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Six Feet Under recap: Falling Into
Place (Season 4 premiere)(Original air date 13 June
2004)
THIS
WEEK'S EPITAPHS:
- Here
lies Lisa, or at least most of her.
-
We fondly remember Nate's marriage, such as it was.
-
Let's have a moment of silence for Russell's seemingly
cool cynicism.
-
Arthur, your casket has been ordered.
Bruno
Baskerville Walsh (1951-1972) Trippy, man.
A bunch of college students are dropping acid and seeing
how beautiful life can be when you're fucked up. The main
one says that "the motherfucking moments, man, they
just keep on coming" -- and yeah, that's true, but
they are a bit less overwhelming when the light is not all
bendy and twisty around you. He leads his friend Cindy,
or Sandy, or something, up onto the roof, and then promptly
jumps off it, and seems to sort of watch himself die from
the vantage point of his suspended acid-addled animation.
You
know, when I was about 8, my sister made me promise her
that I'll try acid before I die. From the looks of it, I
could end up trying it right before I die.
Brenda's
apartment Brenda is tending to Nate's bruised
and battered face. He apologizes for showing up at her door,
but shouldn't you try to be with your soulmate when you're
desperate and broken?
The
Fishers' kitchen table Claire wants to know
when she gets to self-destruct, or when David does, or when
somebody besides Nate does. I dunno, Claire, I think maybe
your "self" is not quite as much in your way as
Nate's is in his way. But I get your point.
Claire
says she's "so sick of everything being so fuckin'
awful all the time." David gives her a look of true
sympathy that makes me wish, and not for the first time,
that he were my big brother. Claire tells Keith goodnight
and gives him and David a sarcastically sweet smile as she
goes.
We
get this delicious bit of dialogue:
Keith:
"I feel like I've been eating this cake for 12
months."
David: "I wasn't gonna say anything."
Don't
mock me like that! Do you know how hard it is to wait so
damn long for these shows to start up again? No, you don't,
so eat your cake and shut the fuck up.
David
tells Keith he can stay over, if he's too drunk to drive
or "whatever." Yeah, it's the whatever that keeps
you two together. They bicker some more and end up laughing
at each other.
Brenda's
apartment Nate needs to sleep, and Brenda
tells him so, but he's in too much shock and pain. He says,
"It's all so fuckin' impossible," but it really
isn't, Nate, and you of all people should know
that, with the kinds of things you see every day.
Fisher
& Diaz Keith and David are cuddling
in David's childhood bedroom. David says it's strange that
he's just been blown in the same bed where his mother used
to read him The Runaway Bunny. Right on cue, they
hear George and Ruth moaning in bed. David hides under the
covers. I'd be diving out the window, I think, but I guess
it is George and Ruth's wedding night, after all.
Arthur
and Claire are rather disconcerted by the whole thing too.
In
the master bedroom, Ruth marvels at the fact that she's
married again, because she never though she would be. Well,
maybe you're not: this guy is so shady, he probably worked
something out at that tacky wedding chapel so he won't have
to bother with another divorce when he's ready to leave.
George
says something deceptively enlightened about living his
life just the way he's wanted to, and whoever doesn't like
it can go fuck themselves. Ruth doesn't look terribly impressed,
with either his philosophy or the fucking. But she does
look like she's in love, so okay, whatever.
Brenda's
bathroom mirror Brenda's brushing her teeth.
I think I could watch her do that for hours, but I could
watch her do almost anything for hours.
She
gets into bed with Nate, intending to comfort and hold him,
and of course he soon starts to want more than comfort.
So she lets him do whatever he wants, but I don't think
she has any illusions about what that really is: just another
form of comfort, because sex can have all kinds of healing
effects, and can even be a way to express grief and move
through it. Yeah, I could be reading too much into it, but
Brenda's face is telling me a lot. She loves Nate, so she's
helping him any way she can, and that's part of what makes
her so gorgeous. Yeah, I know, the sex addict thing complicates
it, but she still seems to know exactly what the hell she's
doing.
The
next morning, they sum things up:
Brenda:
"Nate..."
Nate: "You don't have to say
it. I know."
Things
are still like that between these two, aren't they? Unspoken.
Ineffable.
Or
not. They say a frosty farewell, but maybe that's because
Nate can't feel much of anything right now.
The
Fishers' kitchen table Claire, Keith, and
David are laughing about the noises of the night before.
Keith gets David some more coffee, and it's a grand gesture
that both Claire and David notice.
Nate
comes in with his bashed-in face and bad news. He explains
that Lisa drowned, and that it took the lab a while to figure
out that it was her.
David:
"She just... drowned?"
Nate: "That's what they said.
No evidence of anything else... bad."
Keith: "But she could swim,
right?"
Nate: "Yeah. It just... looks
like she drowned."
Yeah,
we're all thinking it, Keith.
Claire
asks Nate what happened to his face; he just says he got
in a fight, and rolls his eyes at himself.
George
and Ruth saunter in, aglow with their newly wedded bliss,
until they see Nate's face and hear the news about Lisa.
