Guilt, Forgiveness, Redemption--those are the words of the day. Although the obvious correlation is Buffy's guilt over causing Angel to lose his soul (which she seems to believe she is responsible for, but am I seriously supposed to believe it's entirely Buffy's doing that they had sex? And that Angle never considered what the curse meant??), it's framed in a tragic love murder/suicide story from 1955, and it's plausible that the underlying significance could be missed until Cordy snidely asks Buffy, "Over-identify much?" Even then, Giles and the Scoobies assume Buffy has the woman's role in the tragedy, the victim; when Buffy and Angel--enthralled by the spirits--reenact the deaths, Buffy is the male, the shooter. The one who is angry and seeking redemption--not the victim. Angel plays that role.
The gang believes the morality play can't be resolved; it will just keep going in an endless loop because the victim can't forgive the shooter. That may be true most places, but not when a vampire is involved. Being shot and falling from a balcony are no big deal, so Angel finishes the drama by stopping Buffy's impending suicide and forgiving her for causing the situation, pledging enternal love. Notably, Angel is wearing his claddaugh ring through this whole episode, too, making the symbolism even clearer.
A couple episodes back, Buffy announced that she's ready to kill Angel. In this episode, she essentially gets absolved of the guilt for her actions--which may include what she has to do, perhaps? And interestingly, back at the mansion, Angel has been taunting Spike, who we discover can walk now--a little fact Angel doesn't know yet. The pieces are falling in place...
Orwell Was Right
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Clandestine. That's a word I don't hear very often any more--a fabulous
word with rather seedy, sinister undertones. Civil rights. That's a phrase
I don't ...
15 years ago
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