Friday, January 16, 2015

Episode 7x09 "The Honeymoon Is Over"


Cory and Topanga show up at the Tnemtrapa where they expect to be greeted by a "Welcome Home Salami." The "salami" part isn't what confuses Rachel and Angela, but rather the "home" part. ONCE AGAIN, Rachel has given away a room at this place without consulting the person who owned it. Holy shit what the shit Rachel. Seriously.

Everybody stop what you're doing.

Listen to me. What the fuck, Rachel. Fool me once, shame on me. Give away an occupied apartment room twice, what the fuck Rachel. It's unbelievable.

So yeah Shawn moved in here, and Cory and Topanga are pretty upset that they have nowhere to live now. There was clearly a breakdown of communication by all parties, not just Rachel, but I still find myself feeling bad for the newlyweds.

In a complete disregard for how dorm assignments work, the couple believe that they can still live in Cory's old dorm. Not so.


Ahhhhhhhhhhh there we go! This is great, this is the Jack/Eric dynamic I've wanted to see again. I think the paradigm example of this relationship is in First Girlfriends Club. That episode is bogus, but it has the perfect version of the Jack/Eric dynamic. It's doubly reminiscent of that episode since the boys are now quickly joined by three attractive women. That was nice. That was a nice scene that gives me some comforting false hope for this season.

That piece of paper in the gif explains that married couples can only live in a married-couples-dorm, so Jack and Eric have taken command of this one.

Next stop is home, but Alan is adamant that Cory can't stay with them now that he's married. Alamant... Alanmant... There's another scene with Alan at the end, so we'll talk more about him when we get there.


Amy asks her son how he could just not prepare for this situation at all, and his response is bullshit because Amy is completely right. Cory's taking the mantle of responsibility, but Topanga utterly failed to prepare as well, so she's equally (and uncharacteristically) to blame. Now that I think about it, it's genuinely surprising that Topanga could let this happen. Keep that in mind though, because I have a theory about it that's gonna come up later.

Later, at The Union, our heroes learn from Angela and Shawn that, due to a homicide, a couples' dorm is now available for them to live in. I'm not a fan of them lucksacking into having a place to live, but fine. What's more interesting is the way the couples' dorms are presented. Look at this hallway.


There's no reason in the universe that these hallways would be so awful looking, especially this palette of There-Was-A-Fire-Here Brown. Inside the rooms, sure, but come on. And there's the sad guitar music playing. It's a full force attempt at making us feel bad about this place, but it's so overbearing that it ends up being silly. Like it feels like an after school special, like a police officer is about to tell me not to do drugs.

And there's a toddler standing out here in the hall, played by Michael Jacobs's kid in a sweeping display of either nepotism or budgetary constraints. Or both. He informs Corpanga that he sees dead people, which was probably funny back then, like Eric quoting South Park.

The inside of the dorm is comically bad, just like the hallway. I'm going to be calling this The Dorm from now on, even though it's not much of a dorm at all, it's more of an apartment. They've got a fridge and an oven and everything right in here. Normal tiny dorms are already highway robbery, so this place must cost a fortune. 

Some random ass woman walks in here and contributes nothing to the plot for a whole minute and then she leaves. Fantastic.


Who uh, who is this one, Jacobs's daughter and granddaughter? His wife? Why'd we do this?

So we're in Feeny's class now, it's history this time, and the newlyweds are disheveled and exhausted. Feeny dismisses class to try to give them advice, but none of it really sticks.


Okay, theory time. I'm sitting here wondering why I'm enjoying this, with the fact that Topanga was inexplicably irresponsible for once, and then by the end of this scene with Feeny it hits me. Topanga is acting like Shawn. This whole thing feels like a Cory/Shawn adventure. Topanga is being dopey and snarky and... sidekick-y. That's the secret here, they wrote her like Shawn rather than herself. And aside from being completely disingenuous, it's actually working. And it sure doesn't hurt that Cory isn't bitching about sex anymore.

As Corpanga leave the classroom unsatisfied, Feeny admits to himself that he is a fortune cookie, which is totally not true.

Meanwhile, Eric and Jack are playing some sort of billiards-hockey in The Union.


Absolutely fantastic. That's the kind of silly-dumbness that I enjoy from Eric, rather than some in-your-face he's-an-idiot thing, as well as the easygoing sidekick from Jack, rather than the judgmental heckler. Good good good. Rachel is there asking them how everything's going, and the triplets walk in right on cue. They're quickly stolen away by a set of male triplets though, leaving our boys all alone once more.


