- Awards
- 18
04/Dec/85: DYNASTY: The Close Call v. 05/Dec/85: THE COLBYS: Family Album v. 05/Dec/85: KNOTS LANDING: Rise and Fall v. 06/Dec/85: DALLAS: En Passant v. 06/Dec/85: FALCON CREST: Inconceivable Affairs
This week’s KNOTS LANDING opens with Soap Land’s most striking montage sequence yet. As an attempt to appropriate pop video-style visuals into its storytelling, it works far better than anything ever attempted on PAPER DOLLS. With her version of Martha Reeves and the Vandellas’ "Dancing in the Street” playing on the soundtrack, footage of Cathy Geary looking every inch the shiny MTV pop star is juxtaposed with the sight of estranged husband Joshua, plainly dressed and sweaty, preaching to indifferent passers-by in the street. Even as he does so, a giant billboard of Cathy’s face advertising the TV show he used to host is erected on the roof of a nearby building. While effectively setting the scene for what is to follow, there is an interestingly nonlinear, dreamlike quality to the sequence — some of the clips of Joshua are lifted from the previous episode while some are from scenes that will appear later in this ep. Meanwhile, both Cathy’s suddenly sexy image and her secular song choice are somewhat at odds with the religious nature of the TV show in which she is currently starring. (Like “Love Don’t Live Here Anymore”, the Rose Royce song Cathy sang over a previous montage a few weeks ago, “Dancing in the Street” is an old soul classic recently revived by a mainstream pop act. The cover of “Street” Mick Jagger and David Bowie recorded for Live Aid would have reached the US Top 10 only a couple of months before this episode first aired.) So how much of what we see in this montage is “real" and how much is pop video fantasy? It’s hard to say, but given Joshua’s increasingly slippery grasp on reality, the sense of confusion feels appropriate.
Joshua, whose story reaches its tragic climax this week, has gone from zero to psycho within in the space of a year. A tad implausible perhaps, but Alec Baldwin’s performance has been so transfixing throughout — even the rambling sermons he delivers on the street this week are genuinely interesting — that one has been simply pulled along by it unquestioningly.
Such character transformations are grist for the Soap Land mill. While DYNASTY’s Claudia Carrington has turned from an achingly sensitive woman into a vengeful, money-obsessed diva almost overnight, DALLAS’s Sue Ellen Ewing, once a status-driven trophy wife, is now a piously recovering alcoholic. Whereas Claudia’s oil well inheritance last week led her to jubilantly declare that, “job hunting's a thing of the past,” Sue Ellen now reveals her intention to finally join the working class. "A lot of nice people have helped me get back on my feet and I want to do more than just stand around on them,” she explains. And while Claudia’s first action upon learning of her inheritance was to move back into the Carrington mansion, “because now I’m an equal to the Carringtons, to any one of them," Sue Ellen has now transcended such worldly concerns. She listens with a condescending smile as Patricia prattles on about the kind of house she should live in after her divorce (“You have to have the right address and who your neighbours are is very important”), before replying loftily, “Would you believe, Mother, that I haven’t given any of that a moment’s thought?”
This week, Claudia finds herself starring in a one-woman version of the Jock/Jason/Digger storyline from last season’s DALLAS when Blake explains that the oil well she has “inherited” really belongs to him. “Some time back, Matthew and Walter … came to me for a loan … They defaulted and that well was their collateral,” he tells her — only we didn’t see any of that on screen. Instead, like Claudia, we remember “the pressure that you put on Matthew and Walter when they started out. You would have done anything to get that well!” Blake takes offence at this and indeed, within the context of present day DYNASTY, it is unthinkable that he could ever have behaved so dishonourably. “I don’t do things illegally,” he states firmly. This leaves Claudia, recalling something that did happen but couldn’t have happened, stranded in a sort of narrative no man’s land. Grasping for some kind of tangible identity, she turns herself into an archetypal Soap Land vixen as she teams up with Adam for revenge against Blake. “And we will play by his rules,” she vows. "The only thing that counts is winning!” However lacking in logic, this new Claudia is a lot more gripping than the new Sue Ellen, whose change of outlook might be commendable, but also feels somewhat priggish and a bit dull.
