Article first published as ONCE UPON A TIME Review Season 2 Episode 19 Lacey on Seat42F.
Grade: 94%
Grade: 94%
ABC’s ONCE UPON A TIME breaks a long
hiatus this week with “Lacey.” Regina (Lana Parrilla) helps Belle
(Emilie de Ravin) get her memories back, but not her fairy tale ones.
Mr. Gold (Robert Carlyle) is not too happy with Lacey, Belle’s new
persona, who is somewhat the opposite of the girl he loves. Will they be
able to find each other again, as true love’s kiss is needed to break
Regina’s spell?
“Lacey” gives us another piece of the
Rumplestilskin / Belle back story. We see them living together when they
aren’t getting along. This is the part of the Beauty and the Beast
story where things are unhappy, and ultimately culminates in the library
/ “there may be something there that wasn’t there before” bit. Yet,
even in their most miserable times, Belle sees something in Rumple that
gives her hope.
A young man named Robin Hood (Tom Ellis,
Miranda) ventures into Rumple’s home to steal a magic wand. Rumple
captures and tortures Robin Hood, intending to set an example for anyone
else that might think to steal from him. Belle can’t stand to hear the
suffering, and allows Robin to escape when Rumple isn’t looking.
I feel like these scenes in “Lacey” take
Rumple in a darker direction than we’ve seen him before. Yes, we have
witnessed him kill out of revenge, and use magic to manipulate and get
what he wants. But we haven’t seen him being cruel, inflicting physical
pain, without good reason. It’s not like he even knows Robin; Robin is
just a man willing to break the rules to save the woman that he loves,
with no personal beef.
It’s a little strange that Belle sticks
by Rumple at this point. I mean, I get that she thinks she can save him,
and sees the inner part of him that isn’t bad. But as Rumple is hurting
Robin, making her wash his aprons full of blood, there should be more
outrage here. Belle should be disgusted and turned off, maybe even
trying to run away, despite her duty, or take down Rumple. How does she
keep from judging him, even as she begs Rumple to show mercy, which he
eventually does, sparing Robin’s life in the end.
Quick side musing: might Robin’s
never-missing bow, which Rumple ends up with, be the same one that Snow
White (Ginnifer Goodwin) eventually owns?
The Storybrooke versions of the
characters are different than their fairy tale personas, and yet there
is a thread connecting them. Lacey is nothing but dark, loving alcohol
and violence. At first, this is confusing, because Rumple has always
regarded Belle as a sweet, pure innocent. But I think “Lacey” shows us
that his view is simplistic and wrong.
Lacey urges Gold to keep beating on the
Keith, a.k.a. the Sheriff of Nottingham (Wil Traval, All Saints), in
Storybrooke, delighting in the dark side it brings out of him. This
can’t come out of nowhere. I think the purpose of the “Lacey” back story
is to show us that Belle doesn’t flinch at darkness, and may even be
attracted to it. Yes, she encourages Rumple / Gold to act good, but
perhaps she also likes knowing that, deep down inside, he is bad. Or she
likes the influence she has over this part of him, making her feel
powerful to be able to control someone like that, even if it comes
across as her encouraging Rumple to better himself.
It’s a sobering and depressing turn. It
reveals the more complex nature of Belle, but it also shows us something
about her that we won’t like. This kind of changes the game, giving us a
new understanding of a pivotal character that could have long reaching
affects.
There is an immediate consequence in
“Lacey,” and that’s that Gold is now embracing the evil nature he fights
to overcome. He is in love with Belle, or Lacey, or whoever she is. He
is going to do what makes her happy, even if it’s what the old version
of her wouldn’t have wanted, at least, so he thinks. The fact that she
eggs him on when he is beating Keith, and so Gold keeps going, is a bad
sign for where the character of Rumple may go in the last few episodes
of the season to impress his gal.
See, “Lacey” opens with a powerful scene
in which Rumple murders Henry (Jared Gilmore), his own grandson,
because Henry has been foretold to be the instrument of Rumple’s
destruction. At the beginning of the hour, Rumple is deeply bothered by
this vision, and clearly is not comfortable carrying it out, hoping
Belle might remember who she is and help him overcome these desires.
However, if Lacey wants him to be bad, we’ve seen how easily Rumple can
get caught up in that darkness. His behavior late in the installment is
bad news for Henry.
Which means Regina has screwed up again.
By manipulating Belle to be Lacey, thinking she is just going to hurt
Gold, she actually puts Henry is danger. This is similar to last year’s
late arc, in which Regina tries to poison Emma (Jennifer Morrison) and
Henry ends up the one in the coma. Clearly, Regina has not learned her
lesson.
Regina is also causing trouble in
another way. She secretly investigates what the dwarves and Anton (Jorge
Garcia) have been doing, and discovers their beanstalks. The question
is, what will she do about it?
She doesn’t immediately burn the fields,
so maybe she wants to go home. It seems the Charmings have no intention
of taking her with them, based on a line Emma lets slip, probably a
good move considering the threat Regina poses in the past in fairy tale
land. But this now means they can’t just escape her. Which, they
couldn’t have anyway. The disappearance of many, if not all, of the
townsfolk would have eventually raised her suspicion, and she would have
found them. Now, though, she may threaten them leaving in the first
place.
It is doubtful that Regina will team up
with Gold, considering she doesn’t trust him. Regina only finds out this
week that Gold is Henry’s grandfather, and considering that he arranges
her adoption of the boy in the first place, she doesn’t believe that he
didn’t know who Henry is ahead of time. Might the two baddies battle
each other, rather than the heroes?
Even if they do, the end of “Lacey”
triples the threat count when Tamara (Sonequa Martin-Green) and Greg /
Owen (Ethan Embry) bring Hook (Colin O’Donoghue) back to town. He is
their prisoner, but surely he will have no objection to causing trouble
for their enemies. Plus, Hook arrives along with quite a few boxes. What
is in all of those?
“Lacey” is very much setting up some big
end-of-the-season plots, and is interesting, if a bit depressing, in
its own right. For every amusing scene of David (Josh Dallas) giving
Gold dating advice, we get one of Lacey ditching Gold during dinner,
balancing the enjoyable with the story elements that cause dread. The
next three hours should be very exciting.
ONCE UPON A TIME airs Sundays at 8 p.m. ET. on ABC.
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