Buffy and Angel 1: BUFFYNANGLE4EVA!!!!!1!
Is it better the second time around? Or the third? Or tenth? This is the place to come when you have a burning desire to talk about an old episode that was just re-run.
Are you kidding? You're kidding. They resolved the Buffy question! Cookie dough! The smile! "Can stand up - will stand up!" That's what pissed me off most - more than the pandering, more than making a joke out of Angelus - was bringing Buffy back after the perfect closure of Chosen for - what? A couple of cheap gags and another bloody flashback?
I don't agree with much of what you say about Spike, but here on the Buffy question from A:ts TGiQ, we are as one. I hated that with a passion. I have to not think about it. Instead, I remember the "Ciao" scene, and choose to let the rest of it live in the fog.
Where Spike is concerned, I had no problem with them using the attempted rape, or something else equally as dark to send him for a soul. I knew a soul had to be coming for him. He'd changed both too much, and not enough, thanks to the enchipment. But season 7 didn't make it all worth it, for me, that is.
exept that moon in Firefly, which was clearly acceptable
DAMNED SKIPPY!!!
I meant that the point you always used to make about them buggering up Spike somewhere along the line was a good one.
Didn't mean to sound defensive -- I wasn't feeling all that persuasive. I've just been thinking about "my" versions of characters recently, and bemoaning what I see as a requirement to edit their lifespans. But hey. See post #1229.
I have to say, I do think that TGIQ was about the worst Angel episode. I judge it extra-harshly, though, because of its placement in the season. Just like my hatred of the Pylea in S2 is exacerbated by it being how a kick-ass season ended. Keep the fluff somewhere else. Pacing was just fucked.
I enjoyed bits of it, but in a very free from structure and context way, and when the clock is ticking the final few seconds, I don't want to be nibbling meringues.
As much as I adored Bashir on DS9, they asspulled on him, I'll swear.
Oh yeah. Also, Bashir/Ezri in S7 didn't work for me at all. But not enough so that it seriously interfered with my enjoying the show.
Hate the episode, fine. Plenty of people do. But arguing that they tossed it in as filler solely for the sake of a throwaway joke makes no sense to me.
I haven't rewatched it (or A:ts season 5 at all, to be fair). What do you think was the purpose of it? It felt like, if not filler to me then, a stand alone--a stand alone that came too late in the season, when there was still much to accomplish.
eta...
Or see ita:
I have to say, I do think that TGIQ was about the worst Angel episode. I judge it extra-harshly, though, because of its placement in the season. Just like my hatred of the Pylea in S2 is exacerbated by it being how a kick-ass season ended. Keep the fluff somewhere else. Pacing was just fucked.
I am also very hard pressed to think of a series that lasted for more than a 3-4 years, and that had any reliance on a presumed continuity, that didn't eventually succomb to a round of "wouldn't it be cool if", or "this would be neat", or "we need to shake things up" that in turn sacrafices some of the continuity/integrity somehow. Can anybody think of one?
Babylon 5
I'm not arguing that it's not fluffy, or that they probably could have done something better with the third-to-the-last episode. And I'm not arguing that it was a better Buffy/Angel resolution than "Chosen." I just don't agree that it was solely for the purpose of a "slash joke", or whatever Jim's exact words were.
I laughed like a loon, but you're not going to find me saying that it's high art. It was dumb. Sometimes I like dumb.
I just don't agree that it was solely for the purpose of a "slash joke", or whatever Jim's exact words were.
He's disclaimed that as hyperbole already.
solely for the sake of a throwaway joke
I have two problems with TGIQ.
(1) The handling of Buffy. Others have described the problem above. I'd phrase it as, I can't see Buffy hooking up with the Boyfriend that was described.
Nothing inherently wrong with giving an ep to "Where Is Buffy Now?" (OK, in the 3rd to last ep, with the Big Bad not even identified yet, not good -- but that's more timing than an inherently bad idea.) And after "Chosen," Buffy having a spree isn't an unreasonable path. But not the complete meltdown that was implied. Also, don't do it if you can't get SMG for at least a cameo and a spoken line or two.
(2) The handling of Andrew. He was chosen to collect the Potential and deliver the "we don't trust you any more" message. And he handled it well. Plus, his journey in S7 BtVS involved facing up to reality. So suddenly he's living a James Bond fantasy?
Although that's easier to fix. Instead of the two Bond girls, give him a boyfriend.
He's disclaimed that as hyperbole already.
It was in reply to a comment you said, so I didn't catch it on first read-through. Sorry.
Anyway, lunch is probably a better option than digging myself any deeper into this hole.
An episode which I still suspect existed purely to have that slash-pandering little exchange about 'that one time'.
That line was in "Power Play," not "The Girl in Question." God, I hate my brain.
I think TGiQ was a pretty impressive collection of bad ideas, but...not all bad ideas are pandering. If I wanted to pander to fans, I wouldn't spend most of an episode making a jokes about how dumb Angel and Spike are, and how pathetic their feelings for Buffy are. That's what I'd do if I was trying to enrage fans.
Which I am trying to do at times, so I know what I'm talking about.