You'd never make it. I'd rip your spine out before you got half a step. Those little legs wouldn't be much good without one of those.

Glory ,'The Killer In Me'


Buffy 4: Grr. Arrgh.  

This is where we talk about Buffy the Vampire Slayer! No spoilers though?if you post one by accident, an admin will delete it. This thread is NO LONGER NAFDA. Please don't discuss current Angel events here.


Lady O' Spain - Jul 27, 2003 6:15:10 pm PDT #3650 of 10001
Red hair and black leather--my favorite color scheme.

Has anyone seen this?

http://www.bbc.co.uk/cult/buffy/ecomics/index.shtml

Online e-comic written by Petrie. Only the first part seems to be up yet.

Cool. I like Buffy comics that don't require the spending of money.

ETA: ...and I keep misreading the name of the site as 'Buffy Economics".

Took me a little while to figure out when exactly it was set, though.


brenda m - Jul 27, 2003 6:15:53 pm PDT #3651 of 10001
If you're going through hell/keep on going/don't slow down/keep your fear from showing/you might be gone/'fore the devil even knows you're there

I do think you're right though that Cecily's cruelty had as much to do with her audience as it did with whatever her real feelings about him were. He's inappropriately dressed, awkward, and the in-crowd is already laughing at him So then he goes and puts her on the spot, complete with bad poetry, and coming up with the cruelest put-down she can manage is her line of defense.


Kassto - Jul 27, 2003 7:11:44 pm PDT #3652 of 10001
`He combed his hair, Put on a shirt that his mother made, And he went on the air...'

I think Cecily means it when she says William is beneath her -- socially beneath her, in terms of class, and socially beneath her in terms of Victorian polish -- charm, wit, social flair, manners. He's obviously educated and sensitive but a poor catch; not desperately poor financially or he wouldn't be at such a gathering, but poor enough so that it wasn't enough to outweigh his other shortcomings.

I think they put them in old clothes and an old house and gave no thought whatsoever to the status implications of either.

I'm with this utterly. I'm sure ME doesn't have a Victorian social historian on tap to fine tune the props.

And Cecily strikes me as being a popular gal -- when we first see her, she floats down the stairs and is enveloped in a cloud of sycophants, IIRC. How she halfreked, well, one fanfic suggested William's attentions threw off her favoured suitor.


Connie Neil - Jul 27, 2003 8:11:04 pm PDT #3653 of 10001
brillig

I'm sure ME doesn't have a Victorian social historian on tap to fine tune the props.

Nah, that's what we're for, to postulate an entire family history from the placement of a single prop. Still, they could have made it a cozy little Victorian parlor; instead, they gave a space that seems quite large. Sure, easier to maneuver a camera, but fun to speculate on.


Kassto - Jul 27, 2003 9:39:06 pm PDT #3654 of 10001
`He combed his hair, Put on a shirt that his mother made, And he went on the air...'

I just found a great bit of continuity that I didn't notice before. Watching Doppelgangland -- great for many reasons, not just the scene where Devon complains to Oz that they need a roadie, and Oz replies that they only know three chords, and proper professional bands sometimes know six or even seven totally different chords.

Anyway when vamp!Willow visits the Bronze the second time, she moves in on an innocent girl called Sandy. Now it is exactly the same Sandy who Riley flirts with, lets bite him and stakes in season 5. Did everyone else notice this, or am I just really slow?


smonster - Jul 27, 2003 9:42:41 pm PDT #3655 of 10001
We won’t stop until everyone is gay.

Now it is exactly the same Sandy who Riley flirts with, lets bite him and stakes in season 5. Did everyone else notice this, or am I just really slow?

Kassto -- haven't seen that ep but will look for it when I do. Lurrrve the continuity, I does...


WildDemon Cornelius - Jul 28, 2003 12:21:23 am PDT #3656 of 10001
Take your fingers off it, don't you dare touch it, you know it don't belong to you, to you...

I like to think that Cecily ended up as Halfrek b/c one of the clods who abused William at that party got with her and then cheated on her...I probably like to think this b/c more than once I've been "William" to a girl's "Cecily"; I love the idea of the guy who she thought was Mr. Right cheating on her and her becoming a demon while the dorky guy she could've had becomes a badass vampire who saves the world...that's all from the "overidentifying rants" for now...oh, and Amanda rules! Why'd they kill her instead of annoying Rona and bland Vi...well, we didn't get total confirmation that she was dead.


Sue - Jul 28, 2003 3:15:38 am PDT #3657 of 10001
hip deep in pie

Anyway when vamp!Willow visits the Bronze the second time, she moves in on an innocent girl called Sandy. Now it is exactly the same Sandy who Riley flirts with, lets bite him and stakes in season 5. Did everyone else notice this, or am I just really slow?

It was noticed on the boards at the time of the episode, Kassto.


justkim - Jul 28, 2003 4:50:26 am PDT #3658 of 10001
Another social casualty...

Anya points out in OaFA that Halfrek has "coughDaddyIssuescough". It appears that Halfrek's vengence is directed at "helping" children. If Cecily and Halfrek are the same person (rather than just being characters played by the same actress), Cecily's issues wrt William culd be rooted in bad parenting. Maybe her own father was a bad poet and layabout and lost the family fortune (at some point in the past).


Vortex - Jul 28, 2003 5:21:39 am PDT #3659 of 10001
"Cry havoc and let slip the boobs of war!" -- Miracleman

Cecily's issues wrt William culd be rooted in bad parenting. Maybe her own father was a bad poet and layabout and lost the family fortune (at some point in the past).

or maybe she got pregnant?