A blog about television by TIME’s TV critic James Poniewozik.

JFC Watch: A Wizard Did It?

motelweb.jpg
HBO photo: John P. Johnson

With two episodes remaining in the season, I'm going to try to observe a moratorium on the overall question of whether John from Cincinnati is good or bad. Masterpiece or disaster, genius or folly, I'm into it too deep now; it's either building toward something at the end of the season or it's not, and we'll see where it stands when the dust clears (or doesn't). If you're sick of the show, the Bookmarks menu is at the top of your screen, and no offense taken.

Last night, though, I was able to put my finger on something that's been bothering me, which is that I have a hard time buying most of the characters' reactions to John. As in: shouldn't they be a bit more freaked out? Bill, for instance: the man believes in telepathic parrots and has heard John speak to him in the voice of his dead wife, a woman he has no conceivable reason to have known. And yet, when John begins delivering his "Sean will soon be gone" message, it hardly seems to enter into his mind that there could be some kind of paranormal forces at work through John; he goes into police mode and immediately treats it like a potential abduction. Likewise Freddy, though he's experienced a vision about John--there's a lot of that going around now--and previously recognized him as a "shapeshifter."

The episode seemed to give some hints as to why; talking to Cass about events she doesn't remember, John says, "We don't remember my Father's Word." The characters seem to be in sort of a fugue state regarding John, forgetting some of his more remarkable appearances, in the flesh or in their minds, like his sermon of two episodes ago. It's an interesting concept and would add to the dreamlike nature of the show, but to be charitable, it's hard to dramatize; it's hard to tell who knows or remembers exactly what about John, and so hard to judge whether their interactions with him are believeable. (And it's not like they forget altogether, since even Butchie can dredge up from his smack-ravaged brain that John has some kind of extraordinary powers.) To be less charitable, it's pretty close to "A wizard did it"--an easy way to explain the inexplicable.

But I'm getting close to violating my moratorium already. To end on a positive note, I continue to love the absurd comic scenes at the motel, like the squabble over the shuffleboard layout--"The bottom tier is '10 Off.' You don't reward failure, Ramon"--and Barry's scene with Phantom Sean in the motel bar was a beautiful moment. And if someone is marketing a T-shirt with John's ASCII-art divine symbol...

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... I totally want to buy one.

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Comments (7)
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  • 1

    Yes, I'm actually glad there are only a couple of episodes left. I find that instead of simply enjoying the segments I'm spending most of my time trying to analize them while watching them for deeper hidden meanings. That's ok for a few episodes but when no light begins to appear on the horizon it becomes more and more difficult to warm up to the characters or the plot line. There is very little so far to identify with or even relate to. Mystery is one thing. Density is quite another.

    richard

  • 2

    The "sermon" in the motel court was at least partly a supernatural vision, because Bill was there, playing his harmonica. BUT Bill was also in the van, asleep, with John. He woke up not remembering the sermon, but said it felt like he had been playing the harmonica.

    Still confusing....

  • 3

    It's getting a little bit more challenging to know where and when John is... when he appears to people. An occurence we think is happening in real time might or might not be just a vision, like the trip with Cass to the ropes course/stunt tower with the tiki statues. Maybe that was just a vision on her part... maybe she never left the hotel room. After all, it was where John stood mute for most of the previous episode... maybe this whole thing is moving to a shared hallucinatory experience by this group chosen by god/other deity.

    John's earlier appearnce to Cissy doesn't seem to have cooled her jets at all... As Butchie said, "she wakes up pissed off." That doesn't give Ms. DeMornay much to do other than be a white tornado, blowing in and out of scenes.

    Still, it makes me laugh and think. I could do worse.

  • 4

    Cool website, John, thanks for allowing us in. :o )

  • 5

    Uh... you're welcome. It's just my work website; I don't have a myspace page... too old for that demo.

    I should have really freaked you guys out by altering the website a little... try it now...

  • 6

    Forgive me if this info has been posted otherwise, but HBO has some interesting reading posted as an "insider's blog"

    http://www.hbo.com/johnfromcincinnati/inside/season1/episode08.html

  • 7

    John: your tweaking of the website brought out a big laugh from me! Good for you!

    Also, thanks for the HBO post, that helps a little. But being a director myself, I always feel that if I have to put "director's notes" in the program to help the audience, somehow I've failed somewhere along the way.

    (myspace sucks, by the way.)

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