Maybe nto tamper with Xander, so much, but I don't buy shyness and a habit of conceding to Willow as sufficient to make Tara willing to do a resurrection--especially after Tara was so adamant about the wrongness of bringing back Joyce. I wonder if it got out that Dawn did it anyway and how. I don't see Tara conceding a major moral point just to make Willow stop pouting.
'The Cautionary Tale of Numero Cinco'
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.
ust parroting my earlier comment that I think Tara's lines in "Bargaining" made it pretty clear that she had a good idea how dangerous and wrong their plans re; Buffy were, and chose to hop on the tombstone-rolling bandwagon anyway.
I also think that Tara wanted desperately to fit in, and arguing against bringing Buffy back would have been counter productive.
I acknowledge all the arguments about Willow. It was that until the addiction thing which started with the Tara mind-wipe, I did not care. Basically it took the mind-wipe to shock me out of Willow worship.
Also it's crapshoot with bringing Buffy back. We know that a certain percentage of other dimensions are unspeakably horrible. We also know this one isn't. So do we leave Buffy someplace ont he hope that it's NOT horrible, or bring her back where we KNOW she'll be okay?
So if she was being manipulative, it was on the hell dimension argument.
I don't see any reason to think that she was lying here. Not thinking things through, sure; not thinking as she should about the possible negative consequences of what she did, definitely; but I think her intentions were good.
So do we leave Buffy someplace ont he hope that it's NOT horrible, or bring her back where we KNOW she'll be okay?
I think that the definition of "okay" is relative. She'll still be the Slayer, still putting her life in danger every day.
Although, I think that it was not a baseless assumption that Buffy was in a hell dimension. She died closing the door to one, so it wasn't unreasonable to think that she might have ended up there.
but I think her intentions were good.
you know what the say about the road to a hell dimension . . .
I don't see any reason to think that she was lying here. Not thinking things through, sure; not thinking as she should about the possible negative consequences of what she did, definitely; but I think her intentions were good.
Concur.
Although, I think that it was not a baseless assumption that Buffy was in a hell dimension. She died closing the door to one, so it wasn't unreasonable to think that she might have ended up there.
Concur.
Also, Anya did have reservations about the resurrection but frankly didn't care that much that it was WRONG.
I think Willow honestly believed that Buffy was in a hell dimension and really it makes sense. anytime someone was sent to another dimension, it was a hell-like existence. though you could also argue that when that happened their bodies were taken as well and Buffy's wasn't.
I think they all had a bit of "hellmouth on the brain" when thinking it out. it doesn't even cross their mind that Buffy had paid her dues and could quite possibly be getting rewarded with heaven.
you know what the say about the road to a hell dimension . . .
Oh, absolutely. That's what makes it an interesting story, you know? Willow absolutely believed that she was Doing Right. Even when she did uncontestable evil to Tara, she believed she was in the right.