Blind Faith
Roswell Review of 'Toy House'
by Kate Ancel
copyright January 20, 2000
"Max, you know what your
problem is? You put everything on yourself, on your own shoulders.
Maybe you should have some faith in the people around you."
The relationship between mother
and child was explored in this touching and, at times
heartbreaking, outing penned by Jon Harmon Feldman and Jason
Katims. It clearly showed us how secrets can divide families and
how difficult blind faith and unconditional love can sometimes be.
There were no easy answers to be had here and I was pleased they
didn't wrap the story up conveniently by telling the secret. This
outcome was much more realistic and offered much greater
potential for future story development as Isabel and Max must now
deal with actively keeping the truth from their mother.
This episode also gave new
dimensions to the relationships between Michael and Maria and
between Liz and Kyle as they found their way past hostilities.
Random Thoughts:
I wonder how much of Max's
resistance to telling their mother stems from the resistance he's
been facing from Isabel and Michael for months about bringing Liz
into the fold. He threw their words back in Isabel's face more
than once in this episode and the frustration he feels about it
was apparent. I did find his absolute refusal to even consider
telling their mother a little hard to believe given his complete
faith that Liz could be trusted. Certainly you would think Diane
has given him more reason think she would be accepting of the
idea than Liz had before he confided in her. I would have thought
Liz's acceptance of his true nature would have made him more open
to trusting the woman who has apparently loved him
unconditionally most of his life.
But maybe it's a case of too much
too soon for someone almost completely unused to sharing himself
with anyone other than Isabel and Michael. Also, the relationship
he's had with his mother is one of the few normal relationships
he's allowed himself to have over the years. It must be
frightening to think of that being taken from him and being
confronted with suspicion from the last person he expected it
from.
And it's obvious that Isabel has
some real issues with Max taking charge when she disagrees with
his position. I don't get the impression this happens often and
that she is fairly used to getting her way when it does. It's
equally obvious that Max doesn't find it easy to stand his ground
when faced with her anger and her desperation.
I find Isabel to be such a
paradoxical character. With her family, she is almost completely
open, warm and loving. She has obviously felt safe and secure in
the love of the parents who've raised them since the very
beginning. And yet she's developed a persona that is the polar
opposite of the warm, loving girl she is at home to deal with the
outside world. I enjoy watching the different facets of her
personality unfold. Katherine Heigl does such a great job showing
us the many layers of Isabel. Her despair at having to withhold
the truth from her mother was heartbreaking.
But I found it strange that
Diane's suspicions focused so intently on just Max. It seems
reasonable to me to assume that if Max had special powers to hide
because of where he came from, so would Isabel, since they
obviously came from the same place.
While this was primarily an
episode that focused on Max's inability to control everything
around him, we also saw Liz struggling to get back in control of
her life. She refused to admit that it was Max's decision for
them to break up by insisting that the decision was 99% mutual.
She took steps to resolve the tension with Kyle by extending an
olive branch and followed through, opening the door to a more
solid friendship with him. And she made it clear to Max that
she's not going to be sitting around pining for him.
There was also some real progress
in the lines of communication between Michael and Maria. Maria
forces Michael to deal with all those messy feelings he's managed
to avoid most of his life. She doesn't make excuses for him or
make it easy for him. In spite of his repeated statement that he
has to remain uninvolved, he's finding himself entangled in a
very earthly relationship whether he likes it or not. Her opinion
matters to him and he goes out of his way in this episode to make
things right with her. I hope Maria realizes what it cost him to
be so honest with her and how much he must care about her to make
that effort.
Likes:
- I loved the exploration of
Max and Isabel's relationship with their mother. We have
a much clearer understanding of their dynamic, both
individually and together. The bonding scenes were very
well done and Mary Ellen Trainor did a great job of
conveying love for the kids as well as the frustration
any mother would have at feeling left out of something
significantly important in her children's lives and the
hurt of feeling inadequate as a parent.
- I like Diane's protectiveness
of her kids. She shows us again that she's aware of the
undercurrents between Max and the sheriff and she doesn't
appreciate it.
- I was glad to see the easing
of tensions between Liz and Kyle. He's got a lot of
potential as a character and now that they are on the
road to friendship, maybe we will see more of him in the
future. And let's hope that any further life lessons he
learns from Sally Jessy are as enlightening as this one
proved to be.
- I got a chuckle out of Maria
spontaneously cheering for the other team and her
subsequent reaction.
- The scenes between Michael
and Maria were fabulous. I loved that Michael didn't give
up when faced with her hostility, but instead kept making
serious efforts to put things right between them. I found
it very in keeping with the Michael we've come to know
that he would try to solve the interpersonal problem by
fixing the napkin holder for her. It represented
something real and concrete without the messiness that
comes with feelings. I found his anger at her failing
grade touching and sweet. Brenden Fehr conveyed the
confusion and determination Michael was experiencing
superbly.
