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Discussion Topic: Dawson & Joey or Pacey & Joey? #2
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Last edited by ChristinaL80; 04-10-2016 at 09:23 AM |
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Jarlath1 has some good points and I'm glad you agree with me.
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Sorry to have taken so long to respond to some of your other points. Once again, your own statements are in bold:
You see I don't think that mocking was meant to appease PJo fans, they certainly didn't do anything else to appease them that year after all. We have to remember PJo was a critical favourite too. It wasn't just screaming Pacey girls. Critics were raving about it. I think those lines were trying to take the usual complaints about DJo as a bit of a manifesto as to how they were going to prove us wrong. While also backtracking on the Coda kiss that they pushed in there because they thought Season 5 would never happen. The writers didn’t do much to please Pacey/Joey fans in this season…apart from keeping Dawson and Joey apart for much of it for spurious reasons (having Dawson blame Joey for the death of his father was one of the lowest things the writers ever did to him). There was no ‘backtracking’ of the ‘Coda’ kiss. There was just no resolution of it (until a very bad season finale). If they did little to please Joey/Pacey fans, they did very little to please Dawson/Joey fans either. Putting Joey with Prof. Wilder! Getting Dawson and Jen back together (and then having them live together and then splitting up in the course of a few months…ridiculous!) Let’s all admit it – the final two seasons were (apart from a couple of episodes and a couple of characters here and there) a washout, with little to please either of the shippers. Quote: You'll have to refresh my memory, was there a part of Anti Prom were Dawson commented on her bracelet like he didn't know it was her mother's? I never got the impression that is what that line was about. The point was about showing how close Pacey and Joey had become that year, how he wasn't impressed by the diamonds like everyone else was. It was more like Beauty Contest where everyone is marveling at how pretty scrubbed up Joey looks and Joey says 'Its just hairspray'. When he remembers everything he's saying he's remembering every little moment they had together, including the one where she mentioned the bracelet in her blue snowflake sweater. And it makes her remember how she felt during that time and how happy she was compared to how she felt in that moment. I will also point out that knowing about someone isn't necessarily knowing someone. When Pacey is saying 'This is you' he's saying he knows Joey and what matters to Joey. And this is born out through the course of the series, how Pacey can see right through her. He's the first to know she's crushing on Dawson, he's the first to call her out on it when Dawson is oblivious. He can get to the heart of what she doesn't want to say, like the 'You don't want to lose your place' comment in season 5. So when he says 'Its not you', its very consistent with Pacey understanding her nature if not her exhaustive biography. I don't think that excludes Dawson, its not really about him. The Pacey line: ‘I remember everything’ was clearly meant to suggest (since he was in open competition with Dawson at this point) ‘and Dawson doesn’t’. It is a low blow, given the fact that Dawson actually knew Joey’s mother and cared about her, whereas Pacey and Joey didn’t even like each other when they were younger. Your suggestion that Pacey knows about Joey (better than...who?) is stretching things. That he figured out in Season 1 that Joey was in love with Dawson (not crushing on him) hardly demonstrates any great powers of perception. Everyone knew that she was in love with Dawson (including the dogs on the street), apart from Dawson. Everyone. Jen knew it. Grams knew it. Dawson’s parents knew it. Her father knew it (from prison no less). Bessie knew it. The ‘psychic’ woman in the Halloween episode knew it within a minute and a half. Everyone knows. Even Pacey. Joey tells us who knows her best: Dawson. She asks him to write that part of her college application for her (which Pacey is not particularly happy about). You never heard the complaints about Pacey in season 5? They had no idea what to do with him at all and he risked becoming a walking STD. How many girls did he have that year? I want to say 6, he said he slept with 7 girls before Audrey I think and we know of 3 between 1-4. So he had named, Melanie, Audrey, Karen, he nearly cheated on Audrey after so that leaves 2? I did hear the complaints from Pacey lovers about Season 5. I wasn’t particularly impressed with these complaints then because I didn’t hear these same fans complaining when Dawson and Andie had their characters assassinated to facilitate a Pacey/Joey pairing in Season 3. In any case, I didn’t think there was any attempt to destroy his character in Season 5. He did behave out-of-character, but as I said before they were all behaving out of character at various times through the series. For example, not once did I buy it that Pacey would sleep with a married woman as he does in the finale. It wouldn’t happen. Nonsense. That he slept with 7 girls before Audrey…ok, I think it’s a stretch but it doesn’t bother me. But he would never encourage someone to cheat on a marriage or get involved in that kind of triangle. Quote: Its not so much that she is over Pacey in season 5, its just that its ignored beyond one scene. Rememeber that part where Audrey is talking about Joey dating other guys with Pacey there and Joey is really uncomfortable. JJax improved the extreme discomfort of Pacey while in the room and complained off screen 'There is no history on this show'. It hangs about as something that is not really said beyond a line or a mannerism. I remember in Four Scary Stories Joey says 'Who's Karen?' and Pacey says 'Do we really want to go through this now?' to which Joey replied 'Sorry, sugar rush'. Later in the season Audrey tries to set up a fake fight between her and Joey over Pacey that turns into a real one that blurs a line between joke and reality. Audrey clearly feels second best to Joey but that is mostly in Season 6 as they ramp up to Merry Mayhem. How do you reconcile 'I just don't feel it' with 'Its hard to be sorry for something that has been in the back of your mind' or her phone call at the end of that 'That was Then'? Or in Sex and Violence when she agrees to go to his apartment to sleep with him? The smile on her face that just drops when she sees Eddie and the way she says she moved on from him? Or in Clean and Sober when honest drunk Joey (the same honest drunk Joey that kissed Dawson in Season 1) says she never got over Pacey before kissing him? They were well into getting back together before Harley brings up bad memories of Prom. The british channel E4 did a great trailer focusing on how Joey ran hot and cold in those episodes. Pacey and Joey's past relationship is not ignored in Season 5 – it’s just over (whereas, as she acknowledges, Dawson is her past, present and future'). As most viewers should have easily understood – there isn’t really any way to come back after ‘Promicide’ without requiring everyone to suspend credulity just to get two hot people together. The writers bring it up: they explicitly have Audrey ask Joey’s blessing because of her history with Pacey. Her past relationship with Pacey is emphasised. She explains something important to the viewer in that episode (and to Pacey – only he didn’t listen very closely): she doesn’t care who he sleeps with or who he is in a relationship with. All the viewers should know this by now because, as she explained carefully in Coda: the magic was gone. I completely agree with Pacey that ‘this show doesn’t do history’, and agree with your complaint that they tended to rush ahead without referencing back (hence all the Out of character behaviour). However, they did reference Pacey/Joey – to indicate why it didn’t work. In Season 6, after she is dumped by Eddie, Joey tries to give Pacey another go. He’s kind of an interregnum thing for her, filling in time. I don’t need to reconcile anything here – Joey’s last words to her relationship with Pacey clear things up beautifully. The second attempt with Pacey was for obvious reasons from Joey’s point of view: let’s see what happens between us if Dawson is not there in the foreground reminding me of other possibilities. And she finds out what happens – she doesn’t feel it, as she explains, ‘even without Dawson’. That she could drop Pacey for Eddie has always been the hardest thing to explain for Pacey/Joey shippers. Usually Dawson is held to blame for Joey’s supposedly bad choices, but here Joey explicitly sets out that Dawson is not the cause of this break up. The relationship with Pacey just doesn’t feel right. All the other episodes you are quoting come from before this breakup. Connecting ‘honest drunk’ Joey kissing Dawson in Season 1 to ‘honest drunk’ Joey kissing Pacey is Season 6 is a stretch. She would have preferred kissing … Eddie, had he been there. Basically, Joey gives the relationship a second go to see would it work without Dawson, and she finds out that the answer is, no, it wouldn’t. |
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Right gang, lets do this.
