Louie: “Elevator Part 6″/”Pamela 1”
(Episode 3.09, Episode 3.10)

Finally Louie’s “Elevator” storyline comes to a close, and it’s not a moment too soon. The show’s inability to sustain a storyline throughout a whole episode has become harder and harder to ignore as the season progresses. Louis C.K. the creator still seems to fundamentally believe that he’s turned the relationship between the character he plays and Amia to be a beautiful, strong thing worthy of hours of television time, but as it continues towards its crashing end, I question whether it was ever compelling. Did it ever seem like Louis and Amia had a chance, or that their infatuation could’ve sustained itself beyond its time limit? From the beginning, “Louis falls in love with a woman who doesn’t speak English” was always more interesting as an idea than it ever was in execution.
“Elevator Part 6” turns the show into a disaster movie, but the motivation for this strange turn of events is that perfectly named device: the pathetic fallacy. It offers us a pretty poor metaphor for what’s going on in the narrative. As Louis and Amia begin fighting, the storm that we’ve been hearing about through increasingly hilarious headlines is finally hitting New York and much of the city is flooding. It’s a very freshman writing seminar-sort of metaphor, and despite its weakness, this chews up most of the episode’s running time. At first it leads to some decent jokes when Louis prepares for heading out into the storm to rescue his daughters and ex-wife, but once he arrives there’s another strange, irksome problem: Louis’ ex-wife, the woman we’ve seen in the past who’s always ready to cut through the bullshit of life, is screaming and repeating words hysterically, not knowing what to do without her husband. Only Louis can solve this problem, and he simply has them drive uptown to where there’s less flooding. Problem solved, storyline finished, and New York is back to normal.
I’m always a bit disappointed when the dream-logic of Louie is revealed to be all in its lead character’s head, but it’s even more disappointing when the surrealism adds little to the real narrative. It removes one of the things Louis traditionally does best, which is creating a strange world where anything is possible. When that’s removed and the surreal aspects of the show become just extreme expressionism, a little bit of its magic is lost.