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*The title of Barney's new playbook is "The Playbook II: Electric Bang-a-loo", a reference to the film ''[[Breakin' 2: Electric Boogaloo]]''. He alludes one of his new plays, "The Mannequin," to the 80's classic film of [[Mannequin (1987 film)|the same name]].
*The title of Barney's new playbook is "The Playbook II: Electric Bang-a-loo", a reference to the film ''[[Breakin' 2: Electric Boogaloo]]''. He alludes one of his new plays, "The Mannequin," to the 80's classic film of [[Mannequin (1987 film)|the same name]].
*In his last moments with the gang at the Farhampton Inn, Ted acts like [[ET the Extra-Terrestrial|ET]] in saying goodbye to Lily. He brings up with Barney how they [[Sweet Taste of Liberty|licked]] the [[Liberty Bell]].
*In his last moments with the gang at the Farhampton Inn, Ted acts like [[ET the Extra-Terrestrial|ET]] in saying goodbye to Lily. He brings up with Barney how they [[Sweet Taste of Liberty|licked]] the [[Liberty Bell]].
*The 2016 apartment farewell party sees Ted wear his hanging chad costume, which Tracy complements by wearing a [[Al Gore|Gore]]/[[Joe Lieberman|Lieberman]] campaign shirt.
*The 2016 apartment farewell party sees Ted wear his hanging chad costume, which Tracy complements by wearing a [[Al Gore|Gore]]/[[Joe Lieberman|Lieberman]] campaign shirt. For the party, Marshall and Lily dress as [[Captain Ahab]] and [[Moby Dick]] respectively.
*When asked about the possibility of hooking up with girls half his age, Barney claims he needs to reach his [[George Clooney|Clooney]] years to make it happen.
*When asked about the possibility of hooking up with girls half his age, Barney claims he needs to reach his [[George Clooney|Clooney]] years to make it happen.
*Marshall and Lily compare Robin making herself scarce around the gang with [[Sasquatch]] and [[Yeti]] sightings.
*Marshall and Lily compare Robin making herself scarce around the gang with [[Sasquatch]] and [[Yeti]] sightings.

Revision as of 05:55, 21 April 2014

"Last Forever"

"Last Forever" is the final episode of the CBS sitcom How I Met Your Mother. The episode serves as the 23rd and 24th episode of season nine, and the 207th and 208th episode overall; the episode's two parts are classified as two separate episodes. It aired on March 31, 2014.

"Last Forever" received a polarized reaction from both fans and TV critics, with a majority of critics expressing disappointment,[1] primarily in regard to the relationship between Ted Mosby and Robin Scherbatsky, and the fate of the series' titular mother. Many viewers expressed considerable disdain for the apparent disregard for character development, while others praised it for tying up loose ends.[2][3][4][5][6]

Plot

Part 1

In a flashback to September 2005, Ted Mosby (Josh Radnor), Marshall Eriksen (Jason Segel), Lily Aldrin (Alyson Hannigan) and Barney Stinson (Neil Patrick Harris) accept Robin Scherbatsky (Cobie Smulders) into their group. Lily, optimistic about Robin's friendship, decrees that Ted and Barney cannot hook up with her unless they marry her, and Barney scoffs at the idea.

In May 2013, Ted discusses his move to Chicago with Marshall and Lily at Barney and Robin's wedding reception. Meanwhile, Barney recognizes the bass player as the woman—already introduced in previous episodes as the Mother (Cristin Milioti)—who advised him to pursue Robin. When he hears she's single, he decides to introduce her to Ted, who declines the idea as he has to leave in order to get ready to move the next day. Outside, the group sadly bids Ted farewell, and he does a final high-five with Barney, resulting in the two hurting each other and delaying his departure.