There’s a scene in this week’s DALLAS where Sue Ellen dines with Dusty at a downmarket Mexican restaurant — all laminated menus and condiments on the table. “This place doesn’t have strolling mariachis, does it?” she asks at the beginning of the scene. “I hate strolling mariachis." Then, following a serious discussion about JR’s custody appeal, some strolling mariachis do indeed appear, and she and Dusty laugh. This all feels like an attempt to make Sue Ellen down-to-earth and relatable, but it doesn’t really work. There’s a similar, but more successful, scene in FALCON CREST where Dwayne takes Emma to a burger joint. Emma chowing down on Pearl's Super Chilli-Cheeseburger might seem as incongruous as Sue Ellen ordering a burrito, but here the unlikeliness is incorporated into the scene and becomes part of its charm and humour. Nor is the DALLAS mariachis’ rendition of “Guantanamera” the only Spanish-language song we hear in this week’s Soap Land. The night before their wedding, Peter Stavros turns up at Falcon Crest and awakens an indignant Angela. “It’s the tradition in romantic countries for the bride and groom to have the last dance together before they’re married,” he explains as a Spanish guitar player serenades them with a love song and Angela succumbs to his charms. It’s a very sweet scene. So it is that, in this week’s special Spanish edition of Soap Land Song Wars, FALCON CREST clearly triumphs over DALLAS.
As well as characters, we also see actors transform themselves this week. On DYNASTY, a dark and dramatic scene in the Delta Rho attic where Linda Evans plays Krystle as sobbing and terrified as she is bound and gagged by Joel is followed immediately by a comedic scene in Blake and Krystle’s bedroom where the same two actors are now giggly and flirtatious. The contrast is effective and slightly mind-bending. And it’s not just Linda Evans playing a dual role here. Even when he’s not pretending to be Dr. Travers, Joel is almost like a completely different person when he’s with Krystle than when he’s with Rita. With Krystle he's a sinister, obsessive Norman Bates type figure — childlike one minute, frightening the next. With Rita, he’s more reminiscent of Cary Grant — a suave, debonair lover, if also somewhat manipulative.
The DYNASTY-to-COLBYS crossovers continue with no less than three characters — Blake, Dominique, and LB — making the trip from Colorado to California this week. LB, having stumbled upon one secret on DYNASTY — he finds Rita and Joel rolling around in bed together — inadvertently exposes another on THE COLBYS when he shows Fallon, a lady whom he thinks only looks like his mommy, a family photo album, which makes her realise that she is his mommy. “I am Fallon, but I don’t remember!” she cries. Maggie Gioberti is in a similar situation on FALCON CREST when she discovers she wrote an entire novel that she has no recollection of while suffering from amnesia, and now it’s about to be published, Moreover, it appears to be based on people she knows. (“There’s a delightful villainess in it, a woman who runs the valley like her own kingdom,” her publisher informs her). As is increasingly the case on FALCON CREST, this is more the stuff of sitcom than soap opera, but Chase and Maggie’s bemused reactions as they receive the news did make me laugh out loud.
Meanwhile, the question of whether Dominique and Garrett Boydston will rekindle their past romance now spans both DYNASTY-verse shows. Whereas on DYNASTY Dominique seems weighed down by the past (“There’s a certain sadness about you. Something has gone very wrong in your life,” observes Garrett — and what’s with the photograph of Eric Fairgate’s girlfriend Whitney she keeps hidden in a box?), she seems freer on THE COLBYS, happily flirting with Garrett on the dance floor even after finding out that he was behind the attempted takeover of her record company. Oh yes — Dominique has a record company, which this week she invites Monica Colby to run. With Lance managing Apollonia on FALCON CREST and Cathy a singing star on KNOTS, this means that all three of Soap Land’s California-based shows now have ties to the music business. It turns out Apollonia even has her very own Joshua Rush as part of her back story — a songwriter ex-boyfriend called Walker who used to beat her up. Now he’s back in town and down on his luck. A pathetic figure with bad hair still pretending to be a big shot (he claims to be working with Neil Diamond), Walker reminds me of Guzzler Bennett, Bobby’s old college football pal, from early DALLAS.
