Crazy Ex-Girlfriend (S1. E1-2)
Monday, July 11, 2016 at 5:30PM
NATHANIEL R in Crazy Ex Girlfriend, David Hull, Donna Lynne Champlin, Gabrielle Ruiz, Rachel Bloom, Santino Fontana, TV, Vella Lovell, Vincent Rodriguez, comedy, musicals

You know what's crazier than leaving a half a million salary in NYC to move to West Covina, California (2 hours from the beach! - 4 in traffic) on the off chance your ex boyfriend from teen summer camp might be interested in reviving your fling as an adult? Not much. But it is crazy that The Film Experience didn't adopt Crazy Ex Girlfriend in the way it adopted Smash since musicals are kind of our thing (well, one of our things). Over the past two weeks I accidentally ended up rewatching the first five episodes again with friends who hadn't seen them so they're fresh in mind. So with Season 1 now on Netflix, let's catch up before Season 2 arrives in October.

S1:E1 "Josh Just Happens to Live Here!"

In which Rebecca randomly spots her first love in the street and takes it as a sign that she should follow him to West Covina, California, leaving her entire successful New York City life behind.  Let's rank the crazy... 

Greg: Yes, like a date because you're pretty and you're smart and you're ignoring me so you're obviously my type.
Rebecca: I'm sorry what were you saying?
Greg: Perfect.  

Relatably Foolish (Or as Norman likes to say 'We all go a little mad sometimes')
Greg, a bartender, falls hard for Rachel at first sight when she barely looks at him, and talks incessantly about his friend Josh...

Meanwhile Rachel spends half the episode wondering if she's having signal problems because Josh isn't texting.

Endearingly Daft
Everyone at the new office but maybe especially a great throwaway introduction of Mrs Hernandez, "Our Communications Director". You only realize a couple of episodes in that she never speaks. Also a rapper, witnessing Rebecca's preparations to date "Sexy Getting Ready Song" becomes a feminist and begins making phone calls to make amends.

Dangerously Nuts
That shot of Rebecca dumping out her plentiful medications makes you wonder how the show will balance its comedy with the reality of the premise.

Institutionalize Them!
The episode peaks and ends with Paula opening Rebecca's eyes (temporarily) to how crazy her abrupt life rug pull actually was. And here's the beautiful funhouse mirror effect: As Paula does this, her own eyes widened to the point that her orbs seem to disconnect from reality; all they see is Rebecca & Josh. These new galpals are both crazy, escalating each other's obsession. The women have no choice but to duet. The camera has no choice but to fall into their orbit, circling around and up into a final Busby Berkeley aerial shot. 

Episode Grade: B+
MVP: Paula. Rachel is a lot to take at first so Paula serves as a great proxy window to obsess over what her deal is. That's easier than looking our anti-heroine in the eye. At least at first cringey glance.
Songs: "West Covina," (Rebecca)  "Sexy Getting Ready Song," (Rebecca) "West Covina" (Rebecca and Paula)
Introducing: Rachel (Rebecca Bloom), Josh her ex (Vincent Rodriguez III), Daryl her new boss (Pete Gardner), Paula her new colleague (Donna Lynne Champlin), Mrs Hernandez another new colleague (Gina Gallego), and Greg who is Josh's friend (Santino Fontana)

S2:E2 "Josh's Girlfriend is Really Cool"

In which Rebecca meets Josh's girlfriend and tries to befriend her, but first Rebecca and Paula cook up a plan to go to the nightclub Spider's. Let's rank the crazy...

Not Crazy. Totally Sane

Rebecca: Spiders? I drove by there the other night and it was hopping. I always wonder though is it possessive spider's or plural spiders because every time I see a flyer for it the apostrophe is in a different location.
Paula: What difference does it make?!
Rebecca: It doesn't make a difference, it's just, like, it's two different things --like either the club is owned by a spider or the club is filled with, like, a bunch of spiders so, it's a different thing so let's go back to what you were saying.

Relatably Foolish

What no, that's not a good idea!'

Josh tries to talk some sense into Rebecca but she's already determined to make nicey cutesy nice with Valencia and soon is dressing like her and double-dating. Walk into a club like...

Josh, Valencia, Rebecca, and Greg

Endearingly Odd

Oh you were making a joke. I think you did that once before. Sorry, I don't like humor."

Making a humorousless character so funny? Neat trick with Valencia, Gabrielle Ruiz!

Dangerously Nutso

I wanna lock you in a basement with soundproof walls and take over your identity.

The inevitable: Rebecca takes things way too far in her new friendship with her rival Valencia. And makes an enemy instead. The episode ends with Josh and Rebecca apologizing to each other and Josh taking Rebecca to dinner. But then Josh tells Rebecca they can't see each other anymore, even as friends. Her response: 

Institutionalize Her

We'll see about that. [Pause] We'll see about that."

Rachel Bloom's ability to spin a single line from giggling conversational to weirdly obsessive / threatening, on repeat, is unnerving, weird, and also really funny. Emmy for Rachel, please.

Episode Grade: A
MVP: Rebecca.
Songs: "I'm So Good at Yoga," (Valencia)  "Feeling Kinda Naughty" (Rebecca)
Introducing: Valencia, Josh's yoga-instructor girlfriend (Gabrielle Ruiz), Josh's friend White Josh "because he looks like like Josh except for he's white" / "and, also, my name is also Josh" (David Hull), Josh's surfer friend Hector (Erick Lopez), Chris a little kid who hangs out at Greg's restaurant (Jacob Guenther), Marty who works at Rebecca's grocery store (Hunter Stiebel)

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