Review: 'Parks and Recreation' - 'Andy and April's Fancy Party': Impulse power
Our wacky young lovebirds are at the center of a sweet, funny season highlight
Aubrey Plaza and Amy Poehler on "Parks and Recreation."
A review of tonight's "Parks and Recreation" coming up just as soon as I change my Britta filter...
"I cannot emphasize how little we thought about this." -Andy
First, we interrupt this review to bring you a message from "Parks and Rec" co-creator Mike Schur (whom you might also know by the names Mose Schrute and Ken Tremendous):
"The promo that aired after 'Ron and Tammy Part 2,' which inadvertently gave away the upcoming wedding between Andy and April, was a simple human error on the part of some very apologetic NBC employees. In an effort to undo the spoiler, we publicly stated, in a number of interviews, that NBC had just accidentally gotten the character names wrong, and that there was no upcoming Andy-April wedding. We sincerely hope that fans of the show are cool with us gently lying to them, in an effort to maintain the surprise nuptials as much as we could. Now if you'll excuse us, we have to go shoot the season finale surprise Jerry-Donna wedding scene."
So... yeah. That's unfortunate that the promo people confused the two surprise wedding storylines. But I'll say this: because of that promo mix-up, I wasn't shocked about the revelation of what April and Andy were doing with their party. But nor did it take away from my joy at watching one of the funniest, sweetest, just plain best episodes of this season of this great comedy.
There was no surprise factor, but there was still that usual complicated, intoxicating mix of laughs and sweetness that "Parks and Rec" consistently nails. Looked at from one perspective (Leslie at the start of the party), what Andy and April are doing here is ridiculous: the speed with which they did it, Andy opting for his Reggie Wayne jersey instead of a tux, the multiple best men, wedding vows with lines like April's "I want to spend the rest of my life with you. Is that cool?" Looked at from another perspective (Leslie late in the episode), it's oddly beautiful, really romantic and wholly appropriate for these two. A wedding with black tie, with flowery declarations of love, with any band other than Mouse Rat(*) would not have felt like a wedding that Andy Dwyer and April Roberta Ludgate would actually be a part of.
Aubrey Plaza and Chris Pratt were terrific, but what really sold it all was Amy Poehler's performance, and the way that - after hearing Simon & Garfunkel's "April Come She Will" on the stereo, and seeing the blissful looks on April and Andy's faces as they high-fived each other, Leslie - buttoned-down, uptight, superhumanly anal retentive uber-planner Leslie - gave herself over to this madness and let herself see that while this felt crazy, it also felt right. And Leslie's acceptance in turn made April's rare declaration of love to her former boss feel all the more poignant. Great stuff.
Beyond that, "April and Andy's Fancy Party" was simply a reminder that when we follow these characters outside of Pawnee City Hall and just let them hang out together, great, hilarious things tend to happen: Jerry in his new party shirt, the douche-tastic return of Jean-Ralphio(**), Rob Lowe doing a hilarious break dance to "Jump Around," Tom being overly competitive about the "baller position" of best man, Ron being horrified by Chris' vegetable loaf ("Not only does that thing exist, but now you have deprived everyone of cake!" ), etc. The party even allowed the introduction of a great new character: April's creepy, conversation-dominating friend Oren, who gets his just comeuppance when he's trapped in a chat with super-positive Chris.
(**) Three Jean-Ralphio thoughts: 1)Thanks, NBC, for cancelling "Undercovers" early enough that Ben Schwartz was free to come back to where he belongs! 2)I about died when Tom was asking for Vince Vaughn movie suggestions and Jean-Ralphio says, confidently, Fred Claus." 3)Does Tom actually look like less of a d-bag in comparison to his BFF, or does the very fact of that friendship automatically diminish him?
And the sense of overflowing, goofy love from Andy and April helped move the Ben/Leslie thing from something the show has been strongly hinting at to something it's now pointing big neon signs at. Chris gives Ben a practical reason to stay, and Leslie gives him an emotional one. And if those two crazy kids can get married and make it seem vaguely rational, why can't their older role model types find happiness with each other?