First Off, we disagree on the severity of the first two arguments mentioned. That's fine. Its the least interesting part of what we are discussing! Quote:
Well we know that Dawson brings up her existential crisis in 'The Longest Day' Quote:
In Season 2 Joey is confronted by Abbie's death and that is what segues into Joey thinking about her mother. Each character having a relationship with death and what it means. I'm not arguing that Dawson didn't mean anything before her mother died, I'm saying that since Joey has latched on to those around her much more closely. She mentions this a lot in relation to Dawson, Gale and Mitch. She is terrified of losing this solid foundation because she has nothing else. Quote:
I believe Joey and AJ completely. He represents what she wants, he's in a prestigious college, he's winning awards, he has a future, he takes her to nice dinners Joey is attracted to that. You could argue the same with rich boy Anderson who she faked it with to fit in. He was wealthy, something she wanted by wasn't. Joey can be a bit snobby in this way, attracted to her aspirations. I even get Joey and Eddie until he ditches her. Joey Potter does not take that cowardly loser back but the weird College Joey apparently does, multiple times. I do not get Joey and Charlie. Not one lick of sense there. He cheated on Jen and Joey doesn't care? Joey Potter of Season 1-4 would have ridiculed him to high heaven. This is the girl who thought casual sex between consenting adults was a major moral flaw. Quote:
Daydreamer Dawson - Joey the natural cynic wanting to believe the fantasy - Realist Pacey Joey's journey in letting go of the fantasy, the daydreams and embracing real life is the journey of growing up. This dichotomy between Dawson and Pacey is really set up a lot, even in season 3 Jen says 'You'll always be that boy who denies reality and who just wants his parents back together'. In 'Home Movies' there is a long pre amble between Pacey and Dawson about the merits of make believe and real life. Dawson will be back to make believe soon. Its part of the fisticuffs in season 3 where Pacey chastises Dawson for not having time for people who don't fit his rose tinted 1950s lifestyle. Joey says the same multiple times about how Dawson sees the world in black and white, a world that doesn't exist. She says that was the reason she fell for him. The cynic who wants to believe in better but its not real. Look at how she bursts his bubble about 'From Here to Eternity'. Its just another take, they aren't using tongues, the girls bored, the guy is gay, it is make believe. I think through the triangle we see Joey move past these fantasies and into real adult life. Its not there for Dawson until the very last episode 'For the first time in a long time, my life is real'. He makes his real life a fiction! That was a wake up call. Quote:
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P/J shippers are not a monolithic entity. Some might agree with you. It seems clear to me that from The Te of Pacey onwards it was about his future. Even when they talk about their break up, he doesn't say that its because of Dawson. He says that they are going in two different directions, she's on the up, he feels he's going down the drain. Her reaction is that he's breaking her heart into a thousand pieces for her own benefit? Quote:
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If Joey found Pacey such a disappointment in bed why did the show go to lengths to show us this wasn't the case. Quote:
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Joey does feel unnecessary guilt about Dawson. This is the guy that put pressure on her regarding her sex life right at the start of the season. He got that emotional blackmail in quick 'I'm the only person who the answer could possibly kill'. Wouldn't you feel bad and concerned if someone told you that about doing something you've wanted to do? She shouldn't care but she's a good person so she does. Pacey never puts that type of pressure on her. Quote:
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I'll do part 2 tomorrow, that took an hour and a half! Last edited by AsgardianJane; 03-05-2016 at 02:41 PM |
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Wow, I don't know how you guys do these long essays, but they are interesting and thought provoking.
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Before I get to the points you have made, I think we need to do a bit of background clearing in order to set the context for this disagreement.
Essentially, it is really a disagreement about what this show, Dawson’s Creek, was about. To most D/J shippers I have spoken to, the show is about the idea of a soulmate, explored through the story of Dawson and Joey. That is essentially what the show is trying to address. Personally, I think the idea of a soulmate, while a nice one, has no basis in reality. I am prepared to accept that in fictional universes, the idea has traction. In Dawson’s Creek, it was the abiding idea. Related to this fundamental idea of the soulmate – for which Dawson and Joey were the example used to work the idea through – were the many warnings that if soulmates don’t end up together, they will live an unfulfilled life. This is an idea repeatedly returned to throughout the series (in other couples like the two on Witches’ Island, for example), but perhaps most significantly in the Season 4 A. I. Brooks character. The man who actually married Brooks’ soulmate returns to tell Dawson, and indeed tell the viewers, that the three people involved in that triangle had made a mistake. Brooks did not marry his soulmate – she married their friend, and while that marriage was reasonably happy it wasn’t what should have happened and that, if there is an afterlife Brooks and his soulmate will be together. This is a key storyline in a season where Joey has ‘chosen’ someone other than her soulmate. The clear (indeed, only) implication of this is to put a gigantic red sign over Pacey/Joey to indicate that: this is a bad idea. Soulmates, whose destinies are connected forever, whose lives are bound up in each other. And who should choose each other because if they don’t, they will lives ultimately unfulfilled lives. The suggestion here is that Dawson could end up like Brooks, and Joey end up like Brooks’ soulmate, ultimately regretting the bad choices they make. This is also a series that believes in the power of transcendent dreams, their power to overcome the effects of so-called reality. It is no mistake that Joey’s favourite song is ‘Daydream Believer’. A belief in the power of the imagination is one of the major connections between Joey and Dawson. She believes in dreams and transformative love, in the same way as she believes in Dawson (‘she believes in me…and I need that because I am a dreamer’). He is a dreamer, and she is a ‘daydream believer’. This may be corny, but corny is one of the things that this show did well. Their connection is reaffirmed constantly as a somehow transcendent one, beyond explanation (‘I hear you Dawson…I hear you too Joey’; ‘we are beyond friendship, beyond lovers…It’s always you and me’ ‘Soulmates’). I won’t here go into what I think is the meaning behind the final scene of the show which, in my mind, does not hold good things for Pacey and Joey (she kisses Pacey, but is riveted by the sight of herself and Dawson getting together in the ‘dream’ screen). To paraphrase Pacey himself at the start of Season 3, when he is speaking to Joey about Dawson’s rejection: Dawson and Joey are right for each other, they are just not right for each other at this moment. For D/J shippers the moment when they are finally right for each other at the right time was the finale…and the writers bottled it and gave in to fan pressure. The many and various references to other pop culture texts where the ‘wrong choice’ was made (essentially, where the soulmate was not chosen), such as Les Mis, Little Women and Pretty in Pink, also situated Dawson’s Creek as a kind of ‘correction’ which would put things to right. The basis of the show in ‘soulmate’ theory is, to most D/J supporters, self-evident. The viewer is constantly reminded of it. And this is what everything else needs to be considered in relation to. This is one of the reasons why it is crucially important to understand the reason why Joey and Dawson break up in Season 2. You say: First Off, we disagree on the severity of the first two arguments mentioned. You say That's fine. Its the least interesting part of what we are discussing! My point is: no, this is where you start going wrong (probably because you don’t recognise the show’s premise in the soulmate idea). Why do soulmates break up with each other – that is the question posed by Season 2. The answer is – because they get together at the wrong time. Joey needs to figure herself out. Season 1 is about Dawson coming to a realisation; Season 2 is about Joey coming to a realisation. Joey has so many issues in her own life to confront that she cannot be in a healthy relationship. She really should have gone to Paris at the end of Season 1 and started to confront them there. In Season 3, as Dawson explains, Pacey becomes Paris (‘Pacey is this year’s Paris’), and she needs to choose to go to Paris in order to figure out that she has everything she wants at home (which is why ‘Feels Like Home’ is a song to which Season 2 Dawson and Joey reconcile). Joey is constantly trying to escape home because it is where she feels her life and her identity fall apart. Dawson is intimately tied up in this identity crisis for her. It is why she constantly talks about getting away. And she needs to in order to see, as Dawson tells her in the last episode before the finale, that she had everything she wants waiting for her all the time (‘I like how you see me’). By the end of Season 6, tragically for Pacey/Joey shippers, Pacey was not even Paris. Paris was Paris again (in that silly montage sequence) with the implication that Joey would find out once there that actually she wanted to come home (and to everything that ‘home’ signified to her). That is the series arc, with the final 15 minutes of the finale throwing in the spanner to suggest that Joey still hadn’t worked it out. Maybe the death of close friend just heightens feelings of vulnerability for her again, and Pacey/Paris becomes momentarily attractive as a distracting mechanism. As Pacey well knows, however, she will never have that soulmate kind of love for him (he explicitly asks her about this in Season 3, and her silence tells him everything he really needed to know). And the soulmate kind of love is what this series is most invested in. if viewers don’t see this investment, and are distracted by the initial sexual chemistry between Josh Jackson and Katie Holmes, that is to miss the main thing this show is interested in. You say that Dawson in the ‘Longest Day’ ‘clearly thinks she is still in the throes of it in the season 2 sense. Also note that Joey and Pacey parallel in this. Trying to get out of Dawson's shadow. In Crossroads Pacey said that he was tired of being Dawson's sidekick and was going to get a storyline of his own. A few episodes later Joey reflects on the same thing, that so much of her life is tied up in Dawson to the point she doesn't know who she is without his influence and she's trying her own thing too, her art. ‘ You’re missing a lot here. Dawson is right: she is still in the existential crisis of Season 2 (I would make the case that none of the characters ever get over Season 2). Joey is not trying to get out of Dawson’s ‘shadow’. She is trying to figure out who is she is independent of her love of him. That is a completely different kind of struggle. Dawson grows up completely confident about who he is, has great and supportive parents who tell him he’s great. Etc. etc. He doesn’t have much of an identity problem for a lot of the time. Joey does for obvious reasons. You have completely misconstrued Pacey’s comment in Season 2 ‘Crossroads’. Again, he does not want to get out of Dawson’s influence – he wants to stop being a supporting character in the Dawson/Joey show. Who can blame him. And he gets his own show – with Andie McPhee. Sadly, in Season 3, he goes back to once again being a supporting character in the Dawson/Joey roadshow, though he makes a determined effort to take over the lead role this time (relegated again to supporting role by the end of Season 4). It is one of the tragedies of the Pacey character arc. For a brief while in Season 2 he develops his own storyline, before throwing himself under the bus again in Season 4 (as Jen points out in Season 6, she and Pacey – and Jack – are just roadkill in the Dawson and Joey show). In Season 2 Joey is confronted by Abbie's death and that is what segues into Joey thinking about her mother. Each character having a relationship with death and what it means. I'm not arguing that Dawson didn't mean anything before her mother died, I'm saying that since Joey has latched on to those around her much more closely. She mentions this a lot in relation to Dawson, Gale and Mitch. She is terrified of losing this solid foundation because she has nothing else. Joey’s mother is always in the back of her mind. The death of Abbie was cathartic for her because it made her (after a season of trying to ‘find herself’) confront and accept her mother’s death. That was why it was so crucial for her to bring Dawson with her to her mother’s grave. This is the moment when her family is healed and her relationship with Dawson can actually develop properly (and why the building of the white picket fence by Dawson is crucial (beside the fact that Joey finds a sweaty Dawson incredibly sexy) – this is a show that actually believes in white picket fences for soulmates). The everything comes crashing down and Joey will make bad choices for the rest of the seasons. I don't see the problem with her father in Season 6. In fact, his random appearance and lack of issues is startling. Suddenly he's back and Joey is fine with it, again its very 5 and 6 bad writing, ignoring and dropping huge emotional fallout because they don't have time or it doesn't fit their interests. These things don’t need to be explicitly laid down with a trowel! The viewer should have by that time already gathered that Joey has clear issues with her father and these are bound up with Dawson (because her mother used to look at her father the same way Dawson looks at Joey – another indication that soulmates really can mess each other up if they don’t watch it – by going off with someone else…remind us of anyone (Joey with Pacey, perhaps?) – and cause incredible hurt). We get it (or should) and shouldn’t need constant reminders. I believe Joey and AJ completely. He represents what she wants, he’s in a prestigious college, he’s winning awards, he has a future, he takes her to nice dinners Joey is attracted to that. You could argue the same with rich boy Anderson who she faked it with to fit in. He was wealthy, something she wanted by wasn’t. Joey can be a bit snobby in this way, attracted to her aspirations. I even get Joey and Eddie until he ditches her. Joey Potter does not take that cowardly loser back but the weird College Joey apparently does, multiple times. I do not get Joey and Charlie. Not one lick of sense there. He cheated on Jen and Joey doesn’t care? Joey Potter of Season 1-4 would have ridiculed him to high heaven. This is the girl who thought casual sex between consenting adults was a major moral flaw. I don’t think we are in huge disagreement here about Joey behaving out of character many many times in the later seasons – as I said, the only way to make sense of these incidences is to see Joey as still working through the ramifications of Season 2. I don’t accept she makes sense with AJ (another character who eventually chooses his soulmate over his casual fling), except that he is a distraction. The show points this up when it indicates that she tries her best to experience the northern lights with him RATHER than Dawson (just to prove to herself that she can), but then the plot works it so that she does indeed watch them with Dawson (becaue this is a show that genuinely believes that some love is written in the stars – corny, but this is what the show believes). I would say that the arrested development is on Dawson's side ever since the pilot. Dawson is Peter Pan and Joey is Wendy coming through the window. Joey is constantly telling him to grow up, that his childish fantasies do not exist. But I do think Joey got suckered into his fantasies. This is why I think the triangle works so well. Daydreamer Dawson - Joey the natural cynic wanting to believe the fantasy - Realist Pacey Joey's journey in letting go of the fantasy, the daydreams and embracing real life is the journey of growing up. This dichotomy between Dawson and Pacey is really set up a lot, even in season 3 Jen says 'You'll always be that boy who denies reality and who just wants his parents back together'. In 'Home Movies' there is a long pre amble between Pacey and Dawson about the merits of make believe and real life. Dawson will be back to make believe soon. Its part of the fisticuffs in season 3 where Pacey chastises Dawson for not having time for people who don't fit his rose tinted 1950s lifestyle. Joey says the same multiple times about how Dawson sees the world in black and white, a world that doesn't exist. She says that was the reason she fell for him. The cynic who wants to believe in better but its not real. Look at how she bursts his bubble about 'From Here to Eternity'. Its just another take, they aren't using tongues, the girls bored, the guy is gay, it is make believe. I think through the triangle we see Joey move past these fantasies and into real adult life. Its not there for Dawson until the very last episode 'For the first time in a long time, my life is real'. He makes his real life a fiction! That was a wake up call. I’m not sure I’ve ever bought the claim that Pacey was ‘real’ as opposed to Dawson being ‘unreal’, but even if we were to grant this, the claim that Joey should choose Pacey because he represents reality ignores the basic premise of the show which is that fantasy really does trump reality in a world in which there are such things as star crossed lovers, destinies, soulmates, etc. etc. (and where the consequences of choosing someone other than your soulmate are laid out as a life of perpetual restlessness and feelings unfulfillment). Pacey is, in any case, far from ‘real’ – he’s the guy who wants to play the hero in a fantasy in which he is always coming to save the day. It’s sweet, but it isn’t ‘real’. Now is not the time to get into disputing the claim that Dawson wants to live a 1950’s lifestyle (which bears no connection to Dawson’s very 1980s Speilberg version of fantasy. Pacey is usually wrong when he criticises Dawson. At worst Dawson is the kind of fantasist that Frank Capra represents as drawn out by their discussion of this filmmaker – who has had a huge influence on Speilberg – in Season 2, where Jen basically misunderstands Capra while Dawson explains how this version of fantasy actually works – it’s a version of fantasy that does indeed believe in soulmates, and destiny – Some Kind of Wonderful – but does not deny the darkness of the world, the – hint hint – Mr. Potters who almost ruin things [at times I wondered whether the signposting could be any more explicit, but Pacey/Joey shippers appear oblivious to them in their complete commitment to a version of the show which consigns Dawson to