Once Upon a Time: Episodes 1-3

Hey kids, know what time it is? It’s “Mouse uses his folklore degree” time!

I know, I know, I’m excited too.

So, do you want to know what the difference is between a myth, a legend and a fairy tale (or “wonder tale” as the cool kids call them)?

A myth is a narrative relic from a now defunct religion. Thor, Odin, Zeus etc were all once worshipped, so any stories relating to them are myths.

A legend takes place in a real place and time, and may feature real historical figures but is nonetheless fictional or even fantastical. So, Saint Patrick casting out the snakes from Ireland is a legend. He was a real person, Ireland is a real place (I mean, I hope) but the events described are fictional. That’s a legend.

And lastly, a wonder tale takes place in a far off land in an unspecified time and is wholly fictional. Anything that begins with “Once Upon a Time, in a Land Far Far Away” will be a wonder tale. So Snow White, Cinderella, Rumpelstiltskin, you get the idea.

” So what’s Pinocchio?”“Glad you asked. Pinocchio is something called “A FUCKING NOVEL”.”

Pinocchio is a book. With an accredited author. Published just a century before I was born. It is not a piece of ancient world folklore. So when Pinocchio and Gepetto showed up in Once Upon a Time, a series puportedly about “fairy tale” characters, I was a bit confused because they have about as much in common with Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs as Hermione Granger. But of course, we all know why they’re actually here. Because this is a Disney show (well, an ABC show) and Disney made Pinocchio in 1940 (AND WISELY NEVER TRIED TO MAKE IT AGAIN).

And look, I’m sorry, I’ll get into the merits of the show in a bit, but something about this makes me deeply uneasy. Okay, here’s the premise of Once Upon a Time:

In a magical Fairy Tale Land, Prince Charming wakes Snow White and they get married. But the Evil Queen puts a spell on them that pulls them all into the real world and places them in a town called Storybrooke (sigh) where they spend decades living the same lives and never age. Only the Queen’s adopted son, Henry, seems to know the truth, as he has a magic book of fairy tales and has been able to piece together which fairy tale character everyone in town actually is. So what’s my problem?

Well, let’s take Grumpy. Grumpy is just one of the seven dwarves who we see in the background as Snow White’s story plays out. Now, this is very clearly not the 1938 Disney Snow White. The characters all look different, sound different, are costumed differently.

This is not based on the movie but a new version based on the original folk tale, right? All the elements we see here, Snow White, the Prince, the Queen, the magic mirror, the dwarves, are all from the original story. I mean, that’s the clear implication. But here’s the thing.

Grumpy is a Disney character. They created him. In the original story, the dwarves don’t have individual names or personalities. The famous names we know today were all Disney’s invention. And by including original Disney characters like Grumpy and Jiminy Cricket it feels like Disney are trying to Trojan horse them in to the canon of European folklore. It feels like an attempt to make Disney’s Snow White the ONLY Snow White, subtly implying that their version is the definitive one. And yeah, I know that it probably wasn’t intentional. I know the creators probably just thought “hey, we have the rights to Elsa from Frozen let’s use her”. But when has giving Disney the benefit of the doubt worked ever out well for anyone?

Anyway, let’s look at the show

Episode 1: Pilot

The first episode begins with the marriage of Snow White and Prince Charming which is rudely interrupted by the arrival of the Evil Queen. I briefly got excited, thinking we might actually get an accurate re-telling of the original Brothers Grim version of the story.

“Guards! Seize her and get me some red-hot iron shoes! This bitch is gonna DANCE!”

Hey, they weren’t called the “Brothers Cheerful”.

No, the Prince tells Snow not to sink to her level. The Queen then warns the whole kingdom that she will take their happiness away and the Prince throws his sword at her because apparently it’s fine when he sinks to her level and the Queen vanishes in a puff of smoke.

Meanwhile, in modern day Boston, a ten year old kid named Henry is reading the story on a bus. He’s on a mission to track down Emma Swan, a bail bondswoman who’s Henry’s biological mother and who gave him up for adoption when he was born. Emma is spending her 28th birthday alone and is understandably a little rattled by her son’s sudden appearance but she agrees to take him back home to “StorybRooke” Maine, a little town that’s like Twin Peaks but where the supernatural beings are less up their own asses.

In fairy tale land, Snow White is so freaked out about the Queen’s curse that she talks the Prince into letting her visit Rumpelstiltskin, who’s being held prisoner in a dungeon beneath the castle.

Well, I see no possible way he could escape from here.

In exchange for learning the name of their unborn child, Stiltsy tells Charming and Snow that the Queen will trap them all in a prison of time but that their daughter will come to rescue them on her 28th birthday. He then asks them for the name and Snow reveals that its “Emma”. Oooooooh yeah obviously.

In Storybrooke, Emma learns that Henry believes that everyone in town is actually a fairy tale character and the Evil Queen is actually Regina Mills, the Mayor of the Town and Henry’s foster mother. She also learns that Henry is in therapy because he believes that everyone in town is actually a fairy tale character etc etc.

