Tuesday, February 24, 2009

Episode 12: Prophecy Girl

The season started with the delicate blond who was really a nasty vamp; the audience gets warned that their preconceptions about how stories work will be twisted and challenged. The season ends with the characters being challenged: what they believe is true--the prophecies, the texts--those are all going to be twisted and challenged. The show has evolved so that not only the worldview of the audience is questioned. The characters themselves have become real enough that their worldview is suspect, too. And although Giles is the most overt example--finding that Buffy can thwart what he believes is an iron clad foretelling--most of the other characters all grapple with changes that lead their characters to begin evolving, also.

Giles' greatest fear is Buffy dying; that's established in "Nightmares." In this episode, he has to face that. At first,he doesn't tell Buffy what he knows, then he decides he is going to fight the Master to save Buffy--which would be certain self-sacrifice. Until this episode, though, most of the time, he's been the uptight, prissy English headmaster. Finally, Giles becomes a man of action, rescuing Jenny and Willow as best he can and shouting out orders to secure the library. I hadn't realized how close to Wesley he was in style and manner throughout the first season. Watching season two again will be interesting to see how much of the head master vibe exists next year.

I'm still surprised by how undefined Willow is, although she does become more Velveteen Rabbit in this episode. Interestingly, her speech about not going to Spring Fling with Xander ("Do you think I wanna go to the dance with you and watch you wish you were at the dance with her") foreshadows Oz's speech (season 2? 3? we'll see) when he refuses to kiss her because he has this fantasy that when he kisses her, she's kissing him back--not just trying to make Xander jealous. Willow's reaction after finding her classmates in the lounge after the vampire massacre also is a baby step towards defining her character. At the beginning, she was almost simpering, constantly apologetic, just the nerd girl with answers and the best friend who does exposition. While Willow's character still hasn't jelled, it's beginning--and I wonder if the fact there were so few female writers this season impacted how Willow's character was written? The male writers may have had fun writing for the fantasy girls--Buffy and Cordelia--and they've done well with Xander (although romantizing him hugely--looking at their own existence with rosy lens, anyone?) But at this point, Willow is the nerd girl who might have been their friend, but they didn't know her--they were too busy imagining the Buffys. That's the theory I've got, subject to updates!

Buffy tries to quit slaying; she gets angry and scared and yells at Giles and Angel in an impressive scene. But...things happen and she accepts the idea that she is going to die. Her goal is to take the Master out with her. The first episode, she's not going to slay, then she will, but reluctantly. The season ends with her choosing to wade in...literally, since she drowns (and who would expect that the vampire kills her by drowning? Another expectation toyed with). Maybe her character shifts are subtle, but the fact that she's determined to save those she loves despite personal cost is not clearly articulated until this episode.

Xander was the surprise this season. I hadn't randomly rewatched season one like I have later seasons (not rewatched much 2 or 3, either), so I had forgotten--or hadn't realized--how fully realized his character was almost from the beginning. He's goofy and class clown in public venues, but with his BFF's or just one other person, there's maturity and insight and sincerity. And for me, working with kids, that dynamic rings true. Get a couple kids together and their collective IQ's and maturity levels dive bomb. One on one, though, that's a different story. I can believe both the crazy dancing Xander at the Bronze and the Xander who stands up to Angel and challenges him to prove that Buffy's right: "At the end of the day, I pretty much think you're a vampire. But Buffy's got this yen for you. She thinks you're a real person--and right now, I need you to prove her right--" all after forcing Angel down with a cross. Xander's loyalty and bravery as well as his vision are his hallmarks throughout the series (which is why it's so devastating in season 7 when he agrees to kick Buffy out of her house).

At this point, Xander is Buffy's lieutenant; at the beginning, he follows her down to look for the Big Bad even though he's told not to; after that, Xander has her back more often than Angel does, thus far. In fact, Angel and Xander flank Buffy as she's heading to the OK Correl for the final showdown with the Master. Xander saves Buffy when Angel can't--both because he bullies Angel into leading him to the Master's lair, then when he performs CPR, which Angel can't do. Xander doesn't get to kiss Buffy as his prom date, but symbolically he gets much more. But as the series continues, Xander's character gets lost in the shuffle or something; for several season, he is comic relief or plot device; based on season one, the actor has more chops than he will display during the middle seasons, when comic lines about his relationship with Anya or his distrust/jealousy of Spike/Angel are his most routine contribution to the plot. (Note for the future: Xander says "I want to dance with you" when he's asking her to prom; sometime--next season--in a memorable scene, she does dance with him, a dance that usually requires a pole, just to make Angel jealous. Unlike Willow and Oz, Xander settles for what he can get where Buffy's concerned.)

Overall--why is Buffy dressed in a white, gauzy prom dress as she faces the Master? Especially topped with the incongruous black jacket? Is it as obvious as the symbolism would seem--it's a black and white situation, she's going to face her death in a angelic style dress? She's the archetypal innocent scapegoat, being offered to quell evil? Even the dress symbolizes sacrifice; she tells her mom they can't afford it, yet Joyce got it anyway. The rule of 3's is in play as Buffy gets complimented on the dress, too, earning Angel a wry response when he complements her bedraggled, muddy appearance after the Master is dust.

I have more in my notes, but....I've rambled enough and would really like a shower. Later tonight, I'm starting Season two--and that means more Angel, plus Spike--I'm excited!

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