Community - Emotional Consequences of Broadcast Television - Review: "A fitting goodbye"
2 Jun 2015
Community PB ReviewsGathering my thoughts around the Community finale (series finale?) is a hard thing to do. Season 6 was oddly uneven, solidly funny, but with no overall story arc grounding the show as it happened in previous seasons. So this finale had the feeling that it could have happened through any time this season, with the exception of the meta jokes.
Season 6 has been solid, but its lack of continuity and story has certainly made it feel less effective than it should be. And yet it was completely emotional: when it hits the right notes, the show hits right in the heart and I’m baffled, filled with emotion and nostalgia. It is both hopeful and depressing, as any good finale should be (series finales, especially, should hurt at least a little in my opinion). In some ways, it’s a masterpiece, and in some others, it isn’t.
I didn’t laugh as much as I have with other episodes this season; while the pitches for each season each character made through their conversation were in sync with who they are, it just lacked a certain spark or it needed just a little bit more of wit in order to fully work.
But the finale does underline something deep this season has, in fact worked: in episode 8, Jeff told Abed that everyone is going to leave Greendale but him, and now Elroy has left and as Annie is getting her internship on the FBI and Abed is leaving for LA, those fears resurge and Joel McHale does an outstanding job portraying Jeff’s conflicted emotions. He tries to look happy for Annie, but the thought of her leaving the group unveils the many faces of Jeff.
There is also an immensely strong moment in which Abed recognizes TV is a comfort zone and that it's ok for life to move on, getting misty as he remembers Troy's departure. Dany Pudi nails it, he does a terrific job at portraying sadness while also conveying strength. Seeing Troy leave is probably what allowed Abed to move on, as he finally has a chance to make it in LA as a TV producer, and it shows how much he has grown from the man who once feared change above all else. It's a key moment to have for the character and the strength of both the actor and script is like they entered the zone. It last just a few minutes, but it's incredibly powerful.
The issue of what the group will do after Greendale has been present ever since season 4 has ended, and it has resolved in different ways since the end of season 4: Jeff became a teacher, Pierce died, Troy sailed off with LeVar Burton and Shirley left to take care of her father. It was a matter of time for all the rest to start wondering what will they do with their lives. Jeff certainly doesn’t want to be on Greendale forever, he doesn’t want to be stuck there until the end of times, but is he going to be? He doesn’t know and we don’t know.
This group of people love each other, that’s why it hurts so much to leave it or to watch someone leave it.
One of the strongest moments of the finale comes when Jeff is picturing life with Annie; they are together, they have a child, and everything looks good, until Annie asks him “is this what you really want? is this what I want?” and at that very moment it is clear how lost Jeff is.
He is 40 and he has no idea where his life is headed, he is in the middle of an existential crisis he hasn’t been able to resolve: Who is Jeff Winger outside of the study group? Outside of the Save Greendale Committee? Outside of the Nipple Dippers? He has no idea, because this group of people have changed him so much that he doesn’t know what he is without them and he can’t imagine his life without them.
That’s harsh, and it’s hard to accept, the closer you become to people the harder is to imagine your life without them, and for a man on his 40s, it is even harder since the road seems to have already cemented and the ways forward seem all the more narrow than someone who is on their 20s or even 30s. But Jeff’s life only got better from knowing these people, without knowing it, it is what equipped him to move forward even when it’s so hard to do so.
Annie and Jeff share an incredibly deep moment; as Jeff tells her he wants to be young again, Annie points out what’s the great things about being grown up and why she’d like to get there, and why it’s ok to accept that he is older and he can start letting the kid things go and start living as the adult he is.
And then Jeff said: ”I let you go”
We finally get some closure with the whole Annie/Jeff thing. Annie tells him that he should kiss her goodbye or he may regret it for the rest of his life (and I’m sure she just used everyone else as an excuse to say it). I know I say closure when it’s pretty much up in the air after that, but with Annie leaving I think that kiss is the perfect way to wrap up their story, with both of them having the chance to express what they felt for each other and move forward from there.
Then everyone else walks in and they share a tearful goodbye to the room and to both Annie and Abed who are leaving.
Jeff: “I love that I got to be with you guys. You saved my life and changed it forever. Thank you”. At that moment I got truly misty and I remembered why I love Community: these are all broken people that came together and built something better.
Annie and Abed got to move forward, and as Jeff left them on the airport he himself grew a little more and he comes back to the remainder of the group to have drinks on Britta’s bar, sharing good times and laughs while Britta says “this is the show”.
I think there isn’t a better way to end the show than reminding us what it has accomplished. It hurts a little to see Annie and Abed go, but at the same time I’m happy for them, and Jeff staying is not a punishment or halt of growth, but actually it is him learning to stand on his own, enjoying what he has around them, beautiful flawed people who are there for him and who may move on someday, but it’s exactly because of that that it’s beautiful, because it may not be there the next morning.
