Morse and Joan in CODA.

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Morse and Joan in CODA.

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"You know, I don't think you've ever called me by my name." - Joan
Never letting himself forget whose daughter she is.
Always trying to keep her at arm's length.
Never daring to get any closer than "Miss Thursday".
Telling himself he's not earned that privilege.
Terrified what saying her name out loud might reveal to others.
Knowing that there's no going back once he does.
The marry me exchange is so painful because it's not pity Morse is offering Joan when he proposes.
It's just that his primary -- only -- love language is acts of service; if he can risk or sacrifice his life so someone he loves is happy and safe (his behaviour towards Jakes in Jakes' last ep comes to mind) and he can skip the social pleasantries in the process then he is happy too! And it's not even a sacrifice when it comes to Joan -- he would be thrilled to be her husband who provides for her happiness and keeps her safe from the world, like a knight in shining armour.
But Joan doesn't know him well enough to understand this and he does not know Joan well enough to understand why a lightning marriage to the right bloke tm is not salvation to (a woman like) Joan, and certainly the last thing she needs in that moment.
You’re a clever sort, but you don’t say the right things to the right people, and you never will. It doesn’t bother me, but it doesn’t do you any good… I mean, the point is, you’re unorthodox.
e. morse || series 1-9

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Does anyone know when you're supposed to recover from the Endeavour finale?
asking for a friend me
But it's not going to be Carshal, is it? 😭
Going back on some episodes of Endeavour, and I cannot believe Jim and Joan ended up being together. It totally doesn't fit. There was never even a little hint if either one of them liked each other romantically.The writers are brilliant, no doubt, but the decision they made to go with Jim, is frankly a very bad decision and just doesn't fit. It would have been better to have her marry some guy she met whilst Morse was recovering than for her to just suddenly like Jim so much she gets engaged to him and marries him? Not buying it.
I've read a few interviews where apparently Jim and Joan scenes were cut earlier in the series - maybe it would have helped if they left them in?
I dunno, I think they probably liked the tragedy of having the girl Morse is in love with marry one of his only friends but I agree that in reality there was very little attempt to make them a romantic couple.
The way I've ended up reading the storyline is that Jim is more in love with Joan than she is with him. I think she sees him as a good and kind man that will look after her and give her the sort of life she wants, but desperately in love with him? Nah, not really. Morse is an option but I think he's also presented as a risk - she knows life with him won't be easy. So, in the end she takes the safe bet in Jim because she can't afford to take a risk because the last one she took almost destroyed her
Honestly, the moment I started looking at the Morse and Joan relationship as a tragedy, I started feeling better about it.
This Endeavour Variations album is 👌

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Forever crying over them...
Ok - besides the pain of this moment - is this...their first hug? 🥺
Something in their eyes...❤️❤️
"You know, I don't think you've ever called me by my name." - Joan
Endeavour in a nutshell:
Musical intro
Murder
Alright there matey
Shall we say two o’ clock?
Murder
Mind how you go
*Aggressive opera*
Endeavour does something clever and brilliant and we all cry for how lonely he is and are reminded of The Remorseful Day and cry some more.
End credits
Now I'm curious what is everyone's favourite Endeavour episode of all time and why -- reblog and tell me in the tags

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"Letters to the Mail, Christ Almighty! Don’t you ever take a night off?!"
Endeavour, "Exeunt"
Devastating.
I struggle to rewatch this.
I assumed that the end of Endeavour would involve the destruction of the House of Thursday-- of course, I was betting on deaths (several, in fact) but I do like what Mr. Lewis has done, leaving it an open wound. From the beginning my question was whether Morse really wanted to marry Joan, or her dad marry into the family-- the warmth, stability, trust etc. it represented. Those scenes in Fugue where Morse is too disoriented by his post-stab power nap to hide his grin at being at the dinner table, being next to the fire instead of lighting his matches and pressing his nose up against the glass were always setting the stage for the dissolution.
It does work for me that no one dies-- yes, the house is still there, but Morse can never go back, nor would he want to: the people who made it a home are gone. Yes, everyone is still alive, but he can't have that same kind of connection-- he'll never sit around that dinner table again, even if he could get them all in the same room. The kindest thing he could do for his not-family is refuse to ever see them again, for their own safety, and they'll never know. The biker thing doesn't quite work for me (I was thinking about how it might make more sense if Fred had killed another cop, wrt the danger) but the principle is sound. It's not the horrible yet complete catharsis of death, the definite sense of an ending, but an open sore that runs and runs. The places you can't go back to, the people you can't see. Fred can't pass into glorious memory, the knowledge of what he did is there (to borrow a phrase) like a stone in the shoe, digging at Morse. It can never be resolved.
and for me the open wound is knowing they'll never make television like it again!