Now that Joshua has now been cut adrift from the cul-de-sac (“If you ever show your face in this neighbourhood again, I’ll file so many complaints against you, it’ll make some defence attorney rich,” Mack promised him in the last episode), he’s in a similar position to the one Sue Ellen was in after JR told her to get lost following Bobby’s funeral. But where Sue Ellen disappeared from the Ewings’ view, thus sparing them the sight of her gradual deterioration, Joshua continues to hover on the periphery of the KNOTS characters’ world. However, even though he is still visible to them, they cannot reach him. Val and Lilimae run into him preaching in a supermarket parking lot and there’s a moment where Joshua starts to cry and Lilimae makes the same kind of small, futile gestures of comfort towards him as she did when she first saw the twins at the Fishers’ house before Val sternly leads her away. Later, as Val sits in her living room with Karen and Mack freely discussing what a danger Joshua has become and what should be done about him, Lilimae listens silently in the kitchen. One wonders if this is what it would have been like for Miss Ellie two decades earlier, mutely standing by while Jock and JR drove her son away from Southfork. Talk eventually turns to having Joshua placed in an institution. This time, the discussion is a lot messier than the recent one that took place between Miss Ellie and JR over Sue Ellen. “I will not have my son committed!” Lilimae insists, regarding Val, Karen and Mack with the same kind of anger and suspicion that Val did her family a year ago when none of them would believe her children were still alive.
Joshua ends up preaching in a rundown neighbourhood known as the mission district, which kind of feels like the KNOTS equivalent of the alley where Sue Ellen encountered those jive-talkers, hookers, and winos, except this place does have its own code of conduct. When Lilimae follows Joshua there, she gets into an argument with Ken, the ex-boyfriend of the waitress Joshua is now living with. When Ken threatens her, a Hispanic guy comes to her defence. “You don’t come down here threatening people, man,” he tells him, “not in this neighbourhood. And especially not a woman." (Adding another dash of MTV to the cultural mix, Ken is played by the same guy who'll get Madonna pregnant in her “Papa Don’t Preach” video.)
If Fallon swiping the happy couple from atop Blake and Krystle’s wedding cake and biting off the bride's head in the DYNASTY pilot was one kind of metaphor, then the scene on KNOTS where Joshua accidentally knocks his and Cathy’s equivalent decorations — this time breakable rather than edible — to the floor is another. Watching them smash, he becomes obsessed with the idea of uniting his and Cathy’s souls in eternity by killing them both. The one union his plan does achieve is between the two extremes of his own character: his fervent desire for spiritual meaning and his overwhelmingly violent rage.
Four out of five of this week’s soaps features a moment of car-related drama. THE COLBYS ends with a freaked out Fallon, shocked at finally learning her real identity, speeding out of a driveway yet again. This time, Miles is left standing in her dust alongside Jeff, both looking on in helpless despair. If Fallon keeps driving long enough maybe she’ll end up on the same Soap Land mean streets where Lilimae is looking for Joshua on KNOTS. Meanwhile, JR, driving at a similar speed to Fallon as she tears out of the Colby estate, pulls into the Southfork driveway in the final scene of this week’s DALLAS, in a bid to stop Sue Ellen taking John Ross away from him. Over on FALCON CREST, Peter Stavros is on his way to marry Angela when his chauffeur abruptly stops the car and pulls a gun on him. He is then forced out of his limo and bundled into the back of a waiting van. Back on KNOTS, there’s another abduction-by-car when Joshua emerges from Cathy’s backseat, then holds a knife to her throat and orders her to drive to the mission district. Lilimae does a sort of vehicular double take when her car passes theirs and she crashes into some trash cans. A minor accident by Soap Land standards, she emerges unharmed and follows Cathy and Joshua on foot.
Joshua forces Cathy up the staircase to the roof of the building where her billboard is on display. At one point, she manages to break free and runs past him, back down a flight of stairs, only for him to suddenly appear in front of her, having leapt over the bannister from above. It’s like a moment from a horror movie — or from Sue Ellen’s nightmare in last week’s DALLAS where she and John Ross are running away from JR and he suddenly materialises before them. That’s what’s so gruelling about the scene: It feels something from a horror movie or a nightmare, but for Cathy, it is really happening.
