In case you were unclear, as some people on the thread are: slash is not inherently porn and queer content is not inherently about sex.
Mental institution episode on Buffy -- on one hand, trite device; on the other hand, well-executed. Also effectively has some interesting meta thoughts about judging response to stories. Demon summoned with digeridoo? kinda offensive. But you know, it's Buffy and you get used to it.
Also? Xander left Anya. Glad that that wasn't really Xander's future we were seeing, but the whole thing felt forced and not like it had enough arc and the episode didn't know what it wanted to be. Didn't hate it. Didn't love it. Curious to see what Anya will choose, as that choice seems critical to whatever the message the show is or isn't trying to have.
On Angel Gunn needed Wesley's help to save Fred and Wesley gives that speech about he forced himself to live so he could see his friends and explain what he'd done. Oh the burning, burning hate there. Time eight billion and seventy three where my reaction to Angel is to find deaths on Torchwood merciful.
no subject
Date: 2010-05-31 05:38 pm (UTC)Also? Xander left Anya. Glad that that wasn't really Xander's future we were seeing, but the whole thing felt forced and not like it had enough arc and the episode didn't know what it wanted to be.
Here is the single best meta on the episode that I've ever read, in case you'd like something more substantial. (Yes it's my journal, but I didn't write it.) That said, I think the episode kinda fails when you need an essay to explain why it's brilliant.
Wesley gives that speech about he forced himself to live so he could see his friends and explain what he'd done. Oh the burning, burning hate there.
Oh Lord yes, that speech. Actually the whole, awful situation is just one giant ball of angst. (Which of course means that I love it, even as my heart breaks for everyone.)
Time eight billion and seventy three where my reaction to Angel is to find deaths on Torchwood merciful.
Heh. See Ianto's death hit me harder than any Jossverse one, but I wasn't surprised in the least, cause Joss taught me that a writer will always, always go for maximum pain...