Community: “Repilot”/”Introduction to Teaching” (Episodes 5.01 & 5.02)

Community was broken. The show’s fourth season was not only bad, it was destructive, emphasizing the worst parts of the show and expanding them out of all proportion until fans of the show began to question why they ever liked it in the first place. I don’t think it was entirely the fault of the fourth season’s showrunners, either, because it’s hard to think of who could’ve continued the show in the same vein as the first few seasons. With some shows, it doesn’t seem to matter who’s in charge, but Community’s humor always had a certain strange specificity to it. Its comedic voice was certainly the most specific in broadcast television, and it was always a step away from complete and total collapse. Auteurism in television criticism has grown out of proportion, but it did feel a bit like the studio was making a Chaplin flick, or at least a Marx Brothers production, and 10 minutes before the end decided they’d rather someone else finish the picture. The result wasn’t just disappointing, it was depressing.
The question for Community’s fifth season was whether even Dan Harmon could put the pieces back together, especially since the fourth season ended so conclusively. Where, really, was there left to go, and how could Community continue without writing off the entire last season off as a bad dream? Not only had the show plummeted in quality, it had also written itself into a corner, as well as losing one and a half members of its core cast along the way. It would be one thing if the show had a hiatus, but Harmon was asked to return to a show that in 13 short episodes had quickly become a parody of itself.
Harmon’s answer to all these questions was the staggeringly brilliant “Repilot,” which whipped through the myriad of problems of characterization and plotting by facing them head on. Make no mistake about it, “Repilot” was dark. Most importantly, though, the dark and cynical place it came from felt extremely honest. The meta-jokes (particularly those about Troy) were all tinged with both sadness and anger, and in a sense the episode questions the essential premises of Community as a whole. What was the show about, why did Greendale matter, and have any of its characters really grown? Has the increased cartoonishness of every aspect of the show squashed the essential humanism and realistic psychology that used to make up its core?