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Six Feet Under recap: In Case of
Rapture (Season Four, Episode Two) (original air date
20 June 2004)
THIS
WEEK'S EPITAPHS:
- Dearly
beloved, we are so over Rico.
-
We are gathered here today to mark the passing of Keith's
pride.
-
If you plug the drain, does it not bleed?
-
Ashes to ashes and dust to dust: the secret to Brenda
is not simple lust.
Dorothy
Sheedy (1954-2003) Lots of blow-up dolls
are being blown up by two guys, and the jokes are too many
and too easy. I expect more from this show. Well, at least
one of the blow-up dolls has a penis -- why settle for just
a fuck toy if you can have a gender-bending fuck toy? The
guys, who will never be anyone's fuck toys, are filling
the dolls with helium so they can "float from the rafters"
at the Adult Video News awards, which are apparently "the
Oscars of porn." How clever. But I guess if you have
to have balloons, they might as well be interesting ones
-- and you probably don't have to worry about latex allergies
if you use blow-up dolls. Um, at least not for the usual
balloon-related reason.
The
guys play around with the balloons a little (yeah, it's
still too easy) and then haul them off in a pickup. They
slam on the brakes to avoid hitting a skateboarder, and
of course the netting that's covering the dolls comes a
bit loose, and several of them fly on up and out.
Cut to a station wagon with a bumper sticker that says "I
brake for the rapture." I like the ones that say "In
case of rapture, can I have your car?"
You
can see where this is going. The woman at the wheel of the
wagon (whose glasses are as bad as Jenny's on The L
Word) is listening to a radio program about Jesus and
thinking about the rapture, which of course is also another
word for a really good orgasm. And there are those sex toys
floating in the sky. She thinks they're a bunch of angels,
so she gets out of the car and runs right out into the street,
where she is promptly flattened by a car that doesn't brake
for the rapture or the enraptured of any sort. I shouldn't
laugh.
Remember
that movie The Rapture with David Duchovny and
Mimi Rogers? That was freaky, partly because Duchovny had
that really bad mullet. There were cool horsemen in the
sky in that movie though, not some stupid blow-up dolls,
and the whole thing was kind of complex and thought-provoking,
rather than just, well, easy. This scene should have been
accompanied by that Blondie song "Rapture" to
give it an edge.
The
Fishers' kitchen table Nate's kid is awfully
cute. Everyone says that about kids, but look at her! She's
cute.
Ruth
comes in, carrying a rock. She points out the new table.
Oh no! Not a new table! They've always had that old table
-- what can this possibly mean? That change is inevitable?
That the heart of the home is taking on a new shape? That
people like to shop for new furniture sometimes?
So
the table is Persian, and Nate wants to know how that's
different from Indian, which was his guess for its origin.
Ruth knows, of course, that Persia is Iran, India's India,
and Nate's full of himself. She's talking in that sort of
defensive yet offhand way that she reserves for her children
when they're not really seeing her -- and Nate clearly doesn't
see her at all right now, because otherwise he would ask
why the fuck she has a big rock in her arms.
We
find out that the table is not just Persian: it's also George's,
because he and Ruth have been married for three months and
so it's high time he took over the kitchen. Three months?!
This show does that fast-forward thing way too often: they
should change the name from Six Feet Under to Six Months
Later.
Ruth
explains the rock: it's called a horse. Nate tells Maia
that "where Daddy comes from, it's called a rock."
George saunters in and fills in the details: apparently
a horse what you call a rock that was wedged between the
walls of a fault line. Wouldn't it make more sense to call
it a wedgie?
Claire
is there now, and she knows what a horse is: she states
its definition clearly and without irony. George is impressed
and proud.
Claire: "George has been telling
me all about his rocks. Who would have thought they could
be so fascinating?"
George: "Aren't they?"
Claire: "It's like going to
school in your own home."
Can
there please be a special sarcasm Emmy for Lauren Ambrose?
Because she rocks. Or she horses, I guess.
Ruth
suggests that Claire take some photos of George's "keepsakes";
maybe they would inspire her since she hasn't "done
her art" in a while. Claire asks whether it looks like
she needs to be inspired; Nate says yeah.