A few other thoughts:
• The Donna/Ann pairing in "Harvest Festival" was so funny that the show goes to it again in the B-story, with Ann making such a fool of herself at a singles mixer (in a fine comic showcase for Rashida Jones) that even overly-competitive Donna takes pity on her ("Are you Nell? From the movie 'Nell'?") and helps her out. The Donna/Ann and Tom/Ben pairings are good examples of how you can take two characters (Ann and Ben) who ordinarily function as straight men and actually make them into the joke with very little work.
• Loved the pre-credits scene with Ron pretending to pull his tooth out to freak out the others, resulting in Ben running screaming from the room and Tom fainting.
• Of course Ron only knows Julia Roberts as "That toothy girl from 'Mystic Pizza.'" And I'm guessing Ron only saw because it had "Pizza" in the title.
• Just to clarify, when Ron refers to having been married three times, he's only referring to two women, as he married the second (Megan Mullally) Tammy twice, the second time briefly earlier this season. There is no third ex-Mrs. Swanson floating around. (And I'm still waiting for more details on the first Tammy.)
What did everybody else think?
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Next 99 Commentsjoh
April 14, 2011 at 10:02PM EST Reply to CommentWOW. greatest episode of comedy in a long time
Lee Harvey I thought it was terrific. Was surprised that they actually went thru with it.
April 15, 2011 at 3:31AM ESTJon88
April 14, 2011 at 10:05PM EST Reply to CommentAh, the advantage of using the DVR to avoid promos ....
MikeNJD I was thinking the same thing, though in my case it was that the promo was cut off as the recording switched to 30 Rock. For once, I wasn't upset that DVR's don't comepnsate for program run-over.
April 15, 2011 at 8:33AM ESTjenfullmoon Or watching the show only on Hulu the next day...
April 15, 2011 at 11:02AM ESTNick Yeah, I had no idea there was going to be a wedding, either.
April 15, 2011 at 2:29PM ESTCharlie
April 14, 2011 at 10:06PM EST Reply to CommentThe promos didn't blow it for me because I was absolutely convinced they weren't going to go through with it. There are enough sitcom episodes where a young couple thinks they can get married and then gets talked out of it that I just assumed that was happening here.
Truck
April 14, 2011 at 10:07PM EST Reply to CommentF- episode. I can't stand when shows feels the need to show you every single character they've ever created like this. I knew from the opening scene when Andy and April were parading around inviting people to their party that this was going to be more of an The Office style episode instead of what P&R has done with itself recently.
Jim Uh ... what?
April 14, 2011 at 10:18PM ESTAnyway, the only time my television gets turned on during the week is on Thursday nights, and I try to do my best to avoid previews. Therefore, I entered tonight completely fresh. But then the commercials said that April and Andy were getting married (and they also spoiled the hugging scene between Michael and Will Ferrell's character on "The Office"). That was really frustrating for me.
If you didn't love this episode then you aren't a fan of parks and Rec. Simple as that. F episode? Not even close.
April 14, 2011 at 10:43PM ESTYo No, I love this show, but something didn't feel right last night. Almost like they were trying too hard. I still laughed, but didn't feel satisfied in the end.
April 15, 2011 at 3:08PM ESTkronicfatigue I didn't like this episode either. Or rather, the large chunk of it that was the wedding. It felt like later-series Friends, where the characters were extreme versions of themselves. The wedding vows in particular. Something along the lines of "I hate everything, but I don't hate you". Felt like a bad parody, that wasn't redeemed when she tells Leslie she loves her. And Andy appeared to be suffering from extreme brain damage. But I guess I'm not a real fan either.
April 16, 2011 at 1:15AM ESTWrongTruck F- isn't a grade because F is a failing grade so it's pointless to differentiate it. I give your review an F.
