Best of the Rest: 10 Great TV episodes from 2011
Even shows that weren't brilliant overall could offer momentary brilliance every now and then
It's been an uneven year overall for "The Office," but Michael's proposal to Holly was a big high point.
Having already presented my lists of the best overall shows of the year, the best returning shows and the best new shows, it's time for my final superlatives list: 10 great episodes of shows that missed the cut on any of the other lists.
Some come from shows I like a lot, but not as much as some others that actually made a top 10. Some come from shows I once loved universally and now stick with for the occasional reminder of the good old days. And one comes from a show I came to hate pretty thoroughly, as a reminder that even bad shows are capable of greatness for an hour or two.
In no particular order...
"The Office" - "Garage Sale": The post-Steve Carell version of "The Office" has mostly been a diluted version of what the show used to be, but the run-up to Carell's departure featured a string of terrific episodes and moments. I could have easily picked his farewell episode for how well it showcased the many different sides of Michael Gary Scott, or "PDA" for being one of the funniest episodes the show has done in years, but I ultimately went with "Garage Sale" for doing the best job of showcasing both the ridiculous and romantic sides of "The Office" and its departing main character. In trying to craft the perfect proposal for Holly, Michael got to be reckless and oblivious, but he also got to be sincere and winning, and Pam's attempts to control his bad impulses provided Jenna Fischer her best material in a long time. And the subplots about the garage sale itself featured one of Jim's strongest (and yet simplest) pranks on Dwight and a goofy but charming C-story in which Kevin ultimately taught Andy and Darryl the true meaning of "Dallas."
"Curb Your Enthusiasm" - "Mister Softee": "Curb" did three pantheon-level episodes this season, including this one, "The Palestinian Chicken" and "The Vow of Silence." It was ultimately about splitting hairs in choosing one over the others - I didn't think the very last scene of "The Palestinian Chicken" worked, for instance, even though until then it was maybe the funniest of the three - and also enjoying the density of an episode that featured Bill Buckner's redemption, a Larry David origin story, Leon with glasses, Robert Smigel unleashing a symphony of profane taunts and Susie and Ana Gasteyer both having way too much fun in Larry's car. As I said at the time, it almost felt like "Curb: The Motion Picture," it seemed so epic.
"Doctor Who" - "The Girl Who Waited": For a while there, it seemed that the Steven Moffat era of "Doctor Who" had established a pattern where the Moffat-written arc episodes were fantastic and the standalones by other writers were mostly filler. The back half of the latest season finally broke that pattern, as one of my favorite modern "Who" episodes - in which a time anomaly forced Rory to choose between saving the Amy he knows and a cold, bitter Amy from decades into the future - was written by Tom MacRae, not Moffat, and featured some of the best work either Karen Gillan or Arthur Darvill have done on the series.
(NOTE: For some reason, I got the air date for "Chuck vs. Phase Three" completely wrong in my head, when it aired in November of 2010. I'm leaving the video clip in, because Sarah fighting in Thailand is cool, and plugging in my next runner-up at the bottom. Apologies.)
"Chuck" - "Chuck vs. Phase Three": When actors direct episodes of their own shows, the logistics often require them to appear only briefly in the episode before the one they direct. So while Zachary Levi was prepping last season's Thanksgiving episodes, "Chuck" took advantage of his minimal presence to fashion a kick-ass episode in which Sarah was suddenly the hero of the show, fighting her way through Thailand to rescue her man. Just a tremendous showcase of everything that Yvonne Strahovski has brought to the table on "Chuck" over the years, from dramatic range to physicality. I love "Chuck," but "Phase Three" almost had me longing for a spin-off about the Giant Blonde She-Male of Thailand.
