It's 2020: A new decade begins and we're still in the Pacific Northwest, albeit a scant two-hundred years in the past, and no one saw this in a movie theater. But the parallel lines of time still connect, even if a single year looks about as different as two-hundred. We're still trying to take a little something from the Haves, and hoping they don't kill us for it. Is time even passing and how much time? This same dilemma continues, and like all (good) trouble, there's no beginning, no end: only the struggle, and at its heart it speaks of dreams.
This Oregon is a true true melting pot, more so than today. And violence exists. More so than today. It's The American Dream, always complicated, always complicit in its willingness to turn to violence at the drop of a hat or a little spilt milk. When Cookie and King-Lu escape into the forest, I see the same woods as Kurt and Mark's in Old Joy. In a panic, King-Lu, a Chinese Man, confronts a Native American man: their encounter again reminiscent of Meek's Indian, only this time it works. Buttons for a canoe.
They meet their demise at the hands of a wholly insignificant character, simply playing his part in the great game of life (aiming for significance, climbing that ladder). And before they go, Cookie, the chef from Maryland, tells a joke: "Why is a baker like a beggar?"
These movies are significant because they level the playing field. We're all the same in the end.
CHRONOLOGICALLY
⫷ EPISODE 302B - (YOU ARE HERE) - EPISODE 304 ⫸
⫷ EPISODE 302B - (YOU ARE HERE) - EPISODE 304 ⫸
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