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Frank Kogan ([personal profile] koganbot) wrote2009-10-17 06:46 am
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Buffy Season Two Episode Seven

"OK, but do they really stick out?"

"What?"

"Sore thumbs. Do they stick out? I mean, have you ever seen a thumb and gone, 'Wow! That baby is sore!'?"

"You have too many thoughts."

Episode starts real shitty, then turns relatively good. Problem is the script's heavy-handed insistence that Buffy is jealous and doesn't trust Angel, and doesn't trust her own appeal, etc., and that Angel is also insecure and jealous, and there's new guy Ford to be jealous of, and Xander's jealous in his usual way, and the show gets mired in all this exposition.

The reason it feels like exposition is that the show has never sold us on Buffy's insecurities or on her* and Angel being anything but trustworthy, in relation to each other and to everybody else. Now, irl it would make sense that a 16-year-old who has mastery in one part of her life might feel plenty insecure in others, or that someone who has a basic nonnormal aspect to his being might wonder if anyone would really want to get close to him, even if he is strong and handsome. But as I said, the show has never sold us on this, so Xander is the only one whose jealousy believably emanates from his personality (since he does get overlooked and he really is vastly more interesting than sensitively morose hunkboy Angel; but Interesting isn't what Buffy needs).

But then the episode finds itself, thanks to a genuine mystery about who Ford is and what he wants, leading us to a hilarious goth club and its sweet young things, enamored of "vampires," i.e., the misunderstood "Lonely Ones," and wishing to join them. And here the show becomes deft and funny, rapidly suggesting in demeanor and dialogue all sorts of history and petty resentments among the goth kids, as if walking into their club were like walking into an office. And back in the vampire lair, it is amusing to watch Spike as he realizes he has to deal with dorkboy Ford rather than getting to dispatch him instantly. Poor Spike, always reliant on the none-too-competent help of inferiors.

Meanwhile, aboveground, Angel almost makes a joke about his moroseness, and the scriptwriters continue to tease us with how and when Willow is going to blossom.

Ford's got a sad story that is introduced near the end, with just enough time and emphasis to make us feel pathos, but not enough to descend into sap.

*Is it "her and Angel" or "she and Angel"? I suppose it could be "her and Angel's," but the possessive doesn't feel right (though it would be fine if I put "their," so what's my problem with "Angel's"?). But I'm not sure if she's acting as subject or being an object in that sentence. "On her" versus "she being"? I am the master of many things, but the present participle is not one of them.

[identity profile] dubdobdee.livejournal.com 2009-10-18 04:53 pm (UTC)(link)
yes!

The first two (being identical) are genuine nominative absolutes: absolute -- I believe -- because "he" is at most only implied in "I was being sympathetic."

I suspect the nominative absolute in English exists so as replicate the elegant and economc ablative absolute in Latin -- where you can hang a significant qualifying phrase off the main sentence without all kinds of relational faff, because nothing in the qualifying phrase is directly mentioned in the main sentence. Hence its faintly fancy-soundingness.