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"You're standing at the mouth of Hell. And it's about to open up." *

***
"I'm beyond tired. I'm beyond scared.
I'm standing on the mouth of Hell and it's going to swallow me whole. And it'll choke on me." **
* Joss Whedon
** Marti Noxon & Douglas Petrie

Date: 2013-04-17 10:54 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] red-satin-doll.livejournal.com
No contest on the love scenes - although I DO NOT hate Kennedy. Again, I think she's rather awesome in her own ways - and yes, she's spoiled, but she's young, too, and I love her date with Willow.

I'd be fascinated to hear more about your take re: fascism on the show, because I can't pretend to have made a study of it by any means; so what I know is the 101 version. I assume you're referring to the Initiative?

And yes, I agree that Maggie would have made a better big bad for S4, but Lindsay Crouch had to/wanted to leave the show for other projects. I had actually hoped that she would be a role model for Buffy and/or Willow, because mature women on the show are in very short supply. Jenny is killed, Gwendolyn Post is evil, Joyce exists almost entirely as "Mom" and that's really it.

Barring that, Adam could have been a great big bad if they'd handled it right.

Date: 2013-04-18 09:55 am (UTC)
From: [personal profile] kikimay
I think that the Initiative has some fascistic hints, after all they wanted to build the perfect soldier and to neutralize in secret an entire race (demons)
You know, I actually like Adam. It's an interesting creature and the most scary Big Bad. (At least to me. I think he's so scary, brrr!) What did go wrong? I think it was Riley. Professor Walsh was an interesting character and so the concept of the Initiative. IMHO, Riley was the weakest link: we were supposed to being interested in his moral conflict (Buffy VS the Initiative) and being interested in his understanding of the truth and everything ... but we didn't.

Date: 2013-04-18 11:28 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] frelling-tralk.livejournal.com
That was always one of my main problems with the season 4 central arc (sorry to butt in!) It made Riley the emotional focus so, while I can enjoy season 4 for one-off episodes and a happier Buffy, I couldn't really connect with the big arc episodes making the emotional focus Riley clutching on to Buffy's scarf and finding out what he had believed about Prof.Walsh was a lie, or rebelling against the government and declaring himself an anarchist. It was Buffy's story that I cared about, and she wasn't particularly emotionally gutted by Adam or the Initiative the way that she had been in previous seasons by the Master, Angelus,and Faith, so there wasn't all that much heart there for me to care about

Date: 2013-04-18 01:46 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] red-satin-doll.livejournal.com
It made Riley the emotional focus so, while I can enjoy season 4 for one-off episodes and a happier Buffy, I couldn't really connect with the big arc episodes making the emotional focus Riley

Excellent point. Joss complained later about Riley being a boring character, but that's his job as a writer, to find what is interesting in each character or else what the hell are they there for?

It was Buffy's story that I cared about, and she wasn't particularly emotionally gutted by Adam or the Initiative the way that she had been in previous seasons by the Master, Angelus,and Faith, so there wasn't all that much heart there for me to care about

It's telling that one of my favorite episodes of the season - and one of my favorites of the entire series - is Who Are You, which deals with the fallout of Faith and Buffy's relationship in S4. It's my headcanon that the switch affected Buffy as much as it does Faith. If Faith is altered by being inside Buffy's body and eventually sets herself on the path to redemption, I think the reverse is also true. I don't know if that's canon, but thematically, the episode foreshadows Buffy's increasing darkness, self-doubt, her relationship with Spike in S6 (DT hangs a lantern on this, in fact).

My fondness for S4 stems more perhaps by how the events reverberate through the remaining seasons rather than the season itself. Or, I actually like it quite a bit except for Riley/Adam, so, hmm.

Date: 2013-04-18 05:30 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] infinitewhale.livejournal.com

Joss also called Riley well-adjusted...which he most certainly wasn't. I can't say as I found him boring, really. It's just he's not the main character and his issues are never really addressed so he just ended up being annoying in many ways.

Date: 2013-04-18 06:35 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] red-satin-doll.livejournal.com
I liked him in S4 mostly because Buffy seemed happy with him - non-traumatic sex and all that - and didn't get the fandom hate for him; and then S5 hit and that was all she wrote, folks.

Date: 2013-04-18 08:15 pm (UTC)
From: [personal profile] kikimay
I hate the fact that Joss still think he was "a good guy". And he was, ultimately, but he was also so messed up and parading around his big wounded ego and I wanted to someone to just point it out: Riley, you're a good guy but damn if you complain too much!

Date: 2013-04-18 08:20 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] red-satin-doll.livejournal.com
For a moment there I wasn't sure if you were talking about Joss or Riley! Because they sure sound the same - the big wounded egos, etc. Joss acts like a baby when he doesn't get his way.

I'm not sure if I'd define Riley as "good or bad"; I think he's far more morally ambiguous than he wants to think he is. He wants to see himself as a white hat, but neither does he want to question the system or think about it to hard. As long as he can put things in neat little categories he feels safe. To me in that way he isn't heroic in the way that Buffy and Spike are.

And isn't that at the heart of fascism?
Edited Date: 2013-04-18 08:21 pm (UTC)

Date: 2013-04-18 08:30 pm (UTC)
From: [personal profile] kikimay
And isn't that at the heart of fascism?

It is! Nice catch and nice analysis of Riley. I guess that I see him as "good" because he strongly believes that he's good but he does questionable things and he basically has this strong internal system because he's "the soldier", he's always been the soldier and he will always be. But soldiers are not always heroes.

Date: 2013-04-18 09:40 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] red-satin-doll.livejournal.com
It is! Nice catch and nice analysis of Riley.

I'm actually cribbing off norwie2010 quite a bit, but thanks!

he's always been the soldier and he will always be. But soldiers are not always heroes.

Might doesn't make right. But if you're carrying the gun, you need to believe that, I think.

I do think he sees himself as lightened and liberal to an extent - liberal but not progressive or transgressive. He admires strong women, he marries someone who is his peer, but he's making adjustments to the system, not radical changes.

Date: 2013-04-18 10:09 pm (UTC)
From: [personal profile] kikimay
Again, I agree with your - and Norwie- analysis. I think it's frustrating for the audience because Buffy often doubts about herself and her judgement while Riley mostly doesn't.

Date: 2013-04-24 01:48 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] red-satin-doll.livejournal.com
I think it's frustrating for the audience because Buffy often doubts about herself and her judgement while Riley mostly doesn't.

I had to process that a bit, but you're right. At least it's frustrating for those of us who love Buffy? (or maybe just you and me? IDK) After watching the show I was still steaming about it (thanks for nothing AYW! grrrr....) and said something along the lines of "Buffy wouldn't run after the helicopter she wouldn't beg or buckle like that," blah blah - and then someone said to me "Parker". Which then reminded me of how she blames herself for him (she has to go into CaveBuffy mode to take her anger out on him - which is funny in-context but if you think about it a minute, it's another proof that Buffy hasn't learned healthy coping skills. Then again, none of these kids have. You don't become healthy and well-adjusted in a vacuum!)

This is why Riley isn't a hero to me - he starts to wade into his own darkness, gets scared and runs away to create a life that looks very shiny on the outside at least. He projects what he wants others to see in him. Which, good for him on one level, but what happens the next time there's a crisis? There's an emptiness to him, IMO. And that's a lot of what I like about S7 - Buffy and the SG are trying to take responsibility for their own actions without taking on someone else's responsibility, whether with words or actions. (I include Spike in that, and I know that's a controversial thing to say.) The First and Giles arriving, actually, sidetrack Buffy on that account until nearly the end of the season.

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