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A post-hiatus Riverdale returns with the fear of God in its heart

Hey, a Hair musical number that's not “Aquarius” or “Let The Sunshine In!”

TV Reviews Riverdale
A post-hiatus Riverdale returns with the fear of God in its heart
Riverdale Photo: The CW

Whatever its strengths may be, Riverdale has never had much luck with timing. The narrative propulsion of each season has been fighting the broadcast scheduling more and more, starting with the awkward handling of Luke Perry’s death, which drained the tension from the third season finale and pushed the fourth’s proper premiere ahead one week to episode two. The pandemic dealt the production crew another unavoidable obstacle, which may be the reason that the fifth-season time jump that should have started this most recent run of episodes had to be nudged four weeks into the middle of things. Now, we’re back to finish out this stretch following a five-month hiatus that has utterly killed all momentum the season had worked up. Even with the “Previously on Riverdale…” bumper to jog our memories, so many plot points in “Strange Bedfellows” land with a sense of faint, indifferent recognition, an “oh, yeah” that too often fades into “who cares?”

The hour attempts to thread an action plotline with a workable hook through the fallout of last week’s prison break engineered by Hiram, a crisis entangling the concerns of both Archie and Veronica. With all these fugitives on the lam, Hiram’s offered a steep bounty to anyone who can apprehend them, compelling the cash-strapped Archie to take their arrests upon himself. A manhunt is afoot, its ante upped by a robbery at Veronica’s jewelry store (which I’m pretty sure is just the repurposed Uncut Gems pop-up store erected during awards season 2019) that sees her precious Ethiopian blue opal ripped off at the grubby hands of Dodger Dickinson and other area toughs. She enlists Archie in its retrieval and also curries the favor of Reggie, restyled here — moreso in next week’s episode, in which he and Hiram move to the fore for some deep-tissue character development — as a morally ambiguous operator motivated mostly by self-interest. “The bad guys pay better,” goes his explanation for lending his head-knocking talents to Hiram.

Their little team-up is a qualified success, less in that they complete their objective and more in that it provides an opportunity for Veronica to do cue up that A-Team thing where a bunch of guys burst out of the ceiling on ropes right in the nick of time. Though Charles Melton does his best to make the line “drop it, before I drop you” sound un-lame, he and his castmates’ all-business antics pale in comparison to the high level of battiness exemplified by everyone off twirling in their own spheres. That’s literal twirling in the case of born-again flower child Cheryl Blossom, ensorcelled by her mumsy’s cockamamie feel-good religion enabling her to see visions of the late Jason while in a state of ecstatic rapture. Same pretty much goes for Betty and Tabitha, unlikely partners in their hunt for the wayward Jughead, along with his ex Jessica from back in New York. She seems to be more interested in obtaining his manuscript — however “cringey” it may be, as Betty warns — than finding the guy himself, a suspicion confirmed when she doses the other two girls with psilocybin shrooms before excusing herself.

The confrontation between them as Jughead’s sad past and hopeful future, complete with the revelation that he called Betty boring and an airing of the pathetic voicemail he left her in a moment of desperation, has been positioned as the substance of this subplot interrupting Betty’s investigation of the evil trucker seen picking up Jughead in the final scene. That he’s completely left out of this dustup over his relationship status has a way of slowing everything down, the two sparring partners not quite on opposed sides. In actuality, the main course for their sleuthing is its hallucinatory detour, and specifically the impromptu musical number set to “Walking in Space” from Hair. I’m inclined to say that it’s one of the series’ best, though that might be because it’s my favorite song from the musical, underappreciated all these years while “Aquarius” and “Let the Sunshine In” get all the primo soundtrack placements. Personal bias aside, it’s good fun to see the show dabbling in lurid color and experimental camera techniques identified with the ‘60s period evoked by the music, a welcome departure from the usual Glee-lite semicircle spins.

Where’s Jughead during all this hullabaloo? His bad trip leads him to Sketch Alley, where he has a heart-to-hear with the most ruggedly handsome homeless guy since Tom Jane in Arrested Development. His walkabout and the resultant visions that plague him feel most detached from the rest of the episode, the ladies’ movements pertaining to him without ever intersecting. He’s aimless in the most literal sense, and so his scenes can’t avoid feeling that way as well, as if we’re just treading water until something happens to him. The tedium of his conversations with Calvin, the man he idly watched take a beating all those years ago, colors the whole of a sluggish episode. It’s an inauspicious return, though this far into the show’s run, we’ve come to expect tripping starts and sudden, random bursts of climax. We take the episodes as they come, when we can get them. If that takes months, so be it.


