DVD Review: Gilmore Girls - The Seventh Season

Author: PatrickPublished: Dec 06, 2007 at 10:01 pm 1 comment

I stopped watching the seventh season of Gilmore Girls about two thirds of the way through it. I’d seen, and loved, the previous six seasons, but the departure of the show’s creator Amy Sherman-Palladino robbed the show of its soul. A lot of people had issues with the sixth season, but I loved what she had done with the characters, and was eager to see her finish the story.

Midway through this season, there’s a plot development so bad, it pretty much knocked me off the show. The incredibly tight character focus that the Palladinos had developed over the course of the series was neglected for sensational soap opera plotting. The show had drifted so far from what I liked that I didn’t have any particular desire to see the end.

But then the season came out on DVD, so I figured I might as well finish it up. Watching the final six episodes, I was actually pretty impressed. It was still not near what the Palladinos were doing, but it was competent enough to be a satisfying finale to the series.

The series always had two great strengths, Palladino’s writing and Lauren Graham’s performance. Even though the writing isn’t there, Lauren Graham is still amazing. Lorelai Gilmore is one of the most likable and complex characters in the history of television. A lot of TV characters go through a litany of really awful stuff. Look at Nate on Six Feet Under, he’s a regular guy, but suffers through so much, it’s hard to relate to his troubles on an everyday level. Lorelai’s problems are the sort of things that real people face, and her constant refusal to really engage with those problems is how a lot of real people deal with the stuff they face. With the exception of the amazing drunk confession scene at Lane’s wedding, we generally watch her suffer in silence, claiming to be fine even as she feels increasingly worried about her impending loneliness.

That loneliness is magnified as she starts to realize that Rory will soon be leaving her forever. Even before Rory graduates, you can see her starting to worry about her potentially lonely future. The Christopher arc earlier in the season was a big mistake because it filled plot without allowing for real character development. It was a brash, hard to believe decision, and from the moment it happened, it was clear that it would eventually be undone. Once it’s undone, we can view Lorelai not as part of a romantic unit, but just as herself. The show usually worked best when Lorelai was isolated, her relationships with Max or Digger were low points for the show because her participation in the relationship numbs her individuality.

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Article Author: Patrick

Patrick Meaney is a filmmaker/reviewer based out of New York. His films are available on RespectFilms.com, and writings at Thoughts on Stuff. His is also the creator of the webseries The Third Age.

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Article comments

  • 1 - JD Lamb

    Dec 21, 2007 at 1:39 pm

    I agree with your analysis about Lorelai- she does'nt deal with her problems. Thats what
    was so realistic about her character. Anyone could relate to her.

    A major let down this season was that David Rosenthal abandoned the business side of her character-Her dreams for the Dragon Fly Inn. Amy continued building up that storyline- in the end of the fifth season planetd the seed for Lorelai to franchise her business. Its true, a big part of the series was about her inabily to have a stable relationship Its was never the center of her life. Her relationship with Rory was the center of the show. This year Gilmore became the Lorelai relationship show. The balance between mother and daughter evaporated.

    Rory barely had any storyline this season, but that a discussion for another post.

    Amy Sherman Paladino was building an amazing show. Year after year, she added a new layer to the series. Its a shame, Gilmore Girls had to end this way. As a mockery of itself.

    Hope the tv movie will happen

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