I was thinking about Coupling and how I might rewrite it to keep all the things that charm me about it while making the gross icky parts less gross and icky, and I realized that ninety percent of the changes would pertain to the handling of Jane and Jeff’s backstories.
Because Jane was a bisexual woman repeatedly being told that she wasn’t, was
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That's another thing, I would love to see Sally and Susan's relationship explored more. Sally obviously has a lot of insecurities that she projects onto Susan and blames her for (judging by the Spiderman flashback episode, Sally is quite used to being the plain friend beside the much more conventionally sexy Susan, which is probably worse for someone who does put so much of her worth in her attractiveness to men). But too much of their character development focuses on that, so I'd like to see other aspects of their friendship explored as well.
I probably wouldn't be allowed to add a character from a completely different canon to make Jeff's thing easier, would I? Because I really want to bring in Neville, because then you get Jeff having a sexual identity crisis in amusingly Jeffy ways, and a lot of awkwardness from his friends as they try to figure out how to deal with "we're super glad you're finally getting help but are leagues out of our depth when it comes to knowing how to communicate all of this with you".
I mean, didn't a whole arc come out of that episode in general? Like one could easily replace that arc with one about consent and bodily autonomy and not treating people as possessions and talking about naked rights with the person in question instead of your mates. Which would be a lot better than "who has the naked rights to that version of Susan?", "let's all gather and watch porn of our friend that she may or may not have consented to making", and the confusing "I'm mad that you taped us but also made that you taped over us" bit (which could have at least been presented less as "women are confusing" and more "emotions are complicated and it's easy to get one's feelings hurt for two supposedly contradictory things", if it had to be kept at all).
Right! Framing Steve's problems and rants more as "this is the way I see and process the world, and it makes sense, why doesn't anyone else get it, now I'm going to have a tantrum instead of trying to communicate!" than "I'm a guy, this is just how we are" would work a lot better. And if he was going to use "I'm a guy" as his excuse, then the framing could reflect that it's not a right on thing and is more of him fumbling with communication.
(Another thing I would change would be the communication issues. Like the long talks about their feelings and lenses for the given situation don't have to be on screen, but once the plot has resolved and they've simmered, there could easily be a fade out on them sitting down and actually talking, and it would thus make sense when come the next episode they've been doing fine. And occasional short talks could easily be funny if they trip over trying to explain their feelings in suitably amusingly-worded ways.)
Also I just realized Jane's therapist could have been a great way to frame the "joke's on them" approach to her sexuality, because her therapist taking her sexuality and depression seriously and encouraging her to find healthier ways of expressing that would cement it within the narrative as something valid, while still having humor as Jane alternates between digging in her heels, pretending she's doing this for their sake because she doesn't need it, and tests out coping methods that inevitably fall apart.
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...on adding Neville, depends how serious you want this exercise to be. Like if you were going to do an actual filmed remake, the most you could do was a Neville-inspired flower shop owner, but if you're just coming up with a version you like, go for it!
Yes! A whole arc where Steve's sexist tendencies come to head, and he realizes he has to do better, and Susan figures out exactly what she's willing to put up with in terms of Steve's imperfect effort to do better.
Like make Steve less The Normal One and more "Flawed in the specific way that he thinks of his sexist and selfish tendencies as Guy Stuff." And have that interact with his general difficulty in communicating and asking for stuff - like having him with the entirely sympathetic "Having to name stuff and put it into words and ask for things is hard!" and the sexist "Come on, I'm a guy! Guys aren't supposed to know this!"
(Yeah, having some "Let's sit down and really talk" and then fade out or cut to a scene where things are comedically summarized, and some smaller references and brief talks would be much better.)
Ooh, that would be so good!
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If I ever do the rewrite, it'll either be fanfic or just episode summaries and script snippets, so I could get away with having Neville, though I would probably just have an oc based on Neville since the magic bit could potentially complicate things. (Though at some point there'd be a scene with Neville's mates, who would be suspiciously similar to the golden trio, with the redhead mentioning he's the next youngest of seven kids, and other little allusions to their origins.)