Neverland)). Both he and Joey believe in a kind of sweet, romantic comedy, soulmate world which this series was supposed to be about to oppose the cynical alternatives in other shows. Joey is a true believer. The arc of the series is about how Joey realises that this is the script in which she makes sense – not the script where a different kind of fantasy entirely (a fantasy called ‘Paris’ or ‘Pacey’ operates). The notion that Pacey is not a ‘fantasy’ for her, in bizarre. He is just a different kind of fantasy – and, the show repeatedly emphasises, the wrong one (wrong for him, too, given that their relationship almost destroys him…twice). About Dawson’s gift of a photograph to Joey, you say: Well I should say I don't think it meant anything romantically. It was important in their friendship but we're talking love stories here. Remember the scene after where Joey says to Pacey she has put the ghost of Christmas past behind her and was ready for the ghost of Christmas future. Dawson=Past, Pacey=Future. How can you say that there is a romantic implication to that scene when that follows it and it consists of Joey telling him to pursue another woman? Its warm, its heartwarming, its about their friendship but not about romantic love. As Joey says later, she hadn't thought of him in that way for years. Although the show did like to exaggerate time, the last time Joey considered Dawson as a love interest was Witch Island I believe, a year and a half previous. They did the same in Season 6 when Audrey says Joey broke Pacey's heart 'all those years ago', it was a year and a half. I can say that this is a turning point in that Season for very straightforward reasons. This is a season about the movement of Joey away from Pacey and turning back to Dawson. That is the season arc. My view is that people should try to put everything that is said and done in the context of the arc of both the season and the series as a whole (which was always, as most people now know, written with a Joey/Dawson endgame until that very last few days of the shooting of the finale and the last 15 minutes of the show). Once you put things in that context, comments and conversations become clear. I would put Joey’s comment about her future to Pacey in the context of the overall arc that Dawson is ‘a huge part of my past, present and future’. Joey’s jealousy about Dawson/Gretchin – and her terror that Dawson/Gretchin have actually slept together – tells me enough. I’m not sure exactly why anyone thinks this is in any way ambiguous, since, as Joey tells us in ‘Coda’, the magic with Pacey (magic – the kind of magic/fantasy Pacey represents) has worn off, while that with Dawson has always persisted. The notion that Joey hadn’t thought about Dawson ‘in that way’ since Witch Island is, I’m afraid, simply not true. The sexual tension between them in many many episodes of Season 4 was obvious even to Pacey who resented it big time. Even Drue noticed the ‘sexual tension’ between them, the couple so much in love that it makes everyone want to puke. Basically, all the other characters in the show could see that Dawson and Joey loved each other more than they loved anyone else – every other character (the scene in the finale when Joey asks those gathered around her table who she is supposed to be with, and everyone looks at her with a bit of disbelief that she doesn’t get it yet – and claiming that they mean Pacey won’t work since one of those around the table is Bessie, who was always one of the cheerleaders for Dawson, and also given that when he wrote that part of the script, KW hadn’t yet changed his mind). Well I think we have to take in to account what Joey actually says about such jealousy in 'Appetite for Destruction'. Yes, there is such a thing as an unreliable character, they don't always say what they mean but that is usually signposted in the writing. There is no indication or contradiction to what Joey says when she says she isn't jealous of Jen but that her insecurity comes from where she places in his life. And this is supported multiple times in the show very explicitly. This is rewriting history. At the start of season 5, Joey is hoping for a renewed relationship with Dawson, a renewed romantic relationship. This looks like it is going to happen, and then Mitch dies and puts the skids on it. Next things she knows, Dawson is showing up with Jen as his girlfriend. Joey feels jealous – not resentful that she is not Dawson’s friend any longer. Again, I’ve not met anyone who ever claimed that Joey was not jealous (in a romantic sense) of Dawson and Jen’s relationship in Season 5 (the writers probably thought they could regenerate Season 1 dynamics at this stage…They couldn’t). This romantic jealousy is confirmed repeatedly to banal degree at every stage of this series – Joey cannot bear to have Dawson show a romantic interest in anyone other than her. Again, I thought this was just obvious, and that even Joey/Pacey shippers knew this - and it rightly irritated them greatly. Not by Promicide. His insecurities about Dawson and Joey in the present tense are in 'Failing Down', 'Great X Pectations' and 'Self Reliance'. They are resolved in Self Reliance when he encourages her to talk to him, the last of those insecurities regarding Dawson are gone after they sleep together. In Mind Games when Drue is playing his little class couple skit it doesn't bother Pacey at all. Even when he finds out about Joey's lie he forgives her because she told the truth in the end. That is why its Promicide. Its foreshadowed by Gretchen at the start of the season, he was going to sabotage the relationship and that is what he did. He blew up, Dawson didn't have to do anything, Pacey did it himself. There may be a universe where Pacey, who really really wishes Joey would feel a kind of ‘soulmate’ love for him, is not insecure about her relationship with Dawson. In the finale he says something like ‘I hope we are beyond that now’ (which signals that indeed they were not beyond it even 5 years earlier). One of the reasons he so desperately wants to sleep with Joey is that he hopes that once that happens he will have a claim on her (a ‘first’) that Dawson won’t have, and is bitterly disappointed to find that even after this, she is still drifting back to him – that she is at her happiest hanging around with Dawson, and not with him. It is sad, desperately so, that Pacey/Paris (and don’t forget the Romeo/Juliet references abounding in the series) doesn’t get their role as a supporting player – because supporting players end up as roadkill in this series. It is important to note that the 100th episode which was a kind of summation of what the series was about, had a series of flashbacks relating to Dawson/Joey’s relationship, not Joey/Pacey whose scenes merely served as a kind of bump on the road of that primary relationship. Charlie and Eddie are other, less significant bumps, though Joey would choose Eddie over Pacey (probably because Eddie is a bit closer to Dawson). P/J shippers are not a monolithic entity. Some might agree with you. It seems clear to me that from The Te of Pacey onwards it was about his future. Even when they talk about their break up, he doesn't say that its because of Dawson. He says that they are going in two different directions, she's on the up, he feels he's going down the drain. Her reaction is that he's breaking her heart into a thousand pieces for her own benefit? Quote: Here we enter the Looking Glass. This is a show which constantly sets up comparisons between couples and characters, starting with Joey and Jen (‘Is it the blonde or the brunette’), moving to Pacey and Dawson, Pacey and Dawson and Eddie, the Witters and the Leerys, the Leerys and the Potters, etc. etc. The view that we are not to compare Andie and Joey as girlfriends of Pacey is a stretch that I am not buying. Joey and Andie are never put in direct competition or comparison except by Drue in one episode. And its unfair to suggest that different characters must have the same reactions to match up. They have different situations, different temperaments. We were meant to compare Jack and Dawson at one point, is that to mean we are meant to wonder if Dawson's into guys? Of course not. Unless you think there is a direct parallel to force us to compare beyond 'post - coitus' because if that is the case are we meant to compare it to Jen/Chris too? And even if we were, Andie cheated on him. She was that OK with sex. Of course, Joey and Andie are not in ‘competition’, but I don’t think we are meant to ignore direct contrasts that are made between the characters (the Witters seem worse because they are not the Leerys; Mr. Potter is worse because he is not Mr. Leery; Mr. Witter is worst because he is neither of the other two). I’m not suggesting that these different characters must have the ‘same’ reactions to match up (I’m not trying to match them up). What I am suggesting is that if we look at these two situations, one shows two teenagers having fun; the other shows a relationship in deep trouble, a trouble that is not solved by sex – as shown by the fact that they become increasingly divided from each other until the end of the season. Sex does not bring them together or closer – it is an extra ingredient that helps to drive them apart by the end (the whole ‘am I pregnant’ fiasco for which Joey clearly blamed Pacey is sufficient evidence of this). Lets look at Joey's sexual history with Dawson. When given the chance to have sex with him in a relationship she declines. She offers to have sex with him when she thinks its her trump card to getting him back from Eve. Its the same thing Jen tries when on her downward spiral in season 2. Its not meant to show Joey at her most clear headed and comfortable moment when 3 months earlier when not feeling pressed she