"Cougar Town" - "Something Good Coming": Hour-long comedy episodes can be an iffy proposition, and comedy episodes filmed on location when the characters take a trip can be even iffier. But "Cougar Town" pulled both off in its warm, weird, funny season finale, in which Jules and the rest of the Cul-De-Sac Crew flew out to Hawaii to bring Travis home and get him out of a post-break-up funk. The hour featured the usual collection of running gags (Grayson's obsession with the morning routine song was my favorite), paid off (for now) the obvious chemistry between Travis and Laurie, gave new depth to Bobby and even worked in an extended cameo by Sam Lloyd reprising his "Scrubs" role as singing lawyer Ted.
"The Killing" - "The Cage": The series fell apart eventually, but this second hour (which aired back-to-back with the pilot) suggested that Veena Sud and company were actually going to do something special with the gimmick of telling a single murder story over many hours. There were so many moments in "The Cage" that took advantage of the extended time, like a lingering, painful scene where Stan and Mitch Larsen visited the morgue to see their daughter's body, or Detective Holder hustling a pair of high school girls into pointing him to the possible murder scene. That the show eventually revealed itself to have a collection of thin characters and annoying red herrings and other plot twists doesn't take away from this strong early hour. But the quality of "The Cage" is a big part of why so many of us were so frustrated when things took a bad turn later in the season.
"Archer" - "Stage Two" & "Placebo Effect": As usual, I have to cheat at least once per list, and so I've combined the two episodes comprising the mini-arc about Archer being diagnosed with breast cancer. It was at once a joke - a character obsessed with his own machismo gets a disease associated with women - and oddly, wonderfully poignant. "Archer" had no need to go serious - arguably had no business going serious, considering how wildly irreverent the show had been to that point - but it worked, brilliantly.
"How I Met Your Mother" - "The Ducky Tie": It feels like "HIMYM" annoys me more often than not these days, though that may just be the way I feel given the twist near the end of the most recent episode. That said, the show is still capable of turning out a vintage episode from time to time, and "The Ducky Tie" - which brought back Victoria (Ted's best non-Robin love interest) for some closure, and got Marshall and Barney involved in a complicated bet - was as smart and sweet and funny as the show's good ol' days.
"Parenthood" - "Do Not Sleep With Your Autistic Nephew's Therapist": Besides having maybe the best title of any episode of television in 2011, "Do Not Sleep" was also the episode that crystallized my Hulk Theory of "Parenthood," wherein the madder the show gets, the stronger it gets. Lots of Bravermans had lots of reasons to be angry this week - Jasmine at Crosby for cheating on her (even though she'd kicked him out), Adam and Kristina at Crosby for robbing Max of his behavioral aide, Amber at her mom and brother for trying to reconnect with her deadbeat dad, etc. - and as tempers rose, so did the caliber of acting on display. Most episodes of "Parenthood" tend to be of a piece with the others, but every now and then, one stands out like this.
"Sons of Anarchy" - "Hands": "Sons" season 4 had its ups and its downs, but this outing - in which Tara suffered a potentially career-ending hand injury during an abduction attempt, while Gemma confronted Clay about his misdeeds and suffered a savage beating for her trouble - was not only the highlight of the season, but one of the best hours the series has done to date. Great performances from Maggie Siff, Charlie Hunnam, Ryan Hurst and Katey Sagal, and an overpowering sense of dread as one character after another recognized that no one gets out of Charming, or the club, alive, and that what they once thought of as a wonderful outlaw family has turned into a corrosive influence on everyone's lives.
"30 Rock" - "Double-Edged Sword": "30 Rock" tended to get lost in the shuffle of NBC Thursday last season, between "Parks and Rec" having a season for the ages, "The Office" saying goodbye to Carell and "Community" morphing into a new kind of show every week. But "30 Rock" season 5 was quietly strong, and maybe the show's most consistent overall since season 2. One of the reasons the season worked so well is that Liz spent much of it in a secure but infrequent relationship with Matt Damon's Carol, which allowed her to be a bit less pathetic than usual while not forcing the show to give her a romance plot every week. All good things come to an end, and if Liz and Carol couldn't stay together, at least their break-up was spectacular, as she realized she was through with him while stuck on the worst flight in airline history.