Nate and his mom share a nice hug.
Rico's
house Vanessa wants to know why Rico got
home late the night before -- you know, when he was with
Infinity the stripper. He makes up some excuse. You suck,
Rico. Yeah, I know: so does Infinity.
On
the road to get Lisa Nate asks David whether
he and Keith are back together. David says no, he was just
being polite when he told Keith he could spend the night.
"Polite and horny," says Nate. Snicker.
Nate
bares his soul:
Nate: "I never really thought
Lisa and I would be together forever. I always knew something
would come along and end it. I just didn't want it to
be me. You wouldn't believe how much time I wasted thinking,
'Please don't let it be me that fucks it up.'
David: "And it wasn't."
Nate: "No. Good for me."
A
flashback Lisa says Nate smells funny, and
it's because of the cavity fluid. She says that when she
dies, she doesn't want any of that stuff in her; she just
wants to be buried in the forest somewhere, with nothing
between her and the earth that made her.
Nate:
"You don't want to end up in a graveyard."
Lisa: "Nate, the whole world's
a graveyard."
I
know people didn't like Lisa much. But I've been a Lili
Taylor fan for quite a while, and I think she conveys wide-eyed
trust and simple belief better than anyone, and that's what
she did just then.
Brenda's
apartment Brenda's horny horn-playing neighbor,
Joe, arrives with Chinese food. Brenda's been crying, and
he can tell, so she just says, "A friend of mine died."
She and Joe share some awkward, yet companionable, salt-and-pepper
shrimp. I can't believe that's the same guy that was in
Mulholland Drive (which, by the way, includes some
of the hottest girl-on-girl kissing I've ever seen).
Brenda
says she'll eat the shrimp; she eats everything but mushrooms.
I'm with ya there: the texture is so icky! And they taste
like dirt, which is what Joe says.
Santa
Barbara David goes into the... the morgue
or wherever, to pick up Lisa's body. The mortician starts
to talk about how messed up the corpse is, and says it was
one of the worst ones he's ever seen, so David interrupts
and says "this is my sister-in-law." The guy says
he thought David was there on business, to which David says,
"I am, and this is my sister-in-law, and you shouldn't
talk like that about anybody." I almost wish Nate had
gone in instead: he would have decked the guy. We get a
brief glimpse of Lisa's body, and it's sad.
Back
in the van, the smell is almost too much for Nate and Dave,
so they roll the windows down and get the fuck outta there.
Fisher
& Diaz Lisa's sister Barb is nice. She
has two scary-looking twin sons. Well, they're sort of cute,
but they're also sort of Stephen King-y. Lisa's parents
are even more frightening, though: her dad seems to only
be able to speak in clichés, and her mom is an Atavan-popping
one-person pity party.
Lisa's
niece, Michaela, bonds with David, who asks her if she wants
something to eat. She says, "Not me. But I bet the
rest of them do." This kid looks like she could grow
up to work at Fisher & Diaz, and also looks like she
could be the kid sister of Christina Ricci or Jena Malone,
and coming from me those are all compliments.
Rico's
house Vanessa asks her sister Angelica to
move out. Angelica blames Rico, of course, but I think this
time Rico's actually innocent, even though he does look
awfully pleased.
Claire's
bedroom David is there to escape from all
the people downstairs. Claire is trying to "break her
eye open" -- to learn to see things differently, without
all the "tired associations we've made all our sad
lives," so she can be a better artist. She's looking
at a book of Nan
Goldin's photography. Good stuff.
Claire
asks David whether he's back together with Keith, and more
importantly, whether he wants to be.
David:
"I think I could be happy going back, if I could..."
Claire: "Break your eye open
a little."
David: "Yeah. If we both could."
Claire: "Is it that hard?"
David: "You tell me."
Claire: "Yeah. The hardest fuckin'
thing in the world."
David: "Yeah. It is. What about
you: are you seeing anybody? Have you got a thing for
anybody?"
Claire: "Are you kidding? Ugh.
Everyone is an asshole who ultimately fucks you over.
I am totally done with that. I'm thinking about becoming
like a crazy hermit recluse."
David: "You won't always feel
that way."
Claire: "Yes, I will."
The
Stephen King-y twins come to get David; he's wanted downstairs.
Claire thanks him for listening to her complain about her
"cushy, alienated life." Claire rocks.
Downstairs
at Fisher & Diaz Lisa's mom doesn't
care what Lisa wanted: she's putting her daughter in the
family mausoleum in Coeur d'Alene. David tries to get everybody
to compromise. Lisa's mom pops some more pills. Barb tries
to respect Lisa's wishes, sort of. Nate just can't be there
anymore, so he leaves. Michaela is watching from afar.
A
phone call Claire calls Russell from her
car. Russell is on his way to have coffee with some "absolute
idiots who think they're revolutionaries because they just
went to their first flash
mob." Hey, I wanna try one of those! I guess I
should move to a cooler town.
Claire
tells Russell about Lisa. What can you say to news like
that? Russell doesn't really know either.
