Monday, November 20, 2006


In its final season, Buffy the Vampire Slayer issued a mission statement you might not expect from a series that's been on the air for seven years: go back to the beginning. After a foray at college and a year spent toiling away in the working world, Buffy's going back to high school. Several years after its destruction at the hands...or giant coiled tail, whatever...of the ascended Mayor Wilkins, Sunnydale High has been rebuilt from the ground up. The Hellmouth beneath the school happens to lurk directly below the office of Principal Robin Wood (D.B. Woodside), who's harboring some sort of dark secret that may or may not work to Buffy's favor. Anyway, Wood continually stumbles upon Buffy as she spirits Dawn off to her first day of school as a freshman (complete with a duel against restless, vengeful spirits, natch), and ensuring both Summers girls make the most of the lovingly-crafted Sunnydale High set, Wood offers Buffy a job as a part-time counselor. Holed up in the bowels of Sunnydale High is Spike, who's been driven mad by a combination of his newly-acquired soul