Source:
TV Guide [follow link for complete column]
TV GUIDE: The New Season: Vampire Rocks, Beauty Doesn't
Oct 11, 2012
by
Matt Roush
As exciting game-changers go, the only shows currently surpassing The CW's
The Vampire Diaries in their new seasons are Showtime's Sunday blockbusters, the Emmy-winning
Homeland (which just won't stop with the jaw-dropping twists) and the back-on-its-game
Dexter (finally breaking new ground with Deb's realization of her brother's true identity). After several seasons of treading bloody water with increasingly convoluted plotting that didn't really move the show's core characters forward,
Diaries has at last taken the leap in its fourth season (Thursday at 8/7c), turning its leading lady (
Nina Dobrev as the tormented Elena) into the most reluctant of vampires, sending shock waves of guilt, anger and worry through the entire Mystic Falls supernatural brain trust.
"
I was ready to die. I was supposed to die!" Elena cries upon waking to her new sur-reality, which includes the necessity of feeding to survive. Not an easy prospect for someone of whom it is said her "compassion is her Achilles' heel." This dilemma puts those hovering lovesick Salvatore brothers on yet another collision course over the love of their afterlives. Damon (the indispensable
Ian Somerhalder) is, as usual, all petulant frustration and annoyed eye-flashing asides — he's especially amusing next week, as he and eternal worrywart Stefan (
Paul Wesley) scrap over how best to supply the new recruit with blood. Stefan is, as ever, Elena's stalwart protector and sympathizing soulmate, guiding her through giddy mood swings while conspiring with witchy Bonnie (
Kat Graham) to find a dangerously magical end-run around Elena's unwilling transition to the other side.
Upping the ante as the season kicks into high melodrama: increased pressure on Mystic Falls' various supes — werewolf-vamp hybrids, witches, etc. — and their human collaborators by a violent mob of vengeful Town Council members, who are in such frenzied take-prisoner mode you almost expect them to start waving torches around the village. (Fire does, however, play a part in what happens next.) The first two episodes feel like the rebirth of a recharged series, with
Dobrev taking the reins with gusto as she emotes, suffers, hungers and satiates her bloodlust in various surprising ways. Meanwhile, this being The CW, it's not all heartbreak and carnage, as one couple delights in the prospect of "hot, happy vampire sex." Next week, the debate is about whether "grief sex" is healthy or selfish. How can you not embrace a show where a character concedes, regarding Mystic's insanely high body count, "
If we stopped having sex every time somebody died in this town, we'd explode." Now the question looms: When are these randy kids ever going to graduate FROM HIGH SCHOOL???