Even by Soap Land’s melodramatic standards, the suffering endured by Cathy in KNOTS and Krystle in DYNASTY during their respective rooftop and attic ordeals this week is notably extreme, perhaps more extreme than might have originally been intended. In the case of the DYNASTY storyline, one imagines that the original pitch was comedic — “let’s put a Krystle lookalike in the mansion!” — with Krystle’s own ordeal something an afterthought. From an audience perspective, while we're still getting our weekly dose of Linda Evans on Blake’s arm it’s easy to overlook the real Krystle, all but forgotten in the Delta Rho attic. Only now that the Colbys have been spun off into their own show and DYNASTY is free once again to concentrate on its own characters does Krystle’s situation come sharply into focus. “That woman who looked like you has replaced you and Blake hasn’t paid any ransom because he doesn’t even know you’re gone,” Joel tells Krystle coldly. “No-one’s looking for you so no one’s going to find you.” Meanwhile on KNOTS, had Joshua been merely the two-dimensional “monster” Lilimae describes him as moments before his death, Cathy's story might have been little more than a marital variation on the familiar psycho-stalks-girl scenario (e.g., Lucy and her crazy photographer in DALLAS). However, Alec Baldwin’s ability to make his character as believable and heart-wrenching as his actions are deplorable makes the whole story even more desperate and tragic (which isn’t to downplay the contributions of Julie Harris and Lisa Hartman, who match Baldwin in emotional intensity on that roof. Hartman is particularly impressive, given that her character was far less developed in the first place.)
Cathy and Krystle aren’t the only Soap Land characters being held against their will. On DALLAS, Pete Adams, the private eye dispatched to Greece by JR to dig into Marinos Shipping, is now a prisoner of Nicholas, Angelica Nero’s deputy in Athens. Meanwhile, FALCON CREST’s own shipping magnate Peter Stavros is abducted on the morning of his wedding by one of his own employees, his daughter Sofia’s lover Philippe. Nicholas and Philippe are cut from the same Soap Land cloth — both are shifty Europeans with dark Mediterranean colouring who sport equally bouffant mullets. In other words, each could easily pass for Naldo Marchetta’s wayward brother.
As Joel says, no one’s looking for Krystle on DYNASTY so no one’s going to find her. DALLAS and FALCON CREST’s captors have each taken similarly elaborate steps to ensure no one realises a kidnapping has taken place. In the same way that Joel has infiltrated the Carrington mansion in the guise of Krystle’s doctor, Angelica’s assistant Grace assumes the role of temporary secretary at Pete Adams’ detective agency, the better to arrange a phone conversation where Pete can assure his partner — at gunpoint — that everything is fine. This week’s FALCON CREST, meanwhile, ends with Angela in her wedding dress reading a letter, supposedly sent from Peter, that expresses a similar sentiment to the letter Jenna didn’t send to Bobby on the day of their wedding on DALLAS: “Angela, the wedding is off. I don’t love you enough to marry you, Peter."
Elsewhere on FALCON CREST, Cole and Melissa have their marriage formally blessed in a church ceremony. There is no “If anyone can show just cause ...” moment this time around, but given that the bride is secretly in love with the priest performing the ceremony and the woman lurking at the back of the church is pregnant by the groom, there are no shortage of meaningful close-ups during the exchange of vows.
All five soaps conclude with a moment of high drama between a married couple. In ascending order of crisis: Sue Ellen stuns JR on DALLAS by allowing John Ross to remain at Southfork (“Clearly, he’s happiest here — this is where he’ll stay”), DYNASTY ends with Blake ordering “Krystle” to see a doctor of his choosing (“Then we’re really going to find out what's wrong with you, once and for all!”), FALCON CREST has Peter apparently jilting Angela on the morning of their wedding ("I’ve been stood up!”), THE COLBYS finishes with Fallon running away from Miles after discovering her true identity (“If anything happens to that girl,” Miles tells Jeff, “I swear to God I’ll kill you!”) and on KNOTS, Cathy watches in silent horror with Lilimae as Joshua fall to his death just after he has tried to throw them both off the roof.
