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Regular:
Daria,
Quinn,
Helen,
Jake,
Jane,
Trent,
Brittany,
Kevin,
Jodie,
Mack,
Upchuck,
Sandi,
Stacy,
Tiffany,
Joey,
Jeffy,
Jamie,
Ms. Barch,
Mr. DeMartino,
Ms. Li,
Mr. O'Neill
Guest:
None
Non-Speaking:
Andrea,
Robert
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While handing back his students' tests, Mr. DeMartino informs the class
that the impossibly high scores obtained by the members of the football
team (sans Mack) could only have been achieved by cheating, and he names
Kevin as his prime suspect. Kevin adamantly denies having stolen the
test, and Mr. DeMartino tells the class that if the culprit does not
come forward, he will give every student an "F" on the test.
Naturally, this upsets Daria and Jane, as a "F" would wreck Daria's GPA
and would void Jane's highest-scoring test to date. For once, however,
the partners in crime have no plan to change the situation. At home,
Daria stretches out on her bed and channel-surfs, passing several cheesy
detective shows and TV movies (and, of course, Sick, Sad World),
and then slowly, quietly, drifts off to sleep...
At school, Daria opens her curiously enlarged locker, and out falls
Kevin's lifeless body. Mr. DeMartino points out that the perpetrator
usually returns to the scene of the crime to admire his/her handiwork,
and Ms. Li immediately (and without any shred of evidence) points the
finger at Daria. Mr. O'Neill and Mr. DeMartino attempt to play "good
cop/bad cop" in order to make Daria confess to the crime, but she
doesn't crack. Faced with the prospect of prison time for a crime she
didn't commit, Daria decides to find out exactly who killed Kevin, but
since no one else around her is any help, she has to turn to the one
source of last resort: Upchuck's Angels (aka the Fashion Club), a group
of highly styled but barely brainy detectives. Predicably, they aren't
any help. At Kevin's funeral, Daria confronts Mack, who gets very
emotional when she brings up the subject of his hated nickname, "Mack
Daddy." When Daria finds a gun in her locker, Ms. Li attempts to have
her arrested for Kevin's death, until Daria points out that Kevin was
attacked with everything except a gun (which, as it turns out,
belongs to Quinn). Daria fleshes out the guilty parties by claiming that
her locker was coated with a time-activated paint, and the hoax nabs
four people: Jane, Brittany, Mack, and Mr. DeMartino. Of course, that
ultimately doesn't matter to Ms. Li, who's already had an electric chair
custom-fitted for Daria, so she has police officers Jake and Helen lead
Daria away...
... and she awakens to the sound of her alarm clock blaring in her ear;
it's 7:30 in the morning. All of the proceeding events had been nothing
but a TV-influenced dream. At school, Mr. DeMartino has a change of
heart -- sort of. He's going to give the students a make-up test, the
scores for which should reveal who cheated and who didn't. Suddenly,
Kevin barges through the door wearing a fake arrow on his head and
pretending to be dying. This cracks up the football players, but doesn't
exactly cheer up DeMartino, who's barely able to hold back his homicidal
impulses.
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I Didn't Do It:
Who did Kevin and the football team think they were fooling by all
getting 100s on that test? DeMartino isn't stupid, he's crazy (probably
because of stuff like this). The evidence points right to at least one
of them. I'd say that Kevin probably did it at the urging of his
teammates -- it's good to have someone that can claim ignorance without
automatically being called a liar to do the job. By the way, if you must
cheat by stealing a test, get some of the answers wrong on purpose. It's
much less suspicious (not that I would know).
Unintentional Ironies of the Week:
There were two that I'd like to point out. First, was Brittany's "What's
that 'A' doing on you paper?" The second was Helen's "It's a clear cut
case of abuse" after she blew Daria off.
Do the Right Thing:
Mack and Brittany rightly go to Kevin to try to convince him to confess.
He maintains that he knows nothing and feels persecuted for being a
brain. Then Ms. Li overhears Daria and Jane joke about killing him.
Then...
... you know <yawn>, I'm getting a bit tired, time for a
<yawn> nap...
