GENERAL DISCUSSIONS

Joss' fascination with torture ?

POSTED BY: THESOMNAMBULIST
UPDATED: Monday, December 27, 2004 07:15
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Friday, December 24, 2004 2:56 PM

TERAPH


Quote:

Originally posted by PurpleBelly:
Does anyone have anything to say about Joss and torture?



Yes.

Quote:

The original poster would probably like to know.


Let's see, the original poster asked:

Quote:

Original poster: Does Joss have some fascination with it do you think?


Possibly. But I don't know what that fascination could be. People are fascinated by things for so many reasons (since fascination can come from liking something or being terrified of it).

Quote:

Original poster: Or is it just a great topic for character development?


I think it can be used for character development, or learning something about a character, or as a plot hook. (I believe the pilot of "Alias" started with her being tortured, and then jumped back in time, leaving us to wonder how she got there. Could someone correct me if I'm completely mistaken about that?)


Quote:

Original poster: What do you think?...And how well were they done?


Do you mean, "how accurate" or "how well did the show use torture as a story device"?



Quote:

Originally posted by PurpleBelly:
How about the torture of characters with whom we do not identify?



I have no problem with torture being part of a story -- whether the victim be Mal or Prisoner #2 -- so long as it is in support of the story. That means there has to be a reason for it beyond "it would be cool/edgy/ultraviolent to have a torture scene here!". Of course, I think the same thing about car chases, gun battles, and even dialogue. Serve the story, or get out.


What's your opinion of the torture of characters with whom we do not identify?

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Friday, December 24, 2004 4:17 PM

DEWSHINE


ah, well...what an interesting thread.

After reading everything I am compelled to respond on two levels.

One, torture is repulsive.

Two, however, it is that element of aversion that makes one glued to the screen when it is presented that gives torture its dramatic element. When we see Niska's relitive hanging upside down and hear him screaming the automatic conclusion is that Niska is not a nice fellow. Danger flags go up. Having seen this, having heard that Jayne was all ready with his knife and the "pain is scary" bit in 'Serenity', then Jayne telling everyone that Niska is not all warm and fuzzy like he is only hightened that sense of danger. Just about the point in the show where we've forgotten about Niska along comes 'War Stories'.

The torture is a plot device to show how heartless Niska is. It conveys how much danger Mal has put his crew in by returning the medicine that they'd been contracted to take. The bells started ringing the moment I saw the space station.

The entire element of violence in the Firefly universe serves to remind us that this is not our modern society...but a vision of what might happen in our future. Sure there are things that relate back and forth but overall, most of us are blissfully unaware of the high levels of violence shown in Firefly on a daily basis...

Joss uses these elements to show that his vision of the firefly 'verse, and the buffyverse, are dark places that the normal people don't even realize are there, co-existing along side our so-called peaceful lives. Where would the inhabints of Sunnydale have been without the slayer to protect them?
Similarly I believe River would have developed along similar lines had the show stayed on the air...

Check out the improved planetslam.com
Gallerys, message boards, Chat and more...

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Friday, December 24, 2004 5:07 PM

THESOMNAMBULIST


Quote:

Originally posted by teraph:

Quote:

Original poster: What do you think?...And how well were they done?


Do you mean, "how accurate" or "how well did the show use torture as a story device"?




No, I mean; what do you all think of Joss Whedon having torture scenes in each of his shows?

Buffy
Angel
and Firefly.

To me there's some kind of excorsicm of notions.

Usually when an artist repeats his/her motifs it is because they haven't quite managed to express their original intent....

...Or they develop an obsession with a theme, to the extent that it begins to permiate their work over the course of time on a subconsious level.

I was curious what the concensus was on this topic. Wether it (torture) is viewed as:
*Joss Whedon actually having an obsession with torture, or
*Joss Whedon regarding torture as a convenient device for furthering the narrative.

Anyway it's late here. Almost 3:00am Christmas morning....And yes I can't sleep! ....Ironic considering.......

*Merry Christmas*

....TheSomnambulist :)

www.cirqus.com

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Friday, December 24, 2004 6:09 PM

TLACOOK


Why are we assuming that the obsession (if there is one) is Joss'?


