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Bones – The postmortem of the plot device

This week on 'Bones' marked the final week of Booth and Hannah, but where does that leave us? And more importantly, where does that leave the fate of Booth and Brennan? Where does that leave the show?

- Season 6, Episode 12 - "The Daredevil in th Mold"

Ding dong, another Bones plot device is gone. Because honestly, that was pretty much the entire point of this episode. Forget the BMX riders and Sweets and whatever else passed for “plot”, the real take-away is that Hannah is now out of the picture. Even though I’ve gone from hating Hannah to being, well, not exactly fond of her, but not thinking of her as all that awful, she still never was quite able to shake the fact that she existed for no other reason than to be a giant walking plot device. And what’s more, she was a poorly written one. She was a bad choice for the writers to make.

Television writers make terrible choices all the time, because everyone makes bad choices sometimes. And like everyone’s bad decisions, there’s no shame in making a few. But here’s what I love about television so much more than any type of media — not only are the mistakes broadcast, quite literally, to the world at large, but once they are, there’s real-time feedback that allows for writers to hear what they did wrong and fix it. No, they can’t change the past, but they can write around their blunders. You can’t do that with a movie or a book. Once it’s done, it’s done. The ability to grow and tweak your story as you go is what makes television so great, and is the reason I love it so very much.

I just wish someone would convey this point to the Bones writers, because I don’t think they’ve learned a damn thing.

To be fair, the idea of how to get rid of Hannah was a great one. Booth getting defensive and drunk and proposing as a challenge instead of because he genuinely wanted to marry Hannah? Genius. And excellently if subtly laid out in the whole ring scene, where he seems to erroneously believe that the bigger the rock, the more valid this decision would become, which is ridiculous on so many levels — not only because it’s patently untrue, but because it illustrated how clearly Booth wasn’t actually considering Hannah so much as going on a pure whim. If he was actually thinking about Hannah, he might have realized that, say, her job takes her to dangerous places where having a giant rock on her hand would be a bad idea, or that really, if she’s the type of girl he met in a firefight in Afghanistan, she isn’t going to also be the type to want to get blinged out. The logic behind this episode was great, the writers just forgot one thing: they hadn’t done the groundwork necessary for the plot to stand on.

We, as an audience, don’t know Hannah at all. We’ve never seen her be her, we’ve only seen her when it was necessary to have a hot blond plot device walking around. And there was never a moment where the utter lack of character development became clearer than in the proposal scene, which was probably the most awkwardly-done thing I’ve seen since Bones had to work in some product placement. Is Hannah really not the marrying type? Did Booth really know that and ignore it? As an audience, we have no idea.

Using poorly disguised plot devices to keep Booth and Brennan apart isn’t new to the Bones universe, and I wouldn’t have stuck around so long if I minded them. What sets the Hannah storyline apart from the others is that, for the first time, it serves absolutely no purpose. There have been plenty of plot devices, but at least they served to bring Brennan and Booth closer together, or get over some sort of hurdle that stood in the way of a relationship. You felt like even if it was prolonging the wait, it would make the destination worthwhile. There was no point to Hannah besides to keep Booth and Brennan apart.

And what’s more, none of this helps us get over the whole problem of Booth being an emotionally insensitive, completely out-of-character jerk this entire season. Sure, it helps to know that he’s been lashing out and angry at Brennan the whole time for not being willing to fall into his arms, but that still sits pretty weird. First of all, after knowing her so well for so long, did he really expect her to? He’s never given up before when he made overtures and got shot down. And yes, this was one that was bigger than usual, but why would he have thought a grander gesture would somehow get her over her fear of taking a risk on him? And what the hell was that ultimatum at the end of the episode — you go along with my way, exactly my way, or I leave you forever? That’s been Booths problem all along, hasn’t it? People have to agree with him and do things his way, or they get dismissed or ignored. Everyone knew what he was doing with Hannah, but they let him do it because they’re not allowed to say anything without him getting defensive and lashing out. Anything that might hurt his game plan, he covers his ears and ignores. And we’re supposed to believe he’s the emotionally intelligent one? At least Brennan, for all her social deficiencies, is willing to look at the reality of a situation with unflinching realism.

