Where is the pen? It's so incredibly good. :D
I appreciate Abed's lampshading of bottle episodes, because I usually do hate bottle episodes. This one was alright.
Abed: "Puppy parade?"
Troy: "I am in. I wanna see if those wiener dogs are born that way, or if they start off normal and then get wiener."
Okay, Troy...
Jeff: "All right, it's not on the floor, so whoever accidentally took--"
Annie: "Not accidentally. Accidents don't just happen over and over and over again, okay? This isn't budget day-care."
Jeff: "Okay, whoever insidiously and with great malice aforethought abducted Annie's pen, confess, repent and relinquish so we can leave."Britta: "And before you can say 1984, the Thought Police are forcy-worcing you to bend and spread."
Jeff: "'Bend and spread'? Are the Thought Police gonna make love to us?"
Troy: "Do they find thoughts in our butts? I knew I should've read that book."
Pierce: "If, and I mean if the culprit is among us."
Amongus
"You would've been ovulating on Halloween." — Abed
Troy's face, omg :O
Every one of these "special" episodes keeps getting better. This one is the best so far! I love the resolution they come to and I'm impressed they could bring out so much drama with one room, seven characters and a pen.
SCORE: 8/10
Oh yes, we're having a bottleneck episode
9.4/10. At base, I think Community is a writer's show. That's not to say that it doesn't have many strengths. The show owes much of its success to the incredible collection of performers it put together, and despite its network sitcom setting, it was often surprisingly ambitious with its visual storytelling, both in terms of its genre pastiches and the sharp editing and framing of its more traditional episodes. But I think Season 4 helps demonstrate that the show couldn't subsist on those great performances without the unique voice that came from the show's writing room, and an episode like "Cooperative Caligraphy" shows that the show could still deliver one of its greatest episodes even without the benefit of those impressive visuals and homages.
Because what's really striking about this episode is how it manages to keep up so much momentum and energy despite setting everything within the confines of the study room (albeit with hilarious PA announcements discussing the puppy parade). The study group-rending mystery of who took Annie's pen gives the episode a propulsive quality, and the twists, turns, and recriminations make the episode into a nice psychodrama about the frayed ends and collective strengths of this group of slightly (or severely) bent individuals within the confines of a bottle episode.
And oh that Community darkness mixed with that Community weirdness. The reveals that Abed has been tracking the women of the group's menstrual cycles, that Shirley is pregnant after reuniting with her ex-husband (with hints that the events of Halloween may have had something to do with it) and the bad blood and accusations that are batted back and forth are each marvelous in their own ways, allowing the show to have plot in an episode where no one can go anywhere or do much of anything. It's just twenty-two minutes of dialogue, the vast majority of it pretty damn glorious.
Of course, it all gets resolved in the end (apart from the rhesus ex machina tag), with something pleasantly life-affirming, that the group would rather believe in a fiction and trust each other than give into the fact that something as minor as a missing pen has torn them apart. It's a fantastic premise and execution, and even in the shadow of grandiose bits like paintball and alternate timelines, stands out as one of the show's most ambitious outings.
Shout by ChrisKingVIP BlockedParent2024-05-08T23:06:16Z
OMG! I'm dying at-- Annie: "Not accidentally. Accidents don't just happen over and over and over again, okay? This isn't budget day-care." -- THAT IS SO DARK!!! LOL!!! And the more you think about it, the deeper and darker it gets!