3:21 PM

ok … enough with the BLATANT Windoze Stupid Phone product inserts … it didn’t work with Hawaii 5-0 on Monday … and it was even worse in this episode of Bones …

November 12, 2010 at 6:07 PM

I guess you could cut 50% from this post if you don’t justify your opinion. But I guess that’s what’s necessary when you write about “Bones” because otherwise the fans would get medieval on your ass ^^;

November 12, 2010 at 7:41 PM

Check the comments from last week – they already did.

November 13, 2010 at 5:05 AM

Oh wow you’re right O_o

November 12, 2010 at 7:22 PM

BRAVO! You are right! Hannah does SUCK and has SUCKED the life out of B/B and fan spirits. Cam WAS wonderful in her role in this. Thought Daisy and Sweets were handled well too and B/B had a case that was rather interesting/fun. No B/B fuzzies at all but at least we got heart from the supporting cast and that’s better than the mostly nothing we’ve been getting. GREAT review!

November 12, 2010 at 7:39 PM

The focus on the B3 dilemma has diverted too many of the fans from what the show can be– a glimpse into the heart of people who deal with death regularly but see the humanity in all that remains. I think, too, it has diverted the attention of the writers/producers. While I don’t hate Hannah, I can see just how bogged down the show gets when it is focused on B3. It takes away from the rest of the show and steals time from the supporting cast which is truly one of the finest on TV. They are fun to watch.

November 13, 2010 at 1:37 AM

So. very. correct.

Without HB, the show zings along. With HB, the show, like a cruise ship with a problem, comes to a dead stop in the water.

November 13, 2010 at 9:13 PM

No Booth’s girlfriend, no issue with the episode.

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