I thought it was perverse, deconstructive, anti-heroic, soap opera rubish that was badly thought out and planned.
I'm surprised by all the Andrew hate. I liked a lot of the characters introduced in Season 7, like Principal Wood and Caleb, but the only episode in it that I can still enjoy from start to finish is "Storyteller", which is of course a showcase for that character and actor. I find the rest of the season just underwhelming. In my opinion, there wasn't a lot of life left in the show by that point, and they were pretty much out of good ideas.
I didn't care for the 'potentials' storyline or Willow's totally forced romance with that completely uninteresting Kennedy character, especially after how much time and care had been put into naturally developing her previous relationships with Oz, and to a lesser extent, Tara. That last one was so obviously just giving her a love interest for the sake of giving her a love interest. Didn't really see a plausible romance developing there. I just remember Kennedy saying, "you have an odd way of talking, I like that." Well whoop dee freaking doo, it must be true love.![]()
Spuffy - turned my stomach.
Xander leaving Anya at the alter - unforgivable. The man who once stared Angelus himself down...getting cold feet? No way.
I also wanted to address the 'Kennedy was uninteresting' complaint, which strikes me as very ironic given that she is almost 100% archetypeally identical to the character of Faith LeHane, to the point that I have referred to her (Kennedy) in the past as a 'rich man's Faith' (a term that my good friend Caligula still doesn't quite get).
One of my least favorite parts about S6 was what they did to Xander. He's been arguably my favorite character in the show (after Giles), and no matter how many ways I try to rationalize it, I just can't buy that he would abandon Anya at the altar like that. Not after he knew that a demon was just screwing with his head.
During that last conversation with Anya, we saw Xander look at his father, who was busy screaming at Mrs. Harris about some inane thing, which I guess was supposed to imply that Xander was afraid he and Anya would end up the same way. And realistically, he should be a little afraid, but really, after everything he's been through by that point, Xander would have more likely stepped up and married Anya because 1) he still loved her, and 2) just to prove to himself that he's better than his father, and what he and Anya had was stronger than whatever his parents used to have. But, no, they decided to keep pouring on the misery.![]()
I actually don't mind that they had Spike start to fall for Buffy, aside from the fact that Buffy is one of my least favorite characters on the show, so for me it reeks more of "Buffy is the greatest and specialest and most wonderfulest woman ever" than of Spike's character being assassinated. What he tried to do to her at the end of "Seeing Red" was still absolutely pitiful, though. Again, they went for the absolute worst option, when it really wasn't necessary.
Also agreed with Bonzo that the Scoobies were being horribly selfish when they agreed to resurrect Buffy. Sure, they tried to justify it by saying they thought they were rescuing her from Hell, but if they could pull her spirit back from the Beyond, they should have been able to find out where exactly she was, too.
I thought it was perverse, deconstructive, anti-heroic, soap opera rubish that was badly thought out and planned.
I'm not entirely sure it was thought out and planned at all!![]()
Because they didn't just jump the shark this season. They frickin' Tony Jaa'ed that motherfucker.
I kind of view it in the same way that I view Spider-Man 3 or the really crappy parts of NuBSG. Thematically and stylistically all are very similar. Dark, depressing, soap opera's where the previously heroic characters we once rooted for and admired become selfish, degenerate assholes and cheat on and backstab each other for the main purpose of pushing a cliche and heavey handed " Message of Forgiveness" at the end. Most of the narative is rooted in nihlism, and it's rarely subtle about it.
That's a good point, and, I think would have been an excellent way to turn Willow evil... Dark Willow wasn't necessarily a bad idea... in fact, it was a great one (which I think is one of the sole reasons why people want to redeem this season so much), just horribly set up. Don't turn magic into a drug, but use the Star Wars Force analogy instead... Using dark magic (like necromancy) can corrupt a person, amplifying the more selfish and evil urges, bringing the id ascendant. Thus instead of being a bit of a control freak and a little bit needy, she becomes a mental compeller and a total obsessive. Studies dark tomes, takes baby steps down the path of evil... they could have dug a lot of drama by drawing out her Start of Darkness better. Heck, you could even still have Tara killed, if you establish her more properly as the one thing keeping her still human... though, ideally, I would have killed Xander. He's just as close to Willow as Tara (just a different way), and Tara would have probably proven more useful in bringing Willow down in a not-totally-lame fashion like they ended up doing... besides, it would have been a great chance for Wheedon to invert the women-in-the-fridge plot device by stuffing a male in for a change.The Willow arc is shamefully curtailed by writers who got scared and chickened out of really making one of their day-one regulars bad. Early on, the arc is obvious through Tara - Willow's long-seen control freak tendencies are beginning to take her over, through the metaphor of magic.ne' addiction metaphor instead, nice and forgiveable, not really her fault, doesn't damage poor little Willow. One of the show's biggest missed opportunities, imho.
That's a good point, and not something I'd thought about. Even worse when you consider that they hurt her through completely mundane means instead of supernatural supervillainy.And I actually qutie like the Trio as bad guys - especially the fact that Buffy's lamest villains actually do pretty much the worst lasting damage of any to that point
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