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The Good Wife – Haven’t we seen this cliffhanger before?

It will be telling if, next season, Glenn Childs returns to 'The Good Wife'. A return for the former State's Attorney means the show plans to focus at least part of its time on the political … an end to his character could spell a prolonged detour into a lot of cheesiness.

- Season 2, Episode 23 - "Closing Arguments"

I think something must have gotten lost in translation on last night’s season two finale of The Good Wife, because while the stakes of a judge’s murder were certainly referenced, I’m not certain that I ever felt the dire situation that Jacob Rickter (Seth Gilliam, not quite as good as I remember him being on The Wire) was supposedly facing. That said, Judge Morris’ (Jane Alexander) warnings to Will about Rickter’s dim prospects in the appeals process certainly made the defense’s stall tactics a fun and interesting diversion. I hope Petey (William Hill) was okay reading one hundred and eighty-seven pages aloud.

But then I suppose the action last night was anywhere other than in the courtroom … or was it? Lockhart/Gardner appears to be expanding, and I have to ask: how? Even forgetting about what Bond may or may not have done for the firm, when in the last few weeks did we witness an explosion in revenue? Suddenly money’s flowing like there’s no tomorrow? And even if it is, is the prudent decision after their recent financial struggles to spend it all today instead of thinking about tomorrow?

Or maybe the expansion was simply necessary to build Alicia’s promotion into the story line and entice Eli to bring his lobbyist firm in-house. First of all, great way of keeping Eli on the show as a regular! I’m glad that he’s not going to be forced to do something other than politicking in order to stay in the fold … at the same time, the pressure that we know he’ll be applying to Alicia to stand by her cheating husband is old and annoying even before it really starts. Please spare us (and the fictional residents of Illinois).

I also question the timeline that we witnessed with regard to Eli meeting with Diane and Alicia being asked to act as liaison between Eli’s political department and the firm’s legal arm — Diane approached Alicia about bumping her up before she ever spoke with Eli. So what promotion did Diane have in mind for Alicia before she got stuck with the Eli gig? Or was that a flub?

Speaking of flubs, how about Russo (Kelli Giddish) referring to a “PRC” test, something that we all — including her character, who corrected herself later on — know is called a “PCR,” or polymerase chain reaction, test? I assume she just misspoke, but it was surprising that a mistake about a crime show staple like PCR could squeak by in the editing process.

The other action, of course, took place between Alicia and Will. Oh to be able to get back the five minutes I spent watching the end of last night’s episode! Two actors who spent fifty-five minutes turning in stellar performances took me right out of the scene by forcing emotions that are completely lacking on screen. Alicia might as well have headed up to that hotel room with her gay brother Owen (Dallas Roberts) — minus the intimate moments, of course — who, incidentally, was in the episode for what reason? I had hoped we’d already seen the last of him.

I take it the season-ending cliffhanger is meant to either be “did they/didn’t they,” or “what happens now that they did?” but my assumption is that Alicia won’t go through with it. Despite the state of her marriage — and the unworthiness of her mate — I can’t imagine Alicia cheating. And if she did, I think we’d have to have a whole other conversation about the type of person that she’s evolved into. I hope we don’t have to do that.

I guess all I have left to mention is season three. CBS announced that The Good Wife has been renewed, and will be moving to Sunday nights. Is the network looking to dominate a new night of the week, or is it a demotion for the “ratings hit anywhere but on CBS” series? Honestly, while I’m concerned about anything that threatens the show’s future, I think it can speak for itself if given the chance. With a third season it has just such a shot … we’ll have to wait and see if it scores with great cases and suspenseful intrigue, or misses with boring chemistry-less plots and sexual ambiguity nonsense. Which show will return in the fall?

Photo Credit: CBS

4 Responses to “The Good Wife – Haven’t we seen this cliffhanger before?”

May 18, 2011 at 7:06 PM

How could you not love the last 5 minutes? I was sitting in the airport watching and I couldn’t keep the smile off my face. I loved it. Very fitting for their relationship.

I hope they have their hour together and I’m looking forward to where it goes from there.

I hope Eli does join the firm, but I’m not sure about Alicia working for him as a liaison. Not sure if legal/political is a good move for her. I’d miss her in court.

May 18, 2011 at 8:20 PM

It’s all about whether you buy their chemistry. Also, I don’t think Alicia would have allowed herself to be in that situation given where things are with Peter. And showing her recognizable face in public like she was doing? She’s smarter than that.

But basically it all boils down to this: series finale cliffhanger? Really?

May 18, 2011 at 8:51 PM

I got the sense that Eli joining the firm was going to be a revenue stream for the firm, not a job for Eli. In other words, they didn’t have to raise money for it. Maybe I’m wrong.

I’m still with you on the Will and Alicia thing. They just don’t have a lot of chemistry. I’m not sure if that’s the popular opinion or not. I don’t have a problem with that story at this point though. Alicia is scorned, looking for something to shake up her life, I think, and Will was there. It was established that they were both pretty drunk, which leads people to do things they normally wouldn’t (like putting herself out in public). As for “cheating,” I think it just shows how done Alicia is with Peter. I don’t think she even considers it cheating. In her mind, the marriage is over.

I still like Owen, though, I can’t ride that bandwagon with you, Aryeh.

Also, wasn’t the race just a primary? Did they just skip the actual race? Did no republicans run?

May 18, 2011 at 9:06 PM

I think it’s just a place for Eli to sit, although the party chair did mention needing to make sure to get Eli paid between elections. But even if it’s just a revenue stream, they still seem to be expanding, hiring, and renting new office space….

Is there a Republican party in Chicago? :) In the mayoral election everyone runs as “nonpartisan”; maybe it was the same here?

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