Re: Wilfred
Posted: Thu August 14, 2014 3:40 am
Wilfred was not a perfect show, but that was a perfect ending for what it was.
Turns out Ryan has not one, but two, batshit crazy parents. Stands to reason he'd be batshit as well. Projects this personality onto a real dog, and then the real dog dies, yet comes back, finally answering Ryan's question about what Wilfred is - all in his mind. It always had to be that. Anything else would have been ridiculous. I thought it was great when his hot ass sister asked what would make him happy, and he decided to just embrace his mental illness.
Some other observations:
That image of the real Wilfred lying there at the end of part one is about the saddest image ever, especially since nearly everyone has lived it.
"Many Rivers to Cross" is such a beautiful song. Perfect choice for a sad montage, but the montage itself didn't work. I think the main problem was there was dialogue.
Mimi Rogers does a dynamite Mary Steenbergen, but I really wish she and Dwight Yoakum would have been able to see their roles through. In a show about an elaborate hallucination, characters' changing appearances were unfortunate.
I liked the full circle suicide attempt and especially the line, "Good-bye girl next door."
I have one friend who watches this show, so it's a fairly lonely good-bye, but I'm glad I get to have it.
Turns out Ryan has not one, but two, batshit crazy parents. Stands to reason he'd be batshit as well. Projects this personality onto a real dog, and then the real dog dies, yet comes back, finally answering Ryan's question about what Wilfred is - all in his mind. It always had to be that. Anything else would have been ridiculous. I thought it was great when his hot ass sister asked what would make him happy, and he decided to just embrace his mental illness.
Some other observations:
That image of the real Wilfred lying there at the end of part one is about the saddest image ever, especially since nearly everyone has lived it.
"Many Rivers to Cross" is such a beautiful song. Perfect choice for a sad montage, but the montage itself didn't work. I think the main problem was there was dialogue.
Mimi Rogers does a dynamite Mary Steenbergen, but I really wish she and Dwight Yoakum would have been able to see their roles through. In a show about an elaborate hallucination, characters' changing appearances were unfortunate.
I liked the full circle suicide attempt and especially the line, "Good-bye girl next door."
I have one friend who watches this show, so it's a fairly lonely good-bye, but I'm glad I get to have it.