This show
was part of my Andrew Rannells filmography tour – strange to get into Girls for one of the guys, but while I
found the show amusing enough, I loved
Elijah. Even acknowledging my admitted
bias, my enjoyment of Girls was often
directly proportional to how often Elijah was on my screen, and I greatly appreciated
his increasing presence over the course of the series.
Initially
introduced as an ex-boyfriend of Hannah’s, we first see Elijah in the context
of an awkward conversation (very much par for the course for that show.) Hannah has gotten back in touch with him to
discuss STDs, but he, mistakenly assuming she’s already heard rumors about him,
“confirms” that he’s now dating a man.
Hannah is of course blindsided, and the cordial get-together quickly
devolves into arguments and sniping.
Their paths cross a bit more over the course of the first season, and
somehow, by the end of season 1, it makes a weird sort of sense when
in-need-of-a-roommate Hannah suggests he move in with her. After the first look we get at them, it
doesn’t seem like they’d make good friends, but their own particular brands of
awful are surprisingly compatible together.
Because,
truly, Elijah is awful. I know that’s an
odd thing to say in a Favorite Characters post, but it’s undeniable. He’s vain and selfish, frequently unreliable,
and mostly aimless (when he tries to get back into acting, his initial plan is
just to “fuck [his] way up to the middle.”)
While he doesn’t shy away from telling his friends hard truths that they
avoid about themselves, he definitely takes satisfaction in feeling superior to
them, even when his own ducks aren’t in any sort of row. That said, even though I’d likely want to
avoid an Elijah in real life, on TV, he is a riot to watch. He gets most
of the best lines and delivers them with an infectious sort of relish that
makes it hard to dislike him no matter how self-absorbed, petty, or bitchy he
gets.
As the
person who pretty much emerges as Hannah’s best friend, Elijah occasionally
functions as her Magical Gay Advisor – again with the hard truths, pointing out
the problems she refuses to deal with.
Just as often, however, he’s the devil on her shoulder, and together,
they indulge in irresponsible impulses, affirm one another’s delusions, and
encourage one another’s worst tendencies.
I like that Elijah is so often a complete mess who simply carries
himself as if he has it all together (it’s not even that he’s trying to fake
it; it’s that he can be so utterly self-assured despite being a mess.) He’s
a little hedonistic, has some definite arrested development going on, and is
hugely self-impressed, and it’s just endlessly entertaining.
I also
like that, while so much of Elijah’s character is just fun, he also has some
depth to him. He displays an unexpected
level of vulnerability that bubbles to the surface at crucial scenes, mostly
related to his romantic entanglements.
For a character who’s such a hilarious one-liner machine, I’m never
prepared for those moments when he suddenly feels so young and so exposed. There are a number of good ones (explaining
his sugar-daddy situation with George to Marnie, trying to take things to the
next level with Dill,) but the scene that gets to me the most is when, at
Hannah’s urging, he addresses the way Pal frequently belittles him. With his start-and-stop dialogue, it’s
immediately evident how scared he is to do anything that might jeopardize his
relationship with this guy he really likes, even if he’s bothered by how Pal
treats him. And then, the second Pal
shrugs off his concerns with a dismissive remark about why Elijah would ever
take advice from Hannah, you watch him silently crumble, only just managing to pull it together because he’s still
so desperate to make it work. For a
character that usually walks around with such a high opinion of himself and
sees most everybody else as utter disasters, it’s so important to get scenes
like this with him.
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