Stray observations:

  • They’ve had to embrace “remote learning” over at Riverdale High — not for any viral-type reasons, mind you, just because loosed convicts have rendered the school uninhabitable with their wanton destruction.
  • “Hellfire preacher” is the one type that every actor thinks they can absolutely crush, and yet so few can. The natural up-and-down cadence to the rousing sermons lends itself to big, animated acting, but it’s easy to get bogged down in cliché and as Penelope, Nathalie Boltt comes off looking like an Improv 101 student defaulting to what she thinks is her strongest suit.
  • The mini-mystery of what Palladium is or means will be resolved to satisfaction next week, but I’d still like to hear everyone’s best guess. The Palladium was a concert venue not far from my hometown, so I naturally assumed that Hiram had blown his teen-year band’s big chance to play a gig there due to his own diva behavior.
  • It is with a heavy heart that I must relay the editorial overlords’ choice to discontinue my weekly coverage of our pal Hot Archie Who Fucks, though I’ll swing by for a check-in at the season’s end. Keeping up with the exploits of these beautiful fools, from their lascivious teen years to their professionally-focused young adulthood, has been a privilege and honor. Good news is, I’ll still be regularly watching and firing off snappy missives about Riverdale over on Twitter, where I hope you’ll all join me.

19 Comments

  • psychopirate-av says:

    With Riverdale coverage being discontinued, I shall have to find new avenues to promote Nancy Drew. Alas, but I shall find them. Watch Nancy Drew, everyone, seasons 1 and 2 now streaming on HBO Max!

    • mattthecatania-av says:

      Nancy Druid

    • realgenericposter-av says:

      I watched the first 4 or  5 Nancy Drews and found it super boring.  Does it pick up a lot later, or is the show just not for me?

      • psychopirate-av says:

        It gets substantially better by Episode 8, and Episode 9 is one of the standouts of the first season.

    • bloggymcblogblog-av says:

      Reminder! Nancy Drew is on Friday nights next season. 

      • psychopirate-av says:

        Watching it live on Fridays, and then streaming it on Saturdays to keep those numbers high. Hoping the CW’s unwillingness to cancel much of anything overcomes the curse that is a Friday night timeslot.

    • dp4m-av says:

      Season 2 was so much better than an already-good Season 1 — and that hostage-at-the-police-station episode was perfect…

      • psychopirate-av says:

        Agree about Season 2 overall, although I didn’t love that particular episode. Basically, they figured out the show by about Episode 6 of Season 1, and it’s been getting better ever since.

        • dp4m-av says:

          The thing about the police station episode was Nancy being so brutal in getting her father to leave the station — and me being like “that’s gotta be a code” and then Carson going to the restaurant and immediately “Nancy’s being held hostage, it was a code!”Just so perfect… of course she and her father would have emergency voice codes!

    • shurkon93-av says:

      I’m not sure if it was you or another poster but I started watching ND because of someone popping in these RD recaps promoting that instead. I have to admit I really like ND. Much better writing and there funny at times. I binged 1 & 2 over the course of week or so on HBO Max and will start watching live on Saturday mornings on replay (I generally go out a ton on Friday nights) in October when it comes back.  Thanks for the heads up.  

      • psychopirate-av says:

        I think it had to be me, as I’d know of someone else who takes the time to promote Nancy Drew every week in the comments. And let me just say, your comment makes it all worthwhile.

  • bloggymcblogblog-av says:

    Palladium is a rare valuable metal similar to platinum. It has a value of around $2600/ounce and platinum is around $985/ounce so you can see why the thieves would want it. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/PalladiumI’m bummed that this is the end of the weekly coverage of Riverdale. It looks like the Dial M for Maple podcast is done too. I bet it’s due to Riverdale’s decline in popularity. I think the show has really gone done in terms of quality and its plotlines have become nonsensical. I think next season might be its last. The actors seem to be over it as well. 

  • mattthecatania-av says:

    No matter how many times they say “seven years ago” per episode, I refuse to believe the time jump actually occurred.

    Why are the writers still laboring under the misapprehension that we care about anything not directly related to Cheryl Blossom?

  • realgenericposter-av says:

    What?  Archie reviews discontinued?  Bummer.

  • mattthecatania-av says:
  • accesskathryn-av says:

    Well, phooey! I enjoyed this episode, maybe because a glass or two of rosé was involved. Still, we’re a long way from the magic of the first season. 

  • daryl772003-av says:

    what bothers me the most is that the avclub won’t even let you finish the season. the podcast is ending too

  • docprof-av says:

    Fucking hell they really hate having tv reviews over here at this tv website.

  • jpilla1980-av says:

    I guess the steady decline of comments in the comment section sunk Riverdale. I was mostly watching the show so that I could enjoy the snarky conversations here. 

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