And that’s fine, everyone is going to move on eventually, everyone is going to find their way, at least the finale led me to believe that and there’s a soothing air of calm as the show cuts to black and shows the message “#andamovie”. This story will definitely continue on in the movie, but as an end to the TV era of the show, it is fitting, emotional, a bit depressing at times, but incredibly satisfying. And I wouldn’t have it any other way.
Episode Grade: A
Season Grade: B
Strays Observations:
-Jeff’s season 7 pitch after learning Annie is leaving includes the study group with him leading Vicky, Garret, Leonard, Todd, a guy whose name I don’t remember but I have seen and Scronge. It was both funny and sad all the same.
-Chang: “I farted during the 4th one, it’s an inside joke.”
I honestly had to stop the video as I fell off my chair from the laughs.
-Frankie: “You know what we should do, as an outsider who came in and nailed it…”
I agree Frankie, you nailed it. She fit in the group in a real organic way. So did Elroy.
-Chang: “I’m gay… I’m legit gay… *sob*”
-I take the commercial parody at the end as Harmon’s way to mock his own parodies. It got way too meta and convoluted, but it was certainly funny and depressing at some point. And the message at the end is a clear odd way from the writers to tell us that they cared about us. It was weirdly made, but it made me smile.
-And that’s it guys: this is probably the last time I review an episode of Community. It got truly emotional. I want to thank you for your support and ongoing interest on the show and my reviews. I have loved discussing it with you even when we had vastly different takes on it, but that’s what made it interesting to discuss. I honestly thank you for that.
I hope I see you on some of the other reviews I make: right now I write for OUAT, The 100 and now I’ll start reviewing Halt and Catch Fire. Coming this fall I’ll be reviewing Supergirl and 3001: The Final Odyssey, so maybe we can meet again there. And if we don’t, I’ll treasure the discussions we had here.
The episode almost made me cry, this would be a perfect series finale. I don't want it to be one though. I NEED MOOOAAAARRRRR Icecube Head
ReplyDeletekinda loved the season 7 with Seth Green and Leonard. Plus Todd as the psychopath was hilarious
"am I on drugs in that one? I'm all mellow and relatable in that"
scratch that, I actually cried
Luckily, we have the movie to look forward to :)
ReplyDeleteDo we? *Dramatic turn to the camera*
ReplyDeleteReally liked it. And yes, Frankie, you nailed it.
ReplyDeleteDoes anyone know how Community and Sin City Saints are doing?
ReplyDeleteI watched this after I saw Joel McHale on Conan say Yahoo want more, but I found this such a nice "end" to the show as it is. Getting the chance to say goodbye to Abed and Annie was really touching, and I did feel like I was getting emotional.
ReplyDeleteI really liked the commercial at the end, and it took me a second to realise it was actually Dan Harmon reading the disclaimer. Thank you, Dan
I think we don't need more than this, probably just the movie to end the deal, but defenitely not season 7. Not because I wouldn'y watch (I would), but because it feels Community is ending the way it should end
ReplyDeleteOh I didn't mean I wanted season 7, like Abed says you would just let it be with you. I think as soon as Abed refuses Jeff's offer to be meta I was accepting this as the end, as he embraced a future outside the college.
ReplyDeleteI noticed you meant that, I was just agreeing with you and saying why xD.
ReplyDeleteI guess now we wait for the movie
Great review and I agree that this ep was surprisingly adept at hitting me right in the feels... Although I do want more, (#andamovie) you are right in saying that this is a good place to leave things. The pitches were great (Diaper Dean rules! lol) and really was surprised at how well the episode urned from hilarious to serious and heartfelt and in some ways it felt like they were saying goodbye to us, the fans and it's okay to let things go and move on if this is the show's swan song...... but Bring on the movie!!!! #andamovie
ReplyDeleteI've been trying to gather my thoughts all day on the episode. I'm just going to say I loved the episode. Was it the funniest? No, but I did get some genuinely great laughs. Was it very meta? Yes, but in a great way.
ReplyDeleteI don't know where the episode lands on my all time favorite episodes, but I do know one thing, no other episode of the series has had such an emotional impact on me as this episode. I honestly had no idea they would have the episode play out like this, like it could be a series finale. Season 3's finale was awesome, and out of all the finales, really felt like it could've been the best series finale, but then this one came along. It was beautiful, and sad, and heartwarming, and funny, and so many more emotions come to mind but I'll stop.
