Ladies and Gentlemen:
I have gathered you here in this Virtual Outlander Courtroom of Opinion to present my case of Intermixed Identity as it relates to one James Alexander Malcolm MacKenzie Frazer and one Franklin Wolverton Randall, and also, to untie the unfair knot of perceived multiple character flaws of the latter that is succeeding, thus far, in damaging his public persona.
*I am admin to the largest and BEST Outlander facebook group 'Outlander Series' and out of the present 76,000 members, the Team Frank squad could fit in Roger's Mini Cooper...with room for luggage. And a dog.
Indeed, it has been the persistent condemnation and nastiness towards Frank that has inspired theses proceedings.
I put it to you, fellow Outlanderonianiters *wink*, that Claire Beauchamp Randall fell in love with Jamie Fraser so quickly and easily for one simple reason: Jamie is the embodiment of Frank. Frank Randall…her first love and first husband.
Furthermore, I will show that the widely disliked and thus far easily dismissed Frank Randall may well be the story’s biggest surprise and is the best loved character in the making.
*okay, that may be over-reaching a bit but I DO think
he is going to be greatly vindicated someday
This vision may seem as clear as mud to you right now, but hear me out. And put that pitchfork down. They aren’t allowed in the courtroom.*suddenly I feel a wee bit nervous
My Opening Argument:
Claire fell in love, got married and had, from what we can
see from their honeymoon*, some damn fine sex in a lovely, and for all intents
and purposes, happy marriage.
*I understand completely that TVFrank is portrayed quite differently from BookFrank (like many, I read all the books right out of the starting gate a hundred years ago) but for the sake of convenience, I will refer to Frank here as just ‘Frank’ with the understanding that he is both Book and TV Frank rolled together. This may be unfair to those who have not seen the show *shrug* so this will be them, reading this blog:
So I suggest they binge watch Season One and them come back. (NOTE: Buy Visine, lots of wine and Kleenex). Don’t worry…I’ll wait. *
starts whistling and knitting a kilt* For those of you who know the show…let’s continue.
As I was saying, Claire loved Frank very much and he was
obviously mad about her, so when she was thrown at a man in another era who was
so like her husband, she latched onto him and never took off the two wedding rings
that reminded her of her two loves…so very similar despite the time and
distance separating them. Claire was not a simpleton who didn’t know her own
mind, nor was she some slutmuffin who slept around with just any kind of man, regardless of their character. She admired specific things in men and found it
all in the two men she loved.
I know this is fangerous territory (fan+dangerous=
fangerous) as 99% of Outlander fans adore Jamie and dislike Frank, but I say
to you now, as God is my witness, both men are near identical! *if you say that in your best Charlton Heston as MOSES 'Let me people go!' voice, it is more impressive.
I give you the ‘obvious-to-me’, undisputed facts of my case:
I give you the ‘obvious-to-me’, undisputed facts of my case:
1.
Warriors: Jamie is a fighter and a Laird, a
leader of his people but is a learned man with no desire to be a professional
soldier. He wants to farm and lord over his land. Frank was fighter, a soldier
and a leader too, in a high capacity as a MI6 operative in the War Department (we are talking 007 shit here folks),
but did not want it as a career either. He wanted to be a professor in a
university and lord over his books.
2.
No strangers to war and war games…and the maddening
politics of war. They knew their politics.
3.
Well-read and highly intelligent.
4.
Attractive to Claire.
5.
Deeply attracted TO Claire and madly in love
with her.
6.
Kind-hearted and thoughtful (Frank reminds
Claire to take her sweater when it’s cold outside and Jamie gives Claire his
tartan as a cloak as they ride out in the rain for two early examples)
7.
Eager and willing lovers who seem to quiet enjoy
The Snack Bar Downtown, luckily for Claire who’s shop is always open for
business, morning, noon and night.
8.
Communicative. Both men speak with Claire about
their interests and include her in their passions/hobbies/interests: they are
friends as well as lovers
9.
Responsible for many lives. Jamie, for his family,
and for his farmers and their families; Frank for his agents and the people
they helped/killed, and in turn all those families affected.
10.
Claire knows she can count on them to take care
of her when needed. They are both manly men. *and would rock an Old Spice aftershave
commercial, no doubt.
11.
Claire hesitated a little when Frank
spontaneously asked her to marry him before the war and she balked like mad
when Jamie did. Not perfect starts to either marriage.
12.
