Angel. The Fall

Dec 13, 2010 17:09

The main complaints against Angel's arc I saw online boil down to two claims: a) Angel is out of character and b) to service Buffy's journey, Angel is destroyed.

Judging by Jeanty's Q&As, Angel's arc in season 8 is over. He won't be in #40. It's time to sum up his story. What the hell has happened to him?
Angel, Joss way )

comics, angel, btvs season 8

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shipperx December 13 2010, 15:42:19 UTC
So, pre-season 8, Angel comes back to our times from the post-apocalyptic future. He saw the things to come and he knows that the Earth is doomed all the people he cares about will die.

Would have been nice had the execution not sucked so badly that anyone could have figured this out without fanwanking a single line of isolated text in an after-thought one-shot issue that hadn't been planned for the series and only came about after the readers did a collective "wha-huh?"

Only de-powerment can lead to further empowerment And only two no's can make a yes ( ... )

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moscow_watcher December 13 2010, 16:47:19 UTC
And only two no's can make a yes? I'm still boggling over depowering Buffy helps her...except, wait, weren't they powering up to be superbeings? So not really depowering. Just kinda-sorta-on-the-way-to-nonsensical-superpowers.

I think the premise works as a metaphor of the situation when a person has nothing to lose. He suddenly can do anything without bothering about consequences.

So why wasn't he surprised or more upset or more willing to help when it turned out to be? Instead he tried to convince Buffy that everything -- including the world ending -- was just fine.

I attribute it the the glow influence. *shrugs* Then again, Stormwreath up-thread thinks it's a normal human reaction. Maybe it's denial. Maybe. I don't know. It's the part that grates me the most.

And this? I categorize as Jeanty officially reaching. There's absolutely nothing to support that. It's trying to prove a negative "Well maybe it would've been worse"... Well, maybe it wouldn't have been! All we know for certain is that what he did do was catastrophic.I ( ... )

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elisi December 13 2010, 17:06:28 UTC
I think the premise works as a metaphor of the situation when a person has nothing to lose. He suddenly can do anything without bothering about consequences.
Last comment, honest, but this just fitted in too perfectly with this particular piece of dialogue (since I'm all about Jack today...)

IANTO: I've nothing left to lose.

JACK: There's always something left to lose.

Listen to Jack, he speaks the truth.


... )

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moscow_watcher December 13 2010, 17:55:47 UTC
Last comment, honest, but this just fitted in too perfectly with this particular piece of dialogue (since I'm all about Jack today...)

You're very welcome here, honey! Especially with more Jack gifs. :)))

(Seriously I stare at them and I'm like "season 8? what season 8?")

IANTO: I've nothing left to lose.
JACK: There's always something left to lose.

Listen to Jack, he speaks the truth.

The nameless slayer in "Chain" - did she have anything to lose?

Ozymandias was a stone cold brilliant *genius*, who planned and executed his own plan with great success and knew *exactly* what he was doing. That's why he's so scary.)

Ozymandias succeeded at horrible price. Angel thought he could succeed too.

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elisi December 13 2010, 18:49:59 UTC
You're very welcome here, honey! Especially with more Jack gifs. :))) (Seriously I stare at them and I'm like "season 8? what season 8?")
Really? Well in that case I shall bring you John Barrowman dancing in spotty underpants! :)


... )

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moscow_watcher December 13 2010, 20:41:41 UTC
Well in that case I shall bring you John Barrowman dancing in spotty underpants! :)

You. Are. Evil.

Instead of writing long words with obscure meaning I just sit and stare....

Really, she struck me as someone who deliberately chose the mission, understanding what she had to lose, but deciding that the sacrifice was worth it.

That's exactly what Angel did. Or, at least he thought he did.

Were those elves and slimy slugs's lives in the underworld less precious than the human lives Angel has sacrificed?

