"The Human Factor."
Yes. Just...yes. After a brief departure down mediocrity lane, Castle comes back with this little nugget of joy. I mean, was it a flawless diamond? No. But that's okay, because that's not what I expect from Castle anyway, and I enjoyed the figs out of it.
So, because I have to talk about it, I'll start with what I loved and then move into the fascinating little dilemma Beckett has been dropped into. Because that's what I do here apparently: talk endlessly about Beckett while not getting back to Sherlock despite best intentions.
But before I get to a drawn out, angst-filled analysis of Beckett, all I want to do is just mention some of the stuff that made me happy. Starting with this:
endless replay value, right here |
There's something great about the idea of this fully grown man-child in sweats and a hoodie huddled on his floor at six or seven in the morning playing the equivalent of tanks, battleships, and duckies in the tub within (intentional) earshot of the woman he plans to continue sleeping with. While Castle's more childlike tendencies have been a source of irritation for me in the past (see: late s4, which I will probably one day devote a post to), scenes like this remind me of the great joviality with which he approaches life, which is part of what attracted me to him to begin with. Further, they help to reinforce the notion put forth by Montgomery forever ago, that Castle really does bring out the best in Beckett, that he allows her to experience the careless, uncomplicated joy which she deserves but I'm not entirely sure she bothered to engage in often after her mother's death, before she met Castle. The "Rise of the Machines" moment was hilarious just on its basis, but part of what makes it so fun for me is the fact that Beckett is able to let go of that intensely serious and devoted cop mentality -- which so often underscores her characterization, and which was, to some degree, exaggerated this episode for the purpose of building its climax -- to think up and execute something as ridiculous as a midnight Terminator attack.
I could read into this scene further, ramble for another six hundred words about what I think this says about Beckett, but I'm not going to do that (at least, not here, right now), because ultimately the only thing I want to say about this scene is that I loved it because I loved to see Beckett so happy, and Castle so charmingly gullible. The thought of Beckett strategically placing Castle's toys in the bedroom and smuggling the controller in with her to bed is also just an extremely amusing one, and I wanted to mention it.
What's funny is that the other portion of the episode that I loved does have to do with Beckett's intensely serious and devoted cop mentality. Or, to be more general, just her intensity in the episode as a whole.
This takedown. Ugh, just perfection. |
But I enjoyed these plot elements immensely, regardless of the obvious intention behind them, because those intense qualities which Beckett exemplifies and Stana Katic plays up so well are the things which initially got me so interested and invested with her. Because Beckett is nothing if not intense, powerful, and in command. She's a badass, straight up, and this episode catered to how much I enjoy seeing that quality in her, and so strongly at that.
"Where do you see yourself five years from now?" |
Beckett went into the NYPD because of her mother, because she felt a deep-seated need to gain closure for herself and for everyone like her, to make sure no one has to suffer with unanswered questions as she did. It's been well over a decade since Beckett committed her life to this path, and in that time she's finally been able to gain the answers she sought for all those years, yet she's found herself utterly unable to enact any justice on the man she knows is responsible. Beckett expressed a lot of rage early on in the show over the idea that she would find the man responsible for her mother's murder, and she would have to "watch him cut a deal," but she's not even been able to get that. Bracken is above accusation or prosecution. Further, for the most part, the only results of her crusade have been a lot of deaths and near deaths (from her having to kill Dick Coonan (after his threat to kill Castle) to Hal Lockwood nearly killing both the detectives she's responsible for (Esposito and Ryan) to Montgomery's death to Beckett herself getting gunned down at his funeral). This must at least to some degree cast her career as a detective under black light, given how steep the toll has been for so little a result. I'll make a point of saying that I doubt she views the whole of her career this way, given how much she believes in the work she does and how strongly she adheres to the identity it imparts, but the thing about Stack's offer is that it allows her to do much the same thing she's doing now, just away from an environment filled with so many ghosts and bad memories, and with decidedly higher stakes.