The first half had some great laughs and was great Community. Then the second half showed up with Annie announcing that she got the internship and Abed was leaving and suddenly I was frantic, I was panicking just like Jeff. I came in not necessarily expecting Season 7 but I would've loved to have it. Now I don't know. Of course I will watch more Community, should it continue in whatever format, but I will be perfectly content with this. It was such a fitting and beautiful tribute to a show that I hold quite dearly. Other shows have gotten to me, tugged at the emotional strings to bring out some tears and make me care, but no other show has done it quite to the level Community did. You could definitely see the love letter in between the lines from Dan Harmon to the fans.
You know I'm a fan of Jeff/Annie, and while it was a little sad they didn't have a happy ending where they were together, I do think it was the best thing that could have happened, both for the show and for them as characters. For Jeff to want her to stay just for him, or for Annie to give up a big opportunity just for Jeff would have been bad to their characters and who they are. At least they got to express how they felt about one another, and who knows about the future, probably, maybe. It was by far the best ending to appease both the Jeff/Annie fans and the people who don't really care because it gave it a resolution while also leaving it open for that possibility.
Over on the reddit page I saw someone link a picture to a scene of Butters from South Parks which I thought worked well for how I feel. "Well yeah, I'm sad. But at the same time I'm really happy that something can make me feel that sad. It's like, it makes me feel alive. It makes me feel human. The only way I can feel this sad now is if I felt something really good before. So I have to take the bad with the good. So I guess what I'm feeling is like a beautiful sadness." If this truly is the end of this phenomenal show, I will miss it and cherish it for all the laughs and all the warmth it gave. Is it a bit sad a TV show affects me this much? Maybe, probably. But the impact is still there, and I wouldn't trade it for anything. And at least it was here.
I have enjoyed discussing this show with you Pablo. I will miss it. But we do both frequent this site so I'm sure we'll see each other discussing another show. At least until the movie!
Oh, I almost forgot. Dan Harmon's long monologue at the end was a great cap. I thought the odd commercial kinda killed the vibe at first, but once he came in and started talking, I loved it. Again seeing into his insane yet wonderful mind.
Yeah, I'm all in for more Community is it happens, but when you get this kind of satisfying ending you start wondering if it is necessary to keep things running.
ReplyDeleteFuturama had 4 endings through its run and it nailed all of them and it was continually awesome, so if Community can pull that off, I'll be fine with it continuing, though I think the movie is all we need now. I feel the TV era of the show has ended on a high note and it should be preserved
Oh god, I'm sooo going to miss discussing Community with you! I have loved to read your insight on every episode and seeing how passionate you are about the show always makes me smile. At least we'll have the movie review when it comes down (because that's going to happen, I know).
ReplyDeleteI couldn't agree more with everything you have said. Community has been one of the greatest comedy rides I have had (only Pushing Daisies edges it out for me, and by thin margin); I love its characters, its storylines, its meta elements, everything. When it's done perfectly it is a homerun and it feels so great. The last couple of episodes of this season have been particularly strong and I feel that I leave with a good taste in my mouth.
Finales have to hurt a little; in a way it is a sad finale, but it also has hope underlying it, which is what makes it so great. All these characters find themselves in completely new places, but they are ready to face what's coming. And that's the key.
I felt Jeff and Annie's relationship got to its natural ending; they both had feelings for each other, but it couldn't work out, they both want too much in life and it goes on different directions. It hurts, but at the same time it ends in good places and good terms for both of them, which is the best way to end, I think.
I think we connect with TV shows (with good TV shows), because the writers speak to us through the stories they make. It's like we get to know someone and that's why it's so hard when it comes to goodbye. When Parks & Rec ended this season I cried, a lot; they were tears of both happiness for the splendid finale we had (and a stellar final season in top of that) and grief. I was crying because I felt I lost a close friend, and in a way I did, as the story finished and the communication established between me and the cast & crew of the show came to an end.
There are people behind the shows that are made, and we establish connections with them through this medium; it's magical, and good TV shows establish relationship in which we are sad when the time comes to see them go. The cast and crew of Community gave an amazing goodbye to us, knowing that we may not see them again. Key word: may.
We connected with the show because it was a good show, made with love from the people behind the scenes. There may have been a few dramas around (Harmon's firing and rehiring, Chevy Chase's firing, Donald and Nicole's departure), but I think one thing never changed: the people who make the show, love the show, and they are grateful for our passion, so they delivered this beautiful goodbye to us.
Wherever we get season 7 or not, a movie or not, this is the best way to end the TV era of the show. As I said above, I wouldn't have it any other way: it rings true to what Community is: a show of flawed people who love each other and accept each other, even when they have to move on. And honestly, what's better than that?
Sin City Saints I have no clue, but since Yahoo is pushing for more Community episodes, it must have been doing great
ReplyDeletePaget Brewster is amazing. So glad she was added to the cast this season
ReplyDeleteI'm seriously kicking myself for sending in my ballot for that episode competition yesterday now. 'Cause I would've definitely wanted to put this episode in there. Hopefully somebody else will, and it will be part of the competition.
