The Wheel
- Episode aired Oct 18, 2007
- TV-14
- 52m
Don and Betty Draper have an argument when it becomes apparent that he doesn't want to spend Thanksgiving with her family and she plans on going only with the children. He also learns some i... Read allDon and Betty Draper have an argument when it becomes apparent that he doesn't want to spend Thanksgiving with her family and she plans on going only with the children. He also learns some information about his brother Adam. Pete Campbell confirms that he has landed an account fr... Read allDon and Betty Draper have an argument when it becomes apparent that he doesn't want to spend Thanksgiving with her family and she plans on going only with the children. He also learns some information about his brother Adam. Pete Campbell confirms that he has landed an account from his father-in-law for a new skin care product called Clearasil. He objects however when... Read all
- Rachel Menken
- (credit only)
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaBetty's heartfelt confession to Glen in a wintry parking lot - with both characters wrapped up in heavy coats - was actually shot on one of the hottest days of the year.
- GoofsWhen Betty places a call, a modern dual-tone dial tone is heard rather than the "buzz" dial tone in use in 1960.
- Quotes
Don Draper: Well, technology is a glittering lure. But there's the rare occasion when the public can be engaged on a level beyond flash, if they have a sentimental bond with the product. My first job, I was in-house at a fur company, with this old pro copywriter. Greek, named Teddy. And Teddy told me the most important idea in advertising is "new". Creates an itch. You simply put your product in there as a kind of... calamine lotion. But he also talked about a deeper bond with the product: nostalgia. It's delicate... but potent. Teddy told me that in Greek, "nostalgia" literally means, "the pain from an old wound". It's a twinge in your heart, far more powerful than memory alone. This device isn't a spaceship. It's a time machine. It goes backwards, forwards. It takes us to a place where we ache to go again. It's not called the Wheel. It's called a Carousel. It lets us travel the way a child travels. Around and around, and back home again... to a place where we know we are loved.
- ConnectionsFeatured in The 60th Primetime Emmy Awards (2008)
And it is at that point within the series as a project that I started to have my problems because it is not as gripping as I would have liked in terms of the characters and the content. It is not a comparison I want to make but coincidentally I am re-watching The Sopranos at the moment (season 2 at the moment) and it has impressed me by how engaging each thread is whether it being just one for that episode or one that spreads across the season; it makes each episode engaging while also building the characters and the bigger plots at the same time. With Mad Men the same doesn't happen even though I could see it trying hard to do it. For some reason it left me a little cold to the characters and the events – even Peggy, who I had assumed would be the "wide-eyed-innocent" device that the show uses to introduce us to this world (she is, but really only for a while). I'm not saying that nothing happens, because that is not the case – we learn the pasts of some of the characters and the true nature of other characters and relationships, there is stuff going on and to a point I found it interesting.
The problem is that I mostly only found it interesting. I didn't really feel like it ever engaged me or made me care like I would normally want to be by a show (not just a drama, I generally want to be engaged in the show rather than just going along with it). Season 1 never managed to do that and I'm not entirely sure why but it never felt different from the first episode – never made me feel like I had grown with the show over the 13 or so episodes or that I cared more as a result of the time put in. It is not the fault of the cast but I just think the writing is not as good as the hype suggested it was. I have read others on IMDb saying how complex and layered it all is but I just didn't see that – the standard things I would expect to see from a 1950's drama are all there and have all been done before even as recently as 2008's Revolutionary Road. That it is doing them again is not a problem but if you are doing something so familiar then you need to do so with something that makes it stand out and Mad Men never convinces me it has that.
Hamm's central turn helps things by virtue of his charisma and the way he can easily do the "I have a troubled back-story" look at a moment's notice. Likewise Moss, Kartheiser, Slattery and others all provide solid turns that suggest they can do more than the material often lets them. Hendricks sticks in the mind the most of the cast but this is mainly down to how well she works her figure and her sex appeal. It all makes the conclusion that bit more annoying because it appears to have quality or the potential for quality across the board but yet somehow the material never manages to do more than bat to first base when I was waiting to see it knock it out the park at some point.
I will return for season 2 at some point but I will not be in a rush on the basis of this. I'm interested to see what happens with the characters, interested to see where they take it from where season 1 left off but that is the problem – I'm only "interested" not emotionally involved or engaged in the plots and characters.
- bob the moo
- Sep 6, 2009
Details
- Runtime52 minutes
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 1.33 : 1
- 1.78 : 1