In an ideal world, the television medium would respond to this criticism. The writers would look at the fans being disgruntled, realize they did something wrong, and write in a correction. The problem is, this is Bones. There’s a weird, weird relationship between the fans and the writers, this sort of abusive chicken-egg scenario. Which came first, the fans complaining about every tiny thing (and yes, Bones fans, I’ve written for a lot of shows and can say with utmost authority that you are by far the whiniest of any television show fans to my knowledge), or the writers being patronizing and smug and convinced they can do no wrong? It’s an endless, vicious cycle of constant crankiness on one side and condescending martyrdom on the other, and I’m stuck somewhere in the middle, looking at the show and wondering what in the hell kind of point were even trying to make anymore.

So let’s call a truce, you guys. For everyone’s sake. Or, at the very least, for mine. Because a meaningful plot device, I can take, but another Hannah? I don’t think I have it in me.

Photo Credit: Fox

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

19 Responses to “Bones – The postmortem of the plot device”

February 12, 2011 at 6:35 PM

She was a plot device?

Noooooooo!

*snicker*

Seriously you CAN enjoy Bones when you just laugh about the whole romance aspect of the show. I’ve been doing it since Season 4.

Oh by the way how DID you get past the coma/amnesia/dream sequence plot device?

The only thing left now is identical twins and murder plots and a spanish dub and it’ll be absolutely perfect.

“Push her! Push her!” (to quote Season 1 “Friends”) :-D

February 12, 2011 at 7:31 PM

Horrible episode.

Bones being depressed and drunk at the end of the episode was so completely out of character. Wow, his lame girlfriend doesn’t believe in marriage… wow….

Bones told him she loved him like a month ago, they should have had sex by the end of the episode.

So horrible. I’m just begging any channel to come up with a better show so I can watch something else instead.

February 12, 2011 at 7:38 PM

I recommend Nikita if you aren’t watching it. Same time now and much better.

February 12, 2011 at 9:17 PM

I may start looking into that, I only have basic cable plus a few other channels.

February 12, 2011 at 9:19 PM

Nikita is on the CW. So, it is a network show. I hope you can find it.

February 12, 2011 at 9:03 PM

I just got tired of Hannah saying over and over “I’m not the marrying kind.”

Also, I really hated the way Sweets was belittled for not being able to afford a huge rock. First of all, the cost isn’t the point of giving a ring. Second of all, many women don’t *like* huge diamonds. (I think they can be very gaudy.)

I was not a fan of this episode of all. I was happy to see Hannah go, but I think it was a horrible way to get rid of her.

February 12, 2011 at 10:30 PM

Brennan would say it’s not possible – but I agree 110%. They’ve turned Booth into a man-child. They have SO many things they could be working with in terms of Booth’s thinking and behavior, PTSD, trauma issues from his childhood, hell, he could be having more brain issues. However, using any of these ideas would imply that the writers see that the behavior and thinking has been off. They don’t. They see, Booth got rejected, went to war, met someone else and FELL in love with a GREAT woman, who is so nice and “a good person”.

That’s not what was on screen. The fact is the slight sketches of character said woman was given showed a self-centered, manipulative, reckless, BRAT who played head cheerleader to Booth’s obnoxious high-school quarterback and Brennan has been regulated to the faithful nerdy-girl side-kick who’s always there for him. It’s a TAYLOR SWIFT song! Nothing’s wrong with Taylor Swift, but her stuff is about high school kids and their emotions – not 40 year old men. The fact that the 40+ year old men who write the show don’t seem to realize this is a bit scary.

I don’t think I’ve ever seen a show’s quality deteriorate as quickly as Bones has. It’s the one time I’ve wished they would REALLY go all-out soap-opera and make this entire season some character’s nightmare.

February 13, 2011 at 1:42 AM

Brennan would say anything above 100% is meaningless.

February 13, 2011 at 8:03 AM

I have stopped watching Bones – sad it was one of my favorites. So I am commenting on your review. First I love in depth analysis of shows and character development – so well done on your part. Second, It drives me nuts that every show needs to have the two leads together – really? I stopped watching House because of House and Cuddy. NCIS – no Tiva please. On Warehouse 13 – keep them like brother and sister. Why could Bones not have stopped at Angela and Hodgins? I am a romantic and think some shows really work when they get together – Chuck has done well with Chuck and Sarah, Veronica Mars – Veronica and Logan – perfect! Please TV writers – stop putting leads together unless it makes sense.

