Hawaii 5-0: A
little constructive criticism, offered with love.
There are character deaths that have broken my heart. Tara,
Jenny Calendar, and Buffy’s mom on Buffy
the Vampire Slayer. Fred on Angel. Sun and Jin on Lost. Michelle Dessler on 24. Cpt. Roy Montgomery on Castle. “Twinned” John Crichton on Farscape, to name a few. And there is
one thing that ties the deaths on these shows together: the writers earned my
grief by investing in these characters and giving me reasons to care about
them.
Which leads me to a death that, even with the fine acting of
Daniel Dae Kim, only left me cold - Malia Kelly. It’s clear now she was a
character brought in just so the writers could kill her off. A glorified red
shirt. Apart from what the character could ultimately do for the “bigger than
ever” Season 2 cliffhanger and the “huge” Season 3 premiere, they didn’t care
about her at all.
It sums up for me the essence of what’s wrong with Hawaii 5-0, and why some fans who loved
Season 1 are having a difficult time remaining invested in Seasons 2 and
beyond. The episodes that stand out in Season 1 all embraced character. At the
core of Hawaii 5-0, underneath all
the action and explosions and flying bullets, was heart. Danny’s love for his
family. Chin’s separation from and sacrifice for his family. Kono’s connection
with Chin. Steve’s relationship with Mary and his growing friendship with
Danny. Each character got episodes that peeled away their layers, exposing what
drove them, what made them who they were.
Was the writing perfect? No, it sure wasn’t. There were plot
holes a mile wide, and they re-wrote their own history with both Steve and
Chin’s backstories. But I was willing to forgive them because when it comes to
drama, plot is secondary to character development. And they were delivering
that in spades.
Then came Season 2. Danny’s family all but disappeared from
the canvas. We didn’t see Grace until episode 7, and it was an excruciatingly
brief appearance. She didn’t even show up at Chin and Malia’s wedding. Chin got
engaged and married in about the space of two episodes. And then Malia
disappeared until the season finale. Kono, in disgrace and suffering for a
criminal act she committed with
Steve, was adrift and mostly off canvas for the 1st four episodes.
She had a few scenes with Chin, but Danny and Steve were completely absent, on
screen, from her life. Did Steve feel guilt that Kono lost her job? We don’t
know. If he did, we never saw it. Most of her undercover work happened off
screen, her storyline completely invisible until it fitted the needs of the
script in Episode 5. Later in the season, out of nowhere Kono and Adam Noshimuri
(a criminal) began a relationship. It was an unlikely association for a girl
who had seen her cousin’s career ruined by alleged corruption. A relationship
that was pulled out the magician’s hat to serve a plot function in the Season 3
premiere.
Throughout Season 2, important character moments were only
happening off screen, the audience left to conjecture and make sense of it themselves.
The show’s focus became the case of the week and the McGarrett family
conspiracy its driving force. A show I used to watch for character had become
ninety percent plot and stunts. My enjoyment was largely based upon Scott Caan
managing to do so much (non-verbally) with the very little he was given.
The episodes and scenes that do stand out were all about
character. What made 2.10 so amazing wasn’t the pyrotechnics. It was Danny
nervously jiggling his leg next to an airplane right before leaving for Korea.
It was Jenna realizing she’d betrayed her friends for nothing. It was Danny
lingering over Jenna’s body. Danny finding Steve and the look in Steve’s eyes
when he realized he’d been saved. It was Steve refusing to relinquish his gun
in the helicopter.
And then there’s 2.15 and Danny with a gun to his head
having to choose between his daughter and killing an innocent man. The look on
Danny’s face when he finds Grace. The way Grace clings to him. And the way
Danny can only helplessly whisper he’s sorry.
This. Right here. It’s why I love this show. It’s not big guns and
explosions. It’s character driven story. The writers have so much material to
play with. And they choose not to.
The Season 2 finale and the Season 3 premiere are so full of
plot holes, implausibility and cartoonish action that one viewer ordered fans
of the show to “check their brains at the door” in order to enjoy it. The
problem is, I don’t want to watch a show where I have to be brainless in order
to like it. If I’m going to give lazy writing a pass, I better dang well be
getting great character moments in return.
And instead of that, I got the infamous “BooBoo.” That Steve
would call Danny BooBoo is laughable. Why? Because it's cutesy and silly and "precious" and we've never seen Steve be these things. I’d buy Peter Lenkov would call Danny
Williams Boo Boo (a sidekick little bear that runs after the big bear Yogi
constantly whining and pleading with him not to get into trouble) but it was
completely out of character for Steve to do so. As a viewer, I was insulted.
And writers who insult their audience don’t keep that audience for very long.
If the 1.8 in the ratings for the Season 3 premiere is any
indication of what’s to come, Hawaii 5-0
is driving its viewers away in spades. Does this make me happy? Absolutely not.
It makes me incredibly sad, because a show with such a wonderful cast deserves
better than what they’re getting from their writers and their executive
producers.
All great stories begin and end with characters. I hope
someone in the writer’s room for Hawaii
5-0 remembers that. And soon.
1 comment:
Great write-up. Too bad no one remembered. :-(
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