Arthur,
a.k.a. Enunciation Man, walks carefully into the room and
apologizes for breathing. He'll get his cottage cheese and
take it up to his room. What will you do with it there,
Arthur? Maybe I don't want to know.
Arthur
notices the table; he's not sure it works in the kitchen,
but it's beautiful, and he identifies it as Persian because
he's not a flaky angst-riddled widower who doesn't know
that a horse is a rock.
Downstairs
at Fisher & Diaz I can't remember what
these rooms are called, where David and Nate meet with the
bereaved to make arrangements. I think they should be called
bereaveries.
Dorothy
Sheedy's husband is not terribly bereaved, though; he's
big on the God thing too, so he says it was just Dorothy's
time and he's not really very curious about death or dying
or blow-up dolls. Nate doesn't get that at all: why doesn't
everyone whose wife died mysteriously behave just like Nate,
and go out and scream at the dawn? So Nate starts to give
the guy a little lecture about grief and how to do it properly.
David kicks him out of the bereavery.
The
refrigerator Arthur is putting his name
on his condiments. I did that once when I had five roommates,
but only after someone else started it. And sometimes I'd
buy something really weird or gross and put one or another
of my roommate's names on it. I'm trying to distinguish
myself from Arthur, here: can you blame me?
Art
school Claire is at the back of a huge lecture
hall; it's dark and the professor is talking to his notes
rather than to the class. Another bored chick, Anita, says
hi to Claire -- actually, she recognizes Claire and compliments
her work. They bond in their boredom:
Claire: "How much of this gothic
stuff can there be? Some of it's really beautiful, but
it's all kind of starting to run together in my head."
Anita: "I hear that. If I see
one more bleeding Jesus, I think I'll hurl."
Claire: "Maybe if you hurl on
a bleeding Jesus, you could get an independent study credit.
Or a grant."
Anita: "Yeah, I'm sure the NEA
is just dying to hand out money to Christ-defacers."
Claire: "The NEA is dying, that's
for sure."
Okay,
it's official: I wanna be 19 again so I can go to art school.
With Claire.
Anita
and Claire talk some more and laugh; they make plans to
go to an open mike thing the next night, where Anita's friend
Edie will be doing a punk/performance art/whatever kind
of thing. Claire casually says "why not?" but
she's really jumping up and down inside, because she has
a cool new friend who likes to talk about Christ-defacers
and the Incredible Hulk's green package.
The
basement at Fisher & Diaz Nate is having
a fit about the improperly bereaved customer. David lets
him ramble. Rico says something about God, but I think Rico
probably sees blow-up dolls when he looks at paintings of
angels, so nobody's very interested.
Safeguard
Protection Agency Keith is at a job interview;
he wants to be a security guard to the stars. One of the
interviewers is trying hard to be cool, and the other is
not trying hard enough. Keith comes across as sincere and
strong and nervous: I'd hire you, Keith! Well, not to be
my security guard, but maybe you could be my housekeeper.
How do you feel about French maid uniforms?
As
Keith gets up to shake the cool interviewer's hand, he knocks
over a bottle of water. He starts to freak, but reins in
his temper because the cool interviewer guy is looking for
that kind of thing. Who knew Keith was even capable of that?
Next thing you know, the Fishers will do something unthinkable
like get a new kitchen table.
Infinity
the Stripper's apartment Rico, what the
hell are you doing there? You're giving her gifts? Are you
"keeping" her? Fine, stay there for a while so
I can go comfort Vanessa.
A
restaurant Brenda is revealing her new plan
to Joe. She's going to be a therapist: she was raised by
crazy people and is crazy herself, so what could be more
perfect? I have no problem with it. I have a history of
being attracted to my therapists anyway, so I'll take Wednesdays
at 5:00.
Joe
wants to know what day this is. It's Sunday, Joe: that's
why we're watching Six Feet Under. Do try to keep up. Oh,
I see: he and Brenda are counting the days until they can
have sex. Is this like Kissing Jessica Stein, when
Helen and Jessica decided they'd do it on day 10? Yeah,
sort of, except Brenda and Joe are going six times as long,
because Brenda has issues. Apparently she also has an overbite,
according to my friend Jerome. I hadn't really noticed,
but I guess he's a little more observant about things like
that than I am, despite being equally twitterpated by Brenda.
