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Once Upon a Time- Episode 3.04 "Nasty Habits" Review- The show is going on circles right now

Oct 22, 2013

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At times it’s hard to write about the show; sometimes it has multiple storylines all happening at the same time, some other times the episode is unbalanced, sharing both good moments and boring moments. This time we face the latter; at first the episode looked quite promising with Neal’s arrival to Neverland and Rumple’s conflict, but by the end I was so bored and unimpressed that I rested my face on my hands in the final 5 minutes. I’m going to approach this review (this time only) a little different than usual: I normally would describe what’s going on and put my thoughts about the plot on it, but this time I think it’s better if I just outright tackle what I think the episode did right and what it did wrong.

What was done right: While flash backs to the Enchanted Forest almost never really amaze me (and this doesn’t stand out either) it’s an improvement from what we’ve seen the last two weeks. Baelfire and Rumple’s rough relationship is old news by now, but I liked how the twist was added when Peter Pan was involved. The thing is, we know that the first time Neal goes to Neverland is after his father leaves him behind and he ends up in our world, rescued by the Darling family, but I would have never guessed that he knew Pan before handed. Also, one of the things I love about Rumple is his insecurity, how much he doubts himself and those around him; he wasn’t even able to trust his own son because he though he wasn’t worthy of his trust, and so he kept him captive. And every chance he had to make things right with him he has chosen poorly because of that same insecurity. It’s a nice character flaw and one that has been consistent through most of the show while never getting too repetitive. It’s one of those themes the show has known to tackle with the right timing.

In fact, the moments we spend with Rumple in this episode are mostly great; he keeps seeing Belle who is reassuring him that there’s more to him than the monster that he is, and his interaction with Neal (both in the flashback and in Neverland) and Peter Pan (mostly in the flashback) are also quite interesting. His relationship with Peter Pan could lead to some very good storylines and I see a lot of potential there. I enjoyed quite enough getting to know that they knew each other since they were children, and I loved his face when he found out he was the flautist that took Baelfire.

I also like how Neal uses his knowledge about Neverland to his advantage (not to shabby for an ex-lost by); it was a smart move to not only cover with ink the point of the arrow, but the whole thing instead.
There’s also the thing with Neal’s cave; though it doesn’t actually reveal anything it all, it’s always interesting to see the way Neal lived in Neverland, and how he left a map indicating the way back home. Sure, nobody can read it (until Neal inevitably meets with the party, creating some tension between the whole Emma/Hook relationship), but it’s worth seeing how it affects Emma, and once again Jennifer Morrison proves to be having a good season acting wise.

And now we are onto the bad:
For starters, I hate to see how the writers are losing every single chance they got to make Charming/David a more interesting character; he is utterly predictable, and though I get why he thinks is useless to worry his family about his death if he is going to die anyway and that it would only distract them from saving Henry, but that’s not different from what we’ve seen in the last couple of episodes. Here’s what could have worked better: what if he actually was scared of death? What if the writers took the chance to explore the character fear as he, for once, sees that he is unable to do anything to save himself? That would have been a better approach, it would have let us know another part of Charming that we were unaware of, and that would have actually humanized him a little bit, which is always good. But the show it’s starting to go on circles with him.

There’s hasn’t been any development in Snow either; remember the entire interesting theme with her darkened heart last season? It seems as if the show has forgotten about it, and it was a big issue at the end of last season, and I don’t think that helping Regina by the season finale cleared Snow’s heart. The darkness she was growing into was one of the things the show used to humanize Snow and it did wonders with her characters, but where is that right now? Is she still trying to redeem or is she not worried because she already did? All she seems to care about know is to help Emma, and that’s ok, two episodes ago both Snow and Emma shared a very good scene together, but now it’s getting to repetitive.

Also Regina and Hook are mostly in the background for this episode; that’s not very good, considering how good characters they are. (I took pleasure at Regina’s half smile when she learned that Gregg was dead, though).

It’s not just the repetitive side of the show that is getting me frustrated, it’s also that there are some stupid choices. Why the hell would Neal listen to Peter Pan if he is the enemy? Sure, what he says is right, but they got complicated history, so why would he be so eager to believe him? I get it, because he doesn’t trust his father either, yet it doesn’t feel like what one would do on his position. For starters, I would have run away from there, no questions asked, no chit chat with Pan so he couldn’t get in my head. But no, Neal had to listen to him, and then he had a little spat with his father, left with Henry leaving his father behind (the ink thing was good though), lost Henry to Peter (how predictable… because if someone is going to rescue Henry it got to be Emma, right? Why? Because REASONS!) and he has to start all over again (oh man, the repetition in this episode…).

And by the end, Henry finally falls for Pan’s mind games; hearing Neal’s voice while he was drowsy made him lost some hope, apparently as he now believes Pan when he tell them that his mothers are not going to save him after all and that they can be a family. It’s a real pain watching Jared Gilmore’s acting, he has always been the weakest link on the show, and to see his character falling for such a cheap trick and dancing around with the rest of the lost boys isn’t really a perfect ending for me, in fact his performance was just outright sad in that scene (even more than in others he had).

