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Once Upon a Time - Episode 3.08 – Think Lovely Thoughts – REVIEW

19 Nov 2013

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Once upon a time, Rumplestiltskin refused to face Peter Pan armed with nothing but his good looks.


So I have a lot of thoughts about “Think Lovely Thoughts,” an episode that pulls back the curtain on Peter Pan’s origin and pushes “Once Upon a Time” towards the final act of its Neverland arc.

I’ve seen the twist speculated on and maybe some will decry it as obvious. But considering the central theme of family that crops up throughout “Once Upon a Time” – how it can give us strength or be a burden, how it doesn’t conform to any one mold, how it can unite even bitter enemies towards a common goal, etc. – the reveal that Rumplestiltskin’s father is in fact Peter Pan made perfect narrative sense. And the story was sold every step of the way by Robert Carlyle, Robbie Kay and the actors playing Rumple and Pan in the flashbacks.

When we first clasp eyes on wee Rumplestiltskin and his dad (they never say his name, but he’s credited as Malcolm), it’s clear that their father-son relationship is as complicated as Rumple and Neal’s. In fact, Malcolm off-handedly mentions at one point that his own father sold him to a blacksmith so bad dads are a family tradition! Anyway, Malcolm appears to be a shiftless, stilted con artist, who ditches Rumple with nothing but a familiar straw doll so he can avoid responsibilities and keep playing games.

But even though the kindly women who takes him in and praise his spinning skills suggest letting him go, Rumplestiltskin’s still a little boy who believes in his dad. So when he gets his hands on a magic bean, he goes to his father and convinces him they can have a fresh start somewhere else (…and doesn’t that sound familiar). Malcolm latches onto the idea of going to a land where he was at his happiest when he was a boy. That place? Neverland, of course.

Naturally, there are no happy endings for Rumplestiltskin in Neverland. As his disillusionment over his childhood dream leads him to drag the scared lad across the island, it’s clear Malcolm is only interested in being a playmate and not a parent. And that’s all before the shadow (voiced by rocker Marilyn Manson, which…okay) shows up. At first, I thought the shadow was Pan and he was going to use Malcolm to take human form. But I was giving him too much credit. Instead, Malcolm cements himself as the show’s worst father by resolutely abandoning Rumple so he can become a child forever. Wonderful work from guest stars Stephen Lord and Wyatt Oleff in that heartbreaking scene.

Robert Carlyle and Robbie Kay perfectly played the weight of that betrayal when Rumplestiltskin and Peter Pan came face-to-face late in the episode. Their squaring off was unsurprisingly intense. Carlyle did a nice job showing the scarred little boy inside of Rumple. And I really cannot say enough good things about Kay’s performance in this role. The arrogant conviction when Pan insists that he renamed himself to remember Rumple was such a good choice. I’m gonna miss their dynamic a lot when this arc is over.

Can we talk about how stupid Henry is acting for a minute? Yes, he’s a kid. Yes, Peter Pan cleverly crafted a scenario that played on Henry’s desire to be a hero. Yes, he has been disappointed and lied to by Emma, Regina, and Neal plenty of times. But he really has that much trust in Pan, who had him violently kidnapped him and isolated him from his family? He doesn’t blink an eye at performing a magic ritual in a giant skull cave (although I did think the effects shot when Pan rowed them inside of it was pretty nifty)? He doesn’t suspect a darker intent when it involves tearing his heart out of his chest? Maybe this would have worked for me if he had been under Pan’s influence longer, but it’s been a week. I can’t buy that his belief in his loved ones shattered that much in such a short period of time.


Meanwhile, as expected, Charming’s poisoning turned out to be completely pointless. We already had the deus ex machina a few weeks ago of Hook using the island’s water to cure the incurable poison. And then, in about three lines of dialogue, they threw out the potentially interesting complication of Charming being unable to leave Neverland. Sure, Rumplestiltskin is currently contained and that throws a wrinkle into things, but I can’t be bothered to care at this point. This story really did some damage to Charming as a character (though I did enjoy, in an episode filled to the brim with bad dads, the small fatherly moment between Charming and Emma). And I hope Snow was being honest when she said the issues between them were not resolved, but simply tabled. I hated that, after the numerous times she’s expressed her regrets over missing out on most of Emma’s life, she seemed ready and willing to be separated from her all over again.

