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Six Feet Under recap: Bomb Shelter
(Season Four, Episode Eleven)
(original air date 29 August 2004)
THIS
WEEK'S EPITAPHS:
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Our fair Brenda: for her, the bell tolls.
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George goes underground ahead of schedule. Hallelujah!
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We remember Claire's generosity of spirit, and long
for its return.
Edward
Gordon Gorodetsky (1956-2004); Coco Grimes Gorodetsky
(1962-2004); Michael Timothy Gorodetsky (1992-2004); Amanda
Lynn Gorodetsky (1995-2004) I recently
saw an ad for a bumper sticker that said "minivans
are tangible evidence of evil." And here's a good
example of that: Mom, Dad, son and daughter are in their
state-of-the-art minivan, making their oblivious way through
the streets. The son is playing Mortal Kombat; the daughter's
watching a DVD; the dad is fiddling with his onboard GPS;
and the mom is talking on her cell phone. Guess what happens?
Yeah, they turn right in front of a semi: splat goes the
digital minivan.
Hey,
I'm just as big a fan of gadgets as anybody and feel lost
without my laptop, but not. in. the. car. Sheesh.
The
future of the American family Brenda and
Nate are talking about kids, especially cute kids like
Maya. Brenda thinks she and Nate could make a great kid,
but when he doesn't respond to that idea, she talks about
making dinner instead, especially the fact that it's not
fun to do that for someone who hates you. Nate says that
Barb (who's going to be visiting) doesn't hate Brenda,
and in return he gets a look that says "Are you high?"
But no, this time Nate's not high; he's just being optimistic.
What? Being high would make more sense for you, Nate.
If
you think that was paragraph was muddled, I agree: it's
because I'm high. Or optimistic. One of those.
Brenda
goes back to that ignored comment. Nate agrees that they
could make a great kid, but he doesn't want to rush. But
Brenda is in ticking clock mode and doesn't want to commit
to a relationship without the possibility of having a
kid. Um, who is this? That's not my Brenda. Did these
two move to Stepford between last week and this week?
The
Fisher kitchen George is nuts. I mean,
George has nuts. No, this is not another "play
with your rocks" joke! George has bought many, many
walnuts because they're good for you. Ruth thinks it's
weird, but is being her sweet self. And she has her own
agenda: she wants George to go with her to a "Loving
Couples" retreat. Surprisingly enough, George agrees
to do it:
George:
"'Intimacy and Healing'; 'Finding the New in
Your Partner'; and 'Tantric Love,' which you seem to
have circled. Hoping to add some spice to our sex life?"
Ruth: "It's becoming very
popular. Woody Harrelson, Jill Eikenberry, and Sting
are all practitioners. I mean, not with each other,
but you know "
George: "Ruth, if this is
something you'd like to do, I'd be more than happy to
go."
I
would be shocked by George's amenability, but I'm too
distracted by the idea of Woody and Sting getting Tantric
together.
George
also wants to know where the extra water is, for earthquakes
and other disasters. Ruth tries to brush it off, but George
is nuts. This time I'm not talking about the walnuts.
Art
school Billy thinks Claire's new stuff
is amazing. She's following up on the idea that she and
Russell had while they were high you know, tearing
up photos of Claire's face and putting the parts of the
photos on the corresponding real-life body parts. It's
cool. What's cooler is that creepy girl in the back of
the class, who keeps interrupting Anita because Anita
can't express herself as she tries to compare Claire to
David
Hockney.
Russell's
been sitting there fuming while Claire gathers up all
the compliments. He finally says something about how he
and Claire came up with the idea together. I think it's
pretty clear by now that I am very pro-Claire and rather
anti-Russell, so what I'm about to say may seem shocking,
but I can't help it: Russell's right. I mean, it's true
that Claire actually did something with the idea, which
is why I still say she's the artist, but Russell deserves
a little credit for contributing to the original concept.
Wait,
what the hell am I talking about? Never mind: Claire good,
Russell bad. And Billy creepy. The end. Oh and
David Hockney is gay. Is that significant?
The
bereavery Oh, apparently that family of
four (the Gorodetskys) left behind a fifth: he's about
17 or so. Wow, and he has no other family except a grandmother
who's in a care facility and an aunt and uncle he doesn't
really know. Yow. That's what Nate is thinking too.