Later, Ted goes to the Farhampton train station; however, his train is late. He tells an elderly lady about his weekend and she asks many questions about destiny. She looks up and spots the Mother standing nearby, but Ted insists he can't talk to her because he's moving. The next night, Marshall and Lily are surprised to see Ted sitting at their table in MacLaren's. Ted justifies this by telling them that he met a girl, which they approve after finding out she is the bass player from the wedding. In 2015, Ted, now engaged, meets Robin and Barney at MacLaren's to discuss wedding ideas. As Robin goes to buy drinks, Barney admits their marriage is suffering because of Robin's rising career, which requires her to travel frequently. The Mother arrives and tells Ted they have to delay their wedding because she is pregnant.

In May 2016, Ted and the Mother host a get-together with the rest of the gang. Marshall is miserable at his new job, having been forced to return to being a corporate lawyer. Barney and Robin reveal that her constant traveling for work put a strain on them, and after three years of marriage, they have divorced. The mood turns positive when Barney realizes that Marshall and Lily are expecting their third child, but Lily is worried about the group breaking apart. Together they promise they will all be there for the big moments and will remain friends. Five months later, Marshall and Lily decide to move out of their old apartment and put together a final Halloween roof party. Robin is sad to see Ted and the Mother with matching "hanging chad" outfits, alongside Barney who has returned to his womanizing ways. She decides to leave and confesses to Lily that she can't be in the group any longer as she still has unresolved feelings for Ted, which devastates Lily.

Part 2

In 2018, Barney gets ready for another "legendary" night at MacLaren's, even though Ted and Lily, both being parents, aren't intending to stay out late. Marshall arrives and announces he is replacing a retiring judge in Queens, which prompts a celebration. Later, when Barney attempts to score with a young woman, Lily blasts him for fully regressing into his previous self. Barney defends his behavior by telling her he knows that if he couldn't make a marriage with Robin work, he'll never make it work with anyone. Lily relents and Barney leaves to enjoy his night.

In 2019, Ted, the Mother, Marshall and Lily are at Robots vs. Wrestlers. A depressed Barney shows up to say that while he recently completed a “perfect month", the last woman is pregnant with his child. Later, Ted runs into Robin, now a famous news reporter, while showing Penny the GNB building he designed. Later, Marshall, Lily, and Ted await the birth of Barney's child. After throwing up in the bathroom, Barney is led in to meet his daughter, Ellie. Despite his initial denial, Barney is moved to tears, and this leads him to finally change his ways.

At Ted and the Mother’s house, Ted re-proposes to the Mother because it has been five years since they got engaged, and says they are getting married the following Thursday. Before the wedding, the gang, including Robin, meets up at MacLaren’s, and Marshall announces he is running for the New York State Supreme Court. Lily gives a toast praising Ted for all he has been through, and Future Ted narrates how he never stopped loving the Mother for a second, even when she became terminally ill and passed away in 2024.

Returning the story to May 2013, Ted gets the courage to introduce himself to the bass player, and she invites him underneath her yellow umbrella. The two engage in a conversation where she tells Ted she remembers him from when he accidentally taught her Economics class on his first day as a professor. Ted realizes that her umbrella is his umbrella that he left at Cindy's and has his initials on it, but she tells him that T.M. are her initials: Tracy McConnell. Ted continues his conversation with Tracy as the train arrives.

In 2030, Future Ted finishes his story by saying, "And that, kids, is how I met your mother." Penny and Luke protest that this was not the point of the story, and deduce that it was actually about how he still has feelings for their "Aunt" Robin. Ted brushes this off, but his kids remind him that they love Robin and that there's still a connection between the two of them.

In the final scene, Ted goes to Robin's apartment with the blue French horn, and they smile at each other.