didn't want to do it. You’ve seen a different show. You must have. Joey and Dawson are building up to having sex in season 2 (‘they won’t be the poster children for virginity for much longer’ Abbie astutely recognises), and if they had not bumped into Jen on the way home from the wedding they would have had sex. She offers to have sex with him at the start of Season 3, yes to get him back, but not because she doesn’t want to – she’s ready. Now you are comparing characters (Joey and Jen!!!) trying it on with Dawson. However, Jen was in a crazed depression in Season 3; Joey wasn’t. There is never any indication that Joey doesn’t find Dawson sexually attractive (she has thought about his penis size long before they ever get together, and enthusiastically gets into the make out phase of their relationship when they start going out). If Joey found Pacey such a disappointment in bed why did the show go to lengths to show us this wasn't the case. The evidence for Joey and Pacey having a great sex life that you provide are a couple of funny scenes, in one of which Pacey does most of the talking. Again, you need to place everything into the context of the arc of the season, and the series, or things will be misunderstood. Pacey’s neediness in bed is highlighted by their the-morning-after-the-night before conversation, where he signalled to her that for him a great deal depended on whether she liked having sex with him. In this context alone, Joey feels pressure to tell him that everything is alright down there, nothing is wrong. Andie, I expect, would just have told him what she liked and what she didn’t. Joey just doesn’t know how to communicate with Pacey (probably because she is so used to Dawson understanding her so quickly and her understanding him so easily – ‘I hear you Dawson’ ‘I hear you too Joey’). Joey wasn't embarrassed to be with him at the Worthington dinner. She was embarrassed that she didn't know the gallery name and it went down hill from there. She then said that Pacey fit in better than she did, a situation inverted at the end of the season to highlight their break up, she's going up in the world and he's not. Joey does feel unnecessary guilt about Dawson. This is the guy that put pressure on her regarding her sex life right at the start of the season. He got that emotional blackmail in quick 'I'm the only person who the answer could possibly kill'. Wouldn't you feel bad and concerned if someone told you that about doing something you've wanted to do? She shouldn't care but she's a good person so she does. Pacey never puts that type of pressure on her. Again, you are missing the context of the season as a whole, and all the emphases on soulmates going on in other parts of the plot, in your comments about Worthington. The context is the slow, ‘conscious uncoupling’ of Pacey and Joey, and the reconnection between Dawson and Joey. That is what is happening through the whole season! Pacey at the Worthington dinner is just another example of how they don’t work together. Pacey managed to embarrass her completely by accident (that is what I meant by my claim that she was embarrassed to be with him), with the implication that Dawson would never have made her feel like she didn’t belong. I’m not saying Pacey wanted to make her feel that way – I’m sure the opposite was the case – but that is how she felt. It wouldn’t have happened, the suggestion is, had she been with the person who knows her best (Dawson – who writes the essay for her). I’m not going to comment on the attempted character assassination of Dawson – because it seems to me that this is usually what Pacey/Joey shippers fall back on. They just don’t like Dawson and don’t like the way he behaves and tend to misconstrue everything about him (usually concluding by telling us that his forehead is too big). Yes and she does call out Dawson for not noticing for all that time. If he considered her so sexually alluring why didn't he see it? Dawson claims its because he's an idiot. Notice that she also never brings up the fact that Pacey very clearly found her sexual in season 1? He tried to kiss her and told her he found her attractive. Why is she ignoring that? He's also been grabbing her ass and complaining she's a prude. I'd agree that for all Joey talks in season one she has a very big issue with sex and that Jack was no different from the safe to lust at from afar Dawson of Season 1. Isn't that what Aunt Gwen alludes to in 'Stolen Kisses' in her analogy. Her husband was a safe relationship chosen too young but Richard made her feel alive. Once again, no. She has to go to Dawson in order to feel sexually reaffirmed (odd to go to someone for sexual confirmation if you don’t feel sexually attracted to that person!). She does give out a bit because he didn’t seem to recognise her sexuality in Season 1, but he says he was an idiot, and affirms that she is growing in sexuality every day. That is again why she runs back to Dawson when Jack makes his confession. With him she feels that, yes, she is accepted and is found sexually attractive. Pacey found her sexual in season 1? Well, of course! Every heterosexual boy who watched season 1 found Joey sexually attractive! The season is about Dawson coming to the realisation that he loves her completely not just as a friend, and that this includes finding her sexually attractive. Pacey is a normal heterosexual boy and of course he tries his luck with Joey when given the chance! This doesn’t require any special bond between them. He accepts that ‘if you kissed me back you would have been thinking of someone else’ – ie, in this sexual situation, you would have been thinking of Dawson. I’m afraid I would project this forward – to the sexual relationship she has with Pacey in Season 4. She ‘ignores’ Pacey finding her sexually attractive in season 1 because she recognises it for what it is: a horny teenage boy trying it on. It isn’t significant. Even when they start going out she doesn’t say: Pacey, remember how you found me so attractive in season one, and I ignored how important this was for two years, but now I realise how significant it was! No, Pacey’s horny reaction to a hot girl taking her clothes off in his mirror is not important, except that when he asks Dawson’s permission (funny how everyone asks permission in this world for romantic relationships) it jolts Dawson into a realisation. Joey chooses Jack to divert herself with while she sorts her identity out precisely because he was a safe experiment. But he isn’t equivalent to Dawson in Season 1, precisely because Season 1 Joey told us that she feels sexually attracted to Dawson. Regarding Aunt Gwen - you realise that she is a Joey/Dawson-shipper! Joey declined sex with him at the end of Season 2. It took Dawson 5 years and he had one significant sexual relationship in 6, Natasha. Jen did not last long. He had two one night stands, one of which was Joey (in her own words) and had the 'best sex of his life' with Natasha. Then nothing at all in the back half of the 6th season. You seem to be mistaking a fairly normal sex life with a lack of sexuality in Dawson. Just because he isn’t jumping everyone’s bones like Pacey in Season 5 and 6 doesn’t mean he isn’t a fully grown up, sexual person. He has fewer opportunities, I’d suggest, because he isn’t as physically attractive as Pacey. I didn’t hear Jen complaining that in bed Dawson was asexual or pre-pubescent, or Joey, or Natasha. I’m happy he had the best sex of his life with Natasha. As a purely physical act, I’m sure it was good. He had the greatest night of his life, including sex, with Joey. Quote: I wonder how he will feel when Joey forces him to watch The Creek every week, and she sees the sexual side of her relationship with Dawson played out in front of him. He'll be comfortable enough in his relationship to find it moving and cry, we saw that. Maybe he'll give those 2 Season 6 episodes a miss. What I always find amusing is that we see the end of Season 1 of The Creek. It mirrors Season 1 of Dawson's Creek. How does Season 3 of The Creek end after Dawson leaves the show? Is it this never ending cycle of doom where The Creek ends with Colby losing the girl to Petey and making a TV show 'Colby's Creek' about it? The season will present Pacey with a serious problem: the lie that he has told himself, that Joey and Dawson’s relationship was ‘asexual’ or ‘prepubescent’ and ‘innocent’ (a weasel word if there ever was one) will be undermined by the next season of The Creek. Those insecurities so on show at the start of the finale when he was having an affair with a married woman? Are they gone away? Because of a food fight, just before Joey went off again to reaffirm her soulmate relationship with Dawson? Season 3 of The Creek doesn’t happen. Unlike Season 1 of Dawson’s Creek, which was about Dawson choosing Joey, Season 1 of The Creek ends with a rewriting of the end of Season 3 of Dawson’s Creek (which had Joey choose Pacey over Dawson – at his suggestion). Therefore in The Creek, Joey chooses Dawson over Pacey in Season 1. Therefore, no Season 3 of Dawson’s since that has been resolved. And Joey is riveted. To her fictional fantasy character choosing Dawson. In the next season she’ll witness how these problems which kept them apart could have been resolved. It’s not looking good for Pacey – and I am genuinely sad for him, because he remains my favourite character on that show. I’m going to pass the baton on for now – I think we have engaged each other for long enough, and it is time to let others have their say, and this very interesting conversation, as you indicate, has taken up enough time. Plus, I have really said all I think I can say for now. I need a bit of a break. |
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Part 2, Don't go getting ahead of me!