And this week’s Top 5 are …
1 (-) KNOTS LANDING
2 (1) THE COLBYS
3 (4) FALCON CREST
4 (2) DYNASTY
5 (3) DALLAS
This week’s KNOTS LANDING opens with Soap Land’s most striking montage sequence yet. As an attempt to appropriate pop video-style visuals into its storytelling, it works far better than anything ever attempted on PAPER DOLLS. With her version of Martha Reeves and the Vandellas’ "Dancing in the Street” playing on the soundtrack, footage of Cathy Geary looking every inch the shiny MTV pop star is juxtaposed with the sight of estranged husband Joshua, plainly dressed and sweaty, preaching to indifferent passers-by in the street. Even as he does so, a giant billboard of Cathy’s face advertising the TV show he used to host is erected on the roof of a nearby building. While effectively setting the scene for what is to follow, there is an interestingly nonlinear, dreamlike quality to the sequence — some of the clips of Joshua are lifted from the previous episode while some are from scenes that will appear later in this ep. Meanwhile, both Cathy’s suddenly sexy image and her secular song choice are somewhat at odds with the religious nature of the TV show in which she is currently starring. (Like “Love Don’t Live Here Anymore”, the Rose Royce song Cathy sang over a previous montage a few weeks ago, “Dancing in the Street” is an old soul classic recently revived by a mainstream pop act. The cover of “Street” Mick Jagger and David Bowie recorded for Live Aid would have reached the US Top 10 only a couple of months before this episode first aired.) So how much of what we see in this montage is “real" and how much is pop video fantasy? It’s hard to say, but given Joshua’s increasingly slippery grasp on reality, the sense of confusion feels appropriate.
Joshua, whose story reaches its tragic climax this week, has gone from zero to psycho within in the space of a year. A tad implausible perhaps, but Alec Baldwin’s performance has been so transfixing throughout — even the rambling sermons he delivers on the street this week are genuinely interesting — that one has been simply pulled along by it unquestioningly.
Such character transformations are grist for the Soap Land mill. While DYNASTY’s Claudia Carrington has turned from an achingly sensitive woman into a vengeful, money-obsessed diva almost overnight, DALLAS’s Sue Ellen Ewing, once a status-driven trophy wife, is now a piously recovering alcoholic. Whereas Claudia’s oil well inheritance last week led her to jubilantly declare that, “job hunting's a thing of the past,” Sue Ellen now reveals her intention to finally join the working class. "A lot of nice people have helped me get back on my feet and I want to do more than just stand around on them,” she explains. And while Claudia’s first action upon learning of her inheritance was to move back into the Carrington mansion, “because now I’m an equal to the Carringtons, to any one of them," Sue Ellen has now transcended such worldly concerns. She listens with a condescending smile as Patricia prattles on about the kind of house she should live in after her divorce (“You have to have the right address and who your neighbours are is very important”), before replying loftily, “Would you believe, Mother, that I haven’t given any of that a moment’s thought?”
This week, Claudia finds herself starring in a one-woman version of the Jock/Jason/Digger storyline from last season’s DALLAS when Blake explains that the oil well she has “inherited” really belongs to him. “Some time back, Matthew and Walter … came to me for a loan … They defaulted and that well was their collateral,” he tells her — only we didn’t see any of that on screen. Instead, like Claudia, we remember “the pressure that you put on Matthew and Walter when they started out. You would have done anything to get that well!” Blake takes offence at this and indeed, within the context of present day DYNASTY, it is unthinkable that he could ever have behaved so dishonourably. “I don’t do things illegally,” he states firmly. This leaves Claudia, recalling something that did happen but couldn’t have happened, stranded in a sort of narrative no man’s land. Grasping for some kind of tangible identity, she turns herself into an archetypal Soap Land vixen as she teams up with Adam for revenge against Blake. “And we will play by his rules,” she vows. "The only thing that counts is winning!” However lacking in logic, this new Claudia is a lot more gripping than the new Sue Ellen, whose change of outlook might be commendable, but also feels somewhat priggish and a bit dull.