Infidelity: both men slept with other women
while married to Claire. Frank (allegedly) with students and whoever…when Claire rejected
his love when she returned from the Stones (if true, you can’t blame the guy…gotta get your
nourishment somewhere when The Snack Bar is closed!) and Jamie get’s
his off with a little Cave Sex and then impregnates Geneva, a teen-aged, blackmailing little snip, and then later, he actually marries LegHair
(Laoghaire) and has a sex life again, albeit an unsatisfying one. SO, they both are indeed adulterers (in the eyes of most readers) and do the
Posturepedic Polka whilst dreaming of Claire’s face on any woman they are
pounding away at…which makes their deeds less damning, but still sad, and
against their vows. *please note that Diana has said that Frank did not cheat
on Claire during the war (see her defense of Frank here), and he only brought it up to give her an easy out and
let her know he would have forgiven her had she slipped. Too many people refuse
to acknowledge that and it drives me fucking bonkers! So please, just STOP IT already!
GAWD!
13.
Wonderful fathers. Both men are brilliant
daddies who love their daughter dearly, even though ‘boys were preferred’ in
those days and more valued. Both men were incredibly loving to children not
biologically theirs, and adopted them in their hearts and souls, doing whatever
they could to make their lives and futures as safe and happy as they could.
Both wanted to be good fathers, and were.
14.
They were feminists. In a time, both eras
actually, when women were expected to shut up, do their duties in the bedroom
and kitchen and have no semblance of autonomy, each man respected women and
believed they should be treated as equals. Jamie supported Claire in her
‘outrageous’ behavior and allowed her to be herself, and Frank supported
Claire in her goals for higher education and her dream of becoming a doctor…
and allowed her to be herself.
15. Sensitive. Big-hearted men who are not afraid to
cry (Jamie at several points in the story and Frank when his heart cries out
for Claire at the Stones) but interestingly enough, they both have a thin streak of
insensitivity in their make-up that only rears its ugly head one time each:
Frank, when he was mad at Claire for spilling tea at Reverend
Wakefield's home, even though she burned herself...and Jamie, when
Geneva, a mean little shit of a girl, but a wee girl nonetheless, cried
out for him to stop penetrating her and taking her virginity, but he
does so anyway and does it with anger.
16.
Deadly when angered.
17.
Relentless and tenacious. When faced with Claire
in danger, the pain suffered by each man (Jamie when Claire was kidnapped {all
57,000 times} , and Frank when she was lost in the Stones) drove them to the
brink of madness and they were desperate and ruined by the thought of having
lost her for good. They kept searching when all others would have stopped.
18.
Open-minded. New ideas challenged them, and did
not scare them.
19.
Brave. Jamie faced death more than once with his
head held high and Frank took on 2 men at once without a blink of an eye. We
have yet to learn how he fought in the war, but assume it was with Jamie’s kind
of intensity, since they both survived and displayed an inherent ferociousness.
20.
Disdain for poorly held authority. Jamie had
little respect for the British laws and Frank had little respect for the police who handled Claire’s Missing Person case, but a deep respect and
loyalty to proper authority. Jamie was loyal to his Chieftain and country and Frank was
loyal to his country and his superiors.
21.
Unafraid. Both men have courage and great strength of character. Fearless when they needed to be, despite their very real
vulnerabilities deep down inside.
** I must add a #22 as a thoughtful member of OS pointed out one more similarity that I agree is important: "Beth Trogdon Allen: The other missing point is that both men entrusted the women that they loved to the other under the presumption that they would be cared for and protected. Jamie sent Claire to Frank so he could take care of her and raise his child... and Frank did. Frank, in his letter to the Reverend in DOA and his letter to Bree in MOBY presumed that 1)Claire would go back to Jamie if she knew he was alive - hence the fake grave and 2) Bree would be safe with Jamie in the past so he prepared her for a life in the 1700s. Both men were correct. So, if Jamie could trust his wife and daughter with Frank, I don't understand all the Frank hate. Frank was obviously an honorable man who loved Claire (and she him) and Bree very much."
Well said Beth!
** I must add a #22 as a thoughtful member of OS pointed out one more similarity that I agree is important: "Beth Trogdon Allen: The other missing point is that both men entrusted the women that they loved to the other under the presumption that they would be cared for and protected. Jamie sent Claire to Frank so he could take care of her and raise his child... and Frank did. Frank, in his letter to the Reverend in DOA and his letter to Bree in MOBY presumed that 1)Claire would go back to Jamie if she knew he was alive - hence the fake grave and 2) Bree would be safe with Jamie in the past so he prepared her for a life in the 1700s. Both men were correct. So, if Jamie could trust his wife and daughter with Frank, I don't understand all the Frank hate. Frank was obviously an honorable man who loved Claire (and she him) and Bree very much."
Well said Beth!
Mind blowing, right?
