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Once Upon a Time – David’s a big, fat, coward … unlike Prince Charming

Magic water, a golden fiance, a fearless prince, a sneaky writer dude and a cowardly David. This was one weird 'Once Upon a Time.'

- Season 1, Episode 13 - "What Happened to Frederick"

Explain to me this: How is it that Prince Charming can be so utterly, well, charming and gallant in Fairy Tale Land and yet be such a weaselly wimp in Storybrooke? Is his contemporary worminess a side effect of his coma, because the David we see in current time doesn’t hold a candle to the lovesick Prince Charming who was willing to risk everything, including his life, for love in his royal backstory.

First, David wanted to keep illicitly sneaking around behind his wife’s back, transforming Mary Margaret, the woman who he believes is his true love, into a mistress. Instead of breaking up with his wife, with whom he had no memories nor chemistry, before moving ahead with his relationship with Mary Margaret, he wanted the best of both worlds.

Then, when Mary Margaret insisted that he be honest, David agreed to be honest with Kathryn. Only he chickened out and instead of telling her about how he’d fallen for Mary Margaret, he said he and Kathryn weren’t “clicking” and that she should go to Boston, to law school, without him (only she’s unaware of the fact that, like the Hotel California, once you check into Storybrooke, you can never leave, at least not without Regina’s okay). Because he remained silent, David enabled Regina to be the one to tell Kathryn about his affair and Regina gleefully helped spread word all over town that Mary Margaret was a home-wrecker. (Regina’s trusty can of spray paint was a helpful tool for her make-shift, shaming billboard on Mary Margaret’s car.) How uncharming of David.

Now, to make matters worse, according to previews for the next episode, there’s going to be a missing person investigation because Kathryn, who was attempting to leave Storybrooke, has “vanished,” and Mary Margaret will be one of the key suspects. I’ll give the writers this much, I didn’t see this twist coming.

See why I like Fairy Tale Land so much better? There, Prince Charming can face down a shape-shifter who tried to seduce him by pretending to be Snow White in order to fill a canteen with magic water in order to free his reluctant fiance’s lost love from his tomb of gold. In Fairy Tale Land, Prince Charming says romantic things like how he’ll always find Snow White, even if it means risking his neck, literally. I don’t see David, in his current state, doing anything like that.

I don’t know what to make, frankly, of the other guy skulking around Storybrooke, August W. Booth, who, appears to have re-written or re-imagined or re-something Henry’s fairy tale book then planted it near Emma’s car. (It went missing after Regina had his secret hiding place, the play scape at the park, demolished.) Are we supposed to surmise that this dude was hired by Regina to fashion a new book of stories to persuade Henry to read only the tales Regina wants him to read? Or does the writer guy have some sort of power to change the future and/or the past? Who knows if now the entire premise upon which the pilot episode was based — that Henry knew the backstories of all of Storybrooke’s inhabitants because of a book Mary Margaret had given him — is put into question.

Having Emma drink “magic” water from a “magic” pond that’s allegedly beneath the well (along with the rest of Fairy Tale Land), that, I’m assuming that’s supposed to be the same lake from which Emma’s dad drew the water to free Frederick from the golden suit of armor. It appeared as though the writer dude August was scamming Emma by telling her that, by drinking the water, she’d supposedly get back something she lost. Then poof! Henry’s missing book is in a metal case beneath the tire of her car. Regardless of August’s trick, do you think that water has magic powers in Storybrooke?

What do you think, did the Once Upon a Time writers leave us with enough questions to mull over and discuss for the next two weeks until the next new episode?

Photo Credit: Chris Helcermana-Benge/ABC

6 Responses to “Once Upon a Time – David’s a big, fat, coward … unlike Prince Charming”

February 20, 2012 at 9:14 AM

Could August W. Booth be older Henry or am I watching too much Fringe?

February 20, 2012 at 2:42 PM

Yeah, I had that some question in my head.

February 20, 2012 at 11:24 AM

I did seriously want David to grow a pair! The scene that made me scratch my head though was in Fairy Tale land where Charming was galloping away from his Father’s men and his horse easily jumped over a tree but all of the King’s men pulled up as if that was utterly impossible to do.
I do think the water has a bit of magic in it..it worked..Emma got the book back!

February 21, 2012 at 12:51 AM

I wonder if the fairy tale book has some sort of magic powers that Booth wants so he made a fake of it so that Henry would stop looking for it.

Either way, he’s too manipulative, and not in a fun Mr. Gold way.

I like Snow and Charming but David and Mary Margaret are rather a bore. Yet again? I thought when I heard this episode was going to be about them. Kathryn saved the Storybrooke parts, as did Regina when she realized Kathryn was going to let David go.

February 22, 2012 at 5:55 PM

I don’t think the writer of the book was hired by Regina.
I was thinking he was more likely the original author of the book and was adding to it.

As for Prince Charming I was disappointed in the fact that he did not tell Kathryn about Mary Margaret, when he told Mary Margaret he would. Though up until that point I could understand him being confused about being bound by his duty and promises to his wife, while being in love with someone else.
I can understand him feeling like a failure by not honoring his wife but not the “I just don’t want anyone to get hurt” ridiculousness.

I wonder if Emma had a curse on her?

March 4, 2012 at 7:11 PM

it looked to me like he was cleaning and repairing the book (yes, due to DVRs, I’m just getting to this episode). The book was buried in the sand and exposed due to a storm. I don’t remember seeing anything that indicated he was copying the book, but he was cleaning the pages, drying them, and re-making the book. If the book is truly old, it’s made of vellum or papyrus, not wood pulp paper – it can be cleaned and restored.

I like the idea of the author being an older Henry, but that’s injecting yet another level of reality (the future) into Storybrooke – I don’t think they’d do that. But somebody did write down all the old stories in the book that Henry has – there’s almost assuredly a connection there.

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