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Reasons why the finale was pitch perfect for me...

I am, strangely, not depressed or disheartened at all by the ending, despite the fact that in my head I believe that Gunn is dying, that Spike and Angel both may not make it, and that Illyria probably will. And that no reinforcements are coming.

But, oh, my big damn heroes, oh how they left, singing in their souls as they fought.

And it makes sense, because this show has never had an unambiguously happy finale. Buffy's finales have often been painful (Becoming, The Gift), but more of them have been hopeful despite the cost -- they end on notes of grace, of a goal achieved, of satisfaction. Angel's happiest finale was probably To Shanshu in LA, way back when the gang was small and idealistic (*sniff* it still makes me sad to think that Angel's the only one left from the original AI), and even that, after the reaffirmation of family and of their mission to help the helpless, even To Shanshu in LA ends with the shot of Darla, back to wreak havoc on Angel's life. I'm still stunned by TSILA and by that arc -- Darla, Angel going beige, desperate sex, Connor, Jasmine, W&H, and now, Not Fade Away.

There's No Place Like Pltz Glrb (sp) is for the most part a happy finale, much like TSILA -- they gain a new family member, they get home, only to be slammed with another piece of devastating news. Buffy is dead. Tomorrow gets even darker, and while Cordy gets to ascend to the light, Angel ends up in a box under the sea, imprisoned by his son, and Wes lies in the arms of the enemy. In Home, the gang must deal with the repercussions of destroying world peace, no matter how large a lie that peace was, and Angel is hit hardest of them all. He can't save his son. So instead he fulfills a prophecy and gives up the one thing in the world he loves most, and he and his friends end up in charge of hell, or a branch office of it. And yet, my gang goes down fighting in this finale.

[livejournal.com profile] ros_fod points out that Angel's plan does in some way make sense. He knows his team isn't the only one out there fighting the good fight -- there's Buffy and the newly awakened Slayers, there are people like Gunn's gang, and supporting them, making sure that life goes on, that good goes on, are the people like Anne, who fight every day, every moment. And Angel can buy them time. He's signed away his one hope through the years, because it's pointless now -- he has Connor, and Connor has already made him human, in so many ways. His team is tired; they've suffered so many losses over the years, so many gone already in the fight. They've sacrificed their consciences at times, their capacity for forgiveness and mercy, their moral compass. They've been stretched to the breaking point time and again, and each time they've managed to come back, but each time, it's just been that much harder.

But they keep fighting anyway. Because that's what they do.

And Wes, my poor boy, he's been carrying much of what all of them have fallen to in himself; he's only the most drastic example of what this constant fight has done to them. Angel's team has always borne the costs more than the Sunnydale people have because Angel's team has had to make harsher choices to keep going. Maybe in some sense they bear the price of the fight, in the way that Buffy has largely borne the psychological damage of her years as Slayer in lieu of the Scoobies. Buffy, in the end, can't let herself be just a killer, but Angel's team can do that.

And they keep fighting, and they keep taking on more and more damage and more and more death. So one final day, they tear down the house of evil in LA, knowing that it will be rebuilt. But they also know that the rebuilding will take time, that the demons they have killed cannot be immediately replaced. And maybe, because of that, there is one less apocalypse Buffy has to avert, there is one more kid helped at Anne's shelter, there is one more person who does not die at the hands of a demon.

It's not the desperate, suicidal, heroic, sacrificial leap at the end of The Gift, not yet. Because they're still fighting, because they're still buying time. And the brilliant thing is, despite the fact that I think they may be doomed in the end, they also may not be. Because when it ends, they're still fighting.
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Great post...

Fri, May. 21st, 2004 06:30 am (UTC)
Posted by [identity profile] buffyannotater.livejournal.com
What I think that many people who don't understand why Angel did what he did, saying that he's choosing to die for a short-term goal rather than continuing to save people every day, are missing is the fact that Angel has never had so much power before, and thus this may be his only opportunity to real make the Senior Partners hurt, if only for a short amount of time. Like he did at the Hyperion, it's a relatively small action, except instead of holding the evil at bay, by helping one person at a time, attacking the monster by working from the ground up, so to speak, he is using the only chance he will probably ever have to strike at the head of the monster. There are other people out there as you say--Buffy, the Slayers, Anne--who will continue to fight if he and his people die. But as you also say, the brilliant thing about the ending is that they're still fighting when it ends. Which means, symbolically, they are fighting forever; in a literal sense, their deaths will never come, because the story is not being continued (at least for now). As unlikely as it may seem, if they manage to survive at the end, then they would have been able to strike yet another huge blow to the Senior Partners. And if they don't, then those few demons they can kill in the process of the fight are that many less demons harming other people in the world. In a way, I see the final moments of the ep as a metaphor for the entire series. The hordes of beasties descending upon them are like the ultimate mixture of every demon and evil force they have fought for the past five years. They see all these awful things in the world marching forward, and what do they do? They "get to work". The odds were always stacked against them, but it is that tiny chance that they will be victorious that has kept them going. And whether they live or not, in a world full of apathetic people, a fight against evil is, in and of itself, is a victory.

Re: Great post...

Fri, May. 21st, 2004 06:48 am (UTC)
Posted by [identity profile] buffyannotater.livejournal.com
There are other people out there as you say--Buffy, the Slayers, Anne--who will continue to fight if he and his people die.

In case it wasn't obvious, I didn't mean that Anne would be fighting evil the same way Buffy and the Slayers are. But she does fight it in her own way, and continues to soldier on, albeit in the (for the most part) non-supernatural arena of getting kids off the streets, which makes her just as much of a hero as Angel and Co., of course.

Re: Great post...

Fri, May. 21st, 2004 08:39 am (UTC)
Posted by [identity profile] ponygirl2000.livejournal.com
Much agreeage! I made this reply in my own LJ but I think it applies:

I liked the idea from the last half of the season that the apocalypse is ongoing. Not in the sense that we missed the secret kick-off but hopefully we can catch the big finish, but that it's a process. The world is always ending, just as it is always being saved. So there's no big moment that we should be preparing for, nothing that we're putting off. So the gang battling it out in the alley isn't about facing death, it's about facing life.

Plus I think Angel's line about wanting to kill the dragon is important - the episode was his attempt to slay the dragon that is W & H, and it's the attempt that's the important thing.

Fairy tales are more than true: not because they tell us that dragons exist, but because they tell us that dragons can be beaten.
- GK Chesterton

Re: Great post...

Fri, May. 21st, 2004 12:48 pm (UTC)
Posted by [identity profile] buffyannotater.livejournal.com
The world is always ending, just as it is always being saved...So the gang battling it out in the alley isn't about facing death, it's about facing life.

Oooh, I love that! I agree muchly as well. I was fascinated by the same thing...How the Apocalypse isn't a single event, but is what is being played out every day in the fight between good and evil. As the Gang worried about W&H doing to Angel last week, evil is slowly chipping away at/killing the world a little at time, on a constant basis. Which is a similar sentiment to saying that every human being on the planet is dying from the moment they are born. Because the moment life is breathed into you, you also gain mortality. So life and death can be seen as being inseparable from each other, the same as how the way the world is run and what will eventually cause the end of the world go hand-in-hand as well.

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