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I never said 'better than'. Saying that Pacey has a connection with Joey doesn't mean any third person needs to be brought into it. In the words of Pacey Witter when Joey tries to do the exact same thing 'Right, 'cause god forbid I might just be talking about you and me right now.'. Pacey is written to know Joey is hooked on Dawson before Jen does, he's known since before the series started. Other examples, their heart to heart in Decisions where he uses his own problems to force her to do what she knows is right regarding her father. the earrings in Anti Prom as I said shows he knows her core values, 'Other Joey', her need to lose control in Clean and Sober and more. Pacey is the guy who says what Joey doesn't want to hear but she knows is true and part of the reason their banter works so well is that they understand what will get a rise out of the other without going too far. One of the more comedic ones, Pacey knowing Joey will relent and ditch school with him in 'Home Movies' but he 'thought she'd last at least 8 [seconds]'. When Joey talks about who knows her best, what does she say? She talks about when she broke her leg, when her mother died etc... I'm talking about understanding a person. The difference between knowing what someone did and why they did it, the way they think. And Pacey did know Lily Potter, Pacey, Joey and Dawson have been friends/frenemies since at least the age of 6. Joey was invited to Pacey's first boy-girl party. We hear Aunt Gwen talk of Pacey chasing Joey as a child. Mr Witter clearly knows Joey in the Season 2 finale but that is their first scene together. Gretchen also mentions the three of them in the past and how she thought Joey and Pacey would end up together but she's been absent at least 2 years at that point. To say Pacey didn't know Joey's mother is a stretch when Joey clearly knows his father and his home phone number in 'None of the Above'. Pacey even mentions how blind he was not to have noticed Joey was beautiful when he was a kid, we saw him find that out in Season 1. We never see anything of Pacey as a kid, not even in his own house, we just hear of it. He was always there though. Dawson says as much, he's heard Joey and Pacey argue (banter) nearly every day of his life. Quote:
Dawson, well he attempted to murder someone and held Joey to a completely different standard to his best friend despite them doing the same thing but therein lies the drama. Originally, Pacey was meant to try and push Dawson into the rocks in the boat, DJo was going to reunite at the end of Show Me Love but obviously that was scrapped. I did sort of buy it though on Dawson's side. He always had only child syndrome, that was part of his character. It was extreme though. I believe Tom Kapinos, when confronted with how Pacey was behaving in Season 5 he said 'Man's gotta eat' or something similar. They didn't know what to do with him. You probably won't like this but I always thought they should have kept Joey and Pacey together to mid-5. Do the comedy living together angle, get Pacey into Boston with a better excuse than 'I turned up on a boat so why not?', give him bearings and when they break up (because DRAMA!), reason to stay. Quote:
The season 1 kiss and season 6 kiss are exactly the same. Pacey/Dawson talks to a semi coherent Joey who then lets her feelings out in a kiss. Katie even performs it in the same way, watch where her hand is in both kisses. Its hard to see in the S6 one but she cups their face and lands one on them. Clean and Sober even had deleted dialogue to explain that Joey wouldn't remember it the next morning. Pacey tells her what she did in 'Boyfriend' and she denies it because 'Dawson and I never had any fun'. Thus explaining why she doesn't remember kissing Pacey in Castaways. Those last 5 PJo eps were meant to have a 'greatest hits' feel about them. Castaways is full of them, the Wall of televisions, the dialogue after he kisses her is reminiscent of 'Double Date', instead of shaving they were meant to do an 'Anti Prom' dance where Joey brings up Prom and Pacey said 'I remember nothing'. Then you got the mini-mes and Joey contemplating her past and looking to the future with Pacey in 'That was Then' and of course Love Bites, Promicide part 2. Only this time, Joey self-sabotages. Joey was definitely 'feeling it' in Sex and Violence, why was she so jealous? Why did she bang her head in Castaways when she sees the blonde with her hand on Pacey's leg? Which makes the Audrey thing even weirder. Joey even says in Castaways that its past time for her to be complaining about Pacey and other women then she goes on to complain about the blonde he wanted to hook up with. Suddenly she's Joey catching Jen and Pacey again about it. In the PJo thread we've been discussing Joey's fear. Its mentioned a few times in the last eps of season 6. Pacey calls her out as afraid in Love Bites, Eddie then goes on to figure out she's afraid of really loving someone and that he's been blinded (again Pacey seeing through her when it takes everyone else much longer to figure out, Eddie and Joey's last fight is about going away for the summer and then coming back, she's afraid to take that leap again because of how her relationship with Pacey ended), she mentions her fear to Harley and about how she's not afraid with Eddie (presumably because she isn't as invested in him as Dawson and Pacey) her last speech is about not being scared any more while running away to Paris! Last edited by AsgardianJane; 03-06-2016 at 02:22 PM |
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I had about 10 minutes to catch up before leaving for work, but man, it's going to take more than 10 minutes to soak all this in, so I will have to revisit this tonight.