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elisi December 13 2010, 21:02:51 UTC
You. Are. Evil. Instead of writing long words with obscure meaning I just sit and stare....
*grins*

That's exactly what Angel did. Or, at least he thought he did.
No it isn't. (Not debating this, sorry.)

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shipperx December 13 2010, 19:09:12 UTC
Ozymandias was a megalomaniac. But we're told that Angel is in fact a 'hero'... or a puppet. Either way, there's a lack of acknowledgement of how monstrous the decision to do this (if he made a decision at all) actually was. And if he was a puppet all along, then it's not really a character arc. It's Angel as marionette.

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moscow_watcher December 13 2010, 20:47:41 UTC
But we're told that Angel is in fact a 'hero'...

We all know Joss' attitude to unadulterated heroes.

Yes, Captain Hammer's here, hair blowing in the breeze!
The day needs my saving expertise!

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shipperx December 13 2010, 21:07:48 UTC
We all know Joss' attitude to unadulterated heroes.

Doesn't matter what Joss' attitude is when 'hero' is what he markets the character as and when he throws in reasons why though he makes them do very unheroic things, they aren't actually responsible for their actions. Or they did good stuff off screen you didn't know about and ran counter to their stated goals so they aren't really wrong.

That's having your cake and wanting to eat it too.

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moscow_watcher December 13 2010, 22:07:08 UTC
Doesn't matter what Joss' attitude is when 'hero' is what he markets the character as

Joss didn't market Angel. The marketing department at TheWB did. Joss saw AtS as a much darker show from the very beginning. He couldn't commit to his vision on TV. He does it now.

when he throws in reasons why though he makes them do very unheroic things, they aren't actually responsible for their actions.

I've got the impression that Angel will be kept responsible for his actions. If it won't happen I will be very disappointed.

We'll see.

That's having your cake and wanting to eat it too.

Agree. But that's Joss traditional modus operandi. Angelus arc. Spike's and Anya's integration into the main cast.

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elisi December 13 2010, 22:42:44 UTC
Joss saw AtS as a much darker show from the very beginning. He couldn't commit to his vision on TV. He does it now.
Very last comment, I swear. I don't see this as dark. Torchwood is dark. This isn't.

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moscow_watcher December 14 2010, 00:03:10 UTC
*hugs* Okay, let's just agree to disagree.

And - thank you again for so much Jack goodness :)

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elisi December 14 2010, 10:55:27 UTC
Actually, and this is kinda going off on a tangent, but have you seen 'Being Human'? I mention it, because I think it in many ways conforms to what I think Joss' original vision for AtS was (something about Angel licking victim's blood off the pavement?) since they push the 'vampire = addict' metaphor very clearly on that show. S2 especially is a textbook case for 'the road to hell is paved with good intentions' and goes black as sin. (The finale didn't quite live up to the rest of the season, IMHO, but if you want a dark vampire story, that's the place to go.)

Or maybe we just have different definitions of 'dark' which would account for the difficulty of understanding each other. :)

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moscow_watcher December 14 2010, 13:11:04 UTC
No, I havent - but I think I recognize the guy on your icon. Sueworld has a "Being Human" banner at one of the Buffy comics forums, and I often see these faces.
I think I should try to watch it. I heard a lot of praise online and I'm curious about that series.

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shipperx December 14 2010, 16:54:59 UTC
Mitchell! Yes. When I saw Mitchell fall off the wagon and kill all those people, I thought "Joss Whedon would never have the balls for this!" (I believe Rahirah wrote such a response when she saw the episode). There's no 'out' for Mitchell. He's an addict who behaved as an addict. Full stop (and gloriously well done as we saw him rationalize his slide down the slippery slope of good intentions and self-deceiving rationalization). No soulless curse, no Twilight green glow. This was Mitchell. Mitchell did this. It was all him. Now, deal. Joss never has the balls to actually do that. He always makes up some garbage about curses and green glows, then pats his own back about how 'brave' he is.

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