Who can help it? She's got that something.
Joe,
on the other hand, bugs me. I suppose I'm just jealous.
I always did want to play the French horn.
Nate's
hallucination The dead woman, Dorothy Sheedy,
experiences another sort of rapture: she climbs right on
top of Nate and fucks him, because that's her personal heaven.
Nate, maybe you should go see Infinity the stripper.
David
and Keith's place Keith wants to know if
he looks okay in his spiffy suit.
David:
"Yes, sir! You are all that and a box of cookies."
Keith: "You have to say that?"
David: "Yeah. I kinda do."
David
hopes that Keith will be guarding Denzel Washington or Russell
Crowe, or preferably both. He's being sweet and supportive;
he fantasizes about what they'll be able to buy with Keith's
superstar money. Keith says maybe they'll buy a house, and
then he and David get all handsy with each other. These
two are going to be the only stable couple on the show,
aren't they? Relatively speaking, of course.
A
swanky hotel Keith delivers some sort of
case to his co-workers. They're impressed, or maybe just
surprised, that he expresses no curiosity about what's inside:
Cameron Diaz's bling. Now that he's delivered that, he gets
to stand around and be on "lobby duty." I'm glad
they're paying you a lot, Keith, because that looks hella
boring. And those other guys are wankers.
The
Persian kitchen table George is eating yogurt
from a container marked "Arthur." Uh oh.
Arthur
decides to tell George about the history of FormicaTM
because he misses the old Formica table. George tells Arthur
he's got it all wrong. I could give you the details, but
they're not terribly fascinating, although Ruth thinks they
are. Arthur says something bitchy about the yogurt and goes
back to his room; or maybe it's a formicary, which has nothing
to do with Formica even though it looks like it should.
The
swanky hotel bar Keith's coworkers are talking
about which asses they'd tap and all the fine asses they've
had. How old are they? Never mind: the important thing is
that after sitting there for a bit looking nervous and bouncing
his knee, Keith joins in. Keith, how long have
you been out of the closet? This is no time to go back in.
Brenda's
couch Brenda and Joe are making out. She
stops him and makes him go home because her 90 days of rehab
aren't up. She tells him he's not 17, so he can wait, and
that just this once she wants to get to know someone before
she sleeps with them. That's right, she said "them,"
not "him," which is grammatically incorrect but
gender-ically right on! Go home, Joe: I can outlast you.
I can wait 90 days or 900. Never mind that Seinfeld episode.
Shakey's
Pizza Rico is not talking to Vanessa, nor
is he eating his greasy pizza, and Vanessa wants to know
why. I'm sure it has nothing to do with the fact that he's
a lying, heartless, self-centered asshole and doesn't deserve
you.
Open
mike night Look, it's geeky Andrew from
Buffy the Vampire Slayer! He recites a pathetic
little poem about a clitoris and the "crack of the
world," and it makes me giggle because it's Andrew.
Then Edie (Mena Suvari) takes the stage and declares a new
rule: no more "angry poems or songs with clitoral or
vaginal references in them" unless you actually have
a clitoris or a vagina. It seems the corollary, however,
is just fine:
Edie:
"Here's my poem, dedicated to every guy I've
ever been with:
Your penis is kinda nice / Too bad you're attached to
it."
Then
she does her performance art thing. It's a bit... jumbled,
but she does it well, so it kinda works. And we can tell
this by the look on Claire's face, which is definitely inspired,
and clearly moved, and more than a little turned on, and
simply happy. So The L Word went the grand
Stendahl syndrome route; Six Feet Under takes a
different road, preferring to show us one beauty-hungry
heart and its piecemeal victories, and ultimately managing
to be art while talking about art.
Dorothy
Sheedy's viewing Nate peers into the casket.
