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What follows is a distillation of some thoughts I’ve been having for a while about the character arcs, especially Willow’s, in S6 of BtVS. I’ve been rather struck by the way all the characters seem to hit rock bottom at points that reveal their underlying issues to be based on real-life rather than mystical problems and wondering how this might fit into the framework of the series as a whole.



The Age of Disillusionment

Season 5 of BtVS has been described by no less an insider than Marti Noxon as ‘epic’. Thematically it’s easy to see why. Much of Buffy’s arc is occupied by an examination of what it means to be a ‘warrior’ and the complex relationship between the slayer and her mortality. Willow’s experiments with magic suggest yet another classic fantasy storyline, the one in which the talented ingénue becomes corrupted/seduced to the dark side by the power he/she seeks. Meanwhile, Spike’s pining after the unobtainable Slayer begins to resemble a modern retelling of medieval romance conventions. It feels almost inevitable that things should end, as in so many tales of the great battle between good and evil, with the hero’s sacrificial and noble death.

If the proper end to an epic story is death, Season 6, by the very act of existing, repudiates the epic. This will be the season of “au revoir m’sieur metaphor”, in which real life will prove scarier than monsters and evil will come, not from an irresistible godly force, but from three little boys (and one girl) who just don’t know when to stop. In fact the process of undermining the mythic begins even before Buffy’s magical resurrection, in the final words of “The Gift”. After all, if the hardest thing in this world is to live in it, shouldn’t the hero be up to that challenge too?

And challenge it proves to be, “Everything is hard and bright and violent,” says Buffy, “Everything I feel, everything I touch”. Initially our erstwhile hero withdraws into herself. When she finds she can’t even protect her friends from the knowledge of what they’ve done, she lets herself believe she’s come back a monster and vents her consequent self-loathing on Spike. But she’s not a monster, only behaving like one. Finally, the events of ‘Normal Again’, offer her a poison-induced return to heavenly bliss, but the heaven she now envisages is no Valhalla and the valiant hero is just a sick girl in a lunatic asylum. In the climatic scenes of the episode Buffy at last rediscovers the strength to reject the illusion and begin the journey back to life in earnest.

While Buffy actively chooses disillusionment, Willow and Spike seem more deeply committed to the epic interpretations of their lives/unlives and have to be forcibly shocked out of their fantasies.

In the early episodes of season 6, the idea of becoming the next Anakin Skywalker seems to exert the same pull on Willow as Supervillany does on the three nerds. She gains the power to remake the world to her own liking, but is that really what she wants? This is the girl who balked at even being called the Big Gun following her first experience of real power in the final episodes of Season 5. Raising Buffy from the dead feels amazing but also absolves Willow of having to stay “boss of us” and that may be the point. Like most of us, I suspect, Willow wants to feel like Super!Willow without the attendant responsibility of being her. She wants power, yes, but largely as means to avoid having to experience unpleasantness, and if achieving that disrupts other people’s lives then so be it. It takes a trip to Rack’s for her to finally see through what she’s been doing and she crashes to the ground, neither Dark!Phoenix nor fallen angel, but just another junkie seeking a fix for her emotional inadequacies.

Spike’s arc begins by apparently continuing to follow the Courtly Love paradigm of the previous season. However, this breaks down in OMWF, which forces him to admit to his distinctly unknightly feelings of frustration and anger in song. When he and Buffy finally have it out and bring down the house, his romantic illusions revert to the gothic model. “Great love is wild and passionate and dangerous. It burns and consumes.” And disintegrates into narcissistic delusion, with all that effulgence coming down in the end to no more than a brutal scuffle on the bathroom floor.

Much (but by no means all) fan criticism of season 6 seems to revolve around the writers’ perceived failure to deliver the “promised” Willow and Spike arcs of corruption and redemption, respectively. I would argue that deconstructing fantasy/romance conventions was, in many ways, the point of a season that looked beyond the hero’s death, to the metaphorical equivalent of that stage of life when you finally abandon childhood dreams of playing for England or winning the Nobel prize for medicine.

Date: 2005-05-08 09:20 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] frelling-tralk.livejournal.com
Great discussion, thanks!

And yes I love the darkness of Villains as Willow tortures Warren *shiver* And woot someone else that likes Wrecked! The car crash and JunkieAmy was over the top granted *snerk* But I loved Rack, "you taste like stawberries", and Willow's weird tripping.

And I actually like the cheesey junkie talk

And that's where you lost me :p "I'm so juiced" *cries*

Sorry, I have verbal diarrhea at the moment...

Date: 2005-05-08 09:31 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] frelling-tralk.livejournal.com
In a way I can enjoy the final two episodes if I sit back, switch my brain off, and acknowledge that it's all about the pretty effects. There is something fun about evvvil Willow. "Shame on you" heh.

But as a Buffy episode that just doesn't work for me. And then there's the forced sentimentality, "I want to show you the world" *gags*

IMO it does just come across as panicking, trying to give the audience what they think we want. Trite love conquers all messages, and an evil Willow battling Buffy as Angelus and Faith once did in popular earlier seasons. Really season 6 didn't need the big dramatic finish, although I'm not sure how I would have ended it in ME's place...
From: [identity profile] aycheb.livejournal.com
And then there's the forced sentimentality, "I want to show you the world" *gags*

Oh lord those earth monster scenes. I mean I like the idea of handing the sword to Dawn and foreshadowing the whole potentials thing but having to watch while it happens so very, very slowly. Not so much. And all the extra helpings of exposition. Giles rising from his deathbed to explain what we’ve just seen just in case we didn’t get it already. From the commentary they actually wanted even more explosions, dragons even but couldn't afford it.
From: [identity profile] frelling-tralk.livejournal.com
One of my Buffy guides gets into that. Pointing out that The Gift did look like an actual apocalypse and clashing of universes. Whereas Grave tried to introduce the idea of Willow ending the world, but it just comes across like two people arguing on a cliff.

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