Castle, in the typical fashion of TV shows, unwittingly encapsulates Beckett's frame of mind through his little comment, "Where one person might see roses another may see a chance to move on from an old life and onto a new one." Stack's offer is an opportunity for her to move on, to officially close the chapter on this extremely violent and volatile part of her life, which is something she's expressed a desire to do several times throughout the show. And here, at least, her out has arrived, and she's now standing at a crossroads.
I'd venture to guess that part of the reason Beckett is shown to be so happy with Castle in this episode is to impress upon us the joy that she has managed to find in her life, and at that, a simple, uncomplicated joy, with all the comfort and warmth that comes with being in an apartment so bathed in soft, golden light. Because while her quest has led to a lot of pain, it's also led to the development of a found family in the form of the precinct and her relationship with Castle. Stack's life is one of "total autonomy," that of the lone wolf. I think if Beckett didn't feel any attachment to the precinct, her team, or to Castle, she would've taken that job right there in that room, without need for a second conversation, but since she does she now she has to make a choice: give up the team and the reputation she's built within the NYPD, move away from the city she's lived the vast majority of her life within, and make the decision to once and for all let her mother's case (and Bracken) go in the pursuit of something new.
It's an extremely interesting dilemma for me to consider an answer to. By moving away, Beckett will have a chance to fully realize that part of her that is an intensely devoted cop, but in doing so she will become a lone wolf, traveling around the country (and, possibly, elsewhere) for her cases. She will lose her found family, and she will more than likely end up losing her ability to have these quiet nights on Castle's couch with a glass of Zinfandel and a fire warming her back. She will, to some degree, become someone like Jordan Shaw ("Tick, Tick, Tick..."/"Boom"), sacrificing depth, stasis, and stability in her relationship with Castle for meaning in her work. Gone will be the days of their shared, uncomplicated joy.
On the other hand, by remaining a detective, she potentially dooms herself to living the same life she's been living all these years for many, many more, to stagnating in the position she achieved so early in her career (as we know she's the youngest women in the NYPD to make detective), since she has no desire to become the paper pusher that a higher position in the force would demand. She loves her life as a cop, and she believes in it, but after twenty years of doing the same thing, when she, as Stack points out, is capable of achieving so much more? More to the point, by remaining in New York, by remaining in such close proximity to Bracken and to so many private hells, does she risk once again being brought to the precipice, and will she this time find herself swallowed by it -- or worse, will she lose anyone else inside it, or die herself? After all, her leverage over Bracken is only precarious at best, and if something new was to surface in the case, it's possible that her safety may once again be called into question, and she may not be so lucky as to survive a second time.
Neither are the best of paths, though because of the nature of the show, I already know she will opt to remain a detective. Frankly, I hope this is the case, because if she were to leave, getting her position back wouldn't be nearly so easy as it was for someone like Elliot Reid in Scrubs, if possible at all, and I would be annoyed by the fakeness of it if she were to quit, move out, and move up, then return after a period and reintegrate without much difficulty. I would be surprised if her leaving didn't trigger movement from Ryan at least (who, if I remember, has recently aired concerns given his wife and expected child), and that would more than likely domino Esposito into moving on as well. If Beckett were to accept Stack's offer, it would utterly shatter the format the show has been built on, and while I can see them going that route (e.g., at the end of this season's finale, she says she is taking the job and moving, and over the summer between seasons she builds her new life in DC; in the s6 premiere we open with her alone in some starkly decorated apartment, staring at her silent phone, waiting maybe for some word from Castle, with whom her relationship has become extremely strained, and when it rings she gets excited but quickly deflates upon realizing that it's the AG...and so on), I can't for a moment see them keeping such a drastic change in how the show is written. I can't think of any show that could truly pull that off (*maybe* Buffy, post s7), and I can't imagine that Castle would attempt to.
But despite the logic with which I of course must approach plotlines like this, I'm enjoying turning over Stack's offer, because I think, as with her mother's death and a bullet to the heart, it represents for Beckett at least the potential for a massive change in her life and how she chooses to define herself. It may not be the change I necessarily want to see, but that doesn't make it any less significant for either of us to consider.
Seriously, though, Beckett, just stay in New York. Just shoot Bracken in the face. Fall down the precipice. Shatter the mirror. You know you want to. |
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