The dead woman waggles her tongue at him in a lascivious,
hilarious way. The husband shows up just in time to rescue
Nate from his hallucination and then get another lecture
about the proper way to grieve. David has had enough, so
he whisks Nate off behind a curtain:
Nate: "Don't expect me to feed
them lame shit like it's gonna get better, because it
won't. People need to know that."
David: "Well, maybe some people
aren't ready for that."
You're
both right. Let's move on.
A
boy and his dictionary Arthur looks up Formica
and confirms that he was right and George was wrong. I don't
buy this: if Arthur were really the geek he seems to be,
he'd have consulted Formica.com,
not a dictionary.
Open
mike night Claire thinks Edie's performance
was great, but Edie's not hearing it: she says it was self-indulgent
and she doesn't really know what it's about. But she also
says, "I figure: do the work, stay out of the results."
Is that pretentious? I dunno; it's kind of interesting.
Yeah, but I just want to like her because I want Claire
to like her. I'm so shallow.
Edie
asks Claire a bit about herself, and takes her to task for
not picking up her camera in months, because the best time
to work is when you're having a tough time and "your
guts are all raw." I thought that was the best time
to increase the amount of fiber in your diet?
Edie
tells Claire that if her work sucks, the worst that can
happen is that "some asshole will make fun of you,"
and life is too damn short to worry about that. I think
I really do like Edie.
The
office space at Fisher & Diaz Nate is
having trouble coping with Lisa's death, and every death
that comes through reminds him of it.
Nate:
"I keep thinking it's gonna get easier."
David: "No one ever said it
gets easy."
Nate: "Not easy: easier."
I
think it probably doesn't get easier either: you just get
used to it. I mean, I haven't lost a wife or the equivalent,
so I'm not entirely sure, but I've lost close family members
and friends and pets, and that doesn't get easier. Your
guts just get less raw eventually. And then your art starts
to suck, apparently. So you turn on HBO and knock back a
few vodizzies (see footnote) and
the pain just goes away!
But
Nate just can't get it out of his head -- all that death
-- so he quits his job, because he doesn't believe that
anything he does or says helps anyone. Maybe it doesn't,
at least not right away: but is that really the point?
And
you know what I can't get out of my head now? That song
"Can't Get It Out of My Head" by ELO. Dammit.
David's
stunned that Nate has abandoned him, but I think we all
knew it was going to happen eventually. Anyway, David, this
way you can hire someone who won't keep going off on the
clients and telling them how to grieve.
Brenda's
bed Brenda's reading in bed while someone
somewhere makes orgasm noises. Brenda knows it's Joe, so
she calls him; he's masturbating while thinking of her.
Big deal: who hasn't done that? She finds it flattering,
though, or something, so she tells him to come over before
she changes her mind. He crosses the courtyard in his birthday
suit, and yeah, it's kinda funny, especially when he skips
a little and when he wipes his feet on the mat.
The
Persian table David tells Ruth that Nate
quit. Ruth is serene about it: she points out that David
hasn't been happy with Nate's work lately anyway, and it's
probably for the best if Nate doesn't really want the job.
George chimes in:
George:
"Did you know that the average American changes
careers seven times during his or her lifetime?"
Ruth: "Hmm."
David: "Is that information
supposed to be useful in some way, George?"
George: "It's just a fact."
David: "Ah."
The
funeral service Nate leaves. On the way
out, he passes the dead woman's son, who's leaning against
a tree and sobbing. Nate strolls right on by him with a
sort of freedom beginning to glimmer on his face.
Inside,
Rico's cell phone rings: it's Infinity the stripper, wanting
him to come over later. Fuck you, Rico. Fuck. You.
Rico
Unsuave tells David he has to go because Augusto has an
ear infection. I hope you get an ear infection, Rico --
no, make that a urinary tract infection. And a kidney stone.
Oh, and crabs. Scabies. Lice. Chronic flatulence. All of
that and a bad haircut.
The
Fishers' kitchen sink Claire switches on
the garbage disposal. Up bubbles a hell of a lot of bright
red blood. She screams, and it's funny and actually kind
of pretty -- the red blood against the white porcelain sink.
