Sunday, August 9, 2009

Enemies

Faith and Buffy take center stage again. The title of the episode seems self-explanatory: Faith's choices make her Buffy's enemy. Sex abounds in this episode, which opens with Buffy and Angel leaving a movie that was apparently far more "adult" than they suspected. They are lovey-dovey until Faith shows up, gently mocks them, and takes Buffy to patrol. In a sense, that's the template for the whole episode: Faith makes them look at their relationship as she inserts herself into the equation.

There's a point, of course. The Mayor and she are trying to call forth Angelus. She tries to seduce Angel, believing that he'd lose his soul that way (if you've watched Angel, you know that's a vain hope; sex alone doesn't give him the moment of happiness to break the curse or Darla would have had to deal with Angelus.) When Angel won't even kiss her, she resorts to a spell. Double-cross ensues, and Angel plays Angelus as he pumps her for info.

Buffy is jealous. She can paint it as righteous anger, because Faith is bad, Faith is everything Buffy can't be--doesn't want to be--and maybe wishes she could be. Angel was bad, very bad--he liked living on the edge; Buffy takes risks, but refuses to admit she gets a charge out of it. That would be bad, enjoying the kill, enjoying the chase. And that's without even adding the layer of wondering if Angel really likes Faith, really would enjoy it if Buffy would cut loose a bit more.

This tangled relationship doesn't end with this season, either--it's just about the only carryover plot into Angel. Angel saves Faith; Faith saves Angel. In fact, even late in the Angel show, Buffy and Angel are at odds over his relationship with Faith.

Talking about her name is obvious, and I don't currently have anything beyond the obvious to say. Commenting on neatly the names "Faith" and "Angel" fit together is equally obvious, so i won't go there, either--yet.

So are Faith and Buffy the enemies? So it seems--but the animosity is tangled, and Buffy insists that in different circumstances, she could have been Faith. Willow disagrees, claiming that some people are just born good, and experience won't change that. Interesting to contemplate that in light of season 6 and the developement of Dark Willow...

I think there well be more to say here, but I don't know what yet....I may be editing this one.

Saturday, August 8, 2009

Dopplegangerland

In a sense, this is Willow's version of The Zeppo. Vamp Willow from the parallel dimension is called into our dimension as Willow and Anya try to retrieve Anya's necklace. Again, Willow's magic goes awry and causes more problems than it solves.

In the previous episode, Willow has been jealous and sad; she doesn't want to be everyone's doormat, good old reliable Willow. That point is made throughout the episode, even as she tries to tutor a recalcitrant jock and be cheerful Willow in the fuzzy, funny clothes.

Just as The Zeppo begins the redefining of Xander, this episode makes the audience (and maybe her friends?) look at Willow differently. This isn't about Willow as potential witch, it's about Willow as not-relentlessly cheerful good girl. Even though Willow herself stays perky, the image of a "skanky," sadistic, hedonistic Willow is planted. Typcially, Willow wants to be nice to her evil twin, not allowing the gang to kill her--so in Willow's mind, there is in fact an evil Willow wandering through a parallel dimension.

Consequences

Basically, part two of Bad Girls. Faith tries to frame Buffy--which is when we realize exactly how bad Faith really is--and she threatens to kill to escape from the council when their goons (lead by Wesley) kidnap her.

I suspect I should rewatch this one too, but perhaps the most interesting thing is the Angel/Faith connection. After Buffy and Angel manage to capture Faith, she's shackled in Angel's mansion. He talks to her at length in a scene that is paced differently than the rest of the episode. Although he is not successful in getting through to Faith--and might even be called whining and stoically emo--he's just set the stage for Faith's redemption on his show in the next season (or two? I'm not sure of time frame). In the Buffy-verse, this is the beginning of a significant relationship; Angel champions Faith later, when Buffy claims to intend to kill her.

When I rewatch, I want to pay close attention to Buffy's costume and color choices. If I remember right, when she's being bad with Faith, she's in black--much like Faith typically is. After the killing and subsequent actions, Buffy seems to be in black/white outfits often. That's obviously used symbolically, but I'd like to watch it to see if there's more to say.

Also, Xander tries to do a yellow crayon intervention here, building on the "connection" he claimed to make with Faith in The Zeppo. Even though Buffy apologetically tells him that she knows it means nothing to Faith, Xander the faithful has to try--and nearly gets strangled to death by Faith for his efforts.

Importantly, Willow is having issues in this episode. She's trying to be the nice girl, but she's found out the Xander had sex with Faith and Buffy has been bonding with Faith--as much as Willow likes Oz, she's feeling like the odd man out. In this episode, a wordless shot in a montage shows Willow alone, sobbing--a strong visual counterpoint to her daffy, chipper persona. This time, Willow is the one who's jealous; Willow is the one who feels isolated--and she's aware that she's feeling these things even as she tries to be the good girl.

