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Tag: Only Murders in the Building season three

  • I Don’t Like New York…Even In Small Doses: Flipping the Script on a Line From the Season 3 Finale of Only Murders in the Building

    I Don’t Like New York…Even In Small Doses: Flipping the Script on a Line From the Season 3 Finale of Only Murders in the Building

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    A twice-repeated “joke” in the formulaic (for the series) season finale of Only Murders in the Building, “Opening Night,” has two of its main characters telling their current significant others, “I like LA…in small doses.” The “I like LA” said in a manner in which a person might note that they don’t mind something, but of course it wouldn’t be their first choice. As it isn’t for Oliver Putnam (Martin Short) and Mabel Mora (Selena Gomez), the former being the one to utter this “quip” first while grossly kissing his leading lady, Loretta Durkin (Meryl Streep), at the after-party for Death Rattle Dazzle!’s opening night. 

    The subject comes up because Loretta is being approached with other offers after her performance in the musical is well-received. Offers that would inevitably take her to the place where successful actors go: Hollywood. This adding another cliffhanger-y effect (along with the predictable murder of yet another person who orbits the Oliver/Mabel/Charles-Haden trio) to the finale that will allow a dragging out of events for season four.

    In another scene from the party, Mabel then repeats that exact sentiment to her cameraman boyfriend, Tobert (Jesse Williams), who is about to go to said town to work on an “indie film.” Not sure why he couldn’t just say “movie”—oh wait, it’s because he’s become a faux pretentious New York asshole who needs to make LA sound more “legit” than someone like him thinks it is. Including Mabel, who declines the offer to accompany him to said city so that they might continue their budding romance. 

    Instead, she would prefer to float around in misery in New York solving crimes. Even though, as Tobert points out, “You’re always talking about feeling stuck and lost. This could be different.” What he doesn’t take into account is that most people who live in New York get off on that feeling. Wouldn’t honestly know what to do without it. Until some fed-up residents finally reach their threshold and actually do move to LA, often the “only” other option for Americans who see themselves as “creative” and “liberal” (a.k.a. they can fit right in working for ad agencies and support the LGBTQIA+ community, but don’t really want the capitalistic status quo to alter). This despite how climate change is literally eroding away both options.

    That aside, what is most bothersome about the dig at LA isn’t just that it’s a tired trope favored by the likes of “staunch” New Yorkers. No, what’s most bothersome is the continued commitment New Yorkers have to their delusions about the city being “everything.” This still extends to one such exemplar of rigid New Yorkerism: Woody Allen (and yes, other New Yorkers should take pause to think about how the disgraced writer-director remains one of the ultimate mascots of the city). A man who (as Alvy Singer in Annie Hall) once announced, “I don’t wanna live in a city where the only cultural advantage is that you can make a right turn on a red light.” This said after his friend, Rob (Tony Roberts)—though both call each other Max—insists, “California, Max. Get the hell out of this crazy city. Forget it. We move to sunny LA. All of show business is there.”

    Such “enticements” are no match for what Carrie Bradshaw would call “Manhattan Guy” (or, in the wake of the 90s and early 00s, “Brooklyn Guy”), the mutant strain of human who refuses to ever leave the city, not even for a vacation. Convinced that “everything you need is right here.” Rats, bed bugs, self-superior cunts, the normalization of alcoholism, trust fund babies who will always succeed at “art,” shitty apartments for the price of a limb and the constant promise that it’s all worth it for the “culture.” This increasingly consisting of nothing more than the same corporate outposts one finds in any part of America. But the delusion must persist for people like Oliver and Mabel (though it’s easier for Oliver to sustain because of his Broadway “career”) as they’ve put so many years into the endeavor. 

    The only one with blatant torn loyalties is Steve Martin. Whose character, Charles-Haden Savage, pronounces of the seeming exodus, “Los Angeles. A city so nice, they named it Los Angeles.” Because yes, Steve Martin is far more LA than he has ever been New York. Ergo his 1991 love letter to the city, L.A. Story. Which, funnily enough, also stars the New York icon that is Sarah Jessica Parker. With Martin himself being raised in Inglewood and Garden Grove, then attending college in the LA area, it was no wonder he brought into existence something like L.A. Story, or the far more serious Shopgirl in 2005 (an adaptation of his own 2000 novella of the same name). Both works see the good and bad in L.A., while eventually playing up the overriding positive aspects of living there.

