- The Wish is awesome, y'all.
- Amends is slightly less stupid this time round, though it very much feels like AtS Episode 00.
Oh, and the Magic Snow? Still not a fan.
- Buffy has very unfortunate hair from Amends onward. The Zeppo is especially boggle-inducing.
- You know, I still just can't wrap my head around Buffy's behavior in Bad Girls. I
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However, I don't think Buffy's actions in 'Bad Girls' are quite so strange even so when you look at them in context:
* Her mother just betrayed her and tried to kill her.
* Giles just betyrayed her and almost got her killed.
* Angel was acting all weird and tried to kill himself, which in Buffy's eyes probably counts as a betrayal too.
Her life's in turmoil. All the adults she's grown to trust and look on as role models suddenly prove that they're fallible and flawed after all. And she's just turned 18.
Is it so surprising that she might say to herself "Screw them all!", and stop trying to be the 'good girl' all the time, when nobody else seems that bothered about doing the right thing? Why can't she just please herself and do what she wants for a change, instead of always having to be dutiful?
I've just been watching Smashed/Wrecked/Gone, and there's a definite similarity between Willow and Amy in S6 and Buffy and Faith in S3. Except I don't think Amy had the hots for Willow.
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No. I just don't buy the suddenness of it. Like I said, I recognize the narrative elements they had in place to get Buffy to that point. But we don't see any build-up in previous episodes for it. After Helpless, Buffy didn't seem to have any problems with Giles. Ditto with Angel after Amends. And Joyce after Gingerbread.
So I still can't get my head around the Insta-Rebel Buffy of Bad Girls. My first instinct is, "What? Spell?" when I watch it.
But, obviously, YMMV.
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