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Friday, December 24, 2004 6:59 PM

TERAPH


First thing:

Merry Christmas.

Quote:

Originally posted by TheSomnambulist:
I was curious what the concensus was on this topic. Wether it (torture) is viewed as:
*Joss Whedon actually having an obsession with torture, or
*Joss Whedon regarding torture as a convenient device for furthering the narrative.



Well, I don't know if we'll get a consensus, but I think it's more of #2. It's an easy method of saying "this person is evil". Also, I think, in some cases it's just what would believably happen. Many times, it comes from someone wanting information, and being evil enough to use torture.

That said, I think many dramatic writers, and especially horror/dark drama writers would consider torture part of their "toolkit" of options. It, alongside sex crimes like rape, incest and sexual degradation (e.g., sex for drugs) are some of the darkest parts of human experience, and thus fodder for writers. (Cannibalism is dark too, but I don't see that very often on TV.)

How many TV serial killers have tortured or raped their victims? How many cop shows have used incest as a twist in a case? Shows like Law & Order: SVU and the Profiler were based entirely around horrible people doing horrible things.

That said, torture does seem to get more play on the Mutant Enemy than sex crimes do (although Marti Noxon made a good effort at raising the weird/creepy sex stuff in season six).

I mention Mutant Enemy, because a room full of writers comes up with these scripts, so being able to pin who suggested torture is hard. But I honestly don't Joss is obsessed with it. We may have to wait and see if it shows up in "Serenity" or not.


I'll close with a list. To my memory, these are all the acts of physical torture (ranging from the threat of torture to extreme torture) in Mutant Enemy shows.

With the exception of "Halloween" I am assuming that the character enjoys committing torture, and I thus only list "pleasure" as a reason when that is the only reason for the torture. It's possible that Glory doesn't enjoy using torture, but she's a little harder to read. It is also debatable whether Willow took any pleasure from torturing Warren. She may not have been in the mindset to enjoy anything at all.


Buffy: "When She Was Bad" (2.01)
Victim: Vamp Girl by Buffy (cross in mouth)
Writer: Joss Whedon
Reason: Information

Buffy: "Halloween" (2.06)
Victim: Ethan by Giles
Writer: Carl Ellsworth
Reason: Information

Buffy: "Becoming: Part 2" (2.22)
Victim: Giles by Angel
Writer: Joss Whedon
Reason: Information

Buffy: "The Wish" (3.09)
Victim: Angel by Vamp Willow
Writer: Marti Noxon
Reason: Pleasure

Buffy: "Enemies" (3.17)
Victim: Buffy (almost) by Faith and "Angelus"
Writer: Douglas Petrie
Reason: Pleasure

Buffy: "No Place Like Home" (5.05)
Victim: A monk by Glory
Writer: Douglas Petrie
Reason: Information

Buffy: "Intervention"
Victim: Spike by Glory
Writer: Jane Espenson
Reason: Information

Buffy: Season Five
I think Glory tortured someone else.

Buffy: "Villains" (6.20)
Victim: Warren by Willow
Writer: Marti Noxon
Reason: Revenge



Angel: "In the Dark" (1.03)
Victim: Angel by Marcus
Writer: Douglas Petrie
Reason: Information

Angel: "Five by Five" (1.18)
Victim: Wesley by Faith
Writer: Jim Kouf
Reason: I don't recall...

Angel: "Damage" (5.11)
Victim: Spike by Dana
Writer: Steven S. DeKnight & Drew Goddard
Reason: I don't recall...


Firefly: "Train Job"
Victim: Unnamed by Niska and Crow(?)
Writer: Joss Whedon and Tim Minear
Reason: Punishment (Revenge)

Firefly: "War Games"
Victim: Unknown, Mal and Wash by Niska and ?
Writer: Cheryl Cain
Reason: Punishment (Revenge)

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Friday, December 24, 2004 9:05 PM

ANKHAGOGO


Quote:

Originally posted by teraph:
I'll close with a list. To my memory, these are all the acts of physical torture (ranging from the threat of torture to extreme torture) in Mutant Enemy shows.




