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Madmen s7, ep 13/ Ways of Going Home, Alejandro Zambra
"People tell you who they are, but we ignore it. Because we want them to be who we want them to be."
- Mad Men (2007-2015)
āHe was conceived out of desperation and born into a mess,ā Don Draper narrates from his own therapeutic diary. Heās referring to his youngest son, Gene, born from a fleeting moment of passion in Donās decaying marriage to Betty ā but clearly this sentence describes his own bleak, sordid origins.
Mad Men is one of the most spoiled shows ever so this will have spoilers. Donās moment of zen became a meme seconds after the show wrapped. Whatās strange is that the meme doesnāt seem to have an opinion on this ending of this series. The end of Mad Men isnāt beloved like Six Feet Under, polarizing like The Sopranos, or reviled like Dexter. It simply is an ending.
Much like Mad Menās ostensible parent series, The Sopranos, there is some ambiguity. I guess you could interpret that the smirk followed by the āBuy the World a Cokeā advertisement means that Don made a triumphant return and penned a masterpiece ad for his dream client. But does the smirk mean that Don has let such things go? Has his mentality changed to regard these conquests as trivialities? After his disappearance nothing indicates that McCann Erickson would continue to placate Don let alone give him creative carte blanche on their largest account. Donās career, for all intents and purposes, appears over in 1970. He is a very rich man and McCann Erickson is a very unhappy workplace.
Mad Men is a hulking 92 episodes, a long show in todayās era of shows doing 8-10 episode seasons every two years; and sags heavily after season 5. The first half of Season Six is nigh unwatchable and the show got bogged down in constant business intrigue with multiple mergers and new names for Sterling Cooper. Weāre saddled with pointless characters like Ted Chaough and Lou Adler who are one-dimensional and the show spins its wheels hard including a very poor creative decision to mostly pull the show out of New York and thrust it into Los Angeles to make Don ābi-coastalā ā a move that was pretty clearly designed to accomodate outside film projects, not to bolster the quality of Mad Men itself.
Harry Hamlin, who had been mostly missing from TV since major stardom in the 1980s in L.A. Law does add to the proceedings as soft spoken and self-serving weasel, Jim Cutler. I never felt like Mad Men needed an antagonist character, but he was the most worthy one and had a unique presence and delivery. Don is his own worst enemy. Dick Whitman is the hero. The contradictions of Don, and Dick, who I think are primarily distinct (Hamm makes it very clear which he is playing) are the conflict.
Much has also been made of Jessica Pare. She performs a notorious burlesque at Donās birthday party that embodied ācringeā before that was an ubiquitous word. By the time they had developed any chemistry together the show started ripping them apart by her acting career causing conflict about where they should live; and cooled tensions between Betty and Don reminded audiences of their superior chemistry and more fascinating relationship.
I skipped locating all my discs and watched Mad Men on IMDB TV which gave the series, appropriately, advertisements. Some were loud, garish, and artless; but there were some like a sexy beach themed ad for Calvin Klein āEternityā set to a sultry lounge cover of āUnchained Melodyā - I could imagine Don Draper flashing a whisky soaked grin of approval at the spot. This is a good way to watch the show; monitor your volume button as some ads are much louder than the show volume and horribly obnoxious.
Mad Men is a long, uneven, and imperfect show but its grace notes are incomparable. The āCarouselā sequence from Season One is one of the most perfect bits of TV drama ever. Jon Hammās performance as Don Draper and Dick Whitman, what little we see of the latter, are fascinating television characters portrayed to perfection. His work in The Town shows that he has presence in film and Iām baffled at how such a versatile talent has had a tepid career in the six years since the show signed off. Elisabeth Moss has launched into the stratosphere and I sure would like to see more of John Slattery, Christina Hendricks, and Vince Kartheiser (making Pete relatable and somewhat likable is a small miracle of the writing and performances on this series.)
Mad Men isnāt as good as The Sopranos, it isnāt as marketable as Breaking Bad, and it certainly could have told a more compact story; yet I loved spending time in its beautiful dream of the turbulent 1960s. I do not believe weād have masterworks like āOnce Upon a Time...in Hollywoodā that were made in its wake without it.
My time with the show was much like Donās relationships; thrilling highs and plunging lows - yet I canāt wait to hop on that carousel and revisit the series again soon. It truly is a time machine.
Don Draper
Sometimes I ask my self: what if I could really work with these two rascals in the sixties? š„ . . . Pic @luxconduct . . . #dondraper #madmen #sterlingcooper #rogersterling #johnslattery #madmenstyle #weekend #drink #jonhamm #menstyle #styleformen #classicmenswear #elegantsauvage #smoking #suitandtie #elegantman #elegance (presso New York, New York) https://www.instagram.com/p/CFbmHWtoA4e/?igshid=1vzzh7v0tnd6k
Sales of Lucky Strike cigarettes increased by 10 billion packets the year after being featured on the television show Mad Men. #FACT