Stream Buffy the Vampire Slayer - The Complete Sixth Season Online
Dimanche, février 21st, 2010![]() |
Stream Buffy the Vampire Slayer - The Complete Sixth Season Online.
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Season Six of BUFFY is the show’s most controversial by far. Sarah Michelle Gellar has stated that she found the mid-season episodes between her and Spike to be degrading and dreadful and many fans would agree with her. This was the season that Joss Whedon left the expose as the day-to-day note runner and turned over the reins to Marti Noxon, though he nonetheless remained deeply fervent with the note, supervising the narrative arcs and individual episodes, as well as writing and directing several episodes.
There is no demand that Season Six contained some very memorable moments. There is also tiny demand that the season had some conventional episodes–especially at around the two-thirds mark–as well as some not-very-popular myth arcs. The least accepted aspects of the reveal was the self-destructive tendencies and actions of all the major characters and the lameness of the show’s “expansive bads,” the geek threesome known as The Trio. But in fact, the Gigantic Dreadful of Season Six is each individual against him or herself. Buffy, struggling with her inadvertent removal from heaven by Willow, suffers economic difficulties, eventually taking a like a flash food job, eventually numbing herself with a demeaning sexual relationship with Spike. Willow becomes more and more addicted to using magic, to the point that it first threatens to waste her relationships and eventually the world. Xander, tremulous that his impending marriage to Anya icy lead to the same kind of family that he grew up in, leaves Anya a the altar. Anya, crushed by being deserted by Xander, reverts to being a vengeance demon. Dawn’s kleptomania gets out of control until the others glance her scrape. Giles makes an error by going attend to England, imagining that Buffy needs to learn to live on her contain. Only Tara does not select in self-destructive behavior, but her accidental killing spurs Willow’s killing spree at the slay of the season. The season’s motto could be: We have met the enemy and he is us.
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There are titular villains. Warren, the robot-constructing geek from Season Five’s “I Was Made to Appreciate You,” Jonathan, the geek who first appeared in the BUFFY pilot (he was considered for the role of Xander before Nicholas Brendon got the job), and Andrew, whose brother was eager in a flying monkey incident no one seems to remember, team up to pick over Sunnydale. They are uber dorks, obsessed with the whole panoply of funny book culture and Star War action figures. Though them manage to pull off some stunts, apart from Warren’s accidental killing of both his ex-girlfriend and Willow, they are a aesthetic amusing lot. They are more like perpetual humorous relief. BUFFY was always trying to do original things and I applaud them for doing so (the inconvenience to always be current was one of the reasons it was such a sizable display), but I mediate it is helpful to say that having them as the Mountainous Bads was a bit of a mistake. In the destroy, their greatest contribution was in providing victims for Willow’s rampage at season’s slay. Indeed, the single most horrifying moment in the history of the explain had to be the unpleasant instance in which Willow, after catching and briefly torturing Warren for killing Tara, magically removes his entire epidermis. Not honest on BUFFY, apart from some moments in THE SOPRANOS, I know no more awful instance in the history of TV. Clearly they wanted to note unprejudiced how far Willow had gone.
Although the season’s yarn arcs were not especially satisfying, there were a number of unforgettable episodes. The season begins with a grand sequence of episodes, as Willow with the assistance of Tara, Xander, and Anya raise Buffy, who had died a mystical death at the extinguish of Season Five, from the wearisome. Their panic, based largely on Angel’s being sent to a hell dimension at the kill of Season Two, was that Buffy was suffering unspeakable torture in a different hell dimension. But we later learn that she was, in fact, in a residence of grand peace and repose, a spot she could only characterize as “heaven.” The first six episodes gape Buffy struggling to deal with her return to a set that now felt like hell. All these early episodes, even if not strong all the device through, beget at least some spacious moments.