April 21, 2011 at 10:10AM ESTisaacl
April 14, 2011 at 10:20PM EST Reply to CommentFor some reason, Leslie's moment of panic saying "Help me Ann!" really amused me. I think it was the note of out-of-control panic that was driving her to want her best friend to be there. Just a lot of great little bits of comedy, mixed together in a fun way.
Claire
April 14, 2011 at 10:22PM EST Reply to CommentI actually didn't see that previous promo, so I totally was surprised when April and Andy actually did get married! I loved the episode; it was so funny and sweet. And Adam Scott is hilarious.
srpad
April 14, 2011 at 10:23PM EST Reply to CommentThe cake line you quoted may have been the funniest thing I ever heard.
El Knid Especially when paired with Poehler's perfectly timed "Take a walk, Ron."
April 15, 2011 at 12:05AM ESTDonBoy I was expecting the payoff to be that the cake they'd asked for was supposed to become the wedding cake, and so they'd end up with vegetable loaf as wedding cake.
April 15, 2011 at 10:10AM ESTjenfullmoon Ron Swanson was on FIRE this episode. Not just in the effigy-burning sort of way either.
April 15, 2011 at 11:04AM ESTWhich reminds me: I am placing my bet now that somehow in the hubbub of stomping off in a marital huff, Ron and Tammy 2 didn't actually bother to put paperwork through for another divorce/annulment, and this will come back to bite later on.
ideemo
April 14, 2011 at 10:25PM EST Reply to Commenti fell out my se
ideemo
April 14, 2011 at 10:26PM EST Reply to Commentoh god i fell out of my seat during the tooth pulling scene. i think ben and tom's reactions were comparable to ron's joyful reaction to little sebastian
jenfullmoon I had to rewatch it because I started screaming and NOT LOOKING once Ron whipped out the pliers.
April 15, 2011 at 11:06AM ESTThat man is a GOD.
Ron and April and Andy are my favorites on this show and this was my favorite episode ever.
joshmassey
April 14, 2011 at 10:29PM EST Reply to CommentAnd I quote myself, from the Ron & Tammy Part II comments: "I totally don't buy the excuse." Yes, that's what I have to hang my hat on, folks. Give it to me.
Zach L Well said. I'll do the same from the Ron and Tammy Part II Comments about the promo - "Yea that was crazy, better have been some sort of joke or I can imagine the steam coming out of Ken Tremendous' ears right now."
April 15, 2011 at 1:16AM ESTSo looks like it wasn't a joke after all, and I think Mr. Tremendous must have blown a gasket when he saw that promo after Ron and Tammy.
By the way, anyone catch the promo following the show asking viewers to go to NBC.com and sign up for Ron and Tammy's baby registry? Or did the brass at NBC learned their lesson the first time and kept their promos in order?
thehova
April 14, 2011 at 10:31PM EST Reply to CommentI still love the show.
But Parks and Rec and The Office feel a little predictable. The characters don't face setbacks or challenges. It all feels to oddly positive.
They face challenges and setbacks all the time, it's just not to the extent the characters on Breaking Bad or mad Men do. These shows are comedies, the show is supposed to be happy most of the time.
April 14, 2011 at 10:45PM ESTPetrie I don't completely agree although I can see why you see that. Ann has been dumped and is clearly not in a good place. Leslie really struggled in the last episode with out her next idea. Tom keeps on failing in his many business ideas. I think that yes they struggle but they ultimately do prevail which I am okay with because is that the tone of the show, but I disagree that they don't face obstacles.
April 14, 2011 at 10:52PM ESTI do think, however, if they give Andy/April a conflict free marriage then yes I will be let down. But I have faith in the writers that they will introduce conflict to the marriage, but right now I am just basking in the glow of a wonderful wedding.
Stacy But... What's wrong with being positive? These are comedies, all they really have to do is be funny.
April 14, 2011 at 11:16PM ESTthehova yes, negative things happen. But it feels like the outcomes will be predictably positive (everything will end really well for Leslie, Anne, and probably even Tom).
