tencrush: (Default)
tencrush ([personal profile] tencrush) wrote2008-03-06 07:40 am

How they killed my Janto, dudes.

I'm still full of hate after Something Borrowed, and I'll attempt to explain why.

In Kiss Kiss Bang Bang, we were given a promising glimpse of Ianto-with-a-spine. He basically stated he wasn't interested in being Jack's part time office shag and wanted more, or no deal. Jack seemed to be au fait with this and looked to be pursuing the relationship. My little shipper heart went YAY, and that didn't really change, especially after To The Last Man, when I, along with everyone else in the world, pretty much saw what appeared to be a declaration of love from Jack. OMG WOW. Then... what the fuck happened?

I started to develop hate when Ianto said he and Jack 'dabbled'. While I could defend Jack's trying to hide the relationship based on what he said in Meat (he has an emotional investment, it makes you vulnerable, and he really shouldn't be forming EMOTIONAL bonds with his team, because it affects his abilities as their leader, yeah? Fine.), here, though, we suddenly have Ianto downplaying what I had assumed was an emotional attachment to Jack, and why? Dead Man Walking, again, shows Ianto on the defensive with regards to the relationship. "It's not like that", right, OK. Funnily enough, Ianto seems too unsure to expand and tell Owen what it IS, in fact, like. He's become almost apologetic, and why? Oh, roll on Something Borrowed, HERE'S WHY! He's IN LOVE. He's a lovesick puppy, thinking about wedding dresses and looking to settle down. If there's one thing we know about Ianto, you see, it's that he is wickedly loyal, faithful and, one would assume, MONOGAMOUS. Yet suddenly, since Adam, the relationship seems to have taken a turn into roleplaying toy-based sexamalympics. There's been no emotional connection since the kiss in TTLM. What bugs me is that Ianto is shown to be perfectly satisfied with this turn of events. It's almost like the Date Conversation never happened.

Now, I can buy that Jack is capable of loving more than one person. I can buy that Jack loves Gwen. I can even buy that Ianto is perfectly happy to know this and not care. That all makes perfect sense to me. What I can't buy is that Ianto has become such a lovesick boytoy, so impressed with Jack's avant garde sexual prowess, that he is happy to settle back into his role as office based shag, taking whatever nuggets of affection Jack sees fit too throw his way. And it's not Ianto's character making me think that that's how the relationship has progressed, it's Jack's, yet again. Jack, who makes these grandiose declarations about the nature of love to Gwen. Jack, who pines after a long dead wife. Jack, who we thought perhaps was a bit more flexible when it came to who and how many people he gives his heart to, who is QUITE OBVIOUSLY showing us that he believes in OMGONETRUELOVE, and between the lines quite blatantly showing us that Ianto isn't in the running. NO AFFECTION, throwaway lines about red caps and "doing Ianto", that's no longer a guy trying to hide the fact that he's in love with one of his subordinates, that's an omnisexual slut, not at all embarrassed about what he and the teaboy do with hockey sticks. AND I WOULD BE FINE WITH ALL THAT. If it weren't for the date conversation telling me that Ianto wants more, and Ianto's fawning in this episode blatanly telling us HE IS WICKED IN LOVE WITH JACK. Why is he settling for this? What have they done to my boy? Who said in the first episode that some fetishes should be kept to yourself? How many fetishes have he and Jack been broadcasting to the world since Adam? There's something so OFF in this relationship, and I think it's something you either see and hate or you just don't notice AT ALL.

One of the things that squicks me is Jack's flippancy about past conquests (all male, have we noticed yet??) and his obvious love for Gwen and DeadWife. It's almost like the implication is that while dabbling and sexual gymnastics is something Jack does with men, settling down is something he does with women. And Ianto and that dress? Just makes me feel like Jack hasn't yet let Ianto in on that fact, and the joke's on him. Ha ha.

NONE OF THE ABOVE MAKES ANY SENSE, I AM AWARE OF THAT, I JUST CAN'T PUT MY FINGER ON WHAT IS WRONG IN JANTOLAND. I JUST... HATE IT.

[identity profile] dragonkal.livejournal.com 2008-03-07 04:53 pm (UTC)(link)
I don't see a lack of character continuity there. I never got the sense that Ianto was insisting in the date scene that Jack take him Super Serious in public. There's no reason why they couldn't be having dates and deepening their relationship away from work while Jack continues to be his jovial self.

I would find it far more unbelievable if Jack suddenly stopped being silly and joking about sex because he and Ianto were Super Serious now.

I'm really at a loss as to how it could be harder and harder to buy that there's more to the relationship than sex. We had that lovely kiss on the desk and a declaration of love. We had Jack ignoring all evidence in "Adam" that contradicted his understanding of Ianto's personality and strength of character (not explicitly sexual, no, but if you're looking for "depth of relationship" I don't know how much more loyalty you want Jack to display than this). We've had Jack rather giddily tipping his hand about the relationship to Martha -- Ianto wasn't even a footnote the last time they met. And the last episode, we've had them slow-dancing together.

That seems like an awful lot of "more to the relationship than sex" scenes to me, personally. If it doesn't to you, I'm curious: what would you need to see on screen to feel it?

[identity profile] candesgirl.livejournal.com 2008-03-07 06:24 pm (UTC)(link)
I like the showing of love as opposed to the saying of it, like in the scene in Adam. That to me was the biggest declaration of all, Jack just knowing Ianto could never be a killer.

And I agree that it would seem way OOC if Jack suddenly dropped his flirtatious ways and all the innuendo just because he was in a real relationship with Ianto. Ianto accepts him as is, so shall I.