ReplyDeleteThere is also an immensely strong moment in which Abed recognizes TV is a comfort zone and that it's ok for life to move on, getting misty as he remembers Troy's departure. Dany Pudi nails it, he does a terrific job at portraying sadness while also conveying strength.
I actually said, "Ohhhhh!" out loud at that moment and did the whole "hand to mouth" thing. That's when the tears started for me-Danny seriously looked like he wanted to cry right then, and I wanted to just hug him. Awwww. Abed :(. I loved his sentiment about TV being comfort, and these characters feeling like people you get to know. YES. I have a bit of a habit of getting that attached to characters on a show :p. That ending had me wiping so many tears away, with the group hug in the study room and Jeff seeing Annie and Abed off at the airport. The only other episode to get to me that strongly was the one where Troy left.
And yet, there were so many great, funny moments throughout-the Dean's pitch for a season 7 was just hilariously wonderful, especially when Jeff took his shirt off at the end (I approve of his pitch for that reason alone! Just sayin'...:D), and the opening to Britta's version was brilliant. I also liked the version Jeff had with everyone hanging out in the teacher's lounge together and being teachers at the school. I'd be up for that version, too. And the running joke with the dean dancing in his underwear, and trying to work both Elroy AND Shirley in (so nice to see her pop up)...it was all great.
I also agree with you on the Jeff/Annie thing. I'm very pleased with how they handled that-those who like that pairing can imagine a happy future for them someday down the line, and those who don't can just see it as, hey, they addressed it, found closure, everyone moved on and life is good :). They managed to make both shippers and non-shippers happy there, and that's not an easy thing to do!
The best part was Jeff and Annie's conversation about their respective paths in life. As someone who is smack dab between their ages (30), I found myself nodding along in agreement with BOTH of their sentiments about their lives and where they thought they'd be by now and where they want to be or should be in their lives at a certain age. That just hit home so perfectly for me. Great scene between those two, for sure.
I love the idea of Abed as a TV producer, and Annie interning in D.C. with the FBI is great, too (the only (minor) complaint I have about that part of Annie's story is that they missed a great opportunity for a "Criminal Minds" joke/nod to Paget's time on that show playing an FBI agent :p! Ah, well). And I do like that there's still a few people by Jeff's side at Greendale, so he's not feeling so alone just yet.
The nod to the "gas leak" year joke cracked me up, too, as did that entire end disclaimer (particularly the description of the different types of episodes). Who do we pester to make that "Community" board game a reality now :p?
I've enjoyed reading your thoughts about this series. I'm so sad to think this is likely the end, aside from the movie, and will really miss this gang of characters and the show as a whole, along with your reviews. But if this is it, then they went out on one hell of a great note and I thank them all for making us laugh and being as supportive of and fighting for this show as much as we fans did :). Excellent overview, as always.
I love your last four paragraphs. Spot. On. Well said.
ReplyDeleteI think we connect with TV shows (with good TV shows), because the writers speak to us through the stories they make. It's like we get to know someone and that's why it's so hard when it comes to goodbye.
Without fail, I always cry at series finales. Always. Even if it's a show I wasn't a regular viewer of, if I happen to see its last episode, I still get all choked up 'cause goodbyes are sad and the casts always look so sad and it's just weird to think these shows won't be on your TV week in and week out anymore, or you won't see these characters again. I think that's a big part of why shows, at least here in the States, anyway, run for so many years-the fans/cast/crew often get so attached and don't want to say goodbye. They all have to end at some point, of course, but it's still tough to accept that fact all the same.
I haven't really caught up with the show since Dan got fired the first time, but the reviews for this finale are making me want to catch up so I can enjoy it properly...
ReplyDeleteSeason 4 is underwhelming, but not too bad. S5 is pretty good (that's when Dan comes back), and this one is solid. I highly recommend you to watch them, there are incredible episodes on the way!
ReplyDeleteThank you so much! I'm going to miss having you around to comment these reviews as well, you always showed quite a big love for the show and I like when people take the time to say why.
ReplyDeleteI agree with everything you said, this is a great, fitting end, and it hurts as any goodbye should. The movie should be like a reunion with an old time friend, so here's for the wait till the movie :)
Harmon made it clear during the LA times post finale interview that the Jeff/Annie stuff is just beginning and far from over.
ReplyDeleteHarmon made it clear during the LA times post finale interview that the Jeff/Annie stuff is just beginning and far from over. So as Bobrow predicted on Twitter a few weeks ago, Harmon is saving those two getting together for the movie. Agree with everything else you said, though.
ReplyDelete