This is a discussion a friend of mine and I had some time ago, so I'll add some.

We also included Dawn by Doc (cutting her up on the tower), Willow by that creepy thing in the cave (pulling off strips of her stomach --EW), Xander by Ashanti over the seal in the basement, Oz by the Initiative (I'm willing to hear arguements that this is a stretch), Gunn by that big dude in the basement, ditto Lindsey, Lorne by Wolfram & Hart (we saw the damage, but not the actual brainsucking), Cordy by Billy, guided by W&H, Spike by the First, Dru by Angelus (which we saw just bits of), Justine by Wesley (if you count him locking her in a closet for a summer as torture), oh, and Angleus by Holtz in a flashback.
Almost everyone on Buffy or Angel has been tortured at some point, to one extent or another. I think Joyce is the only main character that hasn't been. Unless we're not counting Tara's brain getting sucked.

I'd say there's a pattern there.:)
I just have no idea what it means.
I agree, however, that it's not necessarily indicative of anything about Whedon's mental state. I mean, some of the stuff Stephen King writes is just -- disturbing on every level there is. But he seems to be a fairly mild-mannered, normal dude, by all accounts. Normal for a guy with 40 ka-trillion dollars, that is.

But out of all that torture, what's disturbed me the most is Evil Pregnant Cordelia manipulating Connor's emotions. The scenes with the two of them almost make me physically ill. A close second is Drusilla appearing as Jenny Calendar -- that creeps me out to no end. I'll say it again -- I think the mental torture is worse to watch.

"I know your name, jackass!"

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Saturday, December 25, 2004 8:01 AM

TERAPH


Quote:

Originally posted by Ankhagogo:
We also included Dawn by Doc (cutting her up on the tower) ... Xander by Ashanti over the seal in the basement



I personally wouldn't include sacrifices as torture. I never got the sense that either of these cases involved someone desiring their victim to suffer, only that they die in the proper fashion.

Quote:

Willow by that creepy thing in the cave (pulling off strips of her stomach --EW)


Gnarl! That's a good one. Talk about playing with your food.

Quote:

Oz by the Initiative (I'm willing to hear arguements that this is a stretch)


Yes, although in their minds it would be "animal testing".

Quote:

Lorne by Wolfram & Hart (we saw the damage, but not the actual brainsucking)


Well, we never saw it, so I don't kow how long it took. Was it just an quick act of violence, or was it torture? Are we going to try an seperate batttery from torture. Is there a line?

Quote:

Cordy by Billy, guided by W&H


That was brain torture, wasn't it? (I barely remember that episode. I seem to recall W&H doing a couple of brain tortures on Cordy. I completely forgot to list those.)

Quote:

Justine by Wesley (if you count him locking her in a closet for a summer as torture)


Nah. That's just imprisonment. I wouldn't count that as totrure, no matter how unjustified her imprisonment was.


Quote:

Unless we're not counting Tara's brain getting sucked.


I wouldn't.


Quote:

I'd say there's a pattern there.:)
I just have no idea what it means.



I think it means the same things as the regular use of rape and incest in procedural and cop shows. It's a useful writing tool for showing how cruel people can be to each other.

There is almost an audience issue too. I think viewers of Whedon shows would be more willing to accept torture than rape/incest, and viewers of the the crime shows would be more willing to accept the sex crimes than the torture. (And by "accept" I don't mean "enjoy". I mean only that they would find it a more believable part of the story's world.)


Quote:

I'll say it again -- I think the mental torture is worse to watch.


I tend to agree. Especially if the performer is good. (Although Gnarl eating Willow was pretty hard to watch.)

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Saturday, December 25, 2004 2:06 PM

ANKHAGOGO


Quote:

Originally posted by teraph:
Quote:

Originally posted by Ankhagogo:
We also included Dawn by Doc (cutting her up on the tower) ... Xander by Ashanti over the seal in the basement


Quote:

I personally wouldn't include sacrifices as torture. I never got the sense that either of these cases involved someone desiring their victim to suffer, only that they die in the proper fashion.


