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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.


SailAweigh - Aug 25, 2007 7:47:42 am PDT #5275 of 10469
Nana korobi, ya oki. (Fall down seven times, stand up eight.) ~Yuzuru Hanyu/Japanese proverb

Anya's death was kind of an off note, not needed by the narrative except to say, look! People we knew who had names and were not slayers have also died!

Back when I was still a bit of a spoiler hound, the meta on Anya's death was that Emma Caufield volunteered to be kicked off if they wanted as she had no interest in continuing on in the Buffyverse in any manner. I don't think there were any plans before that, so, yeah, her death was kind of shoe-horned in. It wasn't played down, but it definitely didn't have the impact if would have if they'd had her die in Selfless or at some other point where there could have been some fallout from it.


Dana - Aug 25, 2007 9:08:59 am PDT #5276 of 10469
I'm terrifically busy with my ennui.

Also, Anya really died in a moment of triumph, whereas Tara was collateral "sucks to be you!" damage.


Matt the Bruins fan - Aug 25, 2007 2:48:01 pm PDT #5277 of 10469
"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

And at that point, Tara was pretty much the moral center of the show with everyone else taking turns hitting rock bottom around her. Anya, not so much, though she did manage to go through some personal redemption in that final season.


orkhan - Aug 25, 2007 7:05:08 pm PDT #5278 of 10469

Anya ... did manage to go through some personal redemption in that final season.

What I have to ask is, why did she need so much in the way of personal redemption? She didn't leave anyone at the alter, she didn't subject anyone else to constant scorn. There were no irreversible deaths on her conscience lately, at least a whole lot less recently than Willow I can tell you that.

I guess what I find problematic is that-while acknowledging SailAweigh's insight into the show's inner workings-I think that it is a lot easier to mourn saints than those more problematic characters that make a good storytelling in general and Buffy in particular so compelling.


ChiKat - Aug 26, 2007 7:03:47 am PDT #5279 of 10469
That man was going to shank me. Over an omelette. Two eggs and a slice of government cheese. Is that what my life is worth?

why did she need so much in the way of personal redemption

Over 1,000 years as a vengance demon.


Matt the Bruins fan - Aug 26, 2007 8:05:09 am PDT #5280 of 10469
"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

Yeah, off the top of my head I'd say the tens or hundreds of thousands of people she gleefully brought suffering and death to might merit just a bit more in the way of amends than jilting someone at the altar.

Up until "Selfless" she showed almost no remorse about all the carnage she'd wrought. Even if D'Hoffryn did undo those particular deaths in the frat house, it doesn't whitewash the fact that she engineered them in the first place.

And unless I'm completely misremembering, Anya was pretty handy with the constant scorn right up until her death scene.


Fred Pete - Aug 27, 2007 6:21:14 am PDT #5281 of 10469
Ann, that's a ferret.

There was also the way vengeance demons worked. If you felt you had been wronged and wished, the demon would grant your wish. Regardless of whether any objective person would believe you really had been wronged. So that, say, someone with a jealous nature might wish for vengeance on a "cheating" SO when any cheating had been only in the wisher's imagination.

I remember a little (but only a little) discussion of this. Anya (maybe in a conversation with Halfrek?) said something about, the third or fourth time she granted a wish from the same woman, thinking that maybe the woman should think of herself as the problem. Not that it stopped Anya from granting the wish.

A couple other possible reasons for gliding over Anya's death vs. Tara's death. Anya's death was one incident in a very crowded episode. Spike disappeared, at least one of the Potentials died, huge battle against the minions of the First, disappearance of Sunnydale -- you could almost have missed Anya's death if you looked away from the screen at the wrong moment. By contrast, Tara's death was the focus of that moment. The Trio had been defeated. Spike had gone away. When Warren showed up, Xander and Buffy were quietly resolving their differences. So, big difference in emotional impact.

Also, Tara's death triggered the Big Bad of the season. There was also a certain amount of "what happens next?" surrounding her death. While Anya died in the last episode. Nothing happened next, at least not officially.


Vortex - Aug 27, 2007 6:42:58 am PDT #5282 of 10469
"Cry havoc and let slip the boobs of war!" -- Miracleman

In honor of the first day of classes here I offer a much loved quote --

"One day the campus is completely bare and empty. The next, there are children everywhere. Like locusts. Crawling around, mindlessly bent on feeding and mating. Destroying everything in sight in their relentless, pointless desire to exist."


Beverly - Aug 27, 2007 6:51:33 am PDT #5283 of 10469
Days shrink and grow cold, sunlight through leaves is my song. Winter is long.

I never thought I'd say this, but I miss Snyder.


Jars - Aug 30, 2007 5:04:23 am PDT #5284 of 10469

Just in from Popbitch -

Joss Whedon's long awaited UK based Buffy spin-off,
Ripper, starring Anthony Head, starts filming next summer for BBC.

Has anyone else heard anything about it?