... Kevin somehow ended up in Daria's locker, dead of at least an arrow
wound.
Motivated Seller:
Everyone was a suspect in the case of Kevin's murder. That's probably
because almost everyone had a viable motive. Jane didn't like losing her
high grade that she worked so hard for. Mack never did like being called
Mack Daddy, and DeMartino never liked Kevin period. Brittany didn't want
to be relegated to somewhere off the sidelines. But Daria turned out to
be the prime suspect, despite having no specific motive (there was that
little matter of the body being in her now oversized locker,
though).
Oh No! Is Trent dead?
No, just sleeping.
So, Who's Done It?!?!
All of the detective work really paid off. <sigh> In dream-ality
all Daria had to do was tell everyone about some radioactive dye to get
some confessions. It seems that Jane poisoned Kevin, then Brittany shot
him with an arrow as Mack clubbed him with, well, a club. Finally, after
he was probably already dead, Barch kicked him and declared that it
would be a "great day" and DeMartino strangled him before stashing the
body in Daria's locker.
Subtle Clues:
Each of the murderers drop some hints that they knew some of what
happened to our poor QB. Jane sent her complements to the chef on the
cyanide. Mack kind of lost it when asked about that Mack Daddy stuff.
Brittany was a little too eager to start looking for a new boyfriend.
Finally, DeMartino was quick to point fingers at Daria and Jane. All
that, and the series of close-ups on the guilty parties (complete with
the shady eye shifts) after Ms. Li announces that she knew who did
it.
... wow <yawn>, that was a great nap, and I got a lot done with my
head on the keyboard. <yawn> ...
More Subtle Clues:
The fact that most of this episode was one of Daria's dreams wasn't
immediately obvious, at first, but in retrospect, there were several
clues that stuck out like sore thumbs. First, Daria's large locker.
Second, the fact that a high school was conducting a murder
investigation. Third, the fact that people Daria knows started acting
like famous TV detectives. Finally, but most importantly, I don't think
they (meaning the writers) would really kill off everyone's favorite
whipping boy (but I had my fingers crossed).
Paging Dr. Freud:
Daria's dream can give us some insight into how she sees people and what
she really thinks about them. For instance, she sees the Fashion Club as
stupid, shallow social poseurs. DeMartino is seen as more overstressed
and bitter, while Jake and Helen are seen as haphazard and overly
motherly, respectively. However, the most interesting thing about it is
how she sees herself. The impression that I got was that she feels she
is above, or maybe even superior to, everyone else and almost always
gets screwed anyway (as seen by her "execution" at the end of the
dream).
Shipper Tease of the Week:
Another thing about Daria's dream that deserves special consideration is
the part about Trent being dead. If I were to try to analyze this
portion, I would say that she doesn't think she has or wants to have
feelings for him anymore. This leads to him waking up, which tells me
that she still has some feelings for him that are buried way down. The
whole scene, taken together, tells me that she is trying to move on past
this whole situation but that there is part of her that doesn't quite
want to yet.
At first, I wasn't quite sure what I thought about this episode. But
after watching it again, it grew on me and I think it's probably the
best of the season so far. At this point, I guess I'm going to have to
explain why I like this episode and not like "Depth Takes A Holiday."
There are two reasons, ultimately. First, the dream was presented as
part of the flow of "normal" events in Lawndale. In other words, dreams
weren't even attempted to be passed off as reality. Second, the dream
itself was remarkably similar to what a real dream might be like in that
it took events from Daria's life and her perceptions of the people and
things around her and twisted them into coherence. Even all of the
references, which were many, were well placed and unobtrusive (and I
know that a whole lot of them went right over my head).
Grade:
A-
Daria as a Whole #1, Alter-Ego of the Week (in episode
division):
I liked Daria and Jane as Magnum P.I. and the guy that helps Magnum.
[ed: His name was Higgins.]
Daria as a Whole #2, Actual Alter-Ego of the Week:
Two words: Britney Barch.
Copyright © 2000 Mike Quinn [All Rights Reserved]. Used with
permission. The views presented here are those of the author, and may
or may not necessarily be those of Outpost Daria.
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