I was really excited by the season premiere quality; I thought the show was finally headed on the right direction, that the writers could put the characters on interesting places, but now I’m just hoping the Neverland arc ends soon, because I’ve lost a little bit of hope today. But I’ve felt this way before with the show and it has found ways to correct itself, so I’m crossing my fingers so this let down is only temporary.

Grade: C+

Stray Observartions:

-So we are not seeing anything from Storybrooke until we get finished with Neverland? Ok… (I was eager to know how the show would handle Ruby’s departure).

- Emma: “This is where they’re keeping Henry: Pan’s compound. According to, uh…”
Tinkerbell: “Tinkerbell.”
Emma: “Yeah, I know, still weird to say.”
Tinkerbell: “Tink is fine.
Emma: “Not sure that’s any better.”
At least the show is still able to deliver some funny lines.

-The whole dance around the fire was weird, I don’t see how that could be considered fun at all.

-Next week: get your shipper hats on! Emma is about to Hook up! (Get it! Hook! Hook up? Never mind, ignore my bad puns…)

Pablozky
I'm currently studying Psychology while also writing fantasy books (one already published in my home country, Chile, you can check it out on the facebook icon). I watch many different types of shows, including my favorites Revenge, Game of Thrones, Once Upon a Time and about 23 more. Currently writing articles and some reviews as well


12 comments:

  1. Another good review, I wasn't that keen on this episode either, as I felt it was mostly spinning wheels,


    I'm hoping that maybe the prophecy in relation to Rumple and Henry is actually about freeing Rumple from the Dark One, as opposed to killing Rumple...With that in mind, maybe eventually Charming and Snow will break down and feel the wrath of despair that Pan seems to bringing upon them and from their maybe we will get Darth Snow after all???


    But I def wish Charming would get more interesting as I think he and Emma are the least explored characters, (but with Emma it's more acceptable because she doesn't have an additional incarnation of another life time/time line), but for Charming it's a shame we haven't gotten something more controversial out of him, or see him at a point of real darkness...


    Baelfire is the one I think I'm most dissapointed in, because 1. I'm not sure if he really knows the true nature of why Rumple became the dark one in relation to whom is mother is and what she's done (hook relationship) and because if he is so experienced with Pan and Neverland, then he shouldn't be so easily broken apart....It should have at least taken a couple of episodes IMO.

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  2. "I also felt Henry's acceptance of Pan's philosophy was not realistic...if he's really the truest believer, then he would never give up hope that his moms (or somebody) would rescue him. I'm hoping it ends up being a ruse and he's just playing along to bide his time. I don't feel it would be believable if Emma gets there to rescue him and he refuses to go with her."


    Ditto!

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  3. I completely disagree. This is the best episode since 2.17. The show is much more darker in Neverland. There is no place for "I will always find you" boring repetitive themes. Poeple are really in danger here... Rumple is scared of Pan. Prince is scared of death. Yes indeed he is! IMHO he plays brave but in his last scene with Snow we see that he's petrified by his fate so much that he can't even tell Snow what's happening. Because he finally understood that there are situations in which he can't do anything and true love won't fix it.

    Of course Prince's character is still boring. But, well, at least it is something new in relationship development. Snow's darkening heart is completely forgotten now, but I don't mind. Everyone knows that Snow MUST be good in this show. So personally, I think it was a mistake to even create such storyline.

    And Jared Gilmore makes me love Peter Pan even more. #KillHenry! #KillHenry!


    To be honest, the episode's drawbacks (Gilmore's acting, Prince and Snow's lack of evolution) will never disappear as they have been a part of the show since the very beginning. If you are still watching OUAT, then you have to get used to them.

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  4. "It’s a real pain watching Jared Gilmore’s acting, he has always been the
    weakest link on the show, and to see him falling for such a cheap trick
    and dancing around with the rest of the lost boys isn’t really a
    perfect ending for me."
    Let's be clear here: Jared Gilmore as an actor and Henry as a character are entirely separate. It's not at all fair to blame Jared for the writers' weaknesses. It has been discussed before in the fandom that Henry is not a fully developed character, he's a plot device. He gives impetus to other characters, drives the storylines forward, but he's made no real progress since the series started. His behaviour is not consistent, it just serves the plot and that's it. In 2x11, he went from "we need an armoury to protect ourselves from Regina", to "I knew [she didn't kill Archie]" - 2 minutes later. So I'm not particularly surprised he fell for Pan's tricks so soon.
    And I'm just as frustrated as you with all the missed opportunities for character development of David and Snow. No "dark!Snow", no multi-layered David. Same old, same old. Even as a couple, they don't really have where to go from here, so the only option left is the 'unplanned pregnancy' cliche.

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  5. i think he may have been playing pan tbh (or at least i hope so) because in the promo for next weeks episode henry appears to be hiding from Pan which would make a lot more sense. But otherwise i agree, it would be pretty unrealistic.

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  6. Very true, the actor and the character are very different things. What I meant is, that the way Gilmore plays it makes it way worse. Henry falling for that cheap trick is bad, but the way Gilmore portrays it is even worse!