Production

Before writing the episode, Carter Bays and Craig Thomas decided to watch the series finales of other sitcoms for inspiration. They said that they crafted the last ten minutes of the series right from the start. In February 2014, Bays tweeted that he found a rough draft of the series finale that he first wrote in 2006.[7]

The scene involving Ted's future children (Lyndsy Fonseca and David Henrie) was secretly shot in 2006 during the production of Season 2.[8] This was primarily done so the teenage characters would not age, since Fonseca and Henrie were adults by the time the final episode aired.[9] The scene was filmed on a set closed to everyone except Bays, Thomas, executive producer/director Pamela Fryman, a camera operator, and Fonseca and Henrie, who signed non-disclosure agreements. Fonseca stated that she had forgotten the details of the scene in the years since its filming, while Henrie said, "I do remember. I think I remember. We’ll see."[10][11] Josh Radnor was also told some parts of the finale from the start,[12] but neither he nor the rest of the cast were informed how the series would end.[13] Radnor, not Bob Saget, plays future Ted when he appears on camera. When asked whether he should have played the role, Saget said that Radnor doing so "felt appropriate to me. It's not theMatrix [sic] where Ted CGI's into a narrator of his voice that was done as a sweet way to tell his story from almost his conscience from the future of his own life".[14]

Before the airing of the series finale, debates raged amongst fans concerning the fate of Ted and the Mother, fueled by scenes from "Vesuvius" and other previous episodes that seemed to point to a tragic ending.[15]

According to tweets from Alyson Hannigan, approximately 18 minutes of the original episode had to be cut to fit the broadcast time. One cut sequence features Lily paying back Marshall regarding a bet on whether Ted and Robin end up together, first referenced in the episode "No Pressure".[16] Another cut scene features Robin, wearing her Robin Sparkles jean jacket over her wedding dress, singing "Let's Go to The Mall" with the Mother's band at the wedding reception.[17]

An alternate cut of the ending, described as "a happy ending", will appear on the season nine DVD. It won't contain any new footage, but will be edited in a way that changes the fates of Ted, Tracy and Robin.[18]

Cultural references

  • Just before attempting the "High Infinity", Barney says "See you on the other side, Ray", to which Ted replies "Nice working with you, Dr. Venkman", a reference to the 1984 film Ghostbusters.
  • The title of Barney's new playbook is "The Playbook II: Electric Bang-a-loo", a reference to the film Breakin' 2: Electric Boogaloo. He alludes one of his new plays, "The Mannequin," to the 80's classic film of the same name.
  • In his last moments with the gang at the Farhampton Inn, Ted acts like ET in saying goodbye to Lily. He brings up with Barney how they licked the Liberty Bell.
  • The 2016 apartment farewell party sees Ted wear his hanging chad costume, which Tracy complements by wearing a Gore/Lieberman campaign shirt. For the party, Marshall and Lily dress as Captain Ahab and Moby Dick respectively.
  • When asked about the possibility of hooking up with girls half his age, Barney claims he needs to reach his Clooney years to make it happen.
  • Marshall and Lily compare Robin making herself scarce around the gang with Sasquatch and Yeti sightings.
  • When Barney wants to introduce Ted to the bass player (The mother) he shouts "Grape Scotch!", paraphrasing Doc Brown's catchphrase from Back to the Future.

Critical reception

"Last Forever" received a polarized reaction from TV critics and fans.[19] Viewers expressed considerable dissatisfaction regarding the resolution of Ted's story, his relationship to Robin, and the fate of the titular mother.[2] Additionally, the season-long buildup for Barney and Robin's wedding and their divorce 10 minutes into the next episode was criticized. Fans took to social media, such as Tumblr and Twitter, to express their disappointment. Because of its March 31 air date, many jokingly called the episode an early April Fool's Day prank. [citation needed]

Some fans of the show called on CBS to commission the creators of the show via a petition to rewrite and reshoot the finale. The petition has over 20,000 signatures and significant online news coverage. On April 5, 2014, Carter Bays said on Twitter that an alternate ending, from the same filmed material, would be included on the Season 9 DVD.[20]

