Horrible weather scuttled my already limited plans for leaving the house, so I got to watch the first 3 eps of season 2. I mean I suppose I should have been watching the first half of the Lakers/Celtics game but I hate both those teams, so vampires it is.
First thing that jumps out immediately is that the pacing, character interactions and dialogue have solidified, and the show has found its rhythm. The quality of production, of just keeping things flowing have improved a lot.
I really liked the first episode a lot. They have Buffy struggling with the aftermath of her Master battle. The way they have her friends deal with it was handled perfectly. And Gellar continues to perform brilliantly.
I'm gonna keep praising her because I'm really pleasantly surprised by how great she is. Of all the great things everyone has said about this show, I don't remember anyone talking about her performance, and it's my favorite part of the show.
I also like that Buffy looks like a high school girl. So does Willow. Cordelia, on the other hand, looks like a 28-yr old sweater model for Sears.
Giles said straight-up exactly what I feared but was expecting: Buffy was "technically dead for a couple of minutes." Again- I'm pretty sure it doesn't work that way. If you can be resuscitated, you ain't dead. Whatever.
I also liked the capper, with the kid coming across the Master's remains and declaring "I hate that girl."
So other than confirming my minor annoyance with the prophecy plot point, I couldn't have asked for a better season premiere.
So now we have Spike, who I know is a long-term character. His whole creepy thing with Drusilla fell really flat for me- way too cartoonish. Other than that, not much to say so far- they fight, he's a dick, blah blah, the usual.
Even before I started watching these I was thinking how silly it is that Buffy keeps her slaying from her mother. In the show they said it's to keep her "safe" but that doesn't make sense. Yes I know they do that in the show to add another point of conflict, and that it's part of their whole thing about representing teenager problems- in this case how they feel parents can't understand them- but it makes no sense within the context of the show.
Then I'm watching this episode where Spike busts in the school during parent/teacher conference and Buffy's mom is there and she's like "mom you hide I'll go kill everyone" and.... um, the mom's conclusion is that Buffy is "resourceful." Look, I know I have to suspend disbelief, but come on. Unless there's some twist down the line that her mom is in on it somehow, this is the stupidest part of the show (other than any scene Angel is in, I guess).
So the principal knows about the vampires. My guess? = government agent of some sort. Invisible girl episode showed us the government knows about some of this stuff.
Giles + hot teacher couple- an obvious development but fun to watch.
Anointed one is dead and in the end proves pretty insignificant to the whole story, which I like for this character.
Some stupid shit that annoys me:
I still don't get the point of Cordelia. Now she's insulting everyone again, now she's helping them make stakes... what? My guess is that just like the character Buffy was invented to turn one character type on its head, Cordelia is there to make the pretty popular girl the comedy relief in a similar attempt to play with movie cliches. Either way, it's just a waste of screen time for me.
Now that Angel is part of the opening credits he has to appear in every episode, even in this one where he just shows up at the end of the Frankenstein one to ask if everyone is ok. I know the show is praised for its humor but that unintentional joke was the biggest laugh of the series for me so far.
Why is she "hunting" in a skirt and open-toed shoes? Yes, in a show about vampires this wardrobe choice bothers me. It's just an unnecessary extra piece of nonsense for no reason.
Also there seems to be no rhyme or reason to when she's "hunting," partying, or sleeping. Sometimes this show is too much "wtf it's just about vampires nothing has to make sense."