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  7. I'm really glad that you liked the episode.
    What you say about the drawbacks doesn't make it any better, and I kind of desagree: Gilmore could improve on his acting, Snow had development with the whole theme of her darkned heart, Prince has been a drag all season long (and for most of the show too). I got used to many things in OUAT, but what bothers me goes beyond Gilmore's acting or Prince/Snow character development; it's that the writers seems to be in a comfort zone and they are unable to leave it. Whenever there are risks on storytelling they circle around ground the show has covered before and it makes it feel stuck. Storytelling have to move forward, and right now it doesn't feel like OUAT is doing that. The beginning of season 2 certainly moved things a long, it introduced as to a conflicted Regina, Emma coming to terms with who she is, Rumple's struggle to be better, which all were different from what we've seen on season 1. Season 3, so far, hasn't introduced anything new, it has just reforced what we've seen already. So I haven't liked much the beginning of this season because it lacks that "moving forward" feeling it had last season. There are still plenty of good things out there, but I want to feel that there is more to know about these characters. If this is it and there's no more development, then the show might as well stop

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  8. Thanks for your comment! Glad you're liking my reviews :D
    I completely agree with you about Baelfire: what was he doing listening to Pan? He should have known better.
    I have always thought that Henry is the undoing of the dark one, but not of rumple himself, I think he will eventually seet him free of his curse. When? I don't know.
    About Charming... I'm about to lose hope, but hey! Who knows? Maybe the writers will finally realize that Josh Dallas can do more than just put on a brave face and act as nothing ever happened... man! I wish we could have seen him freak out or something, anything that humanizes him even the slightly would do good (I would even consider grading an "A" any episode that attempted to ground Charming even if a little bit xD)

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  9. Well, IMHO, what we see know (in the wider context) is probably a consequence of a
    very bad storytelling during the second half of season 2. I agree that the show was moving on faster in the beginning of the last season than now, but afterwards the writers decided to slow down and came back to some already overused motives. Maybe they didn't want to make any risky decision (f.e. killing off a character) as it might have impacted shows' rating. So now they have to give the show a proper pace again. To sum up, I prefer to see a slow start and then show's improvement than the last season's chaos (I think they changed some plans during it, they couldn't have been so bad).

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  10. i really like how they show us the insecurity part of Rumple`s character at the end he is the same coward that became the dark one in hopes to gain confidence, but that just made it worst, cause he made people fear him and the person he really loved (Baelfire) Fear him too, so at the end he still feels abandoned, alone and a coward....One thing that bothers me is Neal i dont think it was a good move to bring him to Neverland, i dont know but i dont like the guy let me explain myself i like the guy being Baelfire and his interactions with Rumple but i dont like him as Henry`s father i just dont see him as his father when they are together it feels weird to me....
    Snow and Charmig story is cheesy complete and Awkward and Boring cheesy the same over and over again, i know you believe in true love but c`mon you have to remind that every single time¿? Charming is not going to die, we all know that at the end a kiss will save him or some other cheesy stuff that the producers can come up with....


    One thing im starting to think is that something happen to Pan as well as Rumple to make him evil and what if the only way to make Peter "Good" again is gettin Wendy (adult Wendy) to get to neverland, i mean something should happen to Peter Pan to make him the way he is, someone abandoned him and i think that might be Wendy! she wanted to go back and she wanted to him to go with but Peter just as Rumple just wanted power....

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  11. The Rumple story has never been my favorite aspect of the show (except when he's with Belle), but the interaction with Pan was interesting...I do want to know what happened, as he told Bae that he and Peter were "very close" as children. Mostly, though, I'm getting bored with the FTL flashbacks. I feel like I know enough about these main characters that I don't need as much of that - I'd rather watch their current adventures, or more to the point, I'd like to see them have some adventures. Let's get to Regina and Emma doing magic together. Let's see something, anything happen! Just standing around as a group wondering what to do next isn't very exciting. I agree on the Charming storyline...it's just lame. So is Snow struggling to 'parent' Emma - she's almost 30, she doesn't need a Mommy...how about just being her friend?
    As for next week's promo, here they go bringing in more new characters and probably sending some of the regulars to the backburner for longer. I was looking forward to Neverland as it appeared it would be a good opportunity for the core group to have to work together and be focused on a goal...but now it just feels like they are blundering along. Honestly, I'm surprised that Regina hasn't stomped off into the jungle in frustration to try to rescue Henry herself - since when doesn't she believe she's powerful enough to accomplish most anything?!
    The passion and interaction in the first episode has not continued through the next few. It feels like they aren't in a hurry at all to try to rescue Henry. They have to have Regina say something like "I'll do anything as long as we rescue my son" once per episode so we're reminded that's why they are on this island. I also felt Henry's acceptance of Pan's philosophy was not realistic...if he's really the truest believer, then he would never give up hope that his moms (or somebody) would rescue him. I'm hoping it ends up being a ruse and he's just playing along to bide his time. I don't feel it would be believable if Emma gets there to rescue him and he refuses to go with her.

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