April 14, 2011 at 11:33PM ESTjoshmassey What is positive in Tom's life? That guy is damn near tragic. Hates his job, isn't talented enough to succeed at what he wants, is a pretty hopeless dork, watched his true love date a co-worker and move to Canada, lost the one girl who's ever cared about him, etc.
April 14, 2011 at 11:44PM EST
Tom doesn't hate his job, he just has a different approach to it.
April 14, 2011 at 11:47PM EST
Tom, Jerry, Ann, and Ben are all pretty depressing characters, when you really think about it
April 15, 2011 at 12:23AM ESTnath Actually, if you really think about it, Jerry isn't that depressing at all. He knows he's the butt of all the jokes, but he also knows he's got just a couple more years to put in before he can retire on his pension to his cabin at the lake. In a certain way, he's inspiring.
April 15, 2011 at 3:20PM ESTBen I really liked the way they handled Jerry's material in this episode. When he's simultaneously included in what's going on (getting invited to the wedding, having the chance to wear that awful party shirt) and being roundly mistreated (April attempting to publicly NOT give him the invitation, Tom mocking said party shirt, and Andy making sure to single out Jerry as NOT one of the best men) the balance really comes across as funny and not mean or tired. Maybe it boils down to "he's a dork, but he's OUR dork", a formula that also seems to working well with the Tom-Ben friendship. Good for P&R to, not surprisingly, do A+ work on this part of the episode.
April 15, 2011 at 6:34PM ESTvelocityknown
April 14, 2011 at 10:46PM EST Reply to CommentReally glad I missed that promo, because this episode caught me off guard in a fantastic way.
At first it seemed odd that Andy would wear the Reggie Wayne jersey, then I remembered April got it for him back in Christmas Scandal so it made it very sweet.
Ron was as usual the unsung hero of this episode (pulling out his tooth in the cold open and lessons on how to burn a divorce effigy and the look of sheer joy on his face when he realized he'd be able to do that again).
Glad they didn't waste time dancing around April and Andy's relationship status and that Ann didn't burst in with a "Stop Andy! Don't get married!"
Oh and Chris freaking out the freakiest kid at the party. Fan-freaking-tastic.
Love the continuity in this show (it's like a live action version of Springfield) returns of the Animal Control guys and April's former boyfriends were awesome in small doses.
Billy I was wonder if anyone noticed aprils former bf who had a gay bf!! Lol so funny. I didn't notice until my second viewing. Yes I've watched it twice already. Just the perfect blend of funny and sweet and characters you love getting to be happy together!
April 14, 2011 at 11:19PM ESTjoshmassey Just started watching the show, Billy?
April 15, 2011 at 10:05AM ESTjenfullmoon Anyone else think that Ron Swanson loves watching Burn Notice? It was a very Michael Westen voiceover moment.
April 15, 2011 at 11:09AM ESTJ
April 14, 2011 at 10:50PM EST Reply to Comment"Not only does that thing exist..."
I missed everything that happened after that line because I could not stop laughing. Serious, life-threatening fits.
It's okay. I catch up on Hulu, and the EMTs and I thoroughly enjoyed this week's episode of 30 Rock.
Jim When Ron Effing Swanson is on the cover of Vanity Fair, I'll buy a copy.
April 14, 2011 at 11:49PM EST"Walk it off, Ron" I think Ron and Leslie's office marriage is one of the best relationships on TV
I nominate Harriett Hansen Harris for Ron's first Tammy
jenfullmoon Best line in an episode of many lines. Okay, so many good lines.
April 15, 2011 at 11:11AM ESTAlso, DO NOT FUCK WITH CAKE!
ideemo
April 14, 2011 at 11:02PM EST Reply to Commentbtw, i love how the wipe erase board in andy's friend's kitchen says "ANDY STOP EATING MY FOOD! if it has my name on it, it's mine!"
Jeff
April 14, 2011 at 11:07PM EST Reply to CommentThis was, without a doubt, my favorite episode of Parks and Rec. It had everything you could want, Mouserat, Jean Ralphio, Ron vs. Chris' vegetable loaf, and of course Orin. I couldn't stop laughing hysterically. Just.... wow.