Over at Brew Lagoon, Shangela are having coffee with Corpanga, and it's a continued complain-a-thon. There are some funny bits until Topanga starts crying and runs off... which is more like Shawn than Topanga, so we've still got that going on. Cory complains to Shawn that he can't provide for or protect his wife, and honestly the whole thing makes Topanga sound so weak and helpless, and the way she's acting only makes it worse. I don't like this very much. Cory even pointed out to her at the beginning of the episode that she has suddenly abandoned her ideals of an equal partnership.


Cory insists that Shawn can't help with this problem, and that he himself has to take care of this on his own. But then it immediately cuts to him asking his dad for help, so I dunno. But once again we're seeing Alan's brand of awesome parenting. Cory is a married man now, and Alan needs him to understand and accept the responsibility that comes with that. This scene is awesome, and really lives up to the name of the series. He thought he was ready to get married, so now he has to deal with it. Granted, this all comes from a COMPLETE lack of any sort of preparation on his or Topanga's part, but the idea is there. And we haven't had a good life lesson from Alan in a while.


You can see Amy's legs back there on the stairs, she doesn't want to be a part of this, and initially she wanted to let Cory stay with them. That's interesting, since back in 6x01 it was Alan who wanted to coddle Eric, and Amy who insisted that he couldn't stay with them.

Back at The Dorm, Cory tells his wife they'll have to see this through on their own.

During the credits, we see some bloopers of Jacobs's kid flubbing his line, yet another display of either nepotism or budget constraints.

Plot: 0.5 - Cory and Topanga are idiots. Rachel is a bigger idiot. Simple communication could have prevented all of this, and then even when a miracle lands Corpanga one of the marriage dorms, they still spend every second complaining. What's weird is the huge shift in tone after Topanga starts crying. Their misery is supposed to be funny for most of the episode, and then suddenly we're watching Les Mis.

Character Development: 0 - Topanga turned into Shawn, I don't know if that's development though.

Humor: 1.0 - The misery was funny until Topanga started crying, plus Jack and Eric were consistently enjoyable. I seriously love that billiards hockey whatever they were playing.

Life Lesson: 1.0 - "Deal with your life."

2.5 out of 4.0. It's enjoyable for the most part because, like I said, Topanga is serving as more of a Shawn-sidekick than the Topanga we're used to. Jack and Eric were exactly what I want from them, but god dammit I still can't believe Rachel gave away a room again. What is her problem. 



Thanks for reading, see you Monday.

All images used under Fair Use.

22 comments :

  1. Alan's scene here is kind of controversial with BMW fans, but I think he's in the right. It's a great scene that does sum up the show's theme rather well. However, I do think that Cory and Topanga--while they were irresponsible with their planning--did suddenly get screwed out of a room thanks to Rachel's ridiculousness, so they're not entirely to blame, at least. And yeah, I much prefer this Eric as well.

    Topanga's line about eating the remnants on the wall really sticks out to me. That's got some somber implications...

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  2. You're right, Jack was really good in this episode, and I found Cory really funny too. "Well if you take what we got for our honeymoon and subtract what we spent on our honeymoon we've got about seven blenders." Also, Ben really brought his A-game to that scene with Alan. I thought he did even better than when he yelled at Amy in season 6. Good episode imo.

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  3. Everyone's behavior in this episode really pisses me off. Rachel and Shawn are being fuckin' awful just kicking Topanga out of the apartment and deciding to not mention it until she returns from her honeymoon. The "banish married college couples to this insane, decrepit apartment building" thing is absolutely bizarre. Cory and Topanga devolve into whiny little kids (and your thing about Topanga being Shawn is spot-on--she does act really weird, for her, in this episode), especially when they apparently put zero thought into this after being engaged for an entire year.

    I'm sure it's funny and the Alan stuff is good but holy shit, they're all such dickheads!

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  4. I like the story, but it's weird. Topanga was living with Rachel and Angela she would be contributing something, rent or whatever. So maybe she wasn't actually and Rachel's line she's next was her way to get rid of this moocher. The whole thing about a room being taken gets undermined by the next episode anyway I think.

    I liked Alan and Amy in this episode, especially Amy at the stairs just having to listen to this. Topanga must have some job and Cory had a successful business on Stock Footage Island. If Stock Footage Island is like Hawaii then it might have a high cost of living, but they were only there a few extra days so they must have made a profit before taxes took a hit on them.

    Also people blaming Alan for kicking his son out, they're still paying for his college education as far as I can tell. He's not on scholarship and they're probably still paying Eric's too.

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  5. Something you said suddenly struck something in me. And it was when you were showing Eric and Jack 'how they should be' kind of taking charge and dictating the rules, and it seemed to feel right to me. And it suddenly hit me as to why. And I'll focus on Eric because, well, Eric is a more established character to speak to.

