A reader writes:
I’m fascinated that you’re watching Buffy for the first time. I’d be delighted to read as much commentary as you could possibly feel like generating . . . .
Part of it is envy that you’re coming to it new, part of it is wondering how it comes across All At Once, part of it is always wondering what it looks like to someone else, and part of it is wondering what it looks like to you.
All At Once is only part of the novelty; I rarely get to follow a series at all, vs catching random episodes.
Some impressions of the first season:
A show with such a theme normally has a tiresome character whose job is to say, once per episode, “I’m the relatively stupid character but am I the only one who thinks this is a really bad idea?” . . . . But Xander is so darn likable!
Sunnydale is not a ghost town, and that makes WSoD creak a bit. Is there something about the Hellmouth that makes most residents forget that grue is always happening? (Oct 3: Such a hoodoo is in the Mayor’s interest. It need not be strong enough to keep everyone in permanent denial.)
I loved the novelty of the demon brought to life by a scanner. (I also loved the series Weird Science and Northern Exposure until they jumped their respective sharks. And the dialogue in Buffy is miles ahead of NX.)
Speaking of shark-jumping, in the season closer not only is the principal threat removed but the Shallow Character shows concern for others, a sense of duty and a bit of ingenuity. Ominous!
Angel’s early behavior (“Hi, be on guard against something about which I won’t tell you anything useful, have a jacket, bye”) is one of the few seriously wrong notes. It’s arbitrary, and not really explained by the revelation of his nature.