    In contrast, New Yorkers are far more adept at side-stepping (read: blinding themselves to) the manifold drawbacks to their prom king city. But, like the prom king, it’s well-known he’s a douchebag who ought to be dethroned by someone more complex and multi-dimensional. Despite this, LA is ironically the place that remains, even now, viewed as lacking in complexity. A “pretty face,” so to speak, with nothing to offer but metal (the cars) and plasticity (the reconstructive surgeries). It’s the city that serves everyone’s purpose in being easy to take a pot-shot at. This even occurred in the most-seen movie of the summer, Barbie, when our narrator, Helen Mirren, says, “Barbie left behind the pastels and plastics of Barbie Land for the pastels and plastics of Los Angeles.” Cue the audience laughter. Because, ha ha, “LA sucks and is so vapid” is ostensibly evergreen comedy gold. 

    But, for those willing to look beyond the stereotype and deprogram from the far shittier lifestyle available in New York, turn to the revamping of a famous quote about England in Richard II. The one that Steve Martin as Harris K. Telemacher opens L.A. Story with: “I have a favorite quote about L.A. by Shakespeare: ‘This other Eden, demi-paradise, this precious stone set in the silver sea of this earth, this ground…this Los Angeles.’” A milieu that is far more than just “likable in small doses.”

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    Genna Rivieccio

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  • The Dissociative Delights of Charles-Haden Savage’s White Room

    The Dissociative Delights of Charles-Haden Savage’s White Room

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    Giving name to the thing we all retreat to when embarrassment or generally unpleasant/traumatizing situations take hold, Only Murders in the Building’s fourth episode, “The White Room,” ferries us on a journey to the place where angels surely would fear to tread. If for no other reason than the fact that they have their own “white space” with which to retreat to all the time. And it’s one that doesn’t involve essentially “blacking out” in order to be in said “white place” (no allusion to Texas intended). For Charles-Haden Savage (Steve Martin), the white room arrives early on in the episode, when he’s expected to perform a rousing musical number (a.k.a. patter song) about how one of three babies in Oliver Putnam’s (Martin Short) play-turned-Brodway extravaganza, Death Rattle, is the primary murder suspect.

    To set the tone for Charles’ mentally manufactured “safe space,” the episode opens with Mabel Mora (Selena Gomez) entering a literal white room posing as an apartment (if one can call four hundred and sixty feet that). All the while, Cinda Canning (Tina Fey), whose role is never really over, narrates about the many pratfalls of living in New York (as Charles, Mabel and Oliver did in the series’ first episode, “True Crime”). So it is that, as Mabel enters the apartment she’s being shown by another drop in the bucket of real estate agents, Cinda muses, “New York. It’s not exactly famous for self-care. In this city, we push, we shove, we occasionally urinate on one another. But do we spend enough time loving ourselves? Maybe not. But you can create a sanctuary.” Of course, it won’t be a tangible one, because no real person can actually afford that, in New York or otherwise. So you’ll have to do the next best (/cheapest) thing and create that sanctuary more metaphorically speaking. 

    This includes not just tuning out unwanted sounds or “presences” in one’s living space, but perhaps especially in one’s working life. This being what Charles is forced to do when Oliver insists that he rehearses his patter song in front of the entire cast. Scandalized by the notion, Oliver reminds Charles, “You’ll be performing this in front of thousands, so you might as well get used to the eyeballs.” And so, reluctantly, Charles attempts to sing his rendition of “Which of the Pickwick Triplets Did It?” But it doesn’t take long for him to start swearing like a sailor as his mind then “fades out” the scene before him so that he doesn’t have to process how much he’s embarrassing himself. And who amongst us hasn’t done something similar in order to keep going? Keep functioning? Emotional self-preservation, after all, is at least ninety percent of survival. And that includes doing whatever it takes to stave off any encroaching memories of one’s humiliation. Ergo, “blotting them out” altogether. Or, in Charles’ case, “whiting them out” as he takes an actual paint roller while in the white room and proceeds to keep painting it whiter. 