Also, Tinker Bell turned out to be something of an afterthought, huh? Don’t get me wrong, I like both the actress and the character. But given the noise about how vital she was to the success of Operation Cobra Rescue when they recruited her, I thought she would have a pivotal part to play, maybe exploiting some kind of magical loophole or weakness in Pan’s defenses. But she literally just led them to the camp. And they didn’t even need her to do that since Rumple and Neal already knew where it was from the failed rescue earlier in the season. Pretty weak payoff. I do hope Tink sticks around as she could add some spice to the forthcoming Hook/Emma/Neal triangle.

A final query – we know, as do most of the characters now, that there is a prophecy stating that Henry will be Rumplestiltskin’s undoing. Is it possible that Rumple confronting his father and becoming trapped in Pandora’s Box, all in pursuit of Henry, is what the prophecy hinted at? Or is there another twist coming in this tangled family tree?

19 comments:

  1. You hit most of my sticking points on the episode (re: Henry, Charming, etc) - except one...I actually groaned at Pan using PANdora's Box.

    I was a bit surprised at Tink's uselessness as well....I thought she was supposed to 'get them in the back door'. Although I loved the look that Regina gave Rumple when she said she'd use magic to subdue the Lost Boys and he said "Do you remember the spell?" Actually, their scenes are always quite good and this ep was no exception. You can tell Lana and Bobby are good friends in real life.

    It's getting to be a little too much with the repeat of bad dad syndrome for me....I mean, patterns are one thing, but almost exact duplications of actions is kind of annoying and feels uncreative. Apparently magic beans were quite common back then?

    Also, what was with Regina and Emma doing the lunar eclipse...."Follow my lead." Really? That's all it takes to do magic? Just copy you putting your hands in the air? (Not to mention Emma doesn't even hesitate to see what Regina will do...she does it simultaneously.) I did love that moment when Regina says "I need help" and Emma replies, doubting, "with....magic?"

    Overall, the best episode we've had since the first one of the season since things actually happened. Kind of surprised that the promo for Save Henry *seems* to show Regina putting his heart (or maybe somebody else's?) in him and doing a spell of some sort. Also assuming since I've heard talk of a 'new curse' that it was what they all felt when Henry died.

    Anybody else think that coat (cinched at the waist) that Ginny was wearing made the pregnancy rumor seem more of a truth?

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  2. I totally missed PANdora's Box, good catch!


    The look that Regina shot Rumplestiltskin when he asked if she remember the spell was indeed awesome. Lana Parrilla always rocks Regina's reactions.


    I didn't so much notice Snow's coat as I wondered why Emma waited so long to conjure up a sweater. I know, I know, Jennifer Morrison was freezing and the BTS folks finally took mercy on her. But still lol.


    Thanks so much for reading!

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  3. Rumple's father's name was Malcolm, not Colin.


    I was already annoyed about Charming's poisoning, not because it was so easily cured but because it seemed to be just an excuse for Emma to kiss Hook. I would have preferred if it had been a family bonding moment that somehow Emma was able to save her father, especially after Pan had threatened to make her an orphan again before she left Neverland. But I was also annoyed with them suddenly having Snow and Charming giving up on a way to leave after Snow had just told Emma a couple of days before that it was her job to help Emma to not feel like an orphan any more. Kind of hard to do that Snow if you're not even going to bother looking for a way to get Charming out of Neverland without dying.

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  4. When it comes to it's villains. I have very unpopular opinions about once upon a time. I think Regina is the worst and has consistently sucked since episode one, Corra was OK but a little boring by just being run of the mill power hungry and Rumplestiltskin who was awesome to start with has slowly been ruined as they added more and more to his backstory


    Then we got Pan, Pan was impressive. He seemed like he was going to be an embodiment of the darkness of humanity. he was a manipulator, cruel and revelled in discord, had a range of power that made him a solid threat And the reveal in this episode. This one hurt because it took all that great stuff I liked then chucked out the window by making him a huge man child. That's just... lame if you ask me.


    Props for originality I suppose. But originality still needs good logic, reasoning and structure to it otherwise you get this.