Emma meets the mayor who is hanging around with the Sheriff who is played by Jamie Dornan and who she is obviously fucking. So obviously, in fact, that when the show later revealed they were fucking and acted like it was a shocking reveal I was shocked that I was supposed to be shocked. Anyway, the Mayor thanks Emma for bringing her son back and then tells her that her kid has enough problems without the birth mother who abandoned him hanging around so kindly am-scray. Am-scray Emma does but on the road out of town she almost hits a wolf, swerves and crashes into a sign.

Back in Fairy Tale world, the Prince and Snow White decide to put their baby into a magical cabinet carved by beloved figure of world folklore, Gepetto (yes, I am still salty, yes it matters, no I will not shut up about this). The cabinet is designed to protect one person from the curse like a fridge protecting against a nuclear blast. As the Evil Queen’s curse closes in on the kingdom, the Queen’s army invades the castle. Don’t ask me why, I mean, this is all going to be wiped out by the curse anyway. Maybe she just wants to get one good invasion in and go out with a bang. Anyway, the Queen’s off-brand Nazgul attack and Charming has to fight his way through them with a sword in one hand and a baby in the other.

This show was huge on Tumblr, the devil you say.

He’s injured but manages to get the baby into the cabinet.

Back in the real world, Emma wakes up in a cell in the sheriff’s office because if you find an unconscious woman in a wrecked car obviously you would assume she was up to no good and sling her in jail. And not. Y’know. Some kind of medical facility. Mayor Regina shows up to tell the Sheriff that Henry’s run off again and Emma offers to help find the kid. Emma pays a visit to Henry’s teacher, Mary Margaret Blanchard (why so coy? Just call her “Blanche Neige” and be done with it). Mary tells Blanche that she was the one who gave Henry the storybook and suggests she try looking for Henry in his castle, which turns out to be a castle themed playground. Emma finds Henry, tells him that his mother may be a hard-ass but she does love him and takes him back home. Regina tells Emma to get the hell out of her town, going so far as to threaten her. Emma decides to stay for awhile, partly to keep an eye on Henry and partly, one suspects, to fuck with Regina’s head. She books a room in a Bed and breakfast run by a woman named “Granny” and her grand-daughter Ruby (who are, obviously, Humpty Dumpty and Bluebeard). Emma then meets the mysterious “Mr. Gold”, who owns the entire town.

He got out of his cell? But how?!

Episode 2: The Thing You Love Most

Once Upon a Time was created by two writers who worked on Lost and it follows the same basic structure that show did. Most episodes focus on one character, contrasting their adventures in the present day with flashbacks to their time in the fairy tale world. The second episode gives the Evil Queen the once over. After crashing Snow White’s wedding, the Queen returns to her own palace and consults with the Magic Mirror and her valet. She tells them that she’s going to enact “The Dark Curse” and they remind her that she traded the curse away to…sigh…Maleficent.

Madam? I knew Maleficent. Maleficent was a friend of mine.

After some of the clunkiest, most exposition heavy dialogue I’ve ever heard the Queen demands the curse back and Maleficent refuses. They fight a magical dual and the Evil Queen beats Maleficent (FUCKING WHAT) and leaves with the curse. The Queen gathers a cadre of evil magic users and they try to enact the curse but it doesn’t work.

Meanwhile, in Storybrooke, Regina shows up at the Bed and Breakfast with a basket of apples for Emma because that’s her whole gimmick

She’s like an apple-themed Batman villain. The Appler!

Emma tells Regina she’s still going to stay and Regina replies that she doesn’t need to worry about Henry because she’s got him in therapy. Emma decides to pay a visit to Henry’s shrink, Doctor Hopper. She’s all “hey, I know patient confidentiality is sacrosanct and all…” and he’s all “nah, just take his file, it’s fine, you got an honest face”. This had me face palming until the show pulled the twist that Regina actually made Hopper give Emma the file so that she could frame her for stealing it. This is not a smart show, exactly, but it’s at least smart enough to know when something would be really dumb and subvert your expectations so, points for that, I guess.

In Fairy Tale land, Regina’s valet advises her to go to the person she originally bought the curse from, which turns out to be Rumpelstiltskin. She visits him in his incredibly secure dungeon and he tells her that for the curse to work she has to sacrifice the heart of the thing she loves most (hey, that’s the name of the episode). It turns out that’s the Valet, who is actually the Queen’s father (I’m sure they explain how that works later on).

Mary Blanchard bails Emma out of jail who then chainsaws one of Regina’s apple trees in revenge. In our final flashback to fairy tale land we learn that the Queen’s father’s name was Henry.

Episode 3: Snow Falls

This is the episode where I finally realised that this show was not for me.

This is our “Snow White and Prince Charming” episode, where we learn how these two crazy kids met. Now, translating a character like Snow White for a modern audience while remaining true to the basic essence of the character requires skill and finesse. Or, and hear me out here, you could just make her Catwoman.