Team Frank reactions:
Team Jamie reactions:
Team Undecided's reaction:
These 22 points show how very much alike Jamie and Frank are. But you can count the drastic differences they had on the foot of a Three Toed Sloth:
These 22 points show how very much alike Jamie and Frank are. But you can count the drastic differences they had on the foot of a Three Toed Sloth:
1.
One was older, and one was younger, than Claire.
2.
Jamie was a very tall, imposingly large, tanned farmer
who was raised and built for outdoor life while Frank was tall and slim, athletically
built, but with the intellectual paleness of those who lived indoors in libraries and rooms of reading and teaching.
3.
Jamie was a naive 23 year old virgin who thought
horses and people had sex the same way (which leads us to believe that nobody
had sex in Scotland and France in the 1700’s unless it was behind closed doors
and very secretive, and "a treatise on pleasure" a.k.a. the Kama
Sutra, was not yet available in paperback). Frank, on the other hand,
was an experienced, skillful lover who could lick the sweat off of a Peach Daiquiri from 2 feet, and apparently had a kinky bend as he
delighted in the lack of female underwear in his wife’s wardrobe. One would
imagine he was up for anything…so to speak, from Day One, at the drop of a skirt...I mean, hat.
Before I summarize my case, I must point out a few important details:
There is a number #23 in this list of known similarities but needed to be addressed here as it is
speculative:
#23- Both men suffered at the hands of their enemies and lived
through a form of Post Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD). Jamie’s was induced at
the cruel hands of Black Jack Randall, and Frank’s was acquired in the war. And
he may still suffer from it. We know very little of Frank’s wartime exploits
and experiences save that he said at one point, that he held the fates and
lives of too many men in his hands and most didn’t come back from the
assignments he had to give them. Being a sensitive man, he felt the
responsibility and guilt deeply. He may have even had to bloody his hands
himself in attempts to rescue his agents and failed. Making decisions to leave
men behind or allowing them to be sacrificed for the greater good can be just as
debilitating as killing someone face to face. And how many faces did he have to
sacrifice for the sake of King and country?
It would explain a lot.
The clinical definition of PTSD is such: “Post-traumatic
stress disorder (PTSD) is a mental health condition that's triggered
by a terrifying event — either experiencing it or witnessing it. Symptoms may
include flashbacks, nightmares and severe anxiety, as well as uncontrollable
thoughts about the event. ”
I believe Frank is destined to be the
story’s ultimate Tragic Hero that will be the Snape of these books, and show
himself a decent, self-sacrificing man whose selfless deeds left him as scarred in the
inside as Jamie’s back is on the outside. A man who we end up loving and
admiring, clutching our hands to our chests in anguish as we ache for his
battered, heartbreaking life. We, like Claire, may very well end up loving both
Frank and Jamie, or ‘Framie’, as she probably thinks of them.
However, if the veering off of Frank’s Book Character on the show is simply a decision made for self-satisfying purposes of the producer, a direction he is simply more attracted to…then so be it. It is a separate story from the books and I have finally come to terms with that and thanks to a LONG flight and HOURS of Outlander Starz in my face (see that story here: Confessions of An Aging Traveler) I can enjoy it for the adaptation it is and choose to let it entertain me. And it does.
*For those 'Book Purists' as they arrogantly call themselves, who feel I am being ‘disloyal to the books' (like I took an Outlander Blood Oath at Chapters *snort*) and who stalk/abuse me all over the net for not using my ‘influence’ to trash Starz for their portrayal…well, let me quote the wise philosopher Roseanne Barr who once said to a heckler, “Suck my dick”. Well said, Madame. Well said indeed.
There it is then. If I have not convinced you of the certainty of these Truths, then I have only 5 words for you:
*snicker*
Seriously though, if Diana proves me wrong and has an entirely different story for Frank in the books, or no story at all and allows him to fade into the sunset…then again, so be it. I love Diana Gabaldon for the iconic storyteller she is and admire her choices whatever they are. Outlander is her baby and whatever she says, goes. I like my take on things and will internalize them as an ‘adapted’ side-story regardless of what she writes…and that’s okay, because we all read and interpret books as we like…and we daydream of the characters sometimes, as we are meant to, and THAT is the beauty of reading.
*snicker*
Seriously though, if Diana proves me wrong and has an entirely different story for Frank in the books, or no story at all and allows him to fade into the sunset…then again, so be it. I love Diana Gabaldon for the iconic storyteller she is and admire her choices whatever they are. Outlander is her baby and whatever she says, goes. I like my take on things and will internalize them as an ‘adapted’ side-story regardless of what she writes…and that’s okay, because we all read and interpret books as we like…and we daydream of the characters sometimes, as we are meant to, and THAT is the beauty of reading.
I hereby rest my case.
