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hazelk ([personal profile] hazelk) wrote2009-02-05 09:01 pm
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BtVS S8.22 Swell



Gotta love a monster of the month with biology. This one was a neotonous mammal, a potty mouthed slime mould, at least one of the stages of alien and if you cut it, did it not spill guts everywhere. Extra points for sucking out its victims from the inside, turning every last man of them into a dried prune or a scrotum with red eye. No, I don’t want one for Christmas.

I want a Satsu for Christmas, who survived not only the Swell but the curse of DeKnight and was sexy and bratty and frighteningly competent and witty even when possessed. Mmm babies. Mmm backstory. Also at this point the series needs a reminder that demons, at least some demons, are not the last oppressed minority (that would be white SFF writers) but expressions of the unfettered id.

Which would be Twilight’s id and that id has had definite woman issues both from his own mouth and from the company he keeps. Voll’s denial in the TLWH always gets brought up at this point but it came just a few lines after the reference to Buffy’s spawn and if that’s not a gendered insult I don’t know how much more biological you can get.

What lurks below, what would vampires want with a submarine? I have a feeling that that little throwaway may be crucial. The world has changed the Slayers are organizing and so are the vamps, there’s a war brewing and Twilight (as he said he would) is playing both sides against the middle, using their strengths against them. Buffy tells Satsu they have to stop being what they are, hold back, don’t speak up, go shopping not submarine hopping. It’s eminently sensible in the circumstances. If only it didn’t come so soon after Vampy-Cat-Satsu’s call to just be normal girls.
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[identity profile] stormwreath.livejournal.com 2009-02-05 10:10 pm (UTC)(link)
Oh, I completely agree that when Buffy talked about "less-than" humans she meant vampires and evil demons. It's just that in context, and given what else we know about her, it was a really unfortunate phrase for her to use. Maybe even a Freudian slip. But it does seem, with the submarine and all, that Buffy is thinking in terms of war and victory and black and white.

[identity profile] aycheb.livejournal.com 2009-02-06 05:42 pm (UTC)(link)
Of war yes. But in private she seems to be the person most doubtful of her own whiteness so far.