The
basement at Fisher & Diaz David and
Nate argue while Arthur alternately eavesdrops and tries
to excuse himself. Nate wants to bury Lisa under the stars,
and of course David knows that's against the law and they
could lose their license. Fuck the law!
A
church Rico wants to confess his sins. I
guess that's good, but he's still an idiot, because anybody
who can't see how beautiful Vanessa is doesn't really deserve
a second chance. Also, when did Catholics start doing face-to-face
confessions? I would think the anonymity would be a good
thing. But at least this way the priest can see that although
Rico may be feeling guilty, he's not really feeling sorry.
Brenda's
apartment Brenda calls Nate. There's a book
and a highlighter on her desk: what's she studying? She
asks Nate when Lisa's funeral is, and whether she should
go to it. Nate says no, probably not. Brenda says Nate should
do whatever he needs to do. I need you to tell me what you're
studying, Brenda, and whether you're available to go for
coffee, right about now. I hate mushrooms and like sex:
we're meant for each other!
The
funeral service Lisa's sister Barb says
some truly beautiful things about Lisa's inability to understand
the borders that most of us think keep life manageable:
yeah, that was the thing I liked about her, even if borders
were the thing Lisa couldn't maintain where Nate was concerned.
Barb closes her comments with this: "Lisa didn't believe
in borders, and that's why I know that wherever Lisa is
right now, she's everywhere. She's everywhere and that means
she's home."
Lisa's
mom cries openly in a very fake way. I cry surreptitiously
in a very real way. Then those spooky twins, and their father,
sing that Crosby, Stills, Nash, & Young song, "Teach
Your Children." It's kinda perfect.
Elsewhere,
Claire tells Russell that she had an abortion, because she
needs someone to talk to. He gets possessive and insulted
and eventually says this stupid thing:
Russell:
"It's fucking sad and it's fucked up. I mean,
did you cry? Did you?"
Claire: "I cried more than you
have ever cried in your whole life."
Russell,
I used to think you were kind of cool, but you're being
a jerk. And that ponytail is absolutely hideous.
Speaking
of hideous, George pokes his head in to make sure everything's
okay. Go away, George.
Outside
Rico offers to go to the crematorium first
thing in the morning to pick up the ashes, but Nate says
he'll handle it himself and have them do it right away.
David says, in a plotting, suspicious way, that he'll see
Nate in about an hour.
A
street Rico drives by the strip club. You
still suck, Rico.
The
couch David tells Keith that he doesn't
know what he'd do if he lost him. Keith says he'd find somebody
else, but David doesn't want anybody else, and neither does
Keith.
David:
"Then why do we...?"
Keith: "Keep fuckin' it up?
David: "Yeah."
Keith: "Because we're human?"
David: "If there was a way to
start over... if there was actually a way to start over,
I'd do it, I really would. But is there, even, really
a way to start over, really? Just even in general. I was
talking to Claire, and she's trying to see in this new
way, you know, for her art. I don't know how it happens;
I don't know where the new comes from. You know, the genuinely
new. God, I don't."
I
don't either. This show was kinda new, though, when it started,
and it's still pretty good, so maybe the answer is to watch
more TV.
They
decide they can find the genuinely new together, but not
if they have to sit through more therapy, and only if Keith
quits his job. They joke about having just sort of gotten
married, and it's cute. Keith gives David the remote --
another grand gesture. Yay!
Outside
Brenda's apartment Neighbor Joe is feeding
stray cats. Brenda says she appreciated his stopping by
the other night, and then gives him a kiss. Hmm.
The
basement at Fisher & Diaz Nate is boxing
up some ashes. He presents them to Lisa's parents, who are
grateful. Lisa's dad spits out another meaningless platitude.
Michaela
the goth girl tells David she's glad he's in her family.
David's good with kids the way I am: he treats them like
they're people, rather than aliens.
Nate
tells David there's some stuff to clean up in the basement.
David says he'll take care of it.
Falling
into place And then Nate goes, out on the
road. We go back to David for a moment: he's cleaning up
the mess Nate left when he boxed up the ashes -- which were
actually those of Bruno Baskerville Walsh. Trippy!
So
yes, Nate is returning Lisa to the earth that made her.
While he does, we see Claire, still trying to break her
eye open; and David, going back to Keith's house, to try
to make it a home; and Ruth, watching George sleep.
Nate digs the grave, and it's hard work and not quite right,
but there Lisa is, under the stars. He struggles to get
her out of the body bag; it's horrible to hear her thump
against the dirt walls of her new home. Nate sobs, and in
the cold morning light, he screams.
I'll
say it again: I know people didn't like Lisa much, and maybe
Nate didn't really love her either. But in his desperate,
stark grief, Nate has done right by her, in his own way,
and I think it's enough.
NEXT WEEK ON SIX FEET UNDER: Brenda
reveals that she's studying to become a therapist; Claire
looks to Mena Suvari for inspiration (and who doesn't, really?);
Keith guards the stars; Nate gets even more dissatisfied
with his life; and there's something horrible on the kitchen
table.
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