*Season 3 arc spoilers.*
This episode is pretty good, maybe my favorite of season 3
so far. While kind of busy—there are a lot of plots going on, and not all of
them get their due—things come together nicely on the whole and I like some of
the developments we see here.
Hope’s latest initiative is school uniforms, which almost
everyone hates, naturally. Jean is back together with Jakob (she discovered
after their breakup that she was pregnant, and they decided to make a go at
being a family,) and he and Olla have moved in, which Otis does not adjust
well to. Maeve has a tough but important encounter with her mom. Otis and Ruby
go on a double date with Eric and Adam, which is unexpected all around. Jackson
gets closer with new student Cal.
The biggest detractor to this episode is that there’s just so
much happening. Each of the plots mentioned above have at least one or two
subplots attached to them, and several storylines bleed into one another. As
such, there isn’t really a clear theme or direction for the episode, even
though there are a couple stabs at one.
But while the whole is messy, there’s plenty of good stuff
to be found in the individual stories and scenes. I appreciate that Olla’s
perspective isn’t lost in the shuffle of the big move—she gets important scenes
with both Jean and Otis concerning it, we have another reference to her
friendship with Adam, and there’s a strong scene where we see Lily getting too
distracted to really be there for her girlfriend. In Maeve’s storyline, there’s
an excellent confrontation between her and her mom in which Maeve acknowledges
the complicated factors at play here. Despite the many ways her mom has let her
down, she recognizes that addiction is an illness, saying, “I know it’s
not your fault and I know you’re trying, but you haven’t beaten it yet, and you
might not for a really long time. That doesn’t mean I won’t always love you.”
I haven’t mentioned Cal yet, though they’ve been present
since the start of this season. This is their first chance to really get
highlighted, though. Jackson and Cal have been circling each other a bit since
he first noticed the new kid, and today, both give each other support while
they’re having a tough time. Jackson opens up about his struggles with anxiety,
and Cal, as a nonbinary person, feels very uncomfortable in the new
uniforms—Hope relents to Cal’s desire not to wear a skirt but insists that
their jacket and trousers be too fitted for their comfort. I welcome this new
character and always appreciate storylines for Jackson, but I do worry that the
budding relationship between these two will be somewhat at the expense of
Jackson’s friendship with Viv. (And they do appear to decidedly be
friends at this point, which I find a little surprising. I would’ve bet money
after season 2 that they were going to get together.)
The moment Eric texted Otis about looking forward to their
double date, my eyes about bugged out of my head. Otis/Ruby and
Eric/Adam? It seemed a trainwreck in the making, which is of course the reason
this plotline is happening. And to be sure, the story is full of unexpected
turns. Ruby shows Otis parts of her life that he’s never seen before, Adam
drops a couple of wild bombshells, and even the very idea of Otis taking Ruby
to a bowling alley is surprising. This storyline has fun, sweetness, and a
little drama.
One issue that’s coming up this season is that, so far, Eric
and Adam’s relationship seems to be more about Adam than it is about Eric.
Although Eric reacts to and wrestles with things, Adam is the main mover in
their plots: Adam needs to come to terms with being bi, Adam needs to work on
his communication skills, can Adam make nice with Otis and Ruby? This puts
Eric/Ncuti Gatwa in a less dynamic position, frequently playing second fiddle
to Adam in their storylines, even as Eric’s personality is certainly more
out-front than his. Given that I was relatively pleased early in the series to
see how much agency and plot focus Eric had as Otis’s Black/gay best friend,
it’s disappointing to see him kind of take a backseat to his white, more
masculine boyfriend.
Don’t get me wrong—Gatwa still does well with what he has. I
get a kick out of Eric voguing as he gets ready for his date, and he has a
delightful reaction to a wild situation with Adam’s mom. And he has fantastic
non-verbal acting in a scene where Adam’s mom is introducing him to someone. As
she defers to Adam about the nature of their relationship (it’s been
established that she most likely knows they’re boyfriends, but Adam hasn’t come
out to her,) Eric’s smile fades to hear Adam call him a “friend,” and then he
has to quickly pull himself together to pretend it doesn’t bother him. A
devastating moment, beautifully played.