"I am psychic, you know," was also a pretty memorable line, IMHO.
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Discussion of Buffy and Angel comics, books, and more. Please don't get into spoilery details in the first week of release.
Kitty Pryde? Is that Shadowcat? (showing knowledge of X-Men that is lacking). Do you guys see the influences of Kitty on Buffy?
Do you guys see the influences of Kitty on Buffy?
Well,they're both spunky.
I think Kitty would be more an influence on Willow than Buffy.
Well, he may be thinking about the classic Kitty Pryde character.
She sort of went off to join Excalibur, the UK branch of mutant-dom, for most of the late 80s and 90s, and started shagging Pete Wisdom, an older, ex-spook mutant of some indeterminate power. They rebooted her in the late 90s, brought her back to her, umm, more innocent state and last I checked, she was taking classes in a Chicago area university.
he may be thinking about the classic Kitty Pryde character.
I don't see how she maps, apart from age, to Buffy all that neatly.
I don't see how she maps, apart from age, to Buffy all that neatly.
Well, at a guess, I think it may be because Kitty was supposed to be the one the reader was supposed to associate with. She had superhuman powers, certainly, but on the whole, she remained a "normal" young woman, while still being a hero.
the one the reader was supposed to associate with
Weren't the readers predominantly teenaged boys? Wouldn't it be terribly uncool to associate with the geeky chick (yeah, I see her as more Willowy too)?
I don't think I ever identified with anyone in most comics. More of a dark side projection (see Wolverine) or simple awe (see Storm).
Weren't the readers predominantly teenaged boys? Wouldn't it be terribly uncool to associate with the geeky chick (yeah, I see her as more Willowy too)?
Not my point. X-Men had become a collection of larger-than-life characters who, while popular, didn't have anything to ground them into a common experience--which is why Kitty was added.
It wasn't a unique trick--"Spider-Man" is probably more a Buffy analog than anything X, but it worked. Kitty was hugely popular, without losing that "normal girl with super powers" feel.
Wait -- so you're saying that although it was in theory geeky, it worked? Or that it wasn't geeky?