frelling_tralk: (Buffy sacrifice by nonewsteps)
frelling_tralk ([personal profile] frelling_tralk) wrote2015-07-27 04:33 pm
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10 episodes of Angel that show how it was more than Buffy redux”

Episodes listed are To Shanshu In L.A from season 1, Are You Now Or Have You Ever Been from season 2, Fredless, Birthday, Waiting In The Wings, AND Forgiving from season 3, Soulless from season 4, and finally Smile Time, A Hole In The World, and Not Fade Away from season 5.

To me that that list is seriously failing when it comes to season 2, what about episodes like Darla and Reunion?!? Home from season 4 also deserves a mention IMO, as well as You're Welcome from season 5. Fredless is a cute episode and all, but is it really comparable to the best episodes of the series?

The writer of the article talks about season 3 clearly being the overall best season, "As with Buffy, fans of Angel argue over which is the best season. Is it the second, which properly begins the larger story and gives it scope? The fifth, which wraps up that story with some hard but inspiring lessons? Or the third, which… okay, there shouldn’t really be any contest here. It’s the third. Most of Whedon’s top-shelf writers were heavily involved in season three (including Greenwalt, Minear, Noxon, and Fury), as the plotting became more complex and sophisticated, with the characters making crucial decisions that didn’t always pan out. Most importantly, the third season properly introduces Fred, who soon becomes the clever, sunny, quirky fan favourite

I don't remember season 3 being a particular fan favourite, but then I was thinking about it and I'm not sure that Angel does have universally (well more or less) agreed "best seasons" like Buffy does? Some people really love season 4 and the heavy serialisation there, while some absolutely hate it for what it does to Cordelia's character. Some really love the darker moments of season 3 with Holtz and Wesley, but then I saw a lot of dislike for "Soap Opera elements" at the time when season 3 was first airing, the Angel/Cordelia romance, dorky Angel, and the birth of Conner were by no means universally popular. With Buffy it's generally pretty easy to point to seasons 2, 3, and 5 as the clear favourites, but every Angel season seems to get a LOT of debate between love or hate from what I've seen.

To go off on a tangent for a moment, it seems like most of the hate for season 4 is because of Cordelia's character being lost that year, but I'd argue that already started happening in season 3. The first half of season 3 was great for portraying a more mature Cordelia, but the more they pushed the Angel/Cordelia romance, the more they started writing Cordelia as a Saint and Mother figure for Conner which just didn't work IMO and rang really false. Again at the time I remember a ton of controversy at how Cordelia was being written, especially all the fan jokes on the season 3 finale when she's carried off to the Heavens with twinkly lights, so it's interesting that season 4 takes all the blame for "ruining her character". Technically season 4 was not Cordelia any more, so there's actually more of a justification for the writing of her that year, in comparison to the saintly blonde that Double Or Nothing introduced to us. I remember speculation at the time was that it was down to David Greenwalt getting too carried away with seeing Cordelia as perfect, but I'm wondering now if it was more about fast-tracking Cordelia character arc to becoming a higher being, and thus wrapping up her journey? I remember at the end of season 4 that Joss said something to that effect of having nowhere else to take Cordelia's character at that point

It seemed that Joss allowed behind the scenes drama to affect the writing for Cordelia in quite negative ways unfortunately. I've noticed that posters on [livejournal.com profile] ohnotheydidnt get super-defensive if you imply that the treatment of Charisma was about anything other than Joss firing her for getting pregnant, but I would argue there were a lot of weird vibes in season 3 as well, there was definitely speculation at the time as to whether the Ascension was a way of writing Cordelia out. It's just a shame that Joss allowed whatever BTS drama there was to make its way onto the writing of the character

And this entry is starting to get really O/T, so maybe I should stop there :P But here's a poll anyway for favourite Angel season!