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  5. the truest believer19 November 2013 at 12:56

    i agree henry is stupid but let's not forget that the kid grew up reading/watching fairytales...so maybe he's used to the version of Peter Pan where he's a hero so that's why he believes him.And henry knows every heroes get tested (just like alice in the last Once Upon a time in wonderland) so...

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  6. Actually, Emma had the sweater on when they left for Neverland and it has been in Snow's backpack until this ep, according to JMo herself. It was a popular question during the live tweeting. :)

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  7. That might be OK if Henry's only frame of reference is Disney's version, but in the original books, Pan wasn't really somebody to admire...he was an arrogant kid who didn't really care if people got hurt or what the consequences of his actions were. Not really much of a hero.

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  8. I don't think Pandora's box was properly explained. When did he swap. Or did he "wish" it to himself? Or did the brothers switch it?

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  9. Charming's poisoning wasn't pointless. It ties David directly to Rumple's fate making it crucial they save Rumple. Meaning Emma would want to save Rumple if she wants to be together with her family even if she knows he might kill Henry in the future. Which also puts Emma in conflict with Neal who wants nothing to do with Rumple. Now Pan has three hostages, Henry via his heart, Rumple via the box, and David via Rumple. The interesting complication of the Charmings wanting to stay in
    Neverland is still at play here too. If they want to save both Henry and David without involving Rumple.

    If they decide to save Rumple, they would have to destroy Pandora's box to release him, and in doing so release all the evils into the world to save David but also risk Henry getting killed by Rumple. All this because Charming was poisoned.

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  10. Well it looks like Ginnifer Goodwin is indeed pregnant!

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  11. I think the idea was that the Pandora's Box Ariel brought to Neverland was the real one, but that Pan used belief/the power of the island to switch the boxes. When exactly that happened, I'm not sure.

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  12. Ack, IMDb led me astray. I guess Colin was the name used when they were casting the part. Fixed and my apologies!
    I agree, I think the Charming poisoning being a little side quest for Emma and her parents that brought them closer together (we didn't even get any kind of reaction from Emma about her dad nearly dying or that she might be separated from him) would have been interesting.

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  13. But Pan's not some abstract character. He's a person who had Henry kidnapped, held him prisoner, and has been isolating him from his family. Up until last week, Henry was suspicious of Pan's intentions so the about-face was too quick, in my opinion.
    And at the very least, Henry should know by now that magically plucking hearts out of peoples' chests falls on the darker side of magic.

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  14. To each their own, but Pan being Rumplestiltskin's dad doesn't make him any less of a cruel manipulator in my eyes.
    And as far as Regina and Rumple, I would argue that they're more anti-heroes than villains. We're supposed to like and root for them to a degree so they can't be out-and-out evil.
    Thanks for reading!

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  15. But the end results are going to be the same - Charming will be back in Storybrooke like it never happened. And the show didn't do enough with the character conflicts this situation should have created.

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  16. So all in all wasn't well done.

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  17. I completely agree...I didn't find it believable at all that he trusted Pan. All it would have taken was some new betrayal (or revelation of one) on the part of Emma and/or Regina and I might have bought a quick-change in his beliefs - something to take him over the edge and make him act rashly. But their lies are so far away at this point and were mostly done with a sense of protecting him from a truth they feared themselves or felt he couldn't handle as a child. Sure, he has a right to still be po'd about the lies, but I don't believe it has ruined his overall trust in adults.


    This is why so much of the fandom just hates Henry. He isn't written well...

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  18. Yeah, they didn't really explain it....Pan just says something about Rumple forgetting that you can have anything you imagine in Neverland. So he got the real one by imagining it....but we don't know when. Nor does that explain how Rumple got a 'copy'. Wouldn't it have just gone from wherever to Pan? I guess he would have had to imagine a copy for Rumple as well. That whole thing with the piece of cake and the box seemed thrown in as an afterthought.

    It seems like Hook and Neal would have known this and it might have been a useful thing....like for instance that Ariel wouldn't have been necessary at all - Rumple could have just imagined having the box. They could have conjured up their changes of clothes, food, weapons, etc.

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  19. Yeah, I was pretty sure as of 10/10 and her appearance on Craig Ferguson...the more pictures I saw, the more I believed. Congrats to them! I'm thinking it would be difficult to write into the story at this point, though, unless there is some kind of fast forward time skip coming up.

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