Oh, and if you think Bones fans are the most nitpicky – you don’t follow Supernatural fans.

February 13, 2011 at 8:39 AM

But Mary, these are two leads that had GREAT relationship chemistry. Excuse me, USED to have great chemistry. I would have no problem with these two together, but it should have happened at the latest a season and a half ago.

February 13, 2011 at 9:12 AM

I must be blind – they had great “Partner” chemistry but in my mind that is different than sexual chemistry.

February 13, 2011 at 9:19 AM

I’m with you Mary. They are perfect partners and best friends, but I don’t want to see them get romantic. If they get together, it won’t work long term and then what?

February 13, 2011 at 6:17 PM

I don’t disagree that there’s a difference, I’d just argue that in S2-S4, that the connection was so much more than just “partner chemistry.”

And, I completely disagree with Carla’s point that “If they get together, it won’t work long term…” Good writing could put them together, and keep them together.

February 13, 2011 at 4:27 PM

Bless you! Bless you for having the guts to be honest and critical. This is what I expect from a review.

February 14, 2011 at 10:49 AM

All I’m going to say is Thank you, thank you, thank you for this insightful review, especially as you have always been a long time supporter of Bones. I guess I am one of those whiny Bones fans, but it saddens me to see how character integrity has gone down the drain (Booth, who are you?/Bones, intelligent, kick-ass forensic anthropologist ?). What a waste of the fantastic chemistry between the two main leads, and even the wonderful cast of Bones, to stall a romantic relationship/partnership storyline. That being said, I’m not giving up on Bones. Didn’t SOMEBODY say, “eventually”?

February 14, 2011 at 5:26 PM

Thank you for this amazing review, damn, you nail it! I am a Bones fan, yes I am one of those whiny Bones fans. The thing is HH and Co are ruining the show that we used to love…what’s going on with the writing?? If I wanted to see a soap opera, then I would search a good one, but No, I don’t want that, I want my Bones, the way it was, good written and with a superb cast doing an amazing job. I can understand the drama and angst, but not if the episodes are bad written, with unrecognizable characters and unrealistic and plain stupid situations (Hannah and Brennan BBF’s?? please…Booth being a Jerk, Brennan being weak…that’s pure crap, and the blame is for the writers).
If you give me a well scripted show, with angst, drama or whatever, even putting a significant other for one of the leading characters in order to shake the things, then OK, but if we just get the most absurd story and the daily tease of the producers, treating the fans like dim nasties as HH said once,well, that’s just not fair.
The storyline was a complete fail, the Hannah character was lame and stupid beyond words, I see her as a spoiled high school girl, or worst a spoiled brat. And I don’t want to start with Booth or even Brennan, what happened with the characters that we used to love? What happened with the rest of the cast, they were left aside for this soap opera kind of drama…and I miss them a lot.
Where’s the kick ass Brennan, strong and independant, I know she had issues with her emotions, but you don’t become your partner’s punching ball just for that. And Booth, well, Booth is now the number 1 jerk, I can understand his pain, but there’s so many ways to develop the characters, there’s so much things about Booth past like the gambling thing, PTSD, his father and mother story…that could be an amazing story to tell, and the way he deals with all that pain, with that we could have the drama and the grow for the characters and we could have eluded the moronic girlfriend storyline!
Even if they had developed better the Hannah and Booth relationship, maybe may have achieved a better result, but that’s not the case. The problem this season and even the past two season, is the bad written episodes, and that’s clear now when this plot device called Hannah is out of the scene and you can judge the whole story arc. In my humble opinion Hannah just was a bad way to keep B&B apart, once and again, the old Bones story since season 4.
Sorry if my english is bad, is not my native languaje!

February 14, 2011 at 8:04 PM

I love this show it is my favorite but I’m in the minority and no longer care about Booth and Bren getting together. I’d prefer they never become a couple. Like someone above said, Booth is a man-child and Brennan needs a new man someone younger man, sexier and total GQ.

February 16, 2011 at 1:04 PM

I stopped watching Bones a few episodes in on this season. I’ll probably pick it up later if things turn out better then they are now (I try to read reviews to at least keep up and know when it’s ok to start watching again) but it seems bleak.

February 26, 2011 at 1:26 AM

Ms Hass thank you I enjoy your review and agree a 100%.

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