See, I would. I don't necessarily consider torture as a desire to see someone suffer -- I think inflicting pain on someone in small steps (with or without the intended end result being death) is torture. I thought Dawn and Xander looked as if they thought they were being tortured--and actually, now that I'm thinking back, it seems like both Doc and Ashanti looked as if they were enjoying themselves.


Quote:

Lorne by Wolfram & Hart (we saw the damage, but not the actual brainsucking)

Quote:

Well, we never saw it, so I don't kow how long it took. Was it just an quick act of violence, or was it torture? Are we going to try an seperate batttery from torture. Is there a line?

It's Wolfram & Hart -- I just assume it's torture. >:)

Quote:

Cordy by Billy, guided by W&H

Quote:

That was brain torture, wasn't it? (I barely remember that episode. I seem to recall W&H doing a couple of brain tortures on Cordy. I completely forgot to list those.)

Oh yeah, she got locked into her visions in Season One, didn't she? But there was definitely a manifestation of physical injury on both occasions, and again -- it's W&H. I will always assume the worst intentions of them.


Quote:

Justine by Wesley (if you count him locking her in a closet for a summer as torture)

Quote:

Nah. That's just imprisonment. I wouldn't count that as totrure, no matter how unjustified her imprisonment was.

Yeah, I actually agree -- but I suspect that, had it taken much longer to find Angel, there may have been torture involved. Hard to tell with angry Wes.

Quote:

Unless we're not counting Tara's brain getting sucked.

Quote:

I wouldn't.

I don't think we did, either. I just remembered it as I was typing.


Quote:

I'd say there's a pattern there.:)
I just have no idea what it means.


Quote:

I think it means the same things as the regular use of rape and incest in procedural and cop shows. It's a useful writing tool for showing how cruel people can be to each other.
There is almost an audience issue too. I think viewers of Whedon shows would be more willing to accept torture than rape/incest, and viewers of the the crime shows would be more willing to accept the sex crimes than the torture. (And by "accept" I don't mean "enjoy". I mean only that they would find it a more believable part of the story's world.)



I agree, especially if you take into consideration how people reacted to the whole Buffy-Spike (or Wes/Lilah, for that matter) "relationship", or to Early's threats to Kaylee in Objects in Space. Lots of people were mildly to extremely disturbed by those things, while very few responded in the same way to War Stories or whichever one it was where Angelus tortured Giles.

"I know your name, jackass!"

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Saturday, December 25, 2004 2:59 PM

GWENHARKER


I was one of the people not only disturbed by the whole buffy/spike thing, but also disgusted adn the degrading storyline to those characters.

Moving on.

I think what Joss means by showing the torture is the mental stuff a character goes through during that time. Many are diffrent, Mal's torture attitude is very diffrent from Giles'.

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Saturday, December 25, 2004 4:54 PM

THESOMNAMBULIST


Quote:


Why are we assuming that the obsession (if there is one) is Joss'?



Because Joss is the common dinominator through-out all three shows. I think David Solomon is maybe the only other main decision maker who has been with him from the very first Buffy.

I could be wrong though.

It would I guess have been more correct if I'd said Mutant Enemy.

www.cirqus.com

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Saturday, December 25, 2004 5:22 PM

THESOMNAMBULIST


Quote:

Originally posted by teraph:
First thing:

Merry Christmas.




Teraph thanks - you to :)

Quote:


That said, I think many dramatic writers, and especially horror/dark drama writers would consider torture part of their "toolkit" of options. It, alongside sex crimes like rape, incest and sexual degradation (e.g., sex for drugs) are some of the darkest parts of human experience, and thus fodder for writers. (Cannibalism is dark too, but I don't see that very often on TV.)

How many TV serial killers have tortured or raped their victims? How many cop shows have used incest as a twist in a case? Shows like Law & Order: SVU and the Profiler were based entirely around horrible people doing horrible things.



Yeah I'd go along with that. I like the 'Toolkit" notion. That makes sense. That's maybe the way I'm reading it too. Or as a method for narrative advancement, rather than 'easy horror' .....

