Primeval 4.06
Feb. 16th, 2011 12:41 pmI'm often a bit dubious about `wedding episodes' in action/adventure series. They have a bad tendency to stray into the realm of slapstick and the comedy of embarrassment which really isn't my thing and, even when they don't, the need to combine the sort of frothy light-heartedness which seems compulsory for wedding stories with an action plot often results in tonal awkwardness. Primeval mostly managed to navigate this awkward tight-rope but, in the end, I wasn't really convinced that the wedding was bringing much story.
Claudia Brown was one of my favourite characters of season 1 Primeval and, although I was initially rather put out by the broad-brush stereotyping of her reinvention as Jenny Lewis, I eventually became rather fond of that character too and was very sorry to see her go in season 3. It was nice to see her here but, of course, bringing her back just for the wedding to a man we had never seen before and who got maybe half-a-dozen lines in the whole story left me vaguely unsatisfied. We never got to see Jenny earn her happy ending and even that happy ending was rendered a bit hollow by how little we know about the groom. I'd have also liked to see Jenny taking the possible creature threat a little more seriously. When we last saw her she had developed beyond the point of thinking of a potential predator at loose as little more than an inconvenience to her social plans. It would have been nice if someone had noticed the wedding planner was missing, as well. Lester performing the ceremony was lovely though, despite being at, well, Primeval levels of improbability.
Apart from Jenny's appearance, this was another largely throwaway episode. In fact in general terms the most interesting stuff was happening away from the wedding with Becker and Jess and their rather misguided pursuit of Ethan. It must be said I'm becoming increasingly less enamoured of Ruth Kearney as an actress. Jess has been horribly short-changed in writing terms, but she actually had some pretty good material here and a chance to show that the character was more than a glorified receptionist and she still came across as girlish and a little silly.
In the end though, pleased as I was to see Jenny again, her happy ending was too sketchy and insubstantial to have any real weight and while I was grateful the episode avoided becoming a comedy, it also avoided doing anything else particularly interesting with the wedding. I suspect, if I wasn't a Jenny fan, I'd have seen little point to it at all.
Claudia Brown was one of my favourite characters of season 1 Primeval and, although I was initially rather put out by the broad-brush stereotyping of her reinvention as Jenny Lewis, I eventually became rather fond of that character too and was very sorry to see her go in season 3. It was nice to see her here but, of course, bringing her back just for the wedding to a man we had never seen before and who got maybe half-a-dozen lines in the whole story left me vaguely unsatisfied. We never got to see Jenny earn her happy ending and even that happy ending was rendered a bit hollow by how little we know about the groom. I'd have also liked to see Jenny taking the possible creature threat a little more seriously. When we last saw her she had developed beyond the point of thinking of a potential predator at loose as little more than an inconvenience to her social plans. It would have been nice if someone had noticed the wedding planner was missing, as well. Lester performing the ceremony was lovely though, despite being at, well, Primeval levels of improbability.
Apart from Jenny's appearance, this was another largely throwaway episode. In fact in general terms the most interesting stuff was happening away from the wedding with Becker and Jess and their rather misguided pursuit of Ethan. It must be said I'm becoming increasingly less enamoured of Ruth Kearney as an actress. Jess has been horribly short-changed in writing terms, but she actually had some pretty good material here and a chance to show that the character was more than a glorified receptionist and she still came across as girlish and a little silly.
In the end though, pleased as I was to see Jenny again, her happy ending was too sketchy and insubstantial to have any real weight and while I was grateful the episode avoided becoming a comedy, it also avoided doing anything else particularly interesting with the wedding. I suspect, if I wasn't a Jenny fan, I'd have seen little point to it at all.