There’s a scene in this week’s DALLAS where Sue Ellen dines with Dusty at a downmarket Mexican restaurant — all laminated menus and condiments on the table. “This place doesn’t have strolling mariachis, does it?” she asks at the beginning of the scene. “I hate strolling mariachis." Then, following a serious discussion about JR’s custody appeal, some strolling mariachis do indeed appear, and she and Dusty laugh. This all feels like an attempt to make Sue Ellen down-to-earth and relatable, but it doesn’t really work. There’s a similar, but more successful, scene in FALCON CREST where Dwayne takes Emma to a burger joint. Emma chowing down on Pearl's Super Chilli-Cheeseburger might seem as incongruous as Sue Ellen ordering a burrito, but here the unlikeliness is incorporated into the scene and becomes part of its charm and humour. Nor is the DALLAS mariachis’ rendition of “Guantanamera” the only Spanish-language song we hear in this week’s Soap Land. The night before their wedding, Peter Stavros turns up at Falcon Crest and awakens an indignant Angela. “It’s the tradition in romantic countries for the bride and groom to have the last dance together before they’re married,” he explains as a Spanish guitar player serenades them with a love song and Angela succumbs to his charms. It’s a very sweet scene. So it is that, in this week’s special Spanish edition of Soap Land Song Wars, FALCON CREST clearly triumphs over DALLAS.
As well as characters, we also see actors transform themselves this week. On DYNASTY, a dark and dramatic scene in the Delta Rho attic where Linda Evans plays Krystle as sobbing and terrified as she is bound and gagged by Joel is followed immediately by a comedic scene in Blake and Krystle’s bedroom where the same two actors are now giggly and flirtatious. The contrast is effective and slightly mind-bending. And it’s not just Linda Evans playing a dual role here. Even when he’s not pretending to be Dr. Travers, Joel is almost like a completely different person when he’s with Krystle than when he’s with Rita. With Krystle he's a sinister, obsessive Norman Bates type figure — childlike one minute, frightening the next. With Rita, he’s more reminiscent of Cary Grant — a suave, debonair lover, if also somewhat manipulative.
The DYNASTY-to-COLBYS crossovers continue with no less than three characters — Blake, Dominique, and LB — making the trip from Colorado to California this week. LB, having stumbled upon one secret on DYNASTY — he finds Rita and Joel rolling around in bed together — inadvertently exposes another on THE COLBYS when he shows Fallon, a lady whom he thinks only looks like his mommy, a family photo album, which makes her realise that she is his mommy. “I am Fallon, but I don’t remember!” she cries. Maggie Gioberti is in a similar situation on FALCON CREST when she discovers she wrote an entire novel that she has no recollection of while suffering from amnesia, and now it’s about to be published, Moreover, it appears to be based on people she knows. (“There’s a delightful villainess in it, a woman who runs the valley like her own kingdom,” her publisher informs her). As is increasingly the case on FALCON CREST, this is more the stuff of sitcom than soap opera, but Chase and Maggie’s bemused reactions as they receive the news did make me laugh out loud.
Meanwhile, the question of whether Dominique and Garrett Boydston will rekindle their past romance now spans both DYNASTY-verse shows. Whereas on DYNASTY Dominique seems weighed down by the past (“There’s a certain sadness about you. Something has gone very wrong in your life,” observes Garrett — and what’s with the photograph of Eric Fairgate’s girlfriend Whitney she keeps hidden in a box?), she seems freer on THE COLBYS, happily flirting with Garrett on the dance floor even after finding out that he was behind the attempted takeover of her record company. Oh yes — Dominique has a record company, which this week she invites Monica Colby to run. With Lance managing Apollonia on FALCON CREST and Cathy a singing star on KNOTS, this means that all three of Soap Land’s California-based shows now have ties to the music business. It turns out Apollonia even has her very own Joshua Rush as part of her back story — a songwriter ex-boyfriend called Walker who used to beat her up. Now he’s back in town and down on his luck. A pathetic figure with bad hair still pretending to be a big shot (he claims to be working with Neil Diamond), Walker reminds me of Guzzler Bennett, Bobby’s old college football pal, from early DALLAS.