RP
April 14, 2011 at 11:08PM EST Reply to CommentJust want to say that I that before each new episode airs, I dread a bit, for fear that some of the magic that makes P&R so great will be slightly diminished, or that my expectations are now too high to appreciate any new episode. But week after week, it continues to exceed my expectations. And yeah, some things are predictable, but honestly, there aren't many new ideas in sitcoms anymore, just different executions, and P&R nails it every time because the characters are so great and well-acted.
Well said.
April 15, 2011 at 12:47AM ESTDr. Johnny Fever
April 14, 2011 at 11:17PM EST Reply to CommentMy favourite part was when Leslie called Ann and referred to herself as "Leslie, Leslie Knope of the Parks Department."
magreen17 I LOVED this, mostly because my dad will still END a voicemail with some variation of, "You can get my on the cell. It's Dad," as if I'd forgotten that he told me it was him at the beginning of the call, or, you know, forgotten what my dad sounds like.
April 15, 2011 at 8:44AM ESTPotatoSolution Great line, the only thing that would have made it funnier is if they had held onto it for season 5 or 6.
April 15, 2011 at 5:27PM ESTTeam SCIENCE
April 14, 2011 at 11:28PM EST Reply to CommentAMC has posted an animated Breaking Bad minisode. Check it out, bitch.
http://www.amctv.com/breaking-bad/videos/team-s-c-i-e-n-c-e/
tom_farley
April 15, 2011 at 12:16AM EST Reply to CommentFantastic episode. Alan, I think you were the one I read who first characterized Leslie and Ron as work spouses. Leslie saying "Take a walk, Ron" and Ron doing so without question epitomizes this relationship.
April 15, 2011 at 12:20AM EST Reply to CommentMy favorite part: Andy asking Tom if he was straight, or if he had something going on with Jean Ralphio. Great delivery.
But this show can pretty much do no wrong at this point, as it has nailed every episode this season. Phenomenal writing and the best cast of colorful, entertaining, fun characters since the Bluth family on Arrested Development.
Marie
April 15, 2011 at 12:22AM EST Reply to CommentDon't forget to check out the wedding website!
http://www.awesomesaucewedding.com
The photos are hilarious and people can leave messages on the guestbook.
kensey
April 15, 2011 at 1:24AM EST Reply to CommentIs that the same Reggie Wayne jersey that April gave Andy last year?
Jason
April 15, 2011 at 1:29AM EST Reply to CommentThank Christ for Ron Swanson. Immediately washed away the bad taste of a soul-crushingly abysmal Office episode.
diemunkiesdie
April 15, 2011 at 1:45AM EST Reply to CommentI had forgotten that the promo spoiled this week. In fact I only remembered it when reading this post! I loved every minute of this episode, and I was (thankfully) truly shocked when they got to the big reveal!
Mike
April 15, 2011 at 1:58AM EST Reply to CommentGREAT EPISODE!
My laugh-out-loud moment: the dove not flying. Hilarious.
floo Even better, they were pigeons, provided by animal control. "OK, this one's dead."
April 15, 2011 at 7:19AM EST
"We know this now."
April 15, 2011 at 11:23AM ESTLJA
April 15, 2011 at 2:03AM EST Reply to CommentThat was perfect. This show keeps getting better. I died at the cold open and the ex-wife effigy burning instructions. Nick Offerman makes my life.
nick
April 15, 2011 at 3:39AM EST Reply to CommentThe part where Tom acts as if head just got blown after Jean-Ralphio tells him how to finish best man speech just slayed me. Couldn't stop laughing.
Anybody else disappointed though that we didn't get to hear Tom's speech? I thought for sure they were saving that for the closing credits :(
nath I kind of think it's funnier to leave the speech to our imagination, because part of the joke is that we'll never know if it was actually awesome, or if it was just Tom's idea of awesome, and thus, a hugely inappropriate failure carved from advice in the back pages of "Maxim".