Mind you there's great humour derived from much of the torture scenes.....

Quote:


I mention Mutant Enemy, because a room full of writers comes up with these scripts, so being able to pin who suggested torture is hard. But I honestly don't Joss is obsessed with it. We may have to wait and see if it shows up in "Serenity" or not.



Yeah granted. I merely mentioned Joss because he is our way in to the Mutant Enemy collective.

I also don't think he's obssessed, and that is why I suggested 'fascinated' for the thread topic.

Cheers for the list - I wouldn't personally regarded many of those you've listed as acts of torture - but that's just a difference of opinion, and I couldn't tell you where the boundaries would be drawn where we to try and come to some common ground.

I guess much of what occurs on a TV show arises from what's happened previously....For the show to advance new ideas must be generated and therefore the natural show development may lead to these various horror landmarks. Torture being just one of them.

Maybe I've read too much into it. I dunno, but it was just something that struck while I had to endure another night of insomnia.

Still this has all made for a very interesting read. So thanks to all.

Cheers
TheSomnambulist

www.cirqus.com

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Saturday, December 25, 2004 5:58 PM

TLACOOK


Gwen,

May I ask how old you are? From what I have found, people who didn't live through theier twenties yet (and possibly into their midthirties) had much more difficulty with the destructive relationship motif of season 6.

I thought the whole season was spot on and very very realistic.

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Saturday, December 25, 2004 6:52 PM

CARDIE


Quote:

Originally posted by tlacook:
From what I have found, people who didn't live through theier twenties yet (and possibly into their midthirties) had much more difficulty with the destructive relationship motif of season 6.



I'm 55 and thought the motif was very poorly brought off and that the whole season was a big, Marti Noxon-induced mistake.

Now I wasn't horrified or squicked by it. I just thought that it was a conscious effort to show us people being depressed and thus mean to each other for a season, and that it didn't accomplish much by doing so.

Cardie

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Saturday, December 25, 2004 7:11 PM

TLACOOK


And I thought it summed up the depression and destructive behavior of my twenties, quite well.

There was really nothing in that season that I could not relate to. It was much more relatable than the previous seasons by a landslide.

Lots of half naked JM did not hurt either.

Maybe a generational thing. *shrug*

And I adore Marti Noxon and can't wait for Point Pleasant to come out next month. I also never understood the problems people have with her. I think she is brilliant.

Once, again. Must be a generational thing.

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Sunday, December 26, 2004 4:22 AM

GWENHARKER


Quote:

May I ask how old you are? From what I have found, people who didn't live through theier twenties yet (and possibly into their midthirties) had much more difficulty with the destructive relationship motif of season 6.

I thought the whole season was spot on and very very realistic.



Don't mind at all. I'm 16, 17 in a couple months or so.

Season 6 wasn't as disturbing or disgusting because of just the generel destructive behavior. I've gone through friends with destructive behavior, one commited suicide, so it takes alot to bother me . What was most bothersome to me is the fact that all the characters had been replaced by pod people.

Now, I know the characters aren't going to be the same, but lemme explain.

Season four, for me, was the begining of the twisting of Buffy's character. She's out of high school and three episodes into the fourth season, she's sleeping with someone? Hello, the last time she slept with someone, he lost his soul! Buffy doesn't give herself so freely, we saw this over and over during season Three and I really, really doubt such a dramatic change over sex could've happened so suddenly with no explanation whatsoever. SMG even said herself that she had gone to Joss and said 'Hey, uh, I really don't think Buffy would do this' and Joss said 'She's in college, she's going to be sleeping with guys'.

-_-

Now, to my main thing about the whole Spike/Buffy thing. Yeah, it was confirmed severel times that Spike? Replacment Angel. It bothered me that they tried to sell it off as 'True Love' in Season 7.

Here's my other bothering bit with that season. SPIKE RAPED HER AND THEN IT WAS IMMEDIETLY FORGOTTEN BECAUSE 'OH! SPIKE DOESN'T HAVE A SOUL!'

