The pre-game eulogies had been written (even A&E devoted a Biography to this fictional heroine), the fannish lines had been drawn: it was finally time for the Buffy series finale.
We'd been dreading the moment for weeks. Of the current non-animated series television, Buffy the Vampire Slayer has been the big no-miss series in our house. The perils of Kim & Jack Bauer? Okay, but if we skip an ep, we can catch up. Cancelled-in-the-midst-of-beaucoup-unanswered-questions John Doe? I've still got some entries on tape that I haven't watched yet. Enterprise? It is to laugh. But Buffy truly exemplified Must See TV 'round these parts.
Yeah, I know the show had slumped in its final years: this past season, in particular, the latchkey parenting of series creator Joss Whedon could really be felt. Where previous seasons contained several nuggets of Whedon writing, this year the writer/director seemed to be focusing too much of his attention on doomed s-f Fox victim Firefly to keep a tight grip on his starter series (the David E. Kelley Syndrome). It showed in too many water-treading episodes, too many sequences devoted to characters dreading the season's Big Bad without ever making it clear what this arch-nemesis was up to.
But even at its weakest, BtVS had a snap missing from most series television. Credit a cast of well-defined supporting characters (perhaps the most disappointing aspect of this season was the short shrift some of these regulars received plotwise) whose mere presence was often enough to keep us watching. That and a blenderific premise that allowed the writers to move from comedy to drama to horror (to musical comedy!) often in the space of one hour.
Buffy finales have typically worked to thematically cap and, in some cases, explicate the previous season (last season's Dark Willow climactic episode arc, for instance, did such a strong job tying things together, that when we started watching the season in fx rerun, we were startled to see how much of it had been anticipated in earlier eps). So the big question we had going into the finish was: would it be up to the task of tying up a fairly meandering season and the series itself?








Article comments
1 - Jim Carruthers
What I liked most about "Chosen" was the character's lines sounded like the characters again. This season of BtVS suffered from Joss Whedon spreading himself too thin with Buffy, Angel and Firefly, and the uncertainty of what was going to happen with Buffy.
There were too many eps this season where not a lot happened to move the story forward, and too many new elements introduced with loads of other things to be resolved (just what was the deal with the pod-person who was Giles for the season).
However, I really liked "Chosen", it gave a resolution to the series making me feel like I'd been cheated (cough*x*cough*files*cough).
Parts had me sniffling like a girlie, so I'll take some of that empowerment too (what? why not? all we guys get is the Bud Lite Institute).
Despite the plot holes and things left unexplained, BtVS was still better than almost everything else on teevee.
As the last line said:
"Buffy ? What are we gonna do now ?"
(I'm saving up my money for the Season 4 DVD box out June 10, and waiting for the Six Feet Under - Angel crossover special).
2 - Bill Sherman
Re: that last line. I half expected 'em to replay the big chorus from the Buffy Musical ("Where do we go from here?") over the Mutant Enemy grring zombie. Would've been apt.
Yup, say what you will about Buffy's last season, it was not the X-Files' last season. . .
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