Mad Men Recap: Crisis Management
It's the Cuban Missile Crisis, and Don, Betty and Peggy go out with a bang.
Jon Hamm as Don Draper in the finale for the second season of 'Mad Men' -
AMC
It's the end to another thought-provoking season of Mad Men, one that begat as many questions as it answered -- like leaving some armed munitions buried to be discovered at a later date (or better yet, season). The tension in the Draper marriage has been a season-long build-up to some sort of open conflict, and the Cuban Missile Crisis provides the perfect backdrop not only as a metaphor, but also as a catalyst for the Drapers (and by that token, Peggy and Pete) to let the chips fall where they may. It could be the end of the world, with both the U.S. and Russia playing a game of chicken, and it has folks understandably on edge and more willing to make confessions. Don, for his part, is still cool as a cucumber, believing correctly that there is a lot that they don't know about it -- top secret information that they're not privy to that will alleviate the situation. Don works well with secrets (which is why he would do so well selling Cold War Defense contracts). He believes the crisis will all blow over, saying as much to Joan, and in that moment it seems he could also mean his marriage and the Sterling Cooper merger. His calm demeanor reminded me of the perhaps unintended foreshadowing when Jon Hamm briefly played the ghost of JFK in a sketch on Saturday Night Live the night before. While it's tempting to see him as Kennedy in either of his conflicts, Matthew Weiner provides no easy mapping to the Cuban Missile crisis metaphor, which is just as well -- the Don/Betty dinner table summit raises as many questions as it answers.
Getting back to the Drapers' crisis, it's interesting that it took Betty acquiring a couple secrets of her own to finally let Don back in. The first secret is the one that she uses to bring them together -- her pregnancy. Betty doesn't see raising the child as a single parent to be an option, so it becomes clear that this decision is about Don. She can either get back together with Don (have the baby) or cut him out of her life (abort the baby). Forget about Bobby being a young Don/Dick, this potential younger sibling is Don. That's the first bomb in her arsenal. Then, after Don makes his (sort-of) confession to try and begin to mend the relationship, Betty embarks on her second secret.
I had theorized last week that Don might drop his Dick Whitman bomb, which I would still defend as I think he had it at the ready if the time was right. But Betty's preemptive strike made it an impossibility and served as a reminder that she's only bringing him back because of their mutual responsibility to this unborn child -- which, like the resolution to the Cuban Missile Crisis itself, makes for an uneasy peace. (The grief-stricken look in Don's face says it all.) Note, too, that the scene was framed so that we could believe that she could drop either bomb on Don -- the one that brought them together, or the one that could tear them apart for good. If Don had dropped the Dick Whitman bomb, it too would've torn them apart. It is again like the Missile crisis in that neither one really knew just how close the other one came to blowing it all up. One final thought on the music: Previously: Man, Be Thyself (Episode 2.12) drake lelane Most Popular Stories
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