April 15, 2011 at 3:31PM ESTbelinda
April 15, 2011 at 4:29AM EST Reply to CommentThis show rocks so hard. I go from crying from laughter to awwwwwwwwwwwwwwww in zero seconds.
swearin
April 15, 2011 at 6:07AM EST Reply to CommentLoved this episode; so weird, so awesome. I lol'd that Ron not only makes "ex-wife" effigys but has a proper procedure for ritualistically burning them.
George
April 15, 2011 at 6:38AM EST Reply to CommentI thought it was a funny episode, but I really do not know why the writer married April and Andy. Have they run out of ideas already? It just seemed out of the blue and completely out of character - for April, at least. Just a few weeks ago, she was pretending to hate Andy and was still very hurt by what he did in last season's finale and now she's marrying the guy?
In shows such as The Office and P&R, there's a certain base level of emotional reality that we expect the writers to respect. Naturally, as The Office has worn on, the writers have become stretched for ideas and have taken license with it, but P&R is supposed to be on a hot streak, in its prime and shouldn't need to resort to such gimmicks to fill 20 minutes of television.
Aside from the plot, everything else was great. Especially Rob Lowe, whether he is break dancing or being the unstoppable positive force to Oren's immovable object of negativity, the dude is killing it right now.
cjones there'd be no elvis-priests if people didn't behave rashly. i didn't feel like it was out of character. neither of them seems to hold the institution of marriage in high regard, they're just having a laugh.
April 15, 2011 at 8:03AM ESTGeorge You're probably right about them not holding marriage in high regard, maybe I was overreacting.
April 15, 2011 at 10:05AM ESTWhy was it only Leslie reacting that way? I'm sure at least one of April's parents would have an objection to her marrying a 30 year old without a home or a decent job who both broke her heart and has only been dating their daughter for a month. Don't get me wrong, I love Andy, but on paper he's not a dream son-in-law...gotta stop ranting.
klg19 I suspect that April's parents are pretty on-board with getting her out of the house.
April 15, 2011 at 10:55AM ESTjenfullmoon Why? Because with these two crazy kids, the wedding isn't going to be the end of the story. There's gonna be plenty of amusing plot to milk for all, with two people who have been together a month and don't have anywhere to live being MARRIED. Think of the possibilities!
April 15, 2011 at 11:23AM ESTOh, for those mentioning April's parents, according to the Hulu extra they consider Andy a vast improvement over guys like Oren.
Crumdawg97 I was MAJORLY thrown for a loop that these two would actually get married at this point. A couple episodes ago Andy realized he couldn't even pay for a proper date, but now he's confident enough to commit to marriage?
April 15, 2011 at 12:26PM ESTThis takes nothing away from the humor of the episode. I laughed hysterically throughout. Just not sure if this path made any sense...even for two characters as insensible as Andy and April.
velocityknown I actually felt like this was the most accurate depiction of a marriage we've seen on TV in a while. So many shows go through the repeated motions of creating what they think is a "real" marriage moment. But look at The Office, look at Friends, look at any sitcom that's ever had a wedding, they're funny and special in their own way, but their also cheapened by the spectacle of them. By the ads the show takes out to promote it, the will they won't they of it, the cold feet, the surprise pregnancy or wedding guest, etc. Parks and Rec writers said, "Let's not play that game."
April 15, 2011 at 12:47PM ESTAnd they are better for doing it, they rewarded the fans who tune in weekly with a wedding that is reflective of what a lot of people do: get married rashly. And they didn't use it as a ploy for ratings or to garner interest. This wedding was equal parts for the characters and the fans. And I already hold it in the highest regard for that.
velocityknown sorry about the couple of "there, their, they're" mix ups. Wrote that pretty quickly haha.
April 15, 2011 at 12:49PM EST
Perfectly said Velocityknown. That they had the wedding with NO fanfare at all or pre-episode hype (other than that leak, which thankfully, I did not see) perfectly fits both the characters and the show.
April 15, 2011 at 3:58PM EST- 1
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