[Poll #2017986]
endeni: (Default)

[personal profile] endeni 2015-08-01 08:59 am (UTC)(link)
Well, to me it's not all so black and white. You see, I'm Italian and if anything else, Angel reminds me of a character from one of the most famous Italian novels (if not the most famous), Alessandro Manzoni's I promessi sposi (The Betrothed). This character is the Innominato (the Unnamed) and he used to be this really evil guy only to find god halfway thought the novel and undergoing a radical change, going from Big Bad to a force of good in search of redemption. Angel does the same thing: unlike Spike, he is not one for half measures, he is either the ultimate evil (Angelus) or a great hero. It may well be that the similarities in Angel and the Innominato's journey is due to the Catholics origins of both characters. And the aforementioned search for redemption, which is a very Chaotic thing and no, you're right, there isn't a "secret number you can hit where good balances out bad", that's the point of atonement, you're never really done with it, that's why the Shanshu prophecy doesn't really matter in the end and even defeats the purpose, I mean, it helped Angel find hope at the beginning of his journey but now he is wiser and tougher and he doesn't need that crutch any more. To me that's character development.
Anyway, what I meant to say, Angel is still acting as this grandiose hero in season 5. If he can't beat W&H he'll still try to bring the house down with him inside, no half-measures. Which is something I find to be really coherent with his character.

I also think the redemption theme finds some resonance in season 5, only it's mostly through Spike, who, as he always does, acts like a mirror to Angel's character. Think about "Soul Purpose", with Lindsey taking on Doyle's name in an attempt to convince Spike that he is the one mentioned in the Shanshu Prophecy and him and Spike basically reacting the plot of the pilot of Ats. Which, yes, it's in stark contrast with Angel's situation in the first half of the series, who's now helping the helpless on a large scale and in a more detached way, no longer on a down to heart/one by one approach, and he's a bit adrift, without Connor, surrounded by friends with false memories and being without Cordelia and having lost his link to the PTB (the real ones, not Jasmine). A link he will regain in You're Welcome, which will lead to Angel finding his purpose again and to NFA.

And wow, the more I think about season 5 the more I discover a fondness for it I didn't suspect I had stored in me. Must be the Devil's Advocate in me. More likely, I'm just feeling really nostalgic for Ats, I really have to do a rewatch sooner rather than later. But, yes, season 3/4 are still my favorite ones... No, scratch that, I just found out why picking a favorite season is so hard: it's exactly because Angel's journey is so interconnected through the seasons. Something gets foreshadowed in one season only to reach it's development in another, picking one means wronging the other ones. It's like choosing one of your hands over the other: how can you do that? :D
Edited 2015-08-01 09:05 (UTC)

[identity profile] infinitewhale.livejournal.com 2015-08-01 10:16 pm (UTC)(link)

I might agree, except that's not really a comparison. Choosing to switch sides isn't what Angel does. He doesn't see the light. It's almost literally two different people. I know people quantify Angelus as Angel's ID, but even in that case, it's still just that. It might be a part of him, but there's still the part that says no, and that's an equal part as well.

Angel does make grandiose decisions throughout the show...for a person. The whole foothold in the world thing. Angel acknowledges what they're about to do really doesn't matter and won't affect anything. Ultimately, it doesn't accomplish anything. It's nothing more than an F-U. He can't make the decision for the others (though they agree), but he does for the thousands of residents who are about to have their lives ruined/ended in the war.

I'm not saying it's good or bad, mind you, just saying S5 as a whole doesn't fit with any of the overall themes of 1-4.
endeni: (Default)

[personal profile] endeni 2015-08-03 09:08 am (UTC)(link)
/but there's still the part that says no, and that's an equal part as well/ - Mm? I'm not sure I get what you mean... Do you mind explaining me this bit in other words?

/It's nothing more than an F-U. / - But what a great one! :D :D
Like Gunn says in ELG's Temps Perdu talking about what happened at W&H: “I lost my integrity, Wes lost his sanity, and Fred lost her life.” Season 5 in a nutshell, isn't it? And dammit if W&H don't deserve some retribution for that... ;)

Also, ah, you mean that by getting all those people in L.A. potentially killed in the crossfire with his fight with W&H it's evident that Angel doesn't care about civilian population as he should if he was going to do the redemption thing. I get it now. *nods* But what about the Circle of the Black Thorn's apocalyptic plans? If left undisturbed wouldn't the death toll be higher?

As for Angelus and Angel being two different people, personally I'd say yes and no. After all, they're all the product of the culture of Liam's time, in a way (the way he relates to women for one thing, plus his being controlling, selfish sometimes, manipulative too).