Again, this is something that’s apparently happened off-screen for the duration of the show, but even so, the writers hit this nail too hard. The only plot that didn’t work so well in either tonal direction was the C-Plot, where Penny and Bernadette are at a work function, and Penny learns all about how mean and nasty Bernadette apparently is at work, and how much people actually fear and resent her. I bet Leonard strangled him off-screen after that! The funniest part was that Sheldon didn’t even intend to drink it, and simply wanted to hear the pop. After getting just one semi-positive comment on the final episode though, Sheldon decides that he can’t cancel his webseries, and this leads to him popping open the champagne bottle that Leonard and the guys were supposed to be saving. Fun with Flags hasn’t appeared on the show in a while, and in an interesting way, its apparent wrap was a great way for Sheldon to deal with his own mini-emotional crisis. Most of the episode’s laughs were entirely contained here, but everything worked very well in terms of great comedy. Regardless, Sheldon and Amy nicely prevented the episode from becoming too serious and losing the comedic momentum that viewers tune in for. Seriously? That many? That’s more episodes than The Big Bang Theory itself at this point! I guess Fun with Flags is all Sheldon does off-screen between The Big Bang Theory episodes… It even brought back Star Trek: The Next Generation’s LeVar Burton, following from a Fun with Flags gag that the show did several seasons ago, and it was very amusing to see Burton immensely annoyed at “working” with Sheldon by the point of 200+ episodes. Instead, Sheldon and Amy were kept busy by the final episode blowout for Sheldon’s popular (?) webseries, “Fun with Flags.” This plot was all about goofy laughs, much like Sheldon’s over-the-top behaviour during “The Septum Deviation” last week, showcasing all of the episodes of “Fun with Flags” that Sheldon made off-screen (one of which surprisingly incorporated an inexplicably agreeable Kripke!), complete with silly costumes and backdrops. It’s an old joke that wouldn’t have been welcome in this scenario. Given Sheldon’s denial of any possibility that he may not be a genius or a Nobel Prize winner in the making, Sheldon would have just made an effective internal struggle seem like yet another excuse for him to stroke his bloated, oblivious ego at the expense of the other guys. In fact, speaking of Sheldon, the writers were wise to distance him from the more dramatic conflict that the other three male leads were dealing with. Leonard’s idea of making a pact to open the bottle when one of them discovers a life-changing scientific breakthrough was sweet though… Until Sheldon ruined it, naturally, but I’ll get to that. That’s a heavy possibility to swallow for full-time researchers dedicated immensely to their work. This leads to the three guys dealing with the possibility (or, namely Leonard and Raj, as Howard has been to space) that their research may ultimately amount to nothing, and that may make their life’s work meaningless in the long-term. As they do so, they discover a bottle of champagne given to said professor by his mother, which was to be opened at the time of the professor’s first big world-changing breakthrough… But was never opened. The main plot of the episode involves Leonard, Howard and Raj cleaning out the office of a recently deceased professor at CalTech. This was a solid change of pace though, as every so often, it’s fulfilling to see the lead cast reflect on their lives and think about the future, especially with the show running for so many years at this point. NOTE: Full spoilers for this episode of The Big Bang Theory are present in this review.Īfter last week’s more light-hearted incident with Leonard’s surgery, The Big Bang Theory delivered an episode that was significantly more grounded and dramatic than Season Eight’s past offerings.
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