Thursday, December 10, 2009

Curb Your Enthusiasm - Seinfeld reunion

"That ending was so much better than the one that I wrote." -Larry David says in an unusual display of humility. You almost wonder if he was talking about the ending to the reunion special, or the "Seinfeld" finale.

Here is my opinion on the "Seinfeld" finale: It's not that it didn't work because the characters were revealed to be selfish and shallow and awful human beings. We already knew that. It didn't work because Larry was worried that his audience hadn't figured this out on their own, and that he needed to tell them. And his need to make that point got in the way of the comedy. It wasn't an episode; it was a list of all the bad things Jerry, George, Elaine and Kramer had ever done.

And he's always been adamant (including in a line in this episode) that he has no regrets about the finale. But I feel like Larry has given "Seinfeld" fans the ending they deserved but didn't get a decade ago.

In fairness, placing this "Seinfeld" reunion in the confines of a "Curb" episode makes it easy for it to stand out. It's all the good bits, none of the plot mechanics: just joke, joke, joke, joke, joke. But what we did see of it, here and in "The Table Read," felt much more along the lines of what the finale should have been: just one last collection of stories involving these four socially maladjusted people.

Now, as an episode of "Curb," I'd put this one a little behind "The Table Read," which had the benefit of introducing most of the reunion show jokes already - though this episode featured Jerry's wonderful rant about BlackBerry etiquette. But it still had plenty of inspired moments, whether it was Larry smiling through his pure hatred for Mocha Joe as he filled his tip cup with $20 bills, or the use of "Having said that" as a classic Seinfeld-style catchphrase.

The highlight, easily, was Larry's brief attempt to play George Costanza, and the bizarre meta moment of Larry David broadly playing the mannerisms of an actor who became famous for playing a shorter, stockier, slightly more lovable version of himself.

In the end, the episode provides the exact kind of happy endings that "Seinfeld" itself eschewed: the reunion comes together and is terrific, and Larry and Cheryl get back together, albeit with Cheryl getting an instant reminder of why she left the guy in the first place.

As a "Seinfeld" fan, I feel like I finally got all I needed to see of Jerry and friends. Having said that, I never seem to get enough of the fab five (I had to sneak that in!)

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