Now that Joshua has now been cut adrift from the cul-de-sac (“If you ever show your face in this neighbourhood again, I’ll file so many complaints against you, it’ll make some defence attorney rich,” Mack promised him in the last episode), he’s in a similar position to the one Sue Ellen was in after JR told her to get lost following Bobby’s funeral. But where Sue Ellen disappeared from the Ewings’ view, thus sparing them the sight of her gradual deterioration, Joshua continues to hover on the periphery of the KNOTS characters’ world. However, even though he is still visible to them, they cannot reach him. Val and Lilimae run into him preaching in a supermarket parking lot and there’s a moment where Joshua starts to cry and Lilimae makes the same kind of small, futile gestures of comfort towards him as she did when she first saw the twins at the Fishers’ house before Val sternly leads her away. Later, as Val sits in her living room with Karen and Mack freely discussing what a danger Joshua has become and what should be done about him, Lilimae listens silently in the kitchen. One wonders if this is what it would have been like for Miss Ellie two decades earlier, mutely standing by while Jock and JR drove her son away from Southfork. Talk eventually turns to having Joshua placed in an institution. This time, the discussion is a lot messier than the recent one that took place between Miss Ellie and JR over Sue Ellen. “I will not have my son committed!” Lilimae insists, regarding Val, Karen and Mack with the same kind of anger and suspicion that Val did her family a year ago when none of them would believe her children were still alive.
Joshua ends up preaching in a rundown neighbourhood known as the mission district, which kind of feels like the KNOTS equivalent of the alley where Sue Ellen encountered those jive-talkers, hookers, and winos, except this place does have its own code of conduct. When Lilimae follows Joshua there, she gets into an argument with Ken, the ex-boyfriend of the waitress Joshua is now living with. When Ken threatens her, a Hispanic guy comes to her defence. “You don’t come down here threatening people, man,” he tells him, “not in this neighbourhood. And especially not a woman." (Adding another dash of MTV to the cultural mix, Ken is played by the same guy who'll get Madonna pregnant in her “Papa Don’t Preach” video.)
If Fallon swiping the happy couple from atop Blake and Krystle’s wedding cake and biting off the bride's head in the DYNASTY pilot was one kind of metaphor, then the scene on KNOTS where Joshua accidentally knocks his and Cathy’s equivalent decorations — this time breakable rather than edible — to the floor is another. Watching them smash, he becomes obsessed with the idea of uniting his and Cathy’s souls in eternity by killing them both. The one union his plan does achieve is between the two extremes of his own character: his fervent desire for spiritual meaning and his overwhelmingly violent rage.
Four out of five of this week’s soaps features a moment of car-related drama. THE COLBYS ends with a freaked out Fallon, shocked at finally learning her real identity, speeding out of a driveway yet again. This time, Miles is left standing in her dust alongside Jeff, both looking on in helpless despair. If Fallon keeps driving long enough maybe she’ll end up on the same Soap Land mean streets where Lilimae is looking for Joshua on KNOTS. Meanwhile, JR, driving at a similar speed to Fallon as she tears out of the Colby estate, pulls into the Southfork driveway in the final scene of this week’s DALLAS, in a bid to stop Sue Ellen taking John Ross away from him. Over on FALCON CREST, Peter Stavros is on his way to marry Angela when his chauffeur abruptly stops the car and pulls a gun on him. He is then forced out of his limo and bundled into the back of a waiting van. Back on KNOTS, there’s another abduction-by-car when Joshua emerges from Cathy’s backseat, then holds a knife to her throat and orders her to drive to the mission district. Lilimae does a sort of vehicular double take when her car passes theirs and she crashes into some trash cans. A minor accident by Soap Land standards, she emerges unharmed and follows Cathy and Joshua on foot.
Joshua forces Cathy up the staircase to the roof of the building where her billboard is on display. At one point, she manages to break free and runs past him, back down a flight of stairs, only for him to suddenly appear in front of her, having leapt over the bannister from above. It’s like a moment from a horror movie — or from Sue Ellen’s nightmare in last week’s DALLAS where she and John Ross are running away from JR and he suddenly materialises before them. That’s what’s so gruelling about the scene: It feels something from a horror movie or a nightmare, but for Cathy, it is really happening.
