Endings are hard — especially when they involve shutting down that intense group-therapy session known as seven seasons of “Mad Men.”
Showrunner Matt Weiner always had a thing
about the opening and closing of doors (elevator doors especially.) And in the finale, poor, suffering everyman Leonard describes his feelings of being invisible: He’s just a product sitting on
a shelf inside an unlit refrigerator, going unnoticed when his family opens the door. That reference was what finally got Don to break down and embrace Leonard — and for Don to feel his own
grief.
It could also be a reference to a Coke can, which led to the Coke commercial finale — which, as time goes by, feels flatter and more fizzled. It’s a one-size-fits all
insta-answer, literally a “commercial” way of exchanging one flawed belief system for another.
But also, from Weiner’s point of view, the entire seventh season of “Mad
Men” was a product “sitting in the can” on a shelf, unseen since last October because of AMC’s unpopular decision to split the ending into two half seasons. Was Weiner also
working out his own anger issues with parental units AMC and Lionsgate over season after season of fights, slashed budgets and unnecessary hiatuses, when he and the cast were also sitting unseen?
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With “mad” in the name, MM is probably the most densely psychological TV series ever created. Unlike Tony Soprano, Don never had a Dr. Melfi to open up to, although he did have plenty
of anger issues. He couldn’t even look in a mirror, because he was hiding so much of himself. But he did spend a lot of time on the couch in his office.
And the show in essence allowed
us all time on the couch. It offered a mirror into the country’s mass parental issues, mostly probing feelings of loss, isolation and abandonment, which are painful to analyze in the light.
How many MM mothers abandoned their children? Let us count a few: Don’s sad whore mom (due to death, just as Betty will be doing); Peggy; Anna Draper’s niece, Stephanie; Roger’s
daughter Margaret/Marigold; and Diana the glum waitress. And if you recall in an early season, Duck abandoned his dog in the middle of Manhattan.
In reading about what would have been Marilyn
Monroe’s 89th birthday this week, it struck me that she and Don were about the same age — and endured similarly horrific childhoods, the pain of which they kept reliving. Just like
Don’s Kodak Carousel presentation, this is indeed the pain from “an old wound…a twinge in your heart far more powerful than memory alone.”
Norma Jean was put in an
orphanage at age seven by her paranoid schizophrenic mother and afterwards, moved around from foster home to foster home, resulting in a sketchy background and education, just like Don’s. At age
16, she used marriage as her army experience — a chance to take on a new identity. And they both changed their names: DD and MM (like “Mad Men.”)
Because it was an ad pitch,
Don could end the Carousel presentation with: “It takes us round and round and back home again, to a place where we know we are loved.” But in life, Norma Jean never had that place, and
neither did Don. The slides of the perfect Kodak moments he showed from his home with Betty and the kids were false advertising, as the family was already split. Loathsome media guy Harry Crane had to
run out of the room after seeing those pictures, faced with his own real-life hypocrisy since leaving his wife.
Although Don was great at making shit up and selling it, in the end, he was
forced to see that his own lines he’d repeated to Peggy and Stephanie — “this never happened” and that it’s easy to “move forward” — were a bunch of
crap. Don was a prisoner of his past, and continued to hurt others with his binge-cycles and disappearing acts.
But the woman in the Esalen “rap” group offered Stephanie the
definitive answer on abandoned children: “That child will spend the rest of his life staring at the door, waiting for you to walk in.” So Stephanie had to run out of the room (just as
Harry did) because she was facing her own hypocrisy in believing her kid was better off without her.
I thought the best season-ender of the entire series came in Season 5, during the visually
stunning tracking shot showing Don walking out of the frame of the set of Megan’s commercial, and ending up in a bar, where an attractive woman asks, “Are you alone?”
That’s an existential question that can be seen on many levels. Don couldn’t really answer at that point, and wrestled with it for a few more seasons. The only real resolution or
catharsis that Weiner gave us was in the form of a Burger Chef campaign: “Imagine a place away from the TV, where you can be a family.”
Yet, during one of his interviews, Weiner
admitted that his parents wouldn’t let him watch TV as a kid, so it became a forbidden fruit. He said he got a tiny TV during his second semester of college and made up for lost time,
mentioning all the shows and reruns that he watched religiously, and joking that “I could quote every line of ‘Quincy.’”
In its entire 92 hours, Mad Men is an
astonishing creation: a much smarter, deeper and heavier view of the human experience than anything Weiner could have gotten from watching “Adam-12,” “Dragnet” or
“Fantasy Island.”
Still, he failed to really bring it all home. It’s as if Homer never let Odysseus get back to his wife — but in the meantime stuck him in a Motel 6,
where they at least try to make it homey by leaving the light on.
And I guess that’s its own genius. The “journey” never ends; the message here is that we’ve got to do
the work, and look past all the fake fronts. In the end, all we have is the circle of life and human connection. We have to find and make our own families and our own homes.