Okay, those are 10 of mine. What are some of your favorite episodes of 2011, and why? You're obviously not limited the way I was, so if you want to give me a bunch of "Breaking Bad"s, "Parks and Rec"s and "Louie"s, go for it.
Alan Sepinwall may be reached at sepinwall@hitfix.com
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Next 64 CommentsDryden
December 23, 2011 at 10:20AM EST Reply to CommentGlee - "Silly Love Songs": one of the few instances where everything works, focusing on the kids while building (and paying off) their relationships. The music was varied and spoke to the story without being so embarrassingly on-the-nose. Everyone gets at least one moment to shine. This is why people get so angry at Glee: it's capable of being great television, it just rarely pulls it together.
sepinwall I actually gave both that and "Asian F" serious consideration. As you say, "Glee" can, on occasion, be quite good. It just so rarely manages (or chooses) to be.
December 23, 2011 at 10:23AM ESTKaryn
December 23, 2011 at 10:24AM EST Reply to CommentPsych's "Last Night Gus" was maybe the funniest hour of television this year. Considering the show is a light procedural, it had an incredibly good season in general, but that episode was definitely a cut above the rest. I know that some are annoyed by Shawn (which I totally get), but it did some fantastic ensemble work. And, of course, made me laugh for about 40 minutes straight.
Karyn Following Alan's format, albeit with YouTube instead of Hulu, here's a clip to support my choice! http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qYbfuSzyasQ
December 23, 2011 at 10:27AM EST
Was that the hangover episode?
December 23, 2011 at 10:47AM ESTjoe mchales navy yes this was the hangover episode and it was awesome
December 23, 2011 at 12:34PM ESTJobin2
December 23, 2011 at 10:25AM EST Reply to CommentI'm confused. Why do you have a "top 10 episodes from shows not in my top 10" but not a "top 10 episodes, in general"?
Sorry if that comes off as complaining, I'm a huge fan of your work, I was just hoping for clarification.
sepinwall I find this more interesting, not just because it allows me to acknowledge more shows (everybody gets a trophy!), but to acknowledge that even non-great series are capable of great episodes.
December 23, 2011 at 10:28AM ESTI imagine a list of favorite episodes, period, would be around 80% comprised of shows from my top 10, and while there's some question about which I would pick (Fancy Party or Harvest Festival? Remedial Chaos Theory or the Community clip show? Afghanistan or Eddie?), overall it would seem fairly predictable.
Stormshadow4life
December 23, 2011 at 10:25AM EST Reply to CommentThe Breaking Bad finale and Game of Thrones finale for me. They were just perfect
Chanter
December 23, 2011 at 10:30AM EST Reply to CommentWhat about "You're getting old" from South Park? Surely one of the best they've done.
MattyV
December 23, 2011 at 10:32AM EST Reply to CommentNo better hour of TV this year than the Baelor episode of Game of Thrones. I know it's on your top 10, but it deserves a shout out.
Trey
December 23, 2011 at 10:39AM EST Reply to CommentFor a non top ten show, the Thabksgiving episode of The League made me laugh my hardest all year.
Trey
December 23, 2011 at 10:41AM EST Reply to CommentFor a non-top 10 show, the Thanksgiving episode of The League made me laugh the hardest.
Zach L
December 23, 2011 at 10:43AM EST Reply to CommentNo hipster episode from Happy Endings? Might've been one of the funniest half hours this season
sepinwall It was on the best new series list. I was actually tempted to bend my own rules just to include that one, but refrained.
December 23, 2011 at 10:44AM ESTJesseSP
December 23, 2011 at 10:43AM EST Reply to CommentIt's Always Sunny In Philadelphia - "Chardee MacDennis: The Game of Games." My pick for the funniest episode of what might be the show's best season.