And here's the other thing. Some of the worst seasons on that show (four and six) we're because Joss had a new shiny pet project.

Season Four was Angel. I understand because hey! It's adjusting to working on two shows, it's going to be a little difficult.

As you can see, I have lots of issues.

I turned the television off every Tuesday feeling... depressed. I'm a Buffy/Angel Shipper, I heart my classic Buffy (seasons one, two and three) so yeah, that's part of why I didn't like season 6. Buffy went boning Spike and Angel and Cordelia were being shoved down our throats trying to sell us with 'kyerumption' so people would move onto C/A and would accept B/S (B/S for a reason *coughs*).

It worked on some, didn't work on me. Those weren't my characters up there. And you know something else, alot of people alot older than myself agree with me, so really, age doesn't have everything to do with it.

Season Six was when my two favorite shows went down the drain because of a shiny little bug in space. Oh-ho, I was so amazingly pissed off. He just started getting into a routine and both shows were starting to get back to being better as Joss found a good routine, but then Firefly comes along and it's 'Hey Marti, take your fascination with bleached vampire and have fun!' and whomever got to the helm at Angel (I think it was Greenwalt, who really had no experiance running a show) to take the helm at Angel while he went and made Firefly.

Oh Firefly, how bittersweet my love is for you. You're my classic Buffy Seasons one and Two, my superb Angel Season one! Joss has proved that it takes him awhile for him to juggle shows. Sadly, the shows that made him what he is, payed for it.

I love Firefly, but I love(d) Buffy and Angel more. Between network splits and abandonment by their creator? Sigh...

So yeah, ummm, I'm 16 and I look at things diffrent from you. But it pisses me off when people say that because I'm not the only one with the same viewpoint on that subject. Like I said, I know ALOT of people much older than myself who feel like that.

So the next time you want to push off an opinion because *oh, she must be oh so young* then please think a little, alright?

Bitterly going to watch Firefly because Buffy DVDs haven't arrived yet,

Gwen

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Sunday, December 26, 2004 6:08 AM

AMYEL


Oh Gwen, Gwen Gwen.....

Quote:

Originally posted by GwenHarker:

Season four, for me, was the begining of the twisting of Buffy's character. She's out of high school and three episodes into the fourth season, she's sleeping with someone?



Jane Espenson (the writer of the Buffy-Parker sex) chalks it up to faulty editing. At the end of "Harsh Light of Day", there was a whole conversation with Buffy talking to Willow that she had been thinking "I'm over Angel, it's not about Angel, see how much I've moved on? It's not about Angel..." and she then realizes that it IS all about Angel. But it got cut out for time. I wish they realized that when they were actually editing the ep... but whatever.

Quote:

Here's my other bothering bit with that season. SPIKE RAPED HER AND THEN IT WAS IMMEDIETLY FORGOTTEN BECAUSE 'OH! SPIKE DOESN'T HAVE A SOUL!'


He didn't rape her. He tried, and she beat his ass before he got that close. And HE DIDN'T HAVE A SOUL. Vampires are soulless. They are without souls, which mean they lack a moral compass and things get twisted. Buffy has the capacity to understand the difference. She forgave Angel before, even though while soulless he killed her friends. Spike, without a soul realized that he didn't have the capacity to understand the nuances in that mucky gray area that they were living in. Then he chose to get a soul in order to try to make things better (and yes, he always meant to go get a soul).

Why are you judging Spike the same pre-soul and post-soul and not Angel that same way? Just because he changes his name and Spike doesn't, it's still the same brain and body. Think of what Angelus did to Drusilla. He murdered her entire family and raped and tortured her until she went insane. And he was planning on doing the exact same thing to Buffy! But when Angel has a soul, he's good.

Quote:

and whomever got to the helm at Angel (I think it was Greenwalt, who really had no experiance running a show)


LOL! First of all, Greenwalt has TONS of television experience. In fact, 20th century FOX was the one who put Greenwalt on the Buffy staff in the first place because he was so experienced and Joss was brand new.

