http://janamelie.livejournal.com/ (
janamelie.livejournal.com) wrote in
reddwarfslash2013-08-08 05:55 pm
![[identity profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/openid.png)
![[community profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/community.png)
Does Lister Really Have A "Type"?
I read a brief discussion on the official site in which a poster opined that the common opinion that Kochanski 2.0 simply isn't Lister's type may not be true. They pointed out that Lise Yates is "reasonably well spoken" and that he seems quite happy in "Timeslides" with the extremely upper-class Lady Sabrina Mulholland-Jjones.
I've always thought that original Kochanski seemed better suited to him, but as many have noted, we really don't get to know her very well at all. Maybe Chloe's version isn't as ill-suited as we often imagine.
Here comes the slash angle - Saylee recently pointed out that if we discount Lister's ability to fall for someone who's fussy and uptight, we sink our own ship. ;)
Thinking about Doug's thought processes when he decided to bring in Kochanski for Series 7, I realise part of it was to bring in a woman in order to improve the chances of financing for the longed-for film. Implicit in that was to introduce a potential love interest for Lister. I find it fascinating that he ended up with a character who has similarities with early Rimmer. She may be a lot more competent, but she doesn't fit in with the group either - for example, the scene in "Blue" where she tries to interest the others in an opera game is reminiscent in some ways of Rimmer trying to get the party going in "Dimension Jump" and droning on about Risk in "Meltdown".
The salad cream saga also seems the kind of thing Rimmer would get het up about. I find these parallels amusing. :)
I've always thought that original Kochanski seemed better suited to him, but as many have noted, we really don't get to know her very well at all. Maybe Chloe's version isn't as ill-suited as we often imagine.
Here comes the slash angle - Saylee recently pointed out that if we discount Lister's ability to fall for someone who's fussy and uptight, we sink our own ship. ;)
Thinking about Doug's thought processes when he decided to bring in Kochanski for Series 7, I realise part of it was to bring in a woman in order to improve the chances of financing for the longed-for film. Implicit in that was to introduce a potential love interest for Lister. I find it fascinating that he ended up with a character who has similarities with early Rimmer. She may be a lot more competent, but she doesn't fit in with the group either - for example, the scene in "Blue" where she tries to interest the others in an opera game is reminiscent in some ways of Rimmer trying to get the party going in "Dimension Jump" and droning on about Risk in "Meltdown".
The salad cream saga also seems the kind of thing Rimmer would get het up about. I find these parallels amusing. :)
no subject
As to a type, I really think Lister is the sort of person who's typeless. He would like...whomever he likes, and the next person would probably be fairly different. Lise seemed well spoken and feminine, Kochanski 1.0 was scrappy (as was his image of Camille, but she was really more like Lister than Kochanski 1.0) but intelligent enough to serve as a navigation officer on the bridge , Pete HoweverIt'sSpelled's sister looked like an early 90s swimsuit model, and Hayley Summers was responsible enough to be a bank teller but also had some traditionally "male" interests (as Rimmer gleefully pointed out). He seems more to be the sort of person who likes variety. He falls madly, desperately in love, is obsessed for a while, then loses interest (which is why I prefer the never dated version of his relationship with Kochanski 1.0 to the later retcons, because I think once he was WITH her, the obsession would have passed somewhat). This, of course, leaves the floor open for him to fall in love with a neurotic git, only by that point he's older and in a position where he can't scarper off when he gets bored...plus their relationship has become so complex over the years that he'd be bored out of his skull if he dropped it, even with other people around (a la "Blue" and his clear delight at seeing human Rimmer in "Back in the Red," up to the sort of familial, playful banter of series X).
There was never any real romantic chemistry between Craig and Chloe, so I never bought that he was genuinely in love with Kochanski 2.0. He had more chemistry in one scene with Claire. He seems to be more going through the motions of having his obsession up close and personal, which probably helped take his mind off sending his best friend/worst enemy/pseudo-brother/inadvertent love interest off to die as Ace. All of that was born out to me somewhat with BTE, as much as I disliked it. I got a vibe that Kochanski knew Dave better than Dave did when it came to his obsession with her.
no subject
I think you're right about Lister liking variety - in "Camille" his ideal is basically a female him (same goes for Rimmer and Kryten), but KK 1.0, Lise and Hayley don't seem that similar. There's also a deleted scene from "Dear Dave" where he mentions a fling with a geography teacher who seemed "classy, but behind closed doors she was dirtier than a car mechanic's keyboard!".