It reminds me of that movie The
House That Bled To Death, brought to me by Elvira,
Mistress Of The Dark, on some late-night UHF horror showcase
when I was in high school. (Sorry. Vodizzies make me nostalgic.)
Down
in the basement, the blood's bubbling up from the floor
drain and David's growling about the $38K he spent on the
plumbing a couple of years ago. Claire rushes in with her
camera because it's gross and amazing, and because Edie
has "inspired" her. Mmm hmm.
The
park Nate sees his dad sitting on a park
bench. His dad waggles his eyebrows at a cute mom who's
also on the bench. That's right, Nate: find another woman
so you can fail to appreciate her. And please keep seeing
dead people. That'll be the whole new life that you and
Maia need.
Two
kinds of plumbing The plumber has made
short work of the floor drain and the bad PVC pipe. David
thanks him for "coming so quickly," so the plumber
says that's what he's there for, and the meaningful look
on David's face would help me fill in the blanks if I hadn't
already noticed how tight the plumber's coveralls are. Why
does this sort of thing never happen to me? Oh, that's right:
my plumber is a balding married straight guy who doesn't
even wear cute coveralls.
Brenda's
bed The sparks aren't exactly flying. Joe's
trying hard, and so is Brenda, but it looks like something's
missing -- a little thing like chemistry, probably because
Brenda is larger than life and Joe is twerpy. It's funny,
though, especially when Joe says "I really like you,
Brenda." Dork.
The
basement There's still blood all over the
floor, and now there's a plumber on the floor too, on his
knees, and David's awfully happy about it.
George's
ears Ruth is trimming George's ear hair.
Did I need another reason to be a lesbian? George says he
doesn't think Ruth's children care from him much. Oh? Maybe
if you didn't have so much hair in your ears you'd have
discerned that they actually despise you. But Ruth says
sooner or later they'll love him as much as she does. That
would be a hell of a lot: I don't think I'd even trim Brenda's
ear hair, if she had any.
A
sidewalk Nate talks to his dead dad about
how much bullshit comes with the funeral director gig. Then
he stops whining and admits this: "I'd give anything
if Lisa hadn't died. But, then again, when she was here,
I just wanted to be free..."
Never
mind all that: look at that cute kid!
Nate
and his cute kid stop to pick up a parcel on the doorstep
before they go inside their house. You know it's never good
to get a parcel on your doorstep, especially not if your
doorstep is one of death's hangouts.
David
and Keith's place The happy homo couple
are drinking beer and eating Chinese food. Keith talks about
his new job a little, and then they have the most enlightened
conversation anyone's ever had, on TV or otherwise:
David:
"I got a blow job today."
Keith: "You did not."
David: "I did."
Keith: "From who[m]?"
David: "From the plumber."
Keith: "You got a blow job from
the plumber?"
David: "His name was Andy."
Keith: "A white guy?"
David: "Yeah. He was good with
a wrench."
Keith: "Did you return the favor?"
David: "No."
Keith: "Well, you'd better not
think you're gettin' out of having sex with me tonight."
David: "Okay. But I might need
you to talk about water rams and hand snakes."
They
chuckle. I love them!
The
Persian table George opens the parcel that
was on the doorstep. Inside is a plastic container, and
inside that is some shit. Or, as George puts it, feces.
Ruth
wonders who would send such a thing. I think maybe his name
rhymes with Le Morte D'Arthur -- but that's what we're supposed
to think, so it could be anyone. Maybe it's a message from
beyond. Maybe it's performance art. Maybe it's a random
act of senseless defecation.
Claire
tells everyone to hold still until she gets her camera.
And with that, I think the new table has finally been properly
initiated into the Fisher household: from Persia to poop
in one fell swoop.
NEXT WEEK ON SIX FEET UNDER: Women
take pity on woeful Nate; Keith uses a celebrity loo; Claire
wonders just which way Edie swings; Arthur and Ruth clear
the air; Joe tries to be cool about the sex thing; Rico
continues to irritate the feces out of me.
*
vodizzy = what I call the tantalizing concoction
of vodka, preferably 3,
plus Izze, preferably
the new blueberry flavor.
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