Also, Joss was never the show runner for Angel. He yayed or nayed all of the plot points, sure. But he always basically left Angel to its own devices. David Greenwalt was the show runner since the beginning until s3. Then Jeff Bell took over for the last two seasons.

And I really, really disagree that the season 6 characters were pod people. Everything that went wrong with them had seeds planted early on. Willow always used magic to make herself feel better. Xander has always felt like the useless schlubb. Giles feels deep remorse for the feeling that he's not good enough to keep his slayer/daughter figure alive. Buffy had been fighting her inner darkness for quite a while. And not to mention that she died (in a self-sacrifice, which is just another way to say "noble suicide"), was happy happy happy in heaven, brought back to life where she had to claw her way out of her own grave and immediately start fighting demons so that her friends (who did all that to her in the first place) didn't die. That's a lot to happen to a person, and if I was her I'd probably be even more moody than she was! I never understood why people expected her to get over it quickly. It's personal death, not just a bump in the road.

If Buffy was a real person, I'd be just about the exact same age as her. About a month older, actually. I have felt, and currently feel some of the exact same emotions. I know how pathetic and stupid you can feel when you realize that you are technically an adult, but all you feel is lost and aimless and totally clueless about what you're supposed to do. I'm not as self-destructive as the Scoobies. I'm more into wallowing, actually. But I understood where they're coming from.

GwenHarker, I think a lot of your issues have to do with shippiness, which is kind of a shame... Spike isn't a replacement for Angel. I love those two vampires more than I should (especially together *ahem*) but they both represent the journey to redemption, in two totally different ways.

The Scoobies grew up in a very rough situation and it's bound to effect them. They can't stay happy and carefree forever. Especially when their loved ones just get picked off one-by-one (or en-masse) by the forces of evil. Firefly had the same themes, but all the characters, save River and Kaylee, were much older than Scoobie-age and had figured the way to balance their own lives with the tragic crap that surrounds them.


(edited because I suck at coding and had to fix the quotes)

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Sunday, December 26, 2004 6:32 AM

REEQUEEN


Well, it's already been said (and here I sing the same old song) that it's probably a mistake to put a lot of psychological baggage on JW, simply because of a theme or three that some don't think are "appropriate" (when really what that means is that some people hate, hate, hate, that a show has evolved, and that the characters must evolve as well - and, as I've seen at sites like the Fametracker forum, and AintItCool, people register spite about Firefly because it "distracted" JW from "their" shows). As has been mentioned, it's a collaborative effort, putting together a show. While BtVS, Angel, and Firefly were the brain-children of JW, just because there were torture scenes and attempted rape, one cannot state that JW has psychological issues about sado-masochism on so little evidence. (And it was attempted rape, not rape, so facts straight, first.)

People, up to and including myself, get all proprietary over shows/movies/comics/whathaveyou they enjoy. They start to think of it as theirs, when in reality, it isn't. Which is why I try to see the production side for what it is - something that comes out of the imagination of other people for entertainment value, and if I sometimes pick up a metaphor here or there that means something to me, so much the better entertainment value. This proprietariness, which I struggle with, and has caused me to whine over Buffy and Angel stuff I found icky (Connor and Cordelia being the main thing I found hard to adjust to), is just something we all have to get over. The shows aren't ours in any other sense than that we are fans. Or flans, or Browncoats, or Servants of the Master.

Re-watching certain seasons has taught me a lot about the subtexts, and helped me appreciate the differences from season to season more. What I didn't like the first time 'round, I understood better; while I, at first, was somewhat irritated by season seven of BtVS, up until Caleb (because I luuuuhrrrved Caleb), it made sense to me, and on rewatching, I found it the best round-up of all the mythology I could've wanted. Although I am still a little freaked by the implied incest between Cordelia and Connor, having three sons, I totally get the whole Oedipal thing (and please understand, that was a metaphor, not something to be taken literally).

Having been 16 or 17, and being physically 55 (oh, menopause and old accident injuries are wonderful things), I think it's a bit insular to state that
(quoted from GwenHarker):
Quote:

So yeah, ummm, I'm 16 and I look at things diffrent from you. But it pisses me off when people say that because I'm not the only one with the same viewpoint on that subject. Like I said, I know ALOT of people much older than myself who feel like that.


