Angel 5.22 - Not Fade Away
Somehow, talking about the fight and inspiring the troops turned out to be more interesting than the actual fight itself. Somehow, all the themes inherent to Angel (redemption, being a champion...) weren't as well explored as in 'Power Play'. Somehow, this one last stand against the Senior Partners was nowhere near as defiant and middle-finger-in-your-face as the St. Crispin's Day speech suggested. Granted, the budget was obviously smaller and all the fights were half-baked. But still. One big fight would've been better than a lot of tiny ones. Angel's final hour wasn't his finest one.
Wesley's death: Okay, we share you pain Joss. So thanks for ripping out hearts out, putting it through the juicer, and serving it to us in a cocktail glass with a pink paper umbrella. This was just as heart-wretching as Fred's death. In Buffyverse, this death scene will go down as one of the most painful, but the one with the most mundane dialogue.
The Shanshu Prophecy: This pesky problem was taken care of within the first five minutes of the show. Angel will never Shanshu. In the scene where Angel was handing out all their assignments, I kept waiting for Angel to tell them about the Shansu going bust. That would've made some pretty heavy dialogue and not even Spike would've been insolent about it. The most powerful message of this episode was to keep on fighting even though you're fighting a loser's fight and the very thing you're fighting for was taken away from you. You may have to find a new reason to fight and sometimes, you'll have no idea why you're fighting. But you do it anyway. Yet Angel talks about the Shanshu bust with Harmony (the one rightfully left out of the secret plan). It's fitting in the way that Harmony's the only vampire around with no soul. But dramatically, the entire dialogue meant a whole lot less. Even though Spike will probably Shanshu now, all the drama that came with the prophecy and the Angel vs. Spike tension was effectively lost.
Lorne: His fate is just screaming spin-off. It was nice to see him sing again. We just haven't heard enough of him this season. I can't believe he killed Lindsey. Lorne! A killer! The indignity of Lindsey's death! And Lindsey actually fell for the fool's errand!
Best bits:Angel going "Someone's going to betray me" and Spike is the first to raise his hand. Angel picks Wes but Spike goes "But can I deny you three times?"; Spike going "No amulets, brooches, bracelets, necklaces. No pens or rings."; Spike's poetry finally finding its audience; Illyria experiencing some humanity; Angel going "Okay, Eve, time to get out of the garden."; Lindsey going "You
are a bit speechy."; the evil, too-busy-to-fight-her-own-fight politician getting it right between the eyes from Gunn; Angel spiking the Archduke's drink was, again, clever (Honestly, Angel gained about 100 IQ points in the last two days).
Line-Manglers: Spike, Wes, Lorne, Lindsey, and Illyria were fine. Those most guilty are Gunn and Angel. Misplacing your acting chops in the final episode is just inexcusable. Especially if you deliver a brilliant pep talk in the episode before. Gunn's dialogue with Anne was supposed to be a lot heavy than his wooden face and flat voice made it out to be; Angel's line "People who never cared about anything will never understand people who do." was supposed to sound a little more audacious and menacing. Angel always had more chemistry with the Fang Gang but never newbies like Eve or Hamilton.
The Ending: Cliffhangers are a bitch. This was a semi-cliffhanger though. If Joss really wanted to have us begging and screaming for more, he would've left out all the monsters in the alley and made the surviving Fang Gang stare open-mouthed into the camera with Angel going "Let's get to work". Then we would've been all "What the hell did they see?" (They did something like this on Alias. The suspense just doesn't fade no matter now many times you watch it.) The choice of location was perfect though. The dark, narrow alley was where we first met Angel back on BTVS.
In the end, television execs can kick us out of Buffyverse. But they'll never take the Buffyverse out of us. Yes, it got sucked into the black hole. But that won't stop people from talking about it. It's hard to let go, man. It's hard to let go. There are certain shows right now with bachelors, bachelorettes, annoying back-stabbers, pointless obstacle courses, stupid people, and pseudo-musicians that have all put their big, heavy feet onto the throat of Quality TV and watch it slowly shuffle off this mortal coil. It's grievous and a feeling that not even a morphine IV could counter. Just as Illyria wonders if her fate in a lower plane of existence is better than death, Buffyverse had no choice but to dig its own grave and jump in. This inferior plane of existence in which Buffyverse quietly lived out its last days is unworthy of the glory Buffyverse has to offer, and sadly, it may never be.