Keep it coming, I'm loving the different POVs. I only have time to comment on one thing. Quote:
- Joey blaming Dawson for her father in S2 - Andie cheating on Pacey - Pacey blowing up at Joey - Jack spiralling in University - Audrey's drunken bar bash while singing I actually liked when they put Dawson and Jen together because I never really thought they had a great shot in the first season since Dawson was just too young to really know what was going on. __________________
Last edited by JJH85; 03-07-2016 at 06:20 AM |
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#9 | |||
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I never got the impression the love triangle with AI Brooks' was meant that way. It reinforces the specialness of First Love and that there is a part of the other person you just can't have but how many people marry their first loves? Brooks' best friend is as much a warning to Dawson as anything. Brooks didn't mend his relationship with his friend until his death, he lost everything by holding onto that grudge. As much as Dawson is like Brooks, Pacey is like his friend. Self defeatist. The woman doesn't get a say, there is nothing to say she regretted her decision. He mentions they had three children and a good life. Its the same episode Pacey and Joey sleep together, maybe we are meant to see the woman's decision through Joey's. Pacey even echos Brooks' friend. Brooks' friend: Still, all that time, he had that part of her soul you give your first love. Pacey: What I am scared of is that little piece of your heart that will always belong to Dawson leery. If we are meant to take Joey's response in tandem with this dead woman's: Quote:
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I think between these two vids, they pretty much have the clips right https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aK8DIW_v7SU https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ub2LLbqloow Quote:
Joey: I mean, our lives have always been so intertwined that in many ways I feel like you partially invented me, Dawson. And that scares me so much. I need to find out if I can be a whole person without you. I need to find out if I can be a whole person....alone. Pacey: You know, if I'm loyalty, Dawson, it's only 'cause you cast me in the role. You're the storyteller, you know? You see everything and figure out what it means. Did you see the look on those kids' faces while you were telling them that story tonight? How caught up they were? You're the guy who builds this fantastic world. You just let the rest of us live in it. It sets Dawson up as the director of their lives. He's casting them into the space he wants them, he's writing their lines, and he's about to discover in that last one that the characters aren't playing by the script. Quote:
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You say that AJ goes to his soulmate and you compare this to Dawson and Joey. The episode pulls a bait and switch though and we realise the comparisons are about Joey and Pacey. Joey is of course oblivious to this until the kiss at the end. An international channel did a great little 'spell it out' trailer https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kmgmnvllKLs You've also got things like 'Don't let the friendly banter fool you, we really hate each other' and 'He's buys you paper and demands that you be yourself' (You bought me a wall?). Joey is relating them to her and Dawson when what is actually going on is Joey and Pacey. 'The loudest sound of all, love unspoken', spoken by episode's close. I can be forgiving of AJ as he is clearly there only to serve a bigger storyline. Quote:
Joey is not a natural believer in Dawson's fantasy, she spends a lot of season 1 trying to get Dawson to see the world around him. 'Clap harder Dawson, you may be Tinkerbell's last hope', she falls into his dreams when she kisses him. Suddenly she had what she wanted, maybe wishes do come true but that fades again and by season 3 she's the cynic again. What fantasy is Pacey? A Cinderella Story clearly puts Pacey in the role of 'real thing' which is done again in the finale. He does have a Knight in Shining Armour complex but it usually ends with him beaten and in serious trouble. Quote:
Drue was there to cause trouble, he tried everything to get at Joey and Pacey until he hit on Pacey's insecurities when he took him drinking. He would say anything, just like Abby Morgan when talked about the Joey/Dawson kiss. She's trying to provoke a reaction. Same with Drue, that is their function. He wanted Joey and Pacey broken up the entire time, just like he tried to use sex in A Winter's Tale or Andie in Great Xpectations and Anna. Every trick in the book. Joey and Dawson weren't actually voted class couple. I agree that in Part 1 of the finale everything points to DJo. Bessie was in for a shock! Quote:
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I'd say Eddie is 30% Dawson in that he is a writer, who sits in on classes he 'shouldn't be in', and who ends up going to California. He's not at all like Dawson in personality. Quote:
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Pacey is a teenage boy insecure about whether he 'performed well'. Give him a break, he was tactless and inconsiderate but it wasn't anything more than that. And you may be forgetting that Joey is actually very honest with Pacey in Four Stories. Listen to her dialogue again, she won't remember the clumsy positioning or the awkward morning after she'll remember how when he was on top of her he made her feel like he would always be there to protect her. Quote:
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Joey never finds out about the striptease incident so she can't connect that with why he kissed her and even so, she's complaining about not being found sexual. The entire thing was about sexuality and it the inverse of episode 4 when she is mooning over mystery man's over the shoulder 'throbbing neck muscles'. You say Double Date is never brought up again, that kiss is shown as PJos first in the finale montage. They don't cut it and act like it was nothing. I believe Kevin Williamson said they saw what was happening and 'put a lid on it'. And its shown as more than being a horny teen boy its preceeded by one of four scenes in season 1 where PJo show significant support to each other. Baby, when Joey can comfort him about his statutory rape being revealed when Dawson can't. Boyfriend where he turns up to take her out after she tells him about the baby keeping her up. Double Date where Pacey encourages Joey about her future as she reveals she needs financial help for college (Notice how Dawson shows a distinct lack of support in Beauty Contest in this area until Joey spells it out 'I would never laugh at you'. 'You just did'). Decisions were he takes his Dads car, drives her four hours, pays a prison guard $20 and likely got told off by his father so she can resolve her issue with her dad. Oh wait, they hated each other. I forgot! Quote:
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Did Dawson ever talk about how good Joey was in bed. He's the only character to rank sex partners with Natasha coming in at number 1. Even in the finale, he's skipping out on dates. He's over worked Ok, but there is always an excuse somewhere for Dawson. Quote:
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Last edited by AsgardianJane; 03-08-2016 at 02:35 AM |
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#11 | |||
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I couldn’t resist the temptation to respond to AsgardianJane. I’ve really enjoyed the discussion about a show that both of us have clearly thought a great deal (too much?) about over a long period. I have decided not to respond in the point by point way we have been communicating as I think that is going around in circles.
Instead, I want to return briefly to what I think is a serious contradiction in your argument about the show. 1. You agree with me (or at least you seem to), that the show originally had a Dawson/Joey endgame envisioned by KW. You have also pointed out that when the series looked like it was about to come to an end in Season 4, the ending written was Dawson/Joey (the much loved/hated ‘Coda’). You have also accepted that Season 5 ended with Dawson/Joey. You have agreed that Season 6 didn’t end with an explicit Dawson/Joey (because you claimed that three such season endings in a row would be a bit much), but with a heavily implied Dawson/Joey. You have also said that the writers felt compelled for reasons of loyalty to stick with Dawson/Joey endgame throughout the 4 post-KW seasons. You have also agreed that the first episode of the finale was written with a Dawson/Joey ending in mind. As is obvious, I agree with all this, 100 per cent. 2. You then maintain that somehow, from Season 3 onwards, a Pacey/Joey ending was being prepared and signalled as the best possible ending, and have now gone further and started to argue that if we look closely at Season 1, there is evidence of this ending even there. I don’t think both of these claims can be maintained simultaneously (writers had one ending in mind yet were simultaneously undermining that ending by providing us with a much better one – from the get go). I think there is a much simpler explanation for the ending we got. Pressure. Let me explain. Planning for Season 3 is going nowhere fast, as bad idea piles on bad idea. Berlanti comes up with the notion that a new love triangle will be introduced: not the Eve (as a Jen replacement)-Dawson-Joey triangle that everyone must have realised was ridiculous and wouldn’t work even as they were working hard on it, but Pacey-Joey-Dawson. Pacey’s kissing of Joey is the kiss that saved a show, or so we are told. The difficulty for the writers with this triangle is that 1. There is no real foreshadowing of it in the first 2 seasons (in other words, I don’t for a minute buy your claim that the episode in season 1 where Pacey fancied Joey was anything other than a way the writers could get Dawson to start to face the fact that he was in love with Joey); 2. Fans had been shipping ‘Pacey-Andie’ (fanatically) and ‘Dawson-Joey’ (for two seasons). Therefore they had to work hard to make the new element of Pacey-Joey in any way credible and acceptable. So, first, Pacey-Andie have to be broken up, but Pacey cannot be to blame (so, Andie – someone fans loved in Season 2 – is destroyed and made to behave in ways that are just inexplicable; and Dawson becomes a complete douchebag – though, for the long term plan of a Dawson-Joey ending the writers had to maintain the soulmate narrative). The writers are more spectacularly successful in terms of the character destructions than they could have dreamed, and by the start of Season 5 have to get rid of Andie completely. By