Goodbye to the “Gilmore Girls”
When public ask me why I like “Gilmore Girls” so much, I can never help but think “why not?”
You start with a show full of smart, funny and beautiful women, which I’ve always found to be a good thing. To that add a cast of supporting characters that are very quirky but rarely forced, the best ensemble since “Northern Exposure.” And, finally, throw in the very intelligent writing (for the first five seasons anyways) of Amy Sherman-Palladino and hubby Daniel Palladino, and you’ve got me hooked.
Tonight at 8 on the CW, the show will finally end its run after a fairly phenomenal 154 episodes. It’s probably gone on two years too enlarged already, but I’ve stuck with it until the end, and will be sad to see it go. Here, in the Gilmores’ honor, are my 10 favorite episodes, in only chronological order.
3. Kill Me Now
This was the episode that first got me hooked when daughter Rory (Alexis Bledel) and mom Lorelai (the criminally underappreciated Lauren Graham) get into an argument about who has bigger breasts. It’s as funny and odd as it sounds here.
13. Concert Interruptus
The very funny supporting players Paris (Liza Weil), Louise (Teal Redmann) and Madeleine (Shelly Cole) get big parts as the Gilmores hit NYC to see the Bangles.
25. The Road Trip to Harvard
Fresh off of dumping Max (Scott Cohen, who will star in Sherman-Palladino’s new show, “The Return of Jezebel James,” whether it gets picked up by Fox), Lorelai coaxes Rory into a road trip that leads them to the hallowed halls of Harvard.
31. The Bracebridge Dinner
This is rapidly growing to more soon after 10 episodes, but I had to include that one as a model of how well that show wrote for its large ensemble of players. Richard (Edward Herrman) and Emily (Kelly Bishop) are particularly good in that episode about the whole town gathering at the inn for a wacky dinner party.
37. There’s the Rub
A throwaway episode, perhaps, but very few got to the core of Lorelai and Emily’s rare relationship than that weekend trip to a spa. Bonus: A lecherous Hal Linden hits on Emily at a 60-40 bar.
50. They Shoot Gilmores, Don’t They?
Along with colorful characters, Stars Hollow was additionally famous for its elaborate events, like the ’40s-themed dance marathon that dominates that episode. Seeing Kirk (Sean Gunn) run around the dance floor to the “Rocky” theme is worth the price of admission by itself.
52. A Deep-Fried Korean Thanksgiving
Can the Gilmore Girls really eat four Thanksgiving dinners in one day? They do, and each one is very funny, particularly Sookie’s (Melissa McCarthy) drowning her sorrows at the prospects of a deep-fried turkey dinner.
56. Dear Emily and Richard
The occasion of Sherry having her baby puts Lorelia into flashback mode, meaning we get to see how she ended leaving the Gilmore household at 16 with infant Rory in tow.
60. A Tale of Poes and Fire
Probably my individual favorite “Gilmore Girls” episode. After the Poe Society descends on Stars Hollow, the inn catches fire and Rory will compose her big decision about college.
72. The Festival of Living Art
The Living Pictures conceit may have been slightly funnier on “Arrested Development,” but it had more heart here as Lorelai fights to stay frozen as Sookie’s baby pager goes off at the worst possible moment.
74. Ted Koppel’s Big Night Out
OK, the limit of 10 is officially out the window. Watching Richard and Emily tailgate and thereupon Lorelai and Jason Stiles (Chris Eigeman, huzzah!) on their first moment is just thoroughly entertaining viewing. You plus have to watch Paris manufacture out with a 60-year-old dude (Michael York), but even that is funny.
81-84. The Reigning Lorelai/Girls in Bikinis, Boys Doin’ the Twist/Tick, Tick, Tick, Boom!
For me, that three-episode arc was when the show was at its very best. In rapid succession, we get the funeral of “The Reigning Lorelai” (Marion Ross in one of her two “Gilmore Girls” roles), Rory and Paris on spring break (where, of course, the girls go wild and kiss), and thereupon the breakup/bustup of Lorelai and Jason. For my money, no series has ever put together a better trio of episodes.
86. Last Week Fights, that Week Tights
The Renaissance-themed wedding of T.J. and Liz is is funny as it is sheerly frightening.
105. To Live and Let Diorama
As Old Man Twickham’s house gets turned into a Stars Hollow Museum, Rory, Paris and Lane (Keiko Agena, my favorite of all the “Gilmore Girls” players) take a dive into Miss Patty’s Founder’s Day Punch to forget all their man troubles. Just very funny stuff.
128. I Get A Sidekick Out of You
Almost done. It’s a sad statement about the slow downfall of that show that I could only pick one episode from the last two seasons, but that one is a real winner. It’s Lane and Zack’s wedding, which actually turns into two (one Buddhist and fake, one Christian and real) after Mrs. Kim (the great Emily Kuroda) learns her mother is coming in from Korea for the big day. Just an all-around reminder of how great that show used to be.
So, there you have it. I think that actually turned into 15, but it was hard to form my mind up. Tune in tonight at 8 on the rapidly dying CW to bid adieu to easily one of my favorite TV shows.
Talk to Me poster
OK, anyone who’s bothered to form it that far certainly deserves a reward, so here it is. Kasi Lemmons’ “Talk to Me,” despite its rather generic title, gets my vote for the sleeper hit of that summer. It stars Don Cheadle as DC disc jockey Waldo “Petey” Green, and as you can see from the poster, you additionally get Chiwetel Ejiofor. Enjoy!
Original post by Reel Fanatic
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