Even by Soap Land’s melodramatic standards, the suffering endured by Cathy in KNOTS and Krystle in DYNASTY during their respective rooftop and attic ordeals this week is notably extreme, perhaps more extreme than might have originally been intended. In the case of the DYNASTY storyline, one imagines that the original pitch was comedic — “let’s put a Krystle lookalike in the mansion!” — with Krystle’s own ordeal something an afterthought. From an audience perspective, while we're still getting our weekly dose of Linda Evans on Blake’s arm it’s easy to overlook the real Krystle, all but forgotten in the Delta Rho attic. Only now that the Colbys have been spun off into their own show and DYNASTY is free once again to concentrate on its own characters does Krystle’s situation come sharply into focus. “That woman who looked like you has replaced you and Blake hasn’t paid any ransom because he doesn’t even know you’re gone,” Joel tells Krystle coldly. “No-one’s looking for you so no one’s going to find you.” Meanwhile on KNOTS, had Joshua been merely the two-dimensional “monster” Lilimae describes him as moments before his death, Cathy's story might have been little more than a marital variation on the familiar psycho-stalks-girl scenario (e.g., Lucy and her crazy photographer in DALLAS). However, Alec Baldwin’s ability to make his character as believable and heart-wrenching as his actions are deplorable makes the whole story even more desperate and tragic (which isn’t to downplay the contributions of Julie Harris and Lisa Hartman, who match Baldwin in emotional intensity on that roof. Hartman is particularly impressive, given that her character was far less developed in the first place.)
Cathy and Krystle aren’t the only Soap Land characters being held against their will. On DALLAS, Pete Adams, the private eye dispatched to Greece by JR to dig into Marinos Shipping, is now a prisoner of Nicholas, Angelica Nero’s deputy in Athens. Meanwhile, FALCON CREST’s own shipping magnate Peter Stavros is abducted on the morning of his wedding by one of his own employees, his daughter Sofia’s lover Philippe. Nicholas and Philippe are cut from the same Soap Land cloth — both are shifty Europeans with dark Mediterranean colouring who sport equally bouffant mullets. In other words, each could easily pass for Naldo Marchetta’s wayward brother.
As Joel says, no one’s looking for Krystle on DYNASTY so no one’s going to find her. DALLAS and FALCON CREST’s captors have each taken similarly elaborate steps to ensure no one realises a kidnapping has taken place. In the same way that Joel has infiltrated the Carrington mansion in the guise of Krystle’s doctor, Angelica’s assistant Grace assumes the role of temporary secretary at Pete Adams’ detective agency, the better to arrange a phone conversation where Pete can assure his partner — at gunpoint — that everything is fine. This week’s FALCON CREST, meanwhile, ends with Angela in her wedding dress reading a letter, supposedly sent from Peter, that expresses a similar sentiment to the letter Jenna didn’t send to Bobby on the day of their wedding on DALLAS: “Angela, the wedding is off. I don’t love you enough to marry you, Peter."
Elsewhere on FALCON CREST, Cole and Melissa have their marriage formally blessed in a church ceremony. There is no “If anyone can show just cause ...” moment this time around, but given that the bride is secretly in love with the priest performing the ceremony and the woman lurking at the back of the church is pregnant by the groom, there are no shortage of meaningful close-ups during the exchange of vows.
All five soaps conclude with a moment of high drama between a married couple. In ascending order of crisis: Sue Ellen stuns JR on DALLAS by allowing John Ross to remain at Southfork (“Clearly, he’s happiest here — this is where he’ll stay”), DYNASTY ends with Blake ordering “Krystle” to see a doctor of his choosing (“Then we’re really going to find out what's wrong with you, once and for all!”), FALCON CREST has Peter apparently jilting Angela on the morning of their wedding ("I’ve been stood up!”), THE COLBYS finishes with Fallon running away from Miles after discovering her true identity (“If anything happens to that girl,” Miles tells Jeff, “I swear to God I’ll kill you!”) and on KNOTS, Cathy watches in silent horror with Lilimae as Joshua fall to his death just after he has tried to throw them both off the roof.
And this week’s Top 5 are …
1 (-) KNOTS LANDING
2 (1) THE COLBYS
3 (4) FALCON CREST
4 (2) DYNASTY
5 (3) DALLAS