Thank you.
*oh, and JUST so you know, I am a qualified high-profile lawyer
and here are my credentials: I have a law degree from
the back of a cereal box that I filled out with a purple crayon and framed it for my den, and I tell anyone with ears that I graduated from The University of Gall and Hubris (U
of UGH!), majoring in The Study of Snark in Medieval Literature and Devil’s
Advocacy 101. I can be hired to sort out your legal issues if you call me
at 1-800-NEED-NED. Please be aware that I do NOT accept bribes on Wednesdays...
The Chart: click to enlarge
Well, hello, Denise! My compliments to you for another wonderfully clever and funny post. You have way too many points for me to address as I admit I have not delved nearly as deeply as you have on this subject. There are, however, a few points which speak to me. Therefore..................... I don't hate Frank, not at all. Probably many Sassenachs don't, either, especially those of us who love the books even more than the show. I think part of the negativity comes from the fact that Frank and Black Jack are played by the same actor and many just find it difficult to completely separate the two. (This would be for only the TV Sassenachs.) I do believe Claire loved Frank very much. This is shown by her always wearing his ring even after she went back to Jamie. She says more than once in the books that he was a man she once loved. BUT....I think that once she found Jamie and circumstances brought them together and they were married, she soon realized that Jamie was THE ONE.
ReplyDeleteFor me, personally, there is no comparison between the characters, TV or book. It's JAMMF all the way. OMG, I could never call them equally manly! I guess I'll say it's all a matter of taste. Maybe if I'd never seen Jamie I could do a nooner with Frank, but then, I have seen Jamie. (swoon!) And you don't KNOW that Frank was GIB(or in ancient castle ruins) since we only saw the start of it either time. Claire might have been sprawled on that old table for eons, telling Frank to stop, already, because she had cramps in her legs! Just sayin'... (BTY, Denise, going commando is kinky? Geez, it is THAT cold up in Canada?)
And on the subject of infidelity, I think Frank draws the losing straw, for sure. He cheated on Claire while he was married to her, but she was alive and living with him. When Jamie did it, he was sure he'd never see her again. And neither time was initiated by him, while the same cannot be said of Frank. I don't think an unresponsive wife should be a green light for screwing around. And maybe once Claire realized that he was dippin' his wick in some strange wax, she didn't want to take chances with him. She was a medical professional, after all.
All of this, of course, is just my personal opinion. As I said earlier, I don't hate either book or TV Frank. He was an okay guy. He just wasn't JAMIE. Not his fault, but there you go. Frank deserves some fan lust, too. You can have my share, Denise.
Hello Nancy! Great reply (you had me at 'nooner with Frank'LOL!)! I don't agree with it all, of course, but see your point of view clearly. Jamie is a darling man, no doubt, I just see him as another version of Frank...in a younger and more buff package and feel Claire admired in him what she admired in Frank. That was my purpose of the piece...to give Frank some of the respect and consideration he is sorely lacking in the Fandom. Many thanks for an intelligent and thoughtful comment. *and yes, parts of Canada are pretty freakin' cold and a lack of undies can be the difference between life and death...or at least a warmer bum. ;) Cheers!
DeleteFirst, great post! Second, I like Frank. I would not consider myself TeamFrank, but I like him. While I don't think he and Jamie are as alike as you do, there are similarities as you pointed out. And one thing you noted hit my is a singular truth. He is a tragic figure and very well may be this story's Snape. I agree he is the key to a lot of information. I think he tracked the historical record and knows (or knew) way more about Jamie and Claire than Claire realizes. Can't wait to see what Diana does with his character going forward.
ReplyDeleteThank you AML35. I am keen on Diana pulling a Snape too...it would be gut-wrenchingly beautiful, but one of the reasons I enjoy her writing so much is that one never really knows where she will go. Time will tell and my poor fingernails will suffer being bitten to a quick until then... Cheers!
DeleteThat was the best!! Too funny
ReplyDeleteThanks Unknown! *I know your cousin...Unforgettable. *wink* Cheers!
DeleteI truly enjoyed your post!
ReplyDeleteThank you Sherry! :)
DeleteYou hit the nail directly on the head. Thank you. Life long member of Team Frank.
ReplyDeleteThanks Jan...much appreciated. Cheers!
DeleteBrillant!
ReplyDeleteLove it had such a giggle
Agree that there is more of Frank to come, and that he did do research, how could he not?.
He helped out Bree, why would he have made sure she had these skills if he had not thought of the possibilities
thank you
cheers Nicole
Nicole: Glad you got a giggle or two from this... *smile* And I obviously agree...Frank is amazing. I hope Diana writes his story soon... Cheers!
ReplyDelete