A
law firm David and Keith are meeting with
the guy David attacked in the last episode, at the sushi
bar. The guy's name is Mr. Pasquese, and his lawyer is
helping him seek $500,000 in damages from David. That's
right, David: you're a tortfeasor!
Mr.
Pasquese is not happy he's lost his earring.
David:
"It was just a little hoop! Who wears earrings
now anyway??"
After
Mr. Pasquese and his rather cold-hearted lawyer leave,
David's lawyer asks whether the biting-the-ear thing is
true. What kind of lawyer are you? This is the first time
you've asked your client what he has and hasn't done?
David, you're so gonna lose.
A
restaurant Brenda and her mom are having
lunch and talking about Joe and Nate. Mrs. Chenowith
I love the way she laughs! orders a porterhouse
steak because she's feeling anemic. Then she excuses herself.
Ooh, foreshadowing!
Fisher
& Diaz The doorbell rings; it's a
guy sharing the good news about Jesus. George matches
the guy's evangelical extremes with environmental ones,
and it's actually enjoyable. Solitary nuts are annoying,
but two nuts pushing their craziness on each other is
funny.
The
restaurant A woman gives Brenda a message:
her mom needs her in the bathroom. Brenda finds Mrs. Chenowith
in a stall, buckled over, bleeding. Eeek.
Claire's
place Claire is making another photo/mask/sculpture
thingie and smoking pot. Ah, the life of an artist! Or
would that be the life of a slacker? The subgenius must
have slack!
Ruth
shows up with some laundry. She smells the pot and realizes
that she used to smell it on Nathaniel and thought it
was some sort of embalming fluid. Rather than freaking
out about the fact that Claire has it at all, she encourages
Claire to "use it like a spice."
And
then they have a little girl talk about George; Claire
is impressed by the Tantric thing. Then she sorta makes
a face as Ruth leaves. Hey, Claire, you should appreciate
her: to quote Margaret Cho, you have such a cool mommy!
Vanessa's
house Rico is boring and no longer welcome.
News flash.
David
and Keith's place David is having another
meltdown, this time about the possibility of having to
pay the one-eared guy so much money. Keith helps him breathe,
and then notes that it's kind of good that he and David
aren't married, because Mr. Pasquese has no legal way
to take anything of Keith's. Huh: good argument, Keith.
I'll have to remember that one.
Keith
also suggests that they talk to the guy away from the
lawyers. Well, go ahead: your lawyer sucks anyway.
The
Fisher TV Ruth and George are watching
a promo video for the Loving Couples thingie. David interrupts
and asks Ruth to come downstairs, where she finds a lot
really a LOT of water. Ruth says, "This
is a good deal more than I anticipated," and she
could be talking about the water, the walnuts, or George
in general probably all three at once. David says
the water can't stay in the basement, so Ruth suggests
the bomb shelter. George's face lights up the way Sting's
does when somebody says "Tantric love." And
now I've made myself sick again.
The
hospital Brenda's mom is no longer a woman,
at least not in her estimation now that she is
uterus-free. I guess I can see where she's coming from,
but I would rather find out for myself because I'm tired
of being ThermaCare's best customer. I should stockpile
ThermaCare patches the way George stockpiles... well,
everything.
Creepy
Billy shows up. Brenda is civil to him. She and Billy
try to say nice things to cheer their mom up, but Olivier
has the magic words:
Olivier:
"I look at you in your hospital bed, worn out
from surgery, and I selfishly wonder, 'how long must
I wait before I can fuck you?'"
Mrs. Chenowith: "Wow. Finally
somebody said something right."
Brenda: "It would have been
weird if I'd have said it."
Billy: "Not in this family."
I'm
laughing so hard, I think I'm now uterus-free!
Where
all the flowers have gone Claire, Jimmy,
Anita, and Russell ponder the beauty of flowers and know
they will never create anything that amazing. That's because
you're always goofing around instead of going to school
and cultivating your craft. Russell pisses Claire off
again, just being his Russelly self; she walks off, so
he follows and confronts her. She says she can't believe
he'd try to take credit for her work; he points out that
what he's taking credit for is helping to come up with
the idea. Again, I hate to say it, but he's right. It's
probably the hormones talking, now that I'm uterus-free.