Jonathan
December 23, 2011 at 10:56AM EST Reply to CommentIt's Alway Sunny in Philadelphia: "The Gang Gets Trapped" = Best. Episode. Ever
Ken Raining You're both right!
December 24, 2011 at 1:23AM ESTAndrew
December 23, 2011 at 11:16AM EST Reply to CommentI'm surprised that nothing from this excellent season of It's Always sunny in Philadelphia made your episode list -- Chardee MacDennis, The Gang Goes to the Jersey Shore ("RUM HAM!"), Reunion Part 2 were great. Actually, the season as a whole (except for Frank's Brother) was excellent and I'm not sure that there was one standout episode.
anthonystrand
December 23, 2011 at 11:37AM EST Reply to CommentMy wife stopped watching The Office during season 6 (she generally insists that the season 5 finale is the series finale, in fact), but I showed her "Garage Sale" when S7 was added to Netflix Instant, and she loved it.
What I mean to say is, in the last two seasons, that episode captures the feeling of the glory years better than any other.
anthonystrand
December 23, 2011 at 11:37AM EST Reply to CommentWrite a comment...My wife stopped watching The Office during season 6 (she generally insists that the season 5 finale is the series finale, in fact), but I showed her "Garage Sale" when S7 was added to Netflix Instant, and she loved it.
What I mean to say is, in the last two seasons, that episode captures the feeling of the glory years better than any other.
brian
December 23, 2011 at 11:42AM EST Reply to CommentThe Buckner episode could also be in contention for best comedy episode of the year for any show category. It would be between that and April and Andy's wedding episode on Park's and Rec.
Jerry
December 23, 2011 at 11:47AM EST Reply to CommentI actually hated the "Mister Softee" episode of Curb. There's nothing more painful than when a joke swings big and misses, and that's what happened with the whole car gag for me.
Mark You are in the extreme minority on this one buddy! BTW...the chicken episode is epic and the amazing thing about it is the fact that Leon is MIA in that episode.
December 23, 2011 at 5:07PM ESTME
December 23, 2011 at 11:50AM EST Reply to Comment30 Rock-Operation Righteous Cowboy Lightning
Southland-The Winds
user That episode was sooo funny! One of my all time fav. Also I almost died laughing while watching Queen of Jordan.
December 23, 2011 at 5:24PM ESTuser I mean 'Operation Righteous Cowboy Lightning' was funny
December 23, 2011 at 5:29PM ESTJerry
December 23, 2011 at 11:58AM EST Reply to CommentI had kind of hoped this would be a second ten list, so that we might see some recognition for "Always Sunny" and the other guys who didn't quite make the cut. I know you did lists for the best new and returning shows, which let you spread the recognition around a bit, but the returning shows list was almost entirely redundant.
Lisa
December 23, 2011 at 12:02PM EST Reply to CommentI'm still marveling over "Graduation Day," the season finale of Southland, a show that continues to be criminally overlooked (no pun intended). Sherman not only jumps from one building to another 50 feet off the ground while chasing a suspect, he tears Cooper a new one over Cooper's painkiller addiction and then takes on a new partner when Cooper goes to rehab. Ben McKenzie and Michael Cudlitz did a fantastic job. (McKenzie did that jump tethered to a crane!) The next season starts airing in January, and I hope more people make some time for it.
Alex
December 23, 2011 at 12:22PM EST Reply to Comment"Crawl Space" from Breaking Bad, "A Golden Crown" from Game of Thrones, "Moving" from Louie, "Paradigms of Human Memory" from Community, "Palestinian Chicken" from Curb.
Karyn
December 23, 2011 at 12:52PM EST Reply to CommentI would also give an honorable mention to Revenge's "Suspicion", which was the point in which all of the weeks of set-up, characterization and layering of intrigue seemed to pay off. I wouldn't say that it's "elevated" primetime soap operas, but it's certainly one that's doing the genre about as well as you can do it.