    Eric is a joke. He's actually smart, but everyone think he's dumb and that's because he acts super dumb. But most of his tenure on this show he's commanded respect. And some of it is because he's super funny and he's super charming... but he's still super funny and charming and something's still felt off. The thing is... Eric's an Alpha Male. And that's what's been missing. For the first four or five seasons, any scene that Eric walked into that didn't feature, like, Alan or Feeny, Eric was the most forceful, commanding guy in that scene. Obviously Cory dwarfed to Eric, but like... so did Shawn. So did people in the hallways at school. And that, I think, has what balanced his idiocy - he didn't feel pathetic acting like that be because it never threatened his power as Mr. Cool Guy.

    What I always thought had been the issue had been how stupidly they'd been treating Eric, when I (and everyone) knew the deal with Eric is that he's actually supposed to be smart. But that still only really came out, and even that they don't ditch entirely this season, it's that Eric's supposed to be commanding. And they've lost that.

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    1. I wish I could edit. I have typos in that. Like when I say 'really' and mean 'rarely'. But I still think I'm onto something there. We could all go episode upon episode upon episode without concrete episode of BMW's fun little joke that Eric's a smart guy who most would consider dumb upon first glance because Eric didn't get disrespected or treated as anything other than an Alpha Male upon first interraction. It was only when Eric became, in addition to a guy who's an idiot, a guy who's also a loser and whom no one respects, that suddenly Eric started to not feel like Eric anymore.

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    2. Jeez. Again! I say 'episode' whenI mean 'evidence.' Okay, I'm drunk.

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    3. I'm gonna elaborate more - because I think I may be on to something. Our heroes in this show, in its best years and now, or Cory and Shawn. Because they're underdogs. Eric, at first glance, is almost an antagonist. Eric appears shallow, doesn't appear to have anything going for him but looks and charms, and is popular and dates pretty girls, while Cory struggles to find a date and fit in and find his place, because although he's sensitive and has something to offer, he's not obviously attractive and isn't smooth. Shawn, meanwhile, can get dates and attract people, but because he's broken inside and has to deal with many personal issues, he struggles too. Eric used to represent an antithesis of that - everything worked out for Eric despite not seeming to deserve it. He had all of what Shawn was able to possess, without Shawn's struggles, while possessing all of what Cory had that Shawn envied, without dealing without all of Cory's lack of sexiness and ability to seem cool. And when he was at his most interesting, it was because they were exploring the consequences of that. He didn't get into college, the girls he could always get went away because now he was some guy who didn't get into college, and didn't succeed, and so he had to explore what else was within himself - a depth others didn't realize and he didn't allow himself to explore, because he didn't have to. And so, when Eric struggled, it was as an anti-hero struggled. He has the chance to pass an important test because he's handsome and charismatic and a girl with the answers is into him, but he actually does know that's wrong and doesn't want that be why he succeeds after all.

      But now, that's all gotten messed up. Eric's still got those flaws that are supposed to be why we think he's inconsequential and why we the audience, probably smart soulful people, would resent him. But he doesn't have the success we'd resent. So, he's just this ridiculous idiot who goes around failing and being mistreated. And that's not fun for us. He's not this guy who represented everything we're not, good and bad, in high school and hated for it. And we all had that guy in high school. Nor is he a character, most importantly, that represented everything we hated but, we didn't realize, wasn't as bad as we thought as was a real person with real ideals too. He's just... this pathetic fool. And that doesn't feel right for Eric. It's not tempered by anything to make all this ill-will acceptable. I'm probably not wording this right, but I think that's what the problem, more than Eric's idiocy that was usually okay in earlier seasons, that bothers us.

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    4. Poetry. If you want to fuse all that into a single cohesive typo-free explanation, I'll throw it up as its own post :D (and plug your blog, of course)

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    5. Yeah... that, uh.... that could use a re-write, huh? Yikes. I barely remember even writing it. But it's too long and rambling, so... probably me! Sure, I'll give it a go later.

      I did wanna say that I think a '0' is probably a little harsh for character development, no? Cory is obviously in the midst of learning a hard lesson here. Though, I admit most of the pay-off there comes next time.

      Speaking of pay-off for next time, you'll also learn why we met that woman and her baby next week too, I believe.

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  6. I think the next episode is the one where eric and jack dress up as women. I just wanted to mention that this isn't the first time Matthew Lawrence has dressed up as a woman on camera. He did like 3 times for his previous show, Superhuman Samurai Syber Squad.

