[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index]
Re: ::BuffyWantsWillow:: OTÂ--"As You Were"
(Catching up on some ep discussion that I missed because my inbox
overflowed)
--- In buffywantswillow@y..., "buffythebushkangaroo"
<buffythebushkangaroo@y...> wrote:
Warning: Spoilers & Expletives ahead.
>
> L
> A
> L
> A
>
> L
> A
> D
> I
> D
> I
> D
> A
>
> S
> P
> O
> I
> L
> E
> R
> S
>
> Ok, that should be enough :)
>
>I watched the episode last night, and I'll put my cards on the table
right now. It was the worst episode. Ever.
Well, for me, nothing will ever top (bottom?) "Flooded", but each
according to their taste.
>The whole episode felt like something from the A-Team production crew,
right down to the fake smiles all round, and the He-man belly-
laugh bit when Riley + Bint fly off into the night hanging from a rope
attached to the back of a helicopter.
Isn't that a steal from something else? Xander's cries of "Bye, Riley!"
as our hero (for the ep) choppers off into the night seemed very
derivative.
>Even the ending - which would normally have me spinning in circles on
my office chair bouncing off cupboards and pot-plants and waving my arms
madly - was feebly done.
>Buffy: I'm breaking up with you, Evil Spike.
>Spike: Oh. Bugger. I'll guess I'll just go and get my coat then.
Well, in my review, I got quite worried that it was so low-key to leave
the door open for a reconciliation, but the stage directions in the
shooting script ("It's final. It's over.") seem to be much more
emphatic. Plus the line "it's over" which sounded like possibly being
another case of Denial Girl making A Speech, was supposed to be a much
more matter-of-fact "Yeah. It's over." And Sarah's hesitations and
confused squintings on "I'm using you. It's weak and it's selfish",
which made me worry she was trying to talk herself into this and was
searching for words to convince herself that it wasn't really
loveÂ--none of that's in the script, and her earlier pauses in the
scene are.
So I don't know if the way it was played means that a) SMG knows
something about more B/S down the line and is foreshadowing (my initial
fear), or
b) she just underplayed it, either to make a brutal affair have a tender
ending or to show that Buffy only blames herself, not Spike (which would
be in keeping with Miss "It's All My Fault" 's history), or
c) Doug Petrie, director, just really botched the scene, and managed to
confuse the intent of Doug Petrie, writer. He certainly blew the
symbolic last shot, staying in too close on Buffy and not getting a
proper sense of Buffy either being outside or stepping into the light.
Oh, and we were supposed to get a final reaction shot of Spike after
that, which may be why Marsters was relatively low-key, too.
> Mindless, puerile, unmitigating crap.
Well, scar-faced superhero Riley is a tough sell, since despite the
commando stuff, the character was always grounded in his Joe Iowa
average-ness. When you try and make someone represent simplicity and
normalcy and at the same time be an invincible James Bond (with a wife
who's perfectÂ--except for her complete inablity to act), it's really
not going to work. At least we got one decent surprise, and the arc did
move (and hopefully in my preferred direction).
>Anne-Lise,
>Hating Doug Petrie.
We're done with him for the year. Let's see how you feel about Rebecca
Rand Kirshner.
Thanks for your thoughts,
Dan
This is an archive of the eGroups/YahooGroups group "BuffyWantsWillow".
"Buffy the Vampire Slayer" and "Angel" are trademarks and (c) 20th Century Fox Television and its related entities. This website, its operators and any content on this site relating to "Buffy the Vampire Slayer" and "Angel" are not authorized by Fox.
No money is being made with this website.