I don't think the show itself is necessarily better than other ones, but it's one I look forward to more than almost any other show, and that episode was a good example of why.
Merve
December 23, 2011 at 12:52PM EST Reply to Comment"Chuck Versus Phase Three" aired in 2010.
sepinwall Well, crap. For some reason I had it in my head that all of Chuck season 4 aired in 2011, but I was wrong. Time to plug in one of my runner-up candidates...
December 23, 2011 at 1:03PM ESTJem
December 23, 2011 at 12:53PM EST Reply to CommentI was trying to figure out which show had the dubious honor of "came to hate pretty thoroughly," then I got to the bottom and read about HIMYM. Yes indeed, it was a reminder that HIMYM used to be good...and why I hoped earnestly for Victoria to be the mother.
Apart from that, great call on Chuck vs. phase three. It was probably Chuck's finest hour since the glory days of season 2 (although tough to argue against fan favorites like Honeymooners and Push Mix). Nevertheless it too made me dream of a Giant-Blond She Male (GBSM) series. Or as Mo Ryan put it, Sarah, Casey: American Heroes.
sepinwall No, it was The Killing, Jem. Not HIMYM.
December 23, 2011 at 1:03PM ESTKaryn
December 23, 2011 at 12:55PM EST Reply to CommentOh, and another honorable mention would be Alpha's "Blind Spot" which was not only a chance for Brent Spiner to be rad but also a great, tension-filled bottle episode.
J
December 23, 2011 at 1:00PM EST Reply to CommentNo Community "Remedial Chaos Theory"? That was one of the best episodes of television history, in my opinion.
Mike Might want to read the column where he says he's not including episodes from shows on his top 10 list. I'm pretty sure "Always", "Face Off" "Duckling" "Bloody Harlan" "Fancy Party" etc. would all be on there if he was doing the 10 best episodes from anything.
December 23, 2011 at 9:28PM ESTGreg
December 23, 2011 at 1:01PM EST Reply to CommentAlan, Chuck vs. Phase Three was exhibited in 2010, not 2011.
sepinwall Yup. In fact, it may well have been on my best eps of 2010 list, now that I think about it. Total brain-freeze. I subbed in another show up top that just missed the cut earlier.
December 23, 2011 at 1:09PM ESTed w
December 23, 2011 at 1:02PM EST Reply to CommentTo each his own but I was a little surprised at the Girl who Waited being chosen, which I found dreary and boring. The Doctor's Wife was the standout Dr Who episode of 2011 to me, showing who the main companion has been all along with a great performance by a guest actress. Plus the mental password sequence was memorably awesome. Crimson, 11, delight, petrichor.
Not my video but interesting: http://youtu.be/qxR808buN0U
Love your mention of the Ducky Tie episode though, easily the best in years. If only they had made Victoria the mother and had her become a regular fixture on the series. And I'm happy to see Archer and Parenthood get recognition.
sepinwall
December 23, 2011 at 1:10PM EST Reply to CommentOne other thing on the "Chuck" brain-freeze: if I was publishing this list even a day or two later, tonight's "Chuck" episode would easily be on it.
Again, this isn't necessarily the 10 best non-list episodes of the year: just 10 I really enjoyed for one reason or another.
Daniel
December 23, 2011 at 1:13PM EST Reply to CommentThought for sure we'd see "Consider Helen" from "Enlightened." One of the best of the year for sure.
Adam B.
December 23, 2011 at 1:17PM EST Reply to CommentWhen do we get to the list where you acknowledge The Good Wife? Its second season finale qualifies, no?
sepinwall I thought about it. Liked these episodes more. And TGW did at least get an honorable mention on the returning series list. Good show, but I forget about each episode almost immediately after I've finished watching and/or writing about it. These stuck with me more.
December 23, 2011 at 1:19PM EST- 1
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