    Heres some pics as proof:

    http://i184.photobucket.com/albums/x96/allhailbrandon/1_zps453adf23.jpg

    http://i184.photobucket.com/albums/x96/allhailbrandon/2_zpsc5c713fe.jpg

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    1. That's amazing, I had no idea. I'll definitely mention that in the writeup, thanks! :D

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  7. This episode is one of my favorites but I also can't believe that Corpanga would walk into a situation like this. I understand Alan's desire for Cory to "Deal with his life" as a husband now and a choice HE made to get married so young, but... it baffles me a bit that Alan and Amy didn't know that Cory and Topanga would have nowhere to go. Although this issue does tend to be a point because Cory and Topanga never lived together while dating/being engaged as this was a kids program so, I think that factors in as well. But I just don't understand how all the miscommunication happened. Also that logical Topanga would allow this to happen.

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    1. literally will friedleJanuary 16, 2015 at 10:59 PM

      I think it makes perfect sense that Alan and Amy wouldn't know that Cory and Topanga would have nowhere to go/live. Cory needs to be responsible for all of the things in his life, which sure as hell includes living quarters. I'm not saying that Alan deliberately let Cory become homeless to teach him a lesson, but it definitely makes sense that he wouldn't meddle or discuss Cory and Topanga's living situation with them, nor with Rachangela.

      Also, fuck Rachel.

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  8. Wait, I was just watching this episode and realized that the apartment situation is even more insane. It's a three bedroom apartment. The inhabitants, as of this episode, are Rachel, Angela, and Shawn. Why the fuck would Angela and Shawn need their own separate bedrooms? They're a couple, living in the same apartment, who have been dating on and off for years! So either Angela and Shawn are sleeping in two different bedrooms, which is insane, or they've just got an empty bedroom and are refusing to let Cory and Topanga live in it. What the fuck?

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    1. They did though? They let Cory and Topanga stay there for less than a day, but Cory and Topanga started eating their food, and Shawn and Angela said they were sick and tired of them, and bluntly told them to get out.

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  9. I loooove that Alan didn't cave. A lot of these kids think Alan should have let Cory and Topanga stay with them. Fuck that. They chose to get married, even when they don't have a fucking job, and Alan is paying for Cory's fucking tuition, and now Cory wants a place to stay? He's not a kid anymore, he's married. And then he wants his parents to sign a loan for $80,000 (sounds so cheap in 2015 don't it) for a nice little house, even though he doesn't have a job and his parents would have to pay the loan and mortgage. Cory's a freeloader, and I'm glad Alan put him in his place. If Cory was homeless, he would try his best to get a job, get a place, and that's what he needed. But he lucked into an apartment, and then was too spoiled to see what a starter place it could be. Shawn had the right idea.

    I'm glad the writers went this way. Still wish they all had jobs and paid their own way through school.

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  10. The whole "married couples dorm" thing doesn't make any sense to me. What kind of respectable university would offer such shoddy living quarters? Why would the one designated for married couples be the crappy one while the other ones are normal? In college, I lived in multiple dorms of varying quality (none were *that* bad of course), but the worst one was the freshman dorm because freshmen are lowest of the totem pole. Married couples are much more likely to be older, and are probably mostly graduate students. You'd think that because their needs are greater and their status is higher that they would get the better accommodations by the university. Also, do married couples have to pay for their own housing or can their parents continue to pay housing as part of tuition costs like they would normally do? If the latter's the case, then the parents are also getting ripped off by Pennbrook. They're sending in money to give their children housing as part of the whole college experience, and these children are being forced into subpar living quarters. Corpanga aren't slumming it, they're just being ripped off the university housing department.

    I'm not sure what a typically university would do about married couples, but for this storyline to make sense the university policy should have been that don't accommodate married couples, forcing Corpanga to find the cheapest apartment they can because of their lack of money. The idea of a run down apartment like that with angry neighbors makes much more sense if it was some random low-rent place near the university rather than a university-owned dorm.

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    1. I completely agree and glad someone pointed this out. It makes zero sense that a college dorm would look like this. If the writers wanted Corpanga to stay in a crappy apartment then just force them to move off campus.

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  11. The people who think Corpanga should have "pulled themselves up by their bootstraps" probably don't realize that it's only in the last century or so that it's become commonplace to move out of your parents' house as soon as you turn 18. It used to be that a whole extended family would live together, or at least very close to one another, and would function as a unit. Supporting each other, you know, like family? Cory and Topanga got unexpectedly kicked out of their apartment, and, the first time they went to Amy and Alan, didn't have a place to live. Alan turning them away, even just until they found a place, is unnecessarily cruel and totally out of character for him.

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    1. To be completely fair (and I meant to bring this up in the comment), I think it's worth mentioning that finding a place to live on such short notice, and on Cory's budget, was probably a fair bit easier 20 years ago than it is today. I don't think this plot would be written this way in a current show. However it's not enough to change my general feelings on the situation.

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