The
hospital cafeteria Billy and Brenda chat
and eat. Billy reveals that he slept with Olivier when
he was in college. Brenda and I both wish we didn't know
that.
Brenda
talks about having kids. What is this mommy trip? It doesn't
make sense, unless it's some sort of search for stability.
Brenda's had very little regard for time and biology up
to now, so it just seems so... tired. One uterus-obsessed
storyline per episode is plenty.
The
bomb shelter George can barely contain
his excitement. Ruth says David used to hide in the bomb
shelter. I think maybe he still does, or ought to, psychologically.
A
restaurant One-eared Pasquese is a filmmaker.
He likes to put black men in his films. You can guess
which black man he really likes, and where he wants to
put him.
Keith
rolls with the idea and decides it's a good way to get
the lawsuit dropped. The sad thing about this is that
I saw it coming from a mile away: for a show that's generally
so ground-breaking, there sure are a lot of gay male stereotypes
flying around. And, um, a lot of gay males.
Claire's
place Jimmy wants to know whether Russell
really had something to do with the collage-mask idea.
Claire gets all petulant and defensive. Jimmy doesn't
notice because "everything's derivative of everything."
Mostly he just can't wait to tell Claire that he talked
to a gallery guy who's interested in Claire's work. Gallery
space in exchange for sex? Well, there are worse arrangements.
Vanessa's
house Rico shows up, dismisses the babysitter,
sits down, and watches TV. Oh, and pisses me off. Again.
Just being his Rico-y self.
Nate
and Brenda's house Barb and her husband
are there, talking about chickens and Lisa. It makes sense
in their minds, I'm sure. Then they bring up the "why
were those ashes so chunky?" topic. Rather than play
it cool, Nate spills the truth and tells them about Lisa's
burial.
Guess
what? Barb freaks out.
Brenda's
been in the kitchen during this little exchange; she comes
back to get the general idea and looks like she'd rather
be a sex addict again than listen to Nate try to defend
his own sanity.
Barb
and her husband storm out. Bye!
One-Eared
Pasquese's house Keith does the deed.
Mr. Pasquese offers to give Keith a break from post-traumatic
David whenever he needs it. Keith firmly declines. Bite
his other ear, Keith!
Vanessa's
house Vanessa, who has found out what's
up from the babysitter, calls Rico and tells him he has
no right to be there and that she's not coming home. Okay,
but maybe you could send somebody else over to kick Rico
around a little?
Trouble
in paradise Brenda feels shut out of Nate's
life because he didn't tell her about Lisa's final resting
place. I know I'm breaking all the rules in this recap:
but I can't side with Brenda on this one. The thing between
Nate and Lisa was personal.
Vanessa's
house Blah, blah, Rico, blah, kids, whine,
blah.
Nate
and Brenda's Barb and her husband are
back, threatening to take Maya away. Nate starts screaming
and Maya starts crying. It's all rather dramatic until
Nate compares himself to Job: that actually makes me laugh.
You're sleeping with Brenda, you idiot: you have nothing,
NOTHING, to complain about!
The
gallery The guy wants to show all of Claire's
work. Yay!
The
funeral The remaining Gorodetsky is talking
about pain. Nate imagines that the kid is really talking
directly to him, telling him that Lisa was just the beginning
and everything's going to go wrong. Not if you don't have
an onboard GPS and two kids and a minivan.
The
bomb shelter George is talking about generators
while Ruth talks about sex. Whose going to win? Who cares?
Bedtime
for Bonkers Nate tells Brenda he just
can't have another kid right now. Brenda rolls over and
pouts. I can't decide who to feel sorry for, so I go with
Maya.
Keith
and David's Keith gets home and rambles
about his day while David sits at a table and stares into
space. Keith finally notices and asks what's wrong; David
says the police called, so he has to go identify the guy
who's been haunting his dreams and thoughts and every
move he makes. I don't even wanna see the guy on my TV
how is David suppose to handle this? And why do
we have to wait two weeks to find out?
IN TWO WEEKS ON SIX FEET UNDER: George
goes farther round the bend; Keith encourages David to
fully face his attacker; Rico apologizes; Claire and Russell
fight some more; Nate tries to find out what really happened
to Lisa. That's right: another sunny, funny season finale!
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