I think that's what I'm getting at, yeah! Because it needs to be addressed and his character can be explored through it, it could be presented in a funny way, and it would avoid what was honestly the biggest weakness of the show, which is things being presented as "there is one specific male lens and one specific female lens, and no possible way for them to overlap, because it's not like people are individuals or anything. Instead of disputes being "men are like this, women are like this", they could be more fairly written as "this is how society teaches men and women to behave, and here is a story explore six lenses to view the results of those expectations".
(It would be easy to imply communication was happening without detracting from the funny bits, because all of them are various levels of high strung so it makes sense that they'd need to have the big dramatic episodes before being able to talk properly.)
Like, maybe her canon therapist is introduced early on, and she starts off as being weary of Jane before they bond better, or maybe she's how she was and Jane is like "fine, I'll find someone else!!!" and goes off to get a different therapist. Or maybe after Jeff starts seeing a therapist, he hears Jane talking about hers and is like "therapists aren't supposed to act like that get a new one" but in a more Jeffy way. Maybe he even puts her onto trying his out, or gets a recommendation from them.
(There's definite potential for a couple of episodes that are told in the "people telling the story at the bar, us seeing the different lenses it happened through" with both Jane and Jeff talking about the same event to their therapists.)
I'm trying to think when would be the best time to bring in Neville, because part of me is wanting to replace the season three romance with it, but part of me wants that to be the final straw that leads him into the situation where they meet.
(I'm also on the fence about what to do about Oliver, because he had his own charm when he wasn't being Jeff 2.0, and he was good for Jane, and there are plenty of ways to rewrite him as well, but as I intend to keep Jeff around for season four, is there any real need for him?)
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Ooh, yeah. Definitely insert him then.
Yeah, instead of "The male perspective and the female perspective", "Three reactions to being taught male cultural expectations, and three reactions to being taught female cultural expectations" and it could still deal with society's ideas of Men and Women, with a lot of comedy, but in a different way.
(Yeah, Steve could blow up or Susan could lose her temper, and then they'd be all "Let's talk it out" and then there's references in a ltter scene.
Ooh, yeah, Jane getting a newer therapist, who's ready to listen to her.
(Yes! Jane and Jeff in therapy talking it out! And like it can be an Improved Communication Skills episode where like Steve is trying to actually explain the embarrassing thing to Susan without either "Yes, dear" or a comedic rant, and keeps slipping up and catching himself, and Susan tries to give him space and not laugh too hard or give too many corrections. And Patrick is practicing his Supportive Boyfriend listening skills for Sally, because he's seen from romantic movies that the couples who stay together indefinitely have the Supportive Boyfriend who Listens, so he starts out all weird and acting like the character in the movie, but then gets to be much more natural, and Sally is all "This was a really good talk. Thank you, Patrick" at the end, and then there is hugging, and then there is sex, and Patrick is all "Yes! I can do this boyfriend-relationship thing! And the sex is awesome!" And Jeff is talking to his therapist, and Jane is talking to her therapist, and they each have a good "Letting my feelings out" session.
I was never a fan of Oliver, but he could definitely be added in if you like him.)
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I'm already planning it! I made a post about it on Tumblr instead of here for some reason but we can talk about it over here instead.
And like, at some point some remarks on the arguing and says they need to talk, and they're like "yeah, we know, but first we have to be angry at each other for a little while". And them getting better at handling their arguments over time because they can recognize when they've reached the point they need to walk away and start cooling off, and knowing when it's time to send out the white flag and start talking.
Yeah! Jeff and Jane are talking about the things going on around them and the stuff their friends are doing and the stress it's putting them through (they're both very invested in the Steve/Susan relationship for different reasons) and so they're explaining their friend's side of it, so we get to see the story through their lenses, and it gets brought up that Patrick and Sally are trying the communication thing more too. And all of that culminates in both of them talking about why they're so invested in the relationship: Jeff because they're his friends and he thinks they're the real deal and needs to know that True Love can work out, Jane because she needs to move on from Steve and having him unavailable and knowing Susan makes him happy and that he makes Susan happy helps her a lot.