Because that’s what they did.

Charming and his fianceé, Princess Abigail, are travelling through the woods when they get straight up robbed by a mysterious hooded figure who turns out to be Snow White. And okay, it could have worked, maybe. I can see it maybe working with a different….everything. With all apologies to Ginnifer Goodwin who is a charming and versatile actor, “badass outlaw” is not in her wheelhouse. Secondly, this version of Snow is just such a complete 180 from the Queen Snow White we saw in the pilot, or the Mary Blanchard version that it feels like a completely different person who happens to be played by the same actor. Anyway, she steals the wedding ring that Charming is supposed to give to Abigail and he swears that he will find her.

In Storybrooke, Mary Margaret finds Emma sleeping in her car because she can’t stay at Granny’s any more because she now has a criminal record. She offers to let Emma stay with her but Emma refuses because she doesn’t do roommates.

In “Henry’s Cray-Cray” News, Henry has got it into his head that a “John Doe” coma patient in the hospital is Prince Charming and convinces Mary to read to him from his book. This causes John Doe to take her hand but when she runs to get the doctor he tells her that Doe’s condition is completely unchanged. But when she goes, he calls Regina to let her know.

Back in fairy tale land, Charming captures Snow in a big net like a common Wookie and threatens to turn her in to the Queen unless she returns the ring she stole. And she tells him that she already sold it to some trolls.

Hah! No. Wow. Can you imagine if the trolls from Frozen just, like, showed up in this show? Man. Man, that’d look terrible.

So they team up to get the ring back from the trolls.

Mary Margaret goes to read to John Doe again only to be told that he’s run off which is impressive for a guy who’s been in a coma for years but also not really medically wise. Regina is also at the hospital because she’s apparently John Doe’s emergency contact as she was the one who brought him into the hospital years ago.

Meanwhile, Snow White and Charming fight some trolls, get the ring, he saves her, she saves him, enemies become friends, friends discover that they have crazy sexual chemistry.

They part company and Charming tells her that his name is actually James.

In Strorybrooke, Mary Margaret, Emma, Henry and the Sheriff find John Doe in the forest, drowned in a river. Fortunately Mary Margaret is able to use Magic Hollywood CPR to bring him back to life (for what is Magic Hollywood CPR if not True Love’s Kiss?).

They bring John Doe back to the hospital and he and Mary Margaret seem to have an instant connection but then Regina shows up with a blonde lady and is all “Hey guess what, I found his wife, don’t all thank me at once”. Emma thinks that Regina suddenly finding Doe’s wife is super sus but Regina tells her it was possible because of what Emma’s own investigation turned up. And the episode ends with Emma accepting Mary Margaret’s offer of a spare room because her hatred of Regina has finally become stronger than her hatred of room-mates.

***

So, I got real mixed feelings about Once Upon a Time. On the one hand, I really like all the Storybrooke stuff. I know Jennifer Morrison got some flack for her portrayal of Emma Swan but I think she’s really good. She brings across the idea of this woman who never had a normal stable upbringing and so still feels like a kid in an adult world, hoping that no one sees through her disguise. She’s an interesting lead character and I dig her a lot. I also think Lana Parilla is flat-out great as Regina Mills, bringing real soap-villain energy in some scenes while also showing real humanity and hurt in others. Ginnifer Goodwin is honestly perfect as a modern day version of Snow White, managing to be sweet and kind without being a smiling doormat. And Robert Carlyle is effortlessly creepy as Mr. Gold.

The problem is, ALL these elements (with the exception of Emma who’s just a baby) also exist in the Fairy Tale world and there… they kinda suck. The Evil Queen is a Power Rangers villain, Snow White is (as discussed) apparently Catwoman and Carlyle is playing Rumpelstiltskin like the Lucky Charms Leprechaun after he fell in a vat of Joker Acid. He’s AWFUL. And I know he’s a fantastic actor, hell, he’s fantastic in this show as Mr Gold but his Rumpelstiltskin is an over-acted, gimmicky atrocity.

Then there’s the Fairy Tale land itself which just looks so damn cheap. And I know, it’s a network TV show, I shouldn’t be expecting Game of Thrones level sets, costumes and special effects. What I do think is a fair criticism is the dialogue. Dialogue is so goddamn important in creating a sense of place and time and every character just talks like a 21st century American. And I’ve got nothing against 21st century Americans as long as they stay away from our women but what’s the point of setting a story in two different worlds if you’re not going to take the time to make them feel distinct?

Despite that, I’ll confess there is something very moreish about Once Upon a Time. Spouse of Mouse and I were constantly ripping on it but we did end up binging most of season one so it’s clearly doing something right.

No!

Maybe.

Shaddup.

NEXT UPDATE: 02 March 2023

NEXT TIME: What if they made a Disney movie, and nobody came?

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Published on February 15, 2023 16:09
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