Beverly Hills, 90210
Season 2 (1991)
I recently read StoriTelling,
the first of Tori Spelling’s many books. My sister was a big Beverly
Hills, 90210 fan but I mostly missed that boat, only absorbing bits and
pieces as it played in the background while I played with action
figures. I was, however, a fan of the strangely compelling reality series
Tori & Dean: Inn Love (don’t judge me!). The memoir was pretty
enjoyable; Tori dished the appropriate amount of dirt, especially when it came
to her witchy mother and everyone’s favorite 90s bad girl Shannen
Doherty. In the book she referenced this Halloween episode of Beverly
Hills, 90210, comparing the movement-impairing mermaid outfit her character
Donna wears to her real life elaborate childhood Halloween costumes.
Intrigued, with the help
of the Soap Network and TIVO I was able to watch this episode for the first
time. It opens with a series of slow, lingering, almost pornographic
shots of various jack o’lanterns. The teens (none of whom look even
remotely like actual teens) are planning their upcoming Halloween
festivities. Brandon stays home to dress as a vampire and hand out
candy. Andrea is volunteering at some sort of children’s charity event
(God, she was such a dork). The rest head to a party hosted at some
random Victorian manor.
You do not want to be on the receiving end of Brenda Walsh's disapproval |
The main plot concerns
Kelly and her “provocative” witch costume. It’s laughable because by
today’s slutty standards her Elvira-esque dress is tamer than tame.
However from the costume shop scene on we get it drilled into our heads that
SHE’S MAKING A BAD DECISION. Brenda’s sole purpose in this episode to
chase Kelly around and chastise her every five minutes. I never knew how
heavy on the moralizing this show was!
Sure enough Kelly meets
a college guy dressed like a cowboy and they engage in about 20 minutes worth of
terrible costume-based banter (all about “sharing her broomstick” and “riding
off into the sunset together” and so on). After insisting she eat a
quesadilla (I was convinced it was a date-rape drug laced quesadilla but nope…
he just really wanted her to eat it, I guess? That plot point goes nowhere) he locks her in a bedroom and
attacks her before she’s rescued by Donna and Brenda.
Kelly confronts the Cowboy |
The assault scene is
really unpleasant, as I’m sure was the intention. Even more upsetting is
the fact that basically after being called a jerk and being forced to leave the
party no one does anything about the would-be rapist. There is no
discussion of, I don’t know, calling the police? Prosecution?
Anything?! Maybe a PSA ran after this episode or something because
otherwise it sends a pretty poor message about how to handle this type of
situation.
Steve as Zorro & David as Fashion Mistakes of the 90s |
The first half of the
episode is pretty fun. The obligatory costume shop scene has an insane
amount of music cues and sound effects crammed in. Every time someone
even mentions a costume we get accompanying sound effects: an arrow zinging for
Robin Hood; old timey piano music for Bonnie and Clyde. The party scenes
are enjoyable, as is Brandon’s subplot (he ends trick-or-treating with a love
interest and her niece and nephew) but man, things get so freakin’ heavy.
The almost-rape scene and extreme sermonizing weigh things down, making
for a really mixed bag.
Recurring Themes:
Brandon and Andrea provide us with a Carving Pumpkins Intro. Donna wears a Movement Impairing Mermaid Costume.
Halloween Quotient:
There’s plenty of Halloween to go around but the melodrama outweighs the fun,
resulting in a 3.
See
It, Skip It, Watch It: Skip it!
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