Then advance Episodes 7 and 8, not honest the best episodes of the season, but among the best in the hurry of the exhibit. “Once More, with Feeling” is often cited as the very best episode of BUFFY, and to those who wish the prove had ended at the kill of Season Five, my response is always, “Would you really have wanted for there never to have been “Once More, With Feeling? ” This was the musical episode and while many shows have attempted musical episodes, this one stands far above what any other indicate has either attempted or achieved. What is fantastic is how stunning the episode was despite not having a world of musical talent on the display. Only Anthony Stewart Head (who had taken over the lead in THE ROCKY Dread Narrate Explain in London in the unique production and sung on albums by his brother Murray, the current Judas in JESUS CHRIST, SUPERSTAR), James Marsters (who headed his beget rock band), and Amber Benson (who played Tara) had especially helpful voices. Though not a trained singer, Sarah Michelle Gellar nonetheless acquitted herself quite well both singing and dancing, and Michelle Trachtenberg, though not a singer, build her dance training to ample utilize. Joss Whedon contributed a very lovely group of songs. In one of the best guest appearances in the hurry of the reveal, extinct Broadway hoofer Hinton Battle (perhaps best known as the Scarecrow in the entire hurry of THE WIZ on Broadway) played the demon Sweet, who was accidentally summoned to Sunnydale, and who was responsible for the singing and dancing afflicting everyone. The most incredible thing about the episode was the plan that the songs advanced every anecdote arc in the note and greatly accelerated the action. The best songs were Buffy’s Disneyesque “Going Through the Motions” that started the episode; Tara’s singing of “Under Your Spell” to Willow (ironic in that she learned she was literally being controlled by Willow through magic) ; Spike’s passionate expression of his love/hate for Buffy in “Rest in Peace”; the fabulous duet between Tara and Giles; and the mountainous production number that preceded the battle-that-never-occurred with Sweet, “Lumber Through the Fire.” Not should also be made of Anya’s big bit in an early group number in which the Scoobies are trying to figure out why everyone is singing and dancing. After singing that she has a theory that it “must be bunnies,” the group very ignores her only to have her sob in a stout hard rock voice:
Bunnies aren’t impartial cute like everybody supposed
They got them hoppy legs and twitchy cramped noses
And what’s with all the carrots?
What do they need such suited eyesight for anyway?
Bunnies! Bunnies! It must be bunnies!
The popularity of the episode can be seen in the fact that it is the only episode to have its script published separately and the soundtrack has been released on compact disc.
“Once More, with Feeling” was followed by “Tabula Rasa,” probably the funniest episode ever on BUFFY. After Tara catches Willow manipulating their relationship through the expend of magic, Willow complicates things by attempting once more to get them all forget that she had venerable magic to control others. But the spell misfires and instead everyone in the group, including Willow, forgets who they are. The scene in which everyone tries to figure out who they are is a classic, the best fraction being Spike, who has been going about in a poor suit as a disguise to flee a loan shark (a demon with literally the head of a shark, the only really bad trace in an otherwise graceful episode), deciding that his is Giles’s son and that his name is Randy. When Buffy finds no ID, she tellingly decides that everyone should call her Joan, with echoes of St. Joan in her choice.
Unfortunately, while there are few out and out abominable episodes, there are few absolutely glowing episodes until the ones that destroy the season. The one major exception is “Normal Again,” which resembles many of the alternative reality stories of Philip K. Dick. Buffy is injected with some venom by a demon she fights, and the result is that she imagines that she is actually in a mental institution where she has been fantasizing for several years that she was a vampire slayer in a town called Sunnydale. Or is reality breaking through to invent her quit fantasizing for a while. We fans, of course, can’t imagine that all six seasons were a delusion, but it is nonetheless a gleaming episode.
Although I don’t beget that this is one of BUFFY’s best seasons, I can’t give this less than five stars simply because even during this season BUFFY remained one of the most intellectual shows on TV. Not everything in the season succeeded, but they nevertheless continually strove to accomplish a special point to. The point to took risks; they never played things superb. The spot with taking risks is that sometimes things don’t work out. Unruffled, all in all this was a season with more to delight over than to regret.
Well, I read the reviews of this season, and–based on mixed comments– bought the region without high hopes for being cheerful. I was astonished to ogle that Season Six is now my well-liked season!
I found season five, seemingly universally praised, to be protracted and ponderous, and the character of Glory/Ben one of the least curious villains in any season. In fact, my least common scene in the six I’ve watched was during the final episodes when Glory and Ben wrestle with each other metaphorically, and time seems to cessation for a decade or two, or three.
In a unpleasant intention, that is.
So, I began season six with a lingering sense of dissatisfaction, and the belief that if everyone loved the previous season, and were mixed about the one I was about to contemplate….etc.
I don’t want to spoil Six for anyone reading, and there have been extensive and impassioned overviews of the themes and major points in this place by reviewers in this forum already. I would objective like to say that I heartily disagree with the reviews that record Six as “uneven.” There is a taut focus to the themes; racy, intense writing in nearly every episode; the best opening sequence of episodes in any season; a return to a mordant, dry wit that was conspicuously and unfortunately absent from season Five: and the most compelling villain in Willow. In addition, in a seemingly “stand alone” ep, “Normal Again,” the writers devise a totally thought-provoking alternative to a universe increasingly self-referential after so many seasons, and both a clever and deeply disturbing episode that encapsulates Buffy’s possess arc during the season. I have never enjoyed her character as great as I did, watching her struggle to be in the world during season Six
I recommend this season highly!
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