What those four do have in common is that they were all youthful flings back when he had a lot more choice and as you say, the freedom to scarper. In relative maturity, his priorities change.
Agree that he seemed to be going through the motions with KK 2.0, except in that scene in "BTE". Craig acted his socks off and brought tears to my eyes.
no subject
I did rewatch the end of BTE this afternoon (thanks, Netflix, because I don't have the DVD for that series!), and although I want to snuggle Lister through the whole thing, I STILL got the vibe that his hallucination of KK2.0, which I assume is from his own subconscious, was telling him that they couldn't be together and, more to the point, they SHOULDN'T be together. While clearly it's playing on his insecurities that he's not good enough for her, I still didn't see indications that Lister loved KK2 for being KK2, rather than just for being A Kristine Kochanski.
So I still take away the impression that his feelings are very real, but it's not because he was truly in love with her. He was looking for someone else in her, or she was a friend and he drove her away, but not that he got to know HER and fell in love with her. And all that's laying aside the fact that she's, you know. His Mum. But again, some of that comes from the fact that Craig and Chloe just never had a real romantic chemistry that worked for me.
As to KK 2.0, I'm with Anonymous below, I think she could have been a good character, but she fell flat largely through bad writing in VII (let's make someone who's uptight and annoying and wears really tight clothes like Rimmer, but make her more likable. Somehow. And it didn't work). They still didn't give her a LOT to work with in 8 because, well, Rimmer was back to be Rimmer so he got all those bits, but she's still more likable.
no subject
I kind of agree with your assessment of that scene - much as Lister is clearly suffering and I want to hug him, he does seem to be in love with the idea of Kochanski rather than the specific woman.
The "tight clothes" aspect hadn't occurred to me. *Lol* She' s definitely more likable in VIII. :)
no subject
I understand, costume lady. I'm with'ya. Have a hanky.
no subject
no subject
no subject
no subject
You're right though, the chemistry's just not there.
no subject
:)
I think that being obsessed with Kochanski helped keep him from being depressed that there were NO women at all...because that was okay, he only wanted ONE woman anyway. And it gave him something to focus on and fantasize about when there was nothing else to do day after day. By the time he met 2.0, it was so ingrained in his personality and his how-I-stay-saneness that he just couldn't let it go, even though he's not really in love with her at all. Then, when she left, it was back to having something to focus on other than the situation they're in.
On the other hand, I don't think he's consciously aware of that. He really believes that he's mad about her because he's convinced himself he is. (And, with my slash goggles on, because he doesn't wanna face what's really up with his metaphorical cardiac organ).
no subject
As for the rest, yes, what you said exactly. He's convinced himself that he wants one thing and hasn't bothered (or has deliberately not done) examining whether that's still what he wants. You're right that it's part of how he's kept himself sane, but it couldn't have been working that well if his self-destructive behaviour was enough to drive Kochanski off before BTE.
no subject
Kochanski's leaving was just short of being fridged - shoving her off to create drama for Lister in BTE, But I'd certainly think that Lister's depression, while definitely a factor, wasn't the only reason she left. She was out of her universe, surrounded by people who were not-quite-her-real-friends, she'd tried to move on by dating in prison but now they're all alone again, with a chronically depressed alternate of the man she loved who acted like he was in love with her but clearly wasn't, living a life of intense boredom, dealing with Kryten's obsessive dislike of her....I'd've taken off too. Since what we learn of her leaving comes from Kryten in retrospect and Dave's screwed up subconscious (THIS is your subconscious of joy squid), watchers who think too hard about these things don't really have any idea what her thought process was for leaving.
...Aaaand that is very off topic of whether or not Lister has a type. Ahem. Sorry.
no subject
no subject
no subject
no subject
no subject
no subject
The entire idea of this being from a JOY squid makes zero sense. Their idea of joy is to be killed by their creator, really? If you analyze too closely (or at all), BTE falls completely apart narratively.
no subject
She seemed more like a Distracting Plotline Until You Snuff It Squid to me.
no subject
To be fair, you can also nitpick the explanation given at the end of "Back To Reality" - Rimmer's reason for suicidal despair is given as having a richer, more important brother. As opposed to three? :p
Doesn't stop it from being a fabulous episode. :)
no subject
no subject
no subject
I was going to put a disclaimer on that "unless your last name is Winchester" but I really don't do Dean/Sam :D
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
no subject
no subject