- I liked how subtly Sheriff
Valenti fed Diane's suspicions about the fire. Instead of
coming right out and asking how Max put out a grease fire
with a pan of water, he leaves a brochure for her to
read, allowing her to wonder that for herself instead of
raising her protective shackles by being accusatory.
- I thought it was cute how
Alex rearranged everyone in the bleachers to make room
for Isabel and her friends and conveniently created a
space for himself right next to her.
- Loved Mom giving Max the
third degree about his mysterious female lab partner.
- I loved that Max wrapped the
toy house in newspaper and then was embarrassed about it.
- I thought Jason Behr did an
outstanding job of showing the frustration and fear Max
was feeling as things spiraled out of his control. From
watching Liz gravitate back to Kyle to his first serious
fight with Isabel to his heartfelt plea to his mother for
understanding, his reactions were completely believable
and real.
Dislikes:
- There were more set
inconsistencies in the Evans and Valenti homes. There was
a window where the fireplace should be in the Evans'
living room and the Valenti living room was completely
different yet again. This makes the three different sets
used for that house, by my count.
- The scene at the lockers with
Max and Liz felt contrived. Since when is there reserved
seating at a high school basketball game? There was
nothing explained about why they would be compelled to
sit together and therefore the conversation was
unnecessary. And if they were uncomfortable enough about
the whole situation to actually have a conversation about
it, why would they sit next to each other instead of Liz
sitting with Maria?
- How ironic that both Isabel
and Liz were very quick to condemn Max for his
controlling ways, without ever acknowledging their own
tendencies in the same direction. While I think it was
good that Max was forced to confront this in himself,
we've seen time and again that Liz is every bit the
control freak that Max is and Isabel has been trying to
control Max ever since he confessed the truth to Liz. If
they really believe that Max is the only one with a
control problem, we need to take up a collection and buy
them both tickets on the clue train.
- I thought Max's pretext for
going to see Liz after work at the Crashdown was weak. I
think it would have been a much stronger scene if he had
admitted that he was there because he needed someone to
talk to who could provide a little perspective on the
situation and wasn't as emotionally vested as Isabel and
Michael. I think the same result could have been achieved
if they had left Kyle out of it, and Max would have
established that he still values Liz as a friend and
respects her opinion. He could have even asked her
directly if she was getting back together with Kyle
without creating the ill will giving her permission
created.
Favorite Quotes:
- Max: "You're a real
party animal, Mom.."
- Max: "Everything you
always wanted to know about a dead frog."
- Max: "Thank you. You
mentioned that. Like 10 times."
- Michael: "Dealing
with Frick and Frack over there is one thing, but we
can't bring adults into this and expect them to handle it.."
- Liz: "Hey."
- Max: "Hey."
- Michael: "Hey."
- Maria: "Yeah,
whatever."
- Michael: "Humans. How
excited they get over someone putting a ball through a
hoop. It's ridiculous."
- Isabel: "What are you
saying? That if we tell Mom the truth, she won't love us
anymore?"
- Max: "I'm saying
we'll never know the answer to that question."
- Maria: "Look, I know
how to grip, OK?"
- Michael: "Apparently
you don't."
- Maria: "Interesting.
You know, you should get yourself massive doses of
therapy, like immediately."
- Maria: "Maybe you
should figure out what's wrong with you, Michael. Why you
can't just piece together an apology like any normal
human being. OOPS! Maybe that's the problem."
- Isabel: "We can't
just do a Max on this. We can't just sit back and
passively watch."
- Michael: "You healed
a pigeon. Great. Now you're Doctor Doolittle."
- Liz: "Excuse me? Are
you apologizing to me?
- Kyle: "I guess."
- Liz: "Wow. You know,
I wasn't aware that this was part of your repertoire."
- Kyle: "I didn't
either."
- Kyle: "About lunch. I
was hoping for something high in both fat and cholesterol
without any inherent nutritional value."
- Maria: "I guess I can
safely rule out any career paths involving wood."
- Michael: "It
redefined the term napkin holder."
- Michael: "I gotta be
a stone wall and when I'm with you sometimes I don't feel
like a stone wall anymore.
- Maria: "What do you
feel like?"
- Michael: "I don't
know...like, confused."
- Maria: "Human?"
- Michael: "Yeah, and I
don't want to feel that way."
- Max: "She's got this
thing all of a sudden that I'm controlling."
- Liz: "Oh, so it's her
thing?"
- Max: "What?"
- Liz: "Just take a
Psych class, Max, because you are controlling."
I give this episode 4.5 UFOs out
of 5.
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