the end of Season 3, a substantial section of the viewers have decided that they not only want Pacey/Joey but that they hate Dawson. The vitriol poured out on Dawson on fanboards and foura in this period is extraordinary in terms of a major character in a series, and despite a sizeable number remaining loyal to Dawson-Joey, the majority do seem to have switched their allegiances (though the writers remain committed to Dawson-Joey). Another factor that wasn’t fully counted on was the fact that the sexual chemistry between KH and JJ turns out to be fairly electric. This was because while KH genuinely likes JVDB, she actually fancied JJ (as she admitted in a recent interview, there was a ‘reality’ behind the kissing scenes with JJ that there wasn’t with JVDB). As much as I like KH, she is a limited actress, who finds it much easier to sell a scene when she personally feels it. JJ is a better actor, so can sell most things to viewers, but KH needs some help. While her scenes with JVDB are perfectly fine and good, they never match the scenes she has with JJ – but the key issue here is that the writers didn’t factor this intensity into their calculations. The gap between Pacey/Joey and JJ/KH becomes blurred for a lot of viewers in a way it never did with Dawson/Joey and JVDB/KH (where they were actually acting rather than being ‘real’). Hence the obsession with claiming that Pacey/Joey seemed ‘more real’ than Dawson/Joey: this has, I suggest, little to do with the writing, and more to do with the skill sets of the actors involved here. (on a side note, the best actors in the series were, in my opinion, in order of ability: Michelle Williams, Mary Beth Peil, Josh Jackson, Meredith Monroe, Monica Keena, and Mary-Margaret Humes). The Pacey-Joey-Dawson triangle was invented as a way to get ratings up and a way to keep Dawson/Joey apart for a bit longer (the Moonlighting effect in operation here – if you get the two characters who are meant to be together too soon, the dynamic of the series will die; ironically, as Dawson’s Creek is first introduced as a mid-season replacement without any certainty as to whether it would be picked up for a second season, KW had written it as self-contained, so the proper ‘ending’ had already been reached, which meant an increasingly desperate attempt to find ways to keep the soulmates apart). In other words, Pacey/Joey was designed to be a part of the Dawson/Joey journey, and that design was maintained until the last fifteen minutes of the finale. You say that I don’t tend to believe things that characters say about their relationships when they don’t conform to my idea of the series. This accusation is probably true to a certain extent, but it is also true of everyone. We all suffer confirmation bias, and look for evidence to confirm the theories we have already formed, and try to explain away evidence against that theory. So, for example, I certainly, completely, totally believe the characters when they try to explain themselves most of the time. I believe Joey, for example, when she says she has no problem with Pacey hooking up with Audrey. I believe her when she says she doesn’t feel it with Pacey and when she chooses Eddie over Pacey. I believe her completely when she says that the magic with Pacey faded away, but her relationship with Dawson is ‘pure magic’. I believe completely when Pacey says that being with Joey makes him feel like he is nothing. You tend to explain these things away. You put forward various reasons why you think we are not to take these statements as indicating that these characters really mean what they are saying, or that they are just too caught up in their emotions at the time. Fair enough. It is hard to know how to judge who is right in such debates. What I say is that we need to weigh up the various statements against the arc of the plot (always, always always – until the last 15 minutes – supposed to end with Dawson/Joey). When I do that, certain statements made by certain characters make more sense than others which I then contextualise as banter or evasion. Finally, regarding Mr. Brook’s friend (his former best friend, who married Mr. Brooks’s soulmate). It is no coincidence that he was played by Andy Griffith; it is no surprise that this speech takes place in a season in which we are watching another example of what happens when two soulmates are separated by a friend This is not an accident – it is a direct comment on the events of Season 3 and 4, and takes place in an episode where Joey decides to have sex with Pacey. Its significance is crucial to recognise (and is consistent with the arc we agree that the writers had committed to). You also miss the most significant part of what he says to Dawson: when Mr. Brooks dies ‘he'll be with her. I suppose that's the way it…should have always been.’ I had to look that one up, as I haven’t seen the episode since it was first aired, but I remembered the importance of this conversation and the parallels (sometimes clunking ones) the writers were trying to draw. |
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And again I'm running out of time to comment, so only got to a few this time. Heading off to bed now.
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Everyone except Dawson which I think it kind of the point of the statement about Pacey and Joey becoming closer. I don't think anyone was trying to say that Pacey knew her better, just that he knows things about her (and remembers everything) from their time together. And I don't think it was a low blow, it was an observation.
Hmmm...This is an interesting observation. However, I think AsgardianJane was indeed making the argument that Pacey knows Joey better than Dawson ('I'm talking about understanding a person. The difference between knowing what someone did and why they did it, the way they think.'). My understanding of what AsgardianJane is saying here is that while Dawson knows more about what Joey 'did' (the things that happened in her life), Pacey actually understands her better. My point was the opposite. She doesn't get Dawson to write the essay on her college application becausae he can list off the things that happened to Joey in her life, but because he is the best person to explain what kind of a person she is, because he knows her better than anyone else in her life (including her current boyfriend). Dawson doesn't just know things about her - he knows her. Well, we might say, if he knows her so well, why on earth did he not realise in Season 1 that she was in love with him? The answer to this is fairly obvious and is made clear in their final scene in that Season: dawson is afraid of what falling in love will mean for their relationship because he is afraid of growing up. Everyone also knows that he is in love with Joey, but just doesn't want to face up to it. Does he 'know' she is in love with him...? Probably. He just doesn't want to face up to what that means. |
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#15 | ||||||||
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We know there is evidence in Season 1 that they would get together. Objectively. Kevin Williamson told us so. It was seeing their chemistry in season 1 that made him want to pursue PJo later on. At the ATX festival last year he doesn't dispute it when Julie Plec says you can see it coming in the Pilot. Season 1 was where they decided to do PJo. Double Date was the moment it happened that they would go all in. As stated in Detention, there is meant to be sexual tension between the 4 of them. The kiss in Double Date is not out of nowhere, he's been grabbing her ass and trading sexy banter with Joey for the past 9 episodes. And on top of that in Season 3 they go further and say that Pacey has been chasing Joey around for years. Joshua Jackson of course adlibbed that bit in the finale. 'I have always, always loved you' because he was not happy about the PJo amnesia. Quote:
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The problem with Dawson is the same issue they have in season 1. For all the complaining about season 3 Dawson, Season 1 Dawson with Jen is probably worse. The way he judges her, shames her, doesn't have any trust in her and feels owed because he is a 'nice guy'. I don't see Season 3 Dawson as that far off. Quote:
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Joey has no problem with Pacey hooking up with Audrey- No one disputes that in the context of the show (the summer diaries on the website did. They had Joey write that she had to appear OK with it but that she doesn't like it and she doesn't like the idea of Pacey having an experience like their summer away with Audrey. Why not put that in the show?) We are saying that its weird and not emotionally real. Joey 'Doesn't Feel It'- We dispute that because its contradictory to her words and actions in the previous 4 episodes. Also the fact that when she goes back to Eddie she isn't exactly delighted when her face falls as they hug. The writers also set up Joey's fear in 'That Was Then', 'Love Bites', 'Catch-22' and 'Joey Potter and the Capeside Redemption'. We are given reason to doubt she actually feels that way. That was then used to form the basis of Joey's 'Off the Hook' reply and the 'I've always known' speech. 'Pure Magic'- I don't dispute this. Magic isn't real. It doesn't really dispel my vision of Joey. Reality hit her hard at the end of Season 4 with the harsh reality that she can't live happily ever after at that time. She wants to hold on to 'magic', 'fairy dust', 'childhood' longer. 'I feel like I'm nothing'- Remember earlier in the episode Pacey says he is angry at Joey but doesn't know why? His Promicide rant is clarified in their talk after and in 'Seperation Anxiety'. He doesn't just blow up and leave it at that, there is an afterword. Which of course ends with 'If I were lucky enough to own a boat and I would ask the woman I love to come sailing with me, would she?' 'You wouldn't have to ask Pace'. PJo, not done. Which makes Season 5 even weirder but like I said, they worked very, very hard to get people back on the DJo train. Quote:
Joey chooses to follow her heart and sleep with Pacey, she mimics the decision of the woman to choose Griffith and not Brooks. She never expresses regret for this and never says sorry for it. As I said, that scene between Dawson and Joey is so much more touching to me because they don't end up together. It is a key moment in them saying goodbye. Similarly the last scene from 'Home Movies' where the Jude song plays about a woman marrying another man while she watches the video of her and Dawson as a kid. The same episode 'True Love' is revealed which starts with Pacey telling Dawson she's a heartbreaker. So much in those seasons is made richer with the ending we got. |
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