I mean, let's say you did kill us. Or didn't. There could be torture. Whatever. But somehow you found the goods. What would your cut be?

Mal ,'Out Of Gas'


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.


Matt the Bruins fan - Dec 29, 2005 8:13:48 am PST #2655 of 10459
"I remember when they eventually introduced that drug kingpin who murdered people and smuggled drugs inside snakes and I was like 'Finally. A normal person.'” —RahvinDragand

Right. Angelus viewed himself as an artist of pain and cruelty, but I gather that each victim was merely a blank canvas for him, rather than something to be valued in their own right.


JZ - Dec 29, 2005 8:44:13 am PST #2656 of 10459
See? I gave everybody here an opportunity to tell me what a bad person I am and nobody did, because I fuckin' rule.

I gather that each victim was merely a blank canvas for him, rather than something to be valued in their own right.

IIRC, Drusilla wasn't a blank canvas -- between her innocence, her piety, and her psychic gifts she was less a blank canvas to Angelus than a particularly glowing chunk of marble or flawless alabaster, raw material so exquisite as to demand many months of exacting and highly detailed craftsmanship and artistry. And it's entirely possible that she wasn't the only one; Angelus was more than creative enough to make art out of any hunk of meat he happened to find in an alleyway, but Drusilla was doubtless not the first time he'd ever noticed a victim who could really challenge him to his finest efforts.

And now, ugh. After crawling just far enough into Angelus's brain to write that paragraph, I have to go take a shower.


Topic!Cindy - Dec 29, 2005 9:10:18 am PST #2657 of 10459
What is even happening?

That said, he objectified her. Angel's obsession was never about Drusilla. It was about what Angel could do to her. Here was this pious, spiritually gifted, devout girl. He wanted to make her the opposite of that, not because of her, but because of what it meant about him.


§ ita § - Dec 29, 2005 9:22:58 am PST #2658 of 10459
Well not canonically, no, but this is transformative fiction.

He wanted to make her the opposite of that, not because of her, but because of what it meant about him.

But the opposite of her is intrinsically tied up in who she is.


Frankenbuddha - Dec 29, 2005 9:36:52 am PST #2659 of 10459
"We are the Goon Squad and we're coming to town...Beep! Beep!" - David Bowie, "Fashion"

But the opposite of her is intrinsically tied up in who she is.

Right, as opposed to Buffy, where her being the slayer was incidental to Angelus' obsession. She was his obsession precisely because of the effect that she'd had on Angel.

So, anyone think the original, psych-geek Riley would have been fascinated by what Angelus did to Drusilla, at least on a "anyone else want to put them in separate rooms" level.


Topic!Cindy - Dec 29, 2005 9:49:08 am PST #2660 of 10459
What is even happening?

But the opposite of her is intrinsically tied up in who she is.

I just see it really differently. Obsession is never about the object, except in what feelings/reactions/responses/ideas the object can generate in the obsessor. I can't see how anyone could say she mattered, because what she wanted/loved/thought was good didn't matter to him, except in how he could pervert it. It was all about Angelus using the facts of her personhood and life to get off.

I don't think Angel was obsessed with Buffy, when he had a soul, to the extent Angelus could get obsessed without a soul. If so, the obsession faded over time, and there was enough love there (when he had a soul), that her fate at least mattered to him (if not her opinion on how their relationship would affect her fate).


DavidS - Dec 29, 2005 10:00:57 am PST #2661 of 10459
"Look, son, if it's good enough for Shirley Bassey, it's good enough for you."

Obsession is never about the object, except in what feelings/reactions/responses/ideas the object can generate in the obsessor.

I don't know if I'd put it that way. The nature of the obsession is the power you imbue to the source of your fascination. But there is a transference so the object of attention is supercharged with your particular fucked-upedness. So I wouldn't say it's "never about the object." The object becomes it's own little power center medallion loaded magical interest.


Strega - Dec 29, 2005 10:07:48 am PST #2662 of 10459

One of the great elements of A:ts (to me) is that he fought evil because the victims mattered to him.

Wow. I'm kind of startled by that. (Sorry, I don't mean "I can't believe you're crazy enough to say such a thing!" -- it's more like "Whaddya mean you see two faces? It's clearly a vase!") I think Angel got off on being a hero. Not that he didn't care about the victims at all, but... he cares about the victims in as much as it gives him a reason to beat up the villains, because that's what he's really in it for.

The difference is Modern Angel seeks to alleviate suffering instead of cause it.

I can't agree there, either. Angel tried to avenge suffering, and maybe prevent it, but I think that'd be his own justification to cover the fact that, souled or not, he's just an enormous sadist. He still likes to cause suffering; he just made the same discovery Spike did in "Doomed" -- that killing monsters is almost as much fun as torturing innocents. And for Angel, in both cases I think there's also an ego thrill that wasn't there so much for Spike.


Nutty - Dec 29, 2005 10:25:13 am PST #2663 of 10459
"Mister Spock is on his fanny, sir. Reports heavy damage."

Joining this discussion very late, I recall voting for the "Angel: Kind of His Own Bitch" thread title, because I thought it was true. Which is to say, practically anything Angel ever did (or that happened to him) occurred because it reflected on Angel, and a lot of the time the ordinary people involved got chewed up and spit out pointlessly.

(Drusilla as Angel-victim was established in canon via narrative a long time before she was fleshed out in a flashback. We saw the effect -- Angel's actions -- long before the cause -- Drusilla herself, her consciousness -- mattered to us. Drusilla literally does not matter, except in plot terms and how she reflects ideas about Angel: even in her post-rape scene, the camera leaves her face, and wanders away to focus on him.)

I don't know as how I can blame Angel for that -- he wasn't a writer -- but certainly his character and his show differed vastly from Buffy, moreso as the later seasons tended to become socially isolated. repeated use of the word "champion" was also a factor.


Una - Dec 29, 2005 11:07:41 am PST #2664 of 10459
when i die, please bake my ashes into a brick and use me to hit fascists.

I'm afraid I'm completely ignorant in the definitions of things. What makes somebody a hero?

...so apparently I'm the only one who saw that and immediately thought "somebody who gets other people killed"? *runs away*