Bad Girls

...And the season heats up. Faith and Buffy's problematic relationship takes a turn. Inexplicably, they are best buds, slaying and talking about the personal lives (translation: sex). Faith' bad girl persona is finally articulated as a life-philosophy, pretty Ayn Rand-esque, essentially, "we are better than other people, therefore, we're not bound by the same rules and expectations other people are held to." Buffy, of course, takes a nearly opposite view, feeling the weight of all the responsibility and none of the fun of slaying. Faith emphasizes the physicality of life as a slayer--all the energy and power that needs an outlet, and for the first time (I think), the theme of slaying as sexual foreplay is broached. Later, Spike--another "bad" character--will again force Buffy to admit that is true.

Together, Faith and Buffy ransack and break in, notably stealing the knife that later, Buffy will stab Faith with. Buffy seems to having fun as she tries out life as a bad girl, until completely by accident, Faith kills a human.

Considering all the bad things that have happened in the series, it might be possible that an accidental killing would be dealt with pro forma. Had Buffy been the one who did it, if she'd been alone--there's almost no doubt that she would have immediately told Giles and council protocol would have been followed, with Buffy exonerated and, althought feeling guilty, accepting of what happened. But Faith isn't Buffy, and crisis of faith and trust ensues.

This is Wesley's first episode. Against the backdrop of a true moral crisis calling for wisdom and leadership, the bumbling watcher flails around trying to inforce his authority.

The fact is, I need to think about this one more, and rewatch it later. The metaplot for this season is heating up, and I think this episode and the next are ones that bear re-watching.

Saturday, August 1, 2009

The Zeppo

I've seen this several times, and thought of it as a fun night in Xander's life, a chance for him to have the spotlight a bit. The structure reminds me of teen movies: a night in the life, leading to an older and wiser protagonist. There have been a couple heavy episodes, and we're heading into a couple more heavy ones (I think), so this is the respite.

Wow. I missed a lot. Still processing this one, in fact. First, remember the beginning of the series? How many Xander-centric episodes there were? He was goofy, he was serious, he was Everyman, he was Joss and the writers....

Then, he was Love Interest. The goofy-ness abated some as his wardrobe cleaned up a bit and Cordelia polished the rough edges--a bit. He was an integral part of the team, and had Buffy's back solidly.

This episode seems to begin the process of marginalizing him and redefining him. The last few episodes, Willow has come more into her own, becoming "The Witch." She's smart, but not nearly the brainiac she'd been in ways; beginning with Lovers Walk (maybe the one before; I'd need to look), she's turning to magic instead of other means to solve problems.

That leaves Xander as the odd man out. Giles has unique training and skills; Willow has magic; Buffy is the Slayer; Oz is a werewolf...and Xander? He's in danger, and clumsy, and--more strongly now than before--the punchline. He's also the reason the others are doing what they do: symbolically, Xander is the Everyman Sunnydale resident that they are protecting.

The episode has wonderful dialogue, and Nick Brendon's comic timing as well as his ability to evoke pathos are well used. The conversation about how to be "cool"--the laconic, ultra cool Oz (Seth Green) and the over-excited, rambling Xander is both insightful and hilarious. The conversations between Xander and Cordelia which bookend the episode mark the change between Xander the hapless spurned boyfriend and Xander on the road to manhood, laconic and cool, able to walk away from Cordelia's truthtelling (She is one of the most subtly named characters--a nod to King Lear, fulfilling her namesake's legacy in this episode).

And yes, this is the episode where Xander first saves Faith as she fights, then loses his virginity to her in a sweetly funny--and abruptly telling--couple of scenes. But that's not what made him a man tonight: standing up to Jack O'Toole, getting O'Toole to admit that he wasn't ready to really die--"janitor sweeping up pieces" dead, instead of zombie dead, coolly claiming he wouldn't "mind the silence"--that prototype to the famous yellow crayon speech in season 6 is the moment we see the Xander that lies beneath. For the next couple seasons, he is marginalized, but all through, the Xander who sees (as Caleb will note in season 7) is evolving. He has an almost parallel life to the mystical Scoobies in ways--and when Buffy points out to the council in season 5 that Xander has logged more field time than they all have put together, he puffs up with pride because he is often overlooked as a contributing member of the team. The habit of dismissing Xander's abilities as a Scooby are underscored, and in ways begin, with this episode.

Notably, Buffy and the others are in a parallel, apocolyptical plot which is only alluded to. In a fascinating structural tour-de-force, we see key moments, startling emotional, violent pastiche of imagery, with no context as Xander bumbles in the way of whatever Buffy et al are fighting. It's fun, and the story comes to a conclusion with them glad Xander was "safe," never looking at him hard enough to see the differences that Cordelia and the audience mark. The audience notes the team feel of the battered veterans around the table, with Buffy fapparently forgiving Giles for his betrayal last episode--and Xander sees them much more clearly than they see him--not for the last time, either.