SLIGHTLY OFF THE MARK
Gilligan should have died.
Hold that thought, I’ll get back to
it.
When I was young I couldn’t understand
why girls were attracted to bad boys. Then I finally figured out that this
phenomenon isn’t limited to me not being able to get a date: It’s a part of the
very fabric of our society:
We like bad
stuff.
By that I
mean, we like good things that are bad, and we like bad things that are fun. An
example: Put a can of Mountain Dew and a glass of water in front of me. Now, do
I know which is better? Sure I do – unless it’s from Love Canal, water’s much
better for me than any soft drink. So which do I pick?
Yep.
Because
Dew’s not good for me, but it’s good.
Drugs, alcohol, scary movies, driving fast, voting for morons – you name it. We
almost always choose to do the wrong thing, take in the wrong thing, or watch
the wrong thing.
We also
like bad things that are fun. Racing? We want crashes. Football? Big hits.
Political debates, or live shows, or anything featuring Charlie Sheen? We’re
wishing for a train wreck. And what kind of movie has been hugely popular for
decades? Disaster films.
Which
brings me to television.
I was happy
to learn that The Walking Dead was coming
back to TV for another season. The show, based on a popular graphic novel, is
about a zombie apocalypse.
Zombies!
Apocalypse! Two fun things! Together!
In my home
we enjoyed the first two seasons (except for the lame second season finale),
which were filled with great characters, gripping plotlines, mind-blowing
effects, and icky stuff. About half the cast got killed off, and the rest spent
most of the time on the run from the flesh eating undead. Good times.
I got to
thinking about that, and reflected on the other TV shows I’ve enjoyed over the
years. It’s a fact of story writing that you have to put your characters
through the ringer – otherwise you have no story. Of course, “the ringer” is
relative.
When I was
a kid, I loved to see Godzilla stomp on Tokyo, and big Irwin Allen disaster
movies. I graduated to the same thing on TV: on Buffy the Vampire Slayer I learned the plural of apocalypse. More
recently, half the shows I watched seemed to have regular characters getting
killed or almost killed, as on Bones
and Castle, while the other half
involved fighting off the end of the world, as in the dueling apocalypses on Fringe and Supernatural. Anything else is just a Walking Dead in the park.
So, what
does this have to do with Gilligan?
Well, I
wondered if this pattern might hold, so I took it all the way back to my
childhood TV watching. At first I thought it didn’t hold on some shows: In what
way is The Brady Bunch a disaster,
except when the dog ran through some kid’s science project?
But what’s
the setup of this show? A widow meets a widower and they get married. What
horrible thing happened to their former spouses? Murder most foul? Aren’t the
kids traumatized? How do they deal with eight people (and Alice) sharing one
bathroom? I guarantee you, ten years after that series ended half the kids were
in therapy or jail, and the other half had already suffered some horrible doom.
Which
brings us to Gilligan’s Island.
A comedy,
right? Light laughs, fun for the whole family.
Oh yeah?
These
people were caught in a horrible storm, then slammed onto an uncharted island
with nothing but the clothes on their back, a hold full of luggage, and
apparently the Professor’s entire lab. Every week they’re attacked by
cannibals, giant spiders, or mobsters, or the island sinks, or a volcano blows,
or Gilligan accidentally hands an atomic bomb to a gorilla. (Come to think of
it, this show was the original Lost.)
Willy Gilligan, the so-called
naïve, innocent first mate. (Yeah, he had a first name.)
Think about
it. Was there ever a more calamitous disaster than Gilligan? Every time the
castaways came up with a way to escape that cursed island, Gilligan screwed it
up. I mean, he destroyed the boat with what he claimed to be waterproof glue. The whole boat! After that, it was a
series of disasters as he drove away would-be rescuers and broke every item
that might have gotten them off.
Was he a
screw-up? Or a saboteur?
I maintain
that Gilligan wasn’t happy with his life in the real world. Here, on that island
named after him, he was put down and unappreciated … but he was also the only
real worker (unless you count Mary Ann), and the one who would save everyone’s
lives even as he kept them from getting away. They depended on him. They needed
him.
The man was
a criminal mastermind. The others? Merely his playthings.
And not
smart playthings, either. Let’s face it: They should have killed him by the end
of the first month. Smothered Gilligan with his own pillow, late at night as he
slept. One trip to a shallow grave, and within days they’d have jury-rigged
some piece of equipment that would have summoned help.
Yes,
Gilligan should have died.
Since he
didn’t, he provided my very first experience with a true disaster story, the
kind of thing you watched every week to see what new hardship would slam down
on the poor characters. Ever since then – thanks to Gilligan – I’ve been one of
those enthralled by bad things happening to good people.
Still
another case of me picking bad things. And now, I’m thinking remake. Check this
out:
The Walking Dead – on Gilligan’s Island.
Just wait
and see.
Or even, The Walking Dead – on Gilligan’s Island.
ReplyDelete28 days later.
See? The whole concept gets better and better.
DeleteThe Walking Dead on Gilligan's Island would be good. I can see it now...Gilligan could always be the bait escape. Yeah. That would be good.
ReplyDeleteHugs and chocolate,
Shelly
Yet somehow he'd come out of it alive ...
DeleteI never could understand why Ginger dressed in a sequined ball gown for a three-hour tour. Other hardship - nothing but Maryann's coconut cream pie for dessert.
ReplyDeleteSomething tells me they'd get sick of coconut cream pie awfully fast.
DeleteThis was hilarious, but I almost blew coffee out of my nose at "voting for morons"!
ReplyDeleteI tells it like I sees it! By the way, I hope you weren't drinking that crappachino I wrote about earlier.
DeleteNever saw the show, but I know enough about it to ask who takes that much luggage out for a couple of hours?
ReplyDeleteThe rest of them really should have gotten together and agreed, "Gilligan must die. Who draws the short straw?"
It's one of those shows that became so iconic that everyone knew at least a little about it.
DeleteSorry. The Walking Dead move to slow for me.
ReplyDeletePoor Gilligan - or was he? hmmm...
It's not the speed -- it's the numbers!
Delete