Bill Kuchman of Popculturology said that the success of Milioti as the Mother made it hard to write the character away so quickly, saying, "Thanks to the show’s writing staff and Cristin Milioti, HIMYM had a huge victory on its hands with The Mother. Asking fans to drop all of that with a simple line about The Mother getting sick and passing away was a very difficult request."[21] Kuchman noted that "[over] the course of this final season, HIMYM made us care about Tracy. It made us believe that she and Ted belonged together. It was earned. That's why it was sad to see HIMYM just brush Tracy away."[22]

Donna Bowman of The AV Club graded the episode a B+, saying, "The hour finale was a strange ride, marvelous in some ways, confounding in others. Endings are difficult, and I don’t think any objective assessment would say they nailed this one."[23] Todd VanDerWerff of The AV Club was more blunt in saying that "Bays and Thomas simply looked like shitty long-term planners, unable to understand that getting the audience so invested in the Barney and Robin coupling or in Tracy as a character would make it all the harder when the series finale abruptly dissolved the former and treated the latter’s death as an aside in the narration. That the show never seemed to suggest Ted mourned her feels like a vital betrayal of his character."[24]

Alan Sepinwall of HitFix cited three reasons why Bays and Thomas should not have stuck with the ending they had originally envisioned at the start: the show's lengthy run forced them to stretch out events like Barney's and Robin's wedding, which would have to be quickly undone in the finale; the chemistry between Cobie Smulders and Neil Patrick Harris caused many fans to become deeply invested in Robin and Barney's relationship more than Robin and Ted's; and the casting of Cristin Milioti as the Mother caused fans to become invested in that character as well.[25] Sepinwall stated that "so much of what was terrible here was terrible because Bays and Thomas had a very specific vision for the ending of their show and would not — or, perhaps, after they filmed the kids' reactions, could not — deviate from it. And based on the initial reaction I've seen to the episode, it's going to forever sour the opinion many fans of the show had for it."[25]

Joyce Eng of TV Guide said that she'd prefer Ted not to have ended up with Robin, but "as I consider the romantics that co-creators Carter Bays and Craig Thomas are, it's obvious they would bring this long, winding love story full circle back to the person Ted wanted to be with when we met him. And The Mother — excuse us, Tracy — is reunited with her first true love, Max, too." Though the Mother served as a "cheap plot device" to a degree, Eng said that "Ted's time with her also taught him nothing lasts forever, nothing's perfect. And he needs to move on with his life, but that doesn't make his relationship with The Mother any less important. I don't think the Ted of 2005 would've done the same."[26]

Andrew Meola from MStars praised the episode, saying "I couldn't believe that they actually killed the Mother. But I let it sit for a bit, and then I felt something profoundly beautiful come out of this last hour of How I Met Your Mother."[27]

Maxim Pekarsky, writing for Thought Catalog, summarized: "Having been married to The Mother, Ted wouldn’t have wanted to get back with Robin. He – and we – spent nine seasons accepting that they’re not meant to be. Robin was never The Mother that Ted needed and wanted in his life."[28]