I'm not so much a fan of him as I feel like he had a lot of potential that could have been explored if they hadn't tried so hard to make him the replacement Jeff. They needed a new sixth character to replace Jeff but instead of making a new character they basically cloned Jeff and so he didn't really... go well. But since I'm rewriting with the intent of exploring untapped potential anyway, I might as well explore Oliver too. But I'm still undecided. I certainly can't think of anything to do with him beyond "this is Jane's new socially awkward love interest who is so used to rejection that Jane's personality isn't scaring him off".
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I saw! Yay!
Yes! And like Susan is all "I'm angry and need to walk it off" and Steve learns to neither panic nor go into a huff about things" and Susan says that without taking a swipe at Steve, and it's better than it was!
Ooh yes! This would be such a good episode!
Yeah, I don't know how to use Oliver.
Also, at some point can Jane have either a girlfriend or a "Yes, we totally dated, and broke up for normal reasons" ex-girlfriend? And her friends are all "Huh, really?" and maybe they get at least less obnoxious about it?
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Susan walking away and Steve not panicking because he's worried she won't come back but she usually does and they have a history of that working out for them, so he's better able to trust that he's not about to lose her. And Steve needing to vent and rant for a bit just to get all of his thoughts out and Susan giving him the space he needs to do that and actually brings up the things he says in his rants so they can talk about them.
She absolutely can! It'll be the girl she mentioned in the first episode when she was trying to lure Steve back, and Steve's like "Wait you're real????" and she's like "what, you don't believe her?" I've decided Elisabeth is an Angry Bisexual who gets really passionate about people not taking bisexuality seriously. She gives Jane a lot of much-needed validation of her sexuality.
(She turns up around the time Jeff is having his identity crisis and he's like "wait so I can like guys and still like girls... why didn't I think of that?" and she's like "-patpat- It's okay you live in a society prone to bisexual erasure, at least you're catching on, enjoy your now double potential dating pool", which mostly results in Jeff having a moment of "OH GREAT NOW I HAVE TWICE AS MANY OPPORTUNITIES TO JEFF IT UP WELP".)
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And like she recognizes the difference between Steve being stupid and Steve incoherently working his way towards a concept!
Yes! I love it!
(Jeff would totally have a bizarre panic about dating men that's not like a normal panic, but like Jeff-logic, where there's like eleven steps in the logic chain before anyone knows what he's talking about!)
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(Also, Patrick hears this and assumes Jeff also thinks he's attractive, but it turns out not to be the usual "oh no, my guy friend likes guys now, what if he hits on me?" and more "well obviously he'll think I'm attractive, why wouldn't he?")
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"What?"
"The one with the secret gay language!"
"What?"
(Fun fact - Polari was a secret gay slang used mainly in the UK that was well-nigh incomprehensible until in the sixties or seventies it was used in a popular radio show. No one uses it any more, and it's certainly not obligatory to date men, but Jeff would be around the age of having barely heard of it, and I could totally see him panicking he doesn't speak secret gay language.)
(That is exactly how Patrick would react, and he'd be offended about Jeff not fancying him.)
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"What do you mean you don't fancy me?"
"You're my mate, I don't fancy my mates!"
"Jane's your mate and you fancied her."
"Well yeah but Jane's got eyes and really nice earlobes."
"I've got eyes! And are you saying my earlobes aren't nice?"
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"How do you know? Have you ever dated a bloke?"
"Well no."
"Neither have I! We're lost in the dark without a codebook!"
"Your earlobes are okay."
"What's wrong with my earlobes?"
"Nothing, they're fine. Jane just has really nice ones."
"You take that back! My earlobes are twice as sexy as Jane's!"
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"He's never dated a bloke before either."
"Then what's the problem?"
"Anyway, it doesn't matter, you've got Sally."
"Well obviously I don't fancy you, I just want you to fancy me."
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"Why?"
"To ensure all is right with the universe."
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"Fine, I think you're attractive."
"I knew it."
"Just not my type."
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"What, you think Captain Kidd is going to rise from the grave and kidnap you and your boyfriend?"
"Now I am!"
"...I'll let that go this time, but you better watch yourself."
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