Everybody looks at things differently, it's a fact of invividuality, not age. Just because older folks agree with you, don't make 'em right, either. You have a different opinion, fine, but a lack of experience is a big indicator of why you have that opinion, and I would state that anyone older who would have the same opinion, is lacking in experience in the same way. It's not about whether or not you or your friends have gone through "stuff," either, it's about learning things outside yourself and your group of friends, reading philosophy, history, politics, and all kinds of esoteric things a lot of people ignore because they're too busy "living their lives." It's about understanding that those who hold opinions other than those you personally agree with have value, as well, and may indeed, have the right to hold those opinions. It's about learning to accept that your opinions may not be correct, and learning to change your mind.

I know people have differing opinions from mine, and you're welcome to them. Just because I think you're wrong, doesn't mean I think you're somehow less of a person. Just wrong.

(Edited for tags. Oops.)

"Today we get to meet the real you." Niska - War Stories

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Sunday, December 26, 2004 12:20 PM

TLACOOK


Once again, I am late to the party and others have said what I wanted to say without being as bitchy about it as I would have been.

Xiexie.


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Sunday, December 26, 2004 5:36 PM

GWENHARKER


Quote:

GwenHarker, I think a lot of your issues have to do with shippiness, which is kind of a shame... Spike isn't a replacement for Angel. I love those two vampires more than I should (especially together *ahem*) but they both represent the journey to redemption, in two totally different ways.


I completely understand what you're saying and I do love the Spike Character. I met JM at a convention and he's a great guy, but I'm only saying what was in those eps. Spike's comment about 'that's his girl' and Buffy punching him repeatedly saying 'I'm not your girl' and telling him how 'only one vampire got me hot'.

Regaurdless of attempted/commiting the rape, I was dissatisfied with the fact that it was really never addressed. I separate Spike with and without his soul, even if his character didn't really change as much. I separate Angel with and without his soul.

I'm sad that Season Four was dismal because of editing. I think it would be more realistic (as realistic as you can get with vampires) in Buffy's 'mourning period'.

And yes, I am aware that the seeds for season six were planted early on, I am able to connect the dots, just doesn't mean I have to be happy about it.

Again, this is all just my juvienille opinion, but I love my Buffy characters and I just wish that they didn't try to take Forever away from me in the later season b/c that's what attracted me to the show in the first place.

Each to his or her own, I only know what I know.

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Sunday, December 26, 2004 6:02 PM

TLACOOK


One of the beautiful things about the writing on Mutant Enemy shows is that people from different backgrounds and life experiences can take away different things and different levels of meaning in the same things.

I remember reading LoTR when I was in high school and thinking it was fabulous. I also remember reading in 12 years later and seeing whole different levels of meaning.

That is the mark of good writing.

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Monday, December 27, 2004 5:43 AM

GWENHARKER


Quote:

One of the beautiful things about the writing on Mutant Enemy shows is that people from different backgrounds and life experiences can take away different things and different levels of meaning in the same things.


TLACook, Thank you for that. You're absolutely right.

Uhg, sorry everyone if I came off as harsh. It's been a bad week in my multi-fandom week.

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Monday, December 27, 2004 6:05 AM

THESOMNAMBULIST


Interesting about the Buffy season six differences...

I wasn't into season six either. I've had some destructive relationships myself and this was like any other destructive relationship.... Inaccessible.

However, there was some great stuff in there (The episode where Buffy is in a mental institution), it's just that I don't want to rewatch it quite like I do the previous seasons.

TheSomnambulist


www.cirqus.com

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Monday, December 27, 2004 7:15 AM

REEQUEEN


Quote:

Originally posted by tlacook:
Once again, I am late to the party and others have said what I wanted to say without being as bitchy about it as I would have been.

Xiexie.




I don't know - I think I managed to be pretty bitchy, and quite condescending. Of course, it all depends on what you wanted to say, and I'm not wanting to guess.

"Today we get to meet the real you." Niska - War Stories

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