3, 2, 4, 1, 5, 6, 7.
As bad as Glory was, S6 and S7 both felt like a completely different show to me. Maybe they were better, but it's like apples and oranges comparing them to the first 5 seasons. They just don't feel like the same show at all to me.
Oh, and prooof positive that Buffy and Spike did not have sex again:
Not in the first scene. We think they did it in the SECOND scene, where she comes in from outside, they look at each other, and the next thing we see is a school bus outside an abandoned school, an obvious symbol of the fundamental emptiness of sex with a dead man.
Victor-- I think they may have had sex the second night (reading the script there really are 2 nights and I am not crazy) when there is just a shot of Buffy coming down to the basement and her and Spike looking at each other. i think it is delibrately ambigious.
Favorite season? 3. All the rest are in a jumble - the ones that had arcs or Big Bads I didn't like had some of my favorite standalones, the ones that had some of the individual worst episodes ever also had some of the best - sometimes even the greatest defining moments for this or that character. The best I can say is 3, and then a long list ranking all the individual episodes from all the other seasons, but I absolutely cannot rank the seasons themselves.
I loved last night. Someone else, or possibly multiple someones, pegged it as not specially intellectually satisfying, with any number of plot and season and arc nits to pick, but immensely emotionally satisfying, and that's exactly what it was for me. Everyone was absolutely emotionally true, Joss gave the writing his all, and the actors gave their performance of that writing their all. I can't wait to rewatch (going over to David's to rewatch, in fact, in just about an hour, and impatient to be there already): there was such energy and joy and rich, layered truth and weight to it. To these characters, these people, whose imaginary world may have any number of logical inconsistencies but who are themselves Real in all the most important ways.
Can't wait to read the shooting script.
I said last night at Deb's, "You know, the show really could have ended at S5 and I'd have been satisfied."
Deb reminded me that you'd have to tack on OMWF, which is true.
Deb reminded me that you'd have to tack on OMWF, which is true.
Oh, there's a lot I'm glad it stuck around for: CwDP, Selfless, After Life, Storyteller, the cool Tara/Spike banter in OaFA. Clem in general.
I'm glad the show's ended, but--as one of the recent articles pointed out--that's not the same thing as wanting it gone. And the kicker is, I DO want to know what happens next. I want to know where they all end up, what Faith does to keep out of jail, if Andrew does something worthwhile with his life, if Buffy becomes a fireman. If they run out of gas in the desert and Angel has to send Gunn and Wesley with a few extra tanks to get them to civilization. There are many, many stories left to be told, but I think this one is definitely finished.
Yup. Two obvious bad-writing loose ends are "Why did Giles act like a jerk after he nearly died (and how did he survive?)" and "What was with Dead!Joyce?" She was clearly the First Evil. I think.
I was fanwanking that they needed to make Giles a jerk so it would be easier for Buffy to reject his authority.
I found the show to be very emotionally satisfying as well.
a school bus outside an abandoned school, an obvious symbol of the fundamental emptiness of sex with a dead man.
May I tag? Or would it be too spoilery?
Oh, and since we're playing:
3, 2, 6, 1, 4, 7, 5
There are many, many stories left to be told, but I think this one is definitely finished.
That's it. He set the myth free. Giles and Willow and Xander and Buffy will all go off and do wonderful things, but they aren't bound to the wheel of Fate any more. I like that.