    When he emerges from his white room coma after completing whatever egregious “performance” he gave, he sees that he’s left the people in the room absolutely horrified. Having no idea what he’s just done (only that his pants have been removed and he’s now sitting in one of the bassinets formerly reserved for the Pickwick triplets), he asks if he’s dead or on drugs or both. The other theater actors have to explain that he went into “the white room.” As fellow cast member Jonathan (Jason Veasey) explains it, “[It’s a] stage thing. In TV, if you screw up, you get another take. In theater, there’s no net. You blank out, that’s it. You’re a polar bear in a global warming documentary hanging on to a tiny piece of ice in the middle of the sea, waiting to die.” Charles asks how he’s supposed to stay out of the white room if it’s instinctual, to which Jonathan vaguely replies that he should try going to his “happy place” instead. But what is the white room if not its own happy place? Apparently, a little too dissociatively happy though. No, people want Charles to at least be aware of what he’s doing onstage so that he can have some modicum of control over it. Thus, his latest “lady friend”/live-in girlfriend, Joy (Andrea Martin), tells him he should try making one of his “gorgeous omelets” to decompress and unlock this alleged happy place. 

    Alas, Charles finds the process so soothing that he wants to keep using it as a crutch onstage. Although Joy warns him that’s “no bueno,” he tries to use the same maneuvers he does in omelet-making while singing his jaunty patter song in front of Oliver again. Only to be met with what amounts to a “hell no” from “Olly” as he tells Charles to keep his hands behind his back and sing the damn song. Obliging the request, Charles once more enters the white room, only to reemerge having offended anew the diminished audience of Oliver, Howard (Michael Cyril Creighton) and Tom (Joel Waggoner), the “Christian” pianist. Perhaps even more than the first time. Sensing that something “deeper” is going on with Charles, Oliver takes him into his office and suggests that what might be amplifying Charles’ stress level about the song is the fact that Joy has moved in so abruptly, and that Charles is “meant to be alone,” as he suddenly realizes while talking it out with Oliver. And that, all this time, his “dissociation as survival method” has ultimately been about something more troubling in his life: the notion of domesticated monogamy.

    As we’ve seen with Charles’ dating history, he doesn’t do that well with women. Not only in terms of “accommodating” them, but picking them, to boot. Just from the ones we know, there was Emma, the unseen woman who had a daughter named Lucy (Zoe Colletti) that Charles seemed to grow more attached to than Emma herself. Then there was Jan (Amy Ryan)—whose name is just a stone’s throw from “Joy”—the woman that turned out to be the murderer of Tim Kono (Julian Cihi) in season one. So obviously, Charles is more “gun-shy” about women than he might have previously acknowledged. And this is why allowing one to move in with him so fast has caused something of a psychological break. 

    And yet, when Oliver effectively gives him “permission” to end things with Joy because he insists, “Maybe you don’t need to change. Maybe you are who you are, and that’s enough,” Charles still can’t bring himself to “perform” the breakup. Thus, he enters the white room even while trying to tell Joy that it’s over. When he comes out of it, he’s somehow managed to propose to her during the brief “white-out period.” And that’s when the “dissociative delights” of the room become the dissociative dreads in that he never even knows what he might do in his personal life while “out to sea.” And yes, the third time he goes into the white room, there are fish outside the windows…a result of Joy’s influence, as she’s set up a tank in Charles’ living room filled with sixty-two finned friends and a barrage of accompanying “decor” for them to enjoy. Charles, sadly, can’t say the same of his own “enjoyment,” nor can he account for the major life decision he made while in the white room. 

    Unfortunately, many need that kind of “crutch” regardless of the consequences they might wreak (including, as Jonathan said, “coming to” at a Papa John’s in Yonkers). For the pain of “staying present” just doesn’t seem worth it compared to the comfort of that soothing white room we’re all capable of creating as our “sanctuary” from the reality right in front of us.

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    Genna Rivieccio

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