References

  1. ^ "HIMYM Tomatometer Watch: Series Finale Currently Rotten - Majority of critics disappointed by 'Last Forever'". Rotten Tomatoes. April 2, 2014. Retrieved April 3, 2014.
  2. ^ a b Akuna, Kirsten (March 31, 2014). "Fans Are Not Happy With The 'How I Met Your Mother' Series Finale". Buisiness Insider.
  3. ^ "How I Met Your Mother Watch: Mate and Switch". Time Magazine. March 31, 2014. Retrieved April 2, 2014.
  4. ^ "A wedding, a funeral and a French horn... How I Met Your Mother delivers a legendary series finale". Daily Mail. April 1, 2014. Retrieved April 2, 2014.
  5. ^ "How I Met Your Mother: the latest show to fail in the search for a perfect ending". Guardian. April 1, 2014. Retrieved April 2, 2014.
  6. ^ "'How I Met Your Mother' ends a legendary run". CNN. April 1, 2014. Retrieved April 2, 2014.
  7. ^ ""First Look" at How I Met Your Mother Series Finale: Carter Bays Has Been Writing It Since 2006!". E!. February 7, 2014. Retrieved March 25, 2014.
  8. ^ "Barney writes a book, Barney + Robin, Ted + Stella and other 'How I Met Your Mother' news". Chicago Tribune. July 19, 2008. Retrieved July 21, 2008. He did reveal that more than two years ago ... With only the two kids who play Ted's future children ... they shot a scene that directly relates to the identity of the mother. That scene will be included in the show's series finale"
  9. ^ "'How I Met Your Mother's' Craig Thomas on Ted & Barney's Breakup, Eriksen Babies and The Future of Robarn". Zap2it.com. Retrieved April 10, 2010.
  10. ^ Gelman, Vlada (September 29, 2013). "Farewell, How I Met Your Mother: Ted's 'Daughter' and 'Son' Spill 7 Behind-the-Scenes Secrets". TV Line. Retrieved October 1, 2013.
  11. ^ "Climatic End To 'HIMYM' Shot Eight Years Ago," from AP/TVNewsCheck, January 16, 2014
  12. ^ "'How I Met Your Mother': Josh Radnor Has Always Known (Part of) How It All Ends". The Hollywood Reporter. March 24, 2014. Retrieved March 25, 2014.
  13. ^ "'How I Met Your Mother' stars were left guessing about the sitcom's finale". The New York Daily News. March 24, 2014. Retrieved March 25, 2014.
  14. ^ Saget, Bob (April 4, 2014). "I'm Bob Saget...comedian, actor and author of the new book DIRTY DADDY....ask me anything!". Reddit. Retrieved April 4, 2014.
  15. ^ "'How I Met Your Mother' hints at tragic series finale". The New York Daily News. March 4, 2014. Retrieved March 25, 2014.
  16. ^ https://twitter.com/alydenisof/status/450848994348896256
  17. ^ "'How I Met Your Mother' finale cut a Robin Sparkles performance". Entertainment Weekly. April 3, 2014. Retrieved April 3, 2014.
  18. ^ http://www.deadline.com/2014/04/how-i-met-your-mother-himym-ending-dvd-series-finale-happy/
  19. ^ "HIMYM Tomatometer Watch: Series Finale Currently Rotten - Majority of critics disappointed by 'Last Forever'". Rotten Tomatoes. April 2, 2014. Retrieved April 3, 2014.
  20. ^ Update for those who've been asking: Alt #himym ending will be on s9 DVD and also in the series box set. https://twitter.com/CarterBays/status/452299544995184640
  21. ^ Kuchman, Bill (April 1, 2014). "'How I Met Your Mother' 'Last Forever' Recap: A Divisive Finale and What It Means for 'HIMYM'". Popculturology.
  22. ^ Kuchman, Bill (March 31, 2014). "'HIMYM' Finale Instant Reaction". Popculturology.
  23. ^ Bowman, Donna (March 31, 2014). "Last Forever". The A.V. Club.
  24. ^ VanDerWerff, Todd (April 1, 2014). "Does How I Met Your Mother's finale ruin it for all time?". The A.V. Club.
  25. ^ a b Sepinwall, Alan (March 31, 2014). "Series finale review: 'How I Met Your Mother' - 'Last Forever': How they conned us all". HitFix. Retrieved April 1, 2014.
  26. ^ Eng, Joyce (March 31, 2014). "How I Met Your Mother: Was It a Legendary Finale?". TV Guide. Retrieved April 1, 2014.
  27. ^ http://www.mstarz.com/articles/28407/20140331/met-mother-last-forever-review-kids.htm
  28. ^ Pekarsky, Maxim (March 31, 2014). "'The HIMYM Finale Will Break Your Heart". ThoughtCatalog.