Befitting any drama about a family that owns a funeral home,
"Six Feet Under" gives itself a graceful send-off to end its
five-season run.
And befitting "Six Feet Under," this finale is not without
tears, histrionics, four-letter words, dark humor and (naturally) death.
The Fishers wouldn't have it any other way.
At the start of the episode (9 p.m. EDT Sunday on HBO), everyone seems
to be going nuts. Small wonder. Life has been awfully punishing of late.
Nate Fisher, the conflicted man-boy, died three episodes ago from a
brain hemorrhage. Now his younger brother David, sister Claire and mother
Ruth, as well as his estranged wife Brenda (who gives birth prematurely to
their child) sink further into gloom.
Meanwhile, Nate (Peter Krause) continues his post-mortem haunts, in this episode
initially berating Brenda (Rachel Griffiths) for causing their infant daughter's possible brain
damage.
Rebellious artist Claire (Lauren Ambrose) is panicked about moving from Los Angeles and
launching her career. Ruth (Francis Conroy), whose husband died in the series' debut, has now
buried her first-born and faces losing her daughter.
And what about David (Michael C. Hall) the dutiful son who ran the funeral home and served
as the moral center of the series? During its run, he has confronted his
sexuality, formed a lasting relationship and adopted two boys. But
now, grief-stricken, he has hit a wall.
To some extent, this is all par for the "Six Feet Under"
course, as the series retrospective (8 p.m. Sunday) should bear out. For
five rocky seasons, the Fishers and everyone who shared their orbit have
taken it on the chin. They have waged war with themselves, one another and
an unforgiving universe.
Smart, self-absorbed, unsettled, all too human — to us, these people
were fascinating and often relatable. But not always easy to deal with.
They could really try our patience. They were overdue for fixing.
Good news: By the end of the 75-minute finale, we can leave them secure
in knowing their recovery has begun. And thanks to the wondrously fitting
postscript, we will know a great deal more.
Even at the end, "Six Feet Under" doesn't go soft. But it
takes its leave with its affairs in order. It can rest, at last, in peace.
A groundbreaking series (in more ways than one) when it premiered in
June 2001, "Six Feet Under" dared to whistle past the graveyard
with its fancifully discomfiting look at life and death. It fulfilled a
promise by openly gay creator Alan Ball (who wrote and directed the finale) to be
"a show about life in the presence of death."
Death was always dropping in. At the start of each episode (nearly
every one, that is, except the finale), someone met his or her demise in a
fashion that might be heartbreaking (claimed by sudden infant death
syndrome), grotesque (cut in half by an elevator) or morbidly funny (hit
by a car while witnessing the Rapture). Each slice of life (or, more
aptly, slice of death) was meant to demonstrate the randomness and
ineluctability of our common fate.
"Six Feet Under" thought a lot about death, and about death's
impact on the survivors. After all, it viewed death through the eyes of a
family that runs a funeral home — assisting at the cusp of the
hereafter, while struggling with the here and now.
In its premiere four years ago, its tone was quickly established: The
patriarch, Nathaniel Fisher, was killed while fiddling with his cigarette
when a bus smacked into the hearse he was driving.
But he never went away. Played by Richard Jenkins, he engaged in an
active afterlife throughout the series' run.
Now, on the finale, he reappears to bully his son David into saving
himself. Later in the episode, he and son Nate jointly offer Brenda a
much-needed blessing.
On "Six Feet Under," ghostly presences are skilled at saying
what needs to be said, as when Nate gives Claire a pep talk about moving
to New York to pursue her photography.
"You want to know a secret?" he counsels. "I spent my
whole life being scared: of not being ready, of not being right, of not
being who I should be. And where did it get me?"
Then, in the show's closing minutes, as Claire gathers the people she
loves most for a farewell photo before she drives away, Nate, looking on,
says a curious thing.
"You can't take a picture of this," he tells her. "It's
already gone."
In this richly satisfying finish to a series like none other, we
understand what he means. We see these characters as we have never seen
them before. But as we realize how much we cared for them, we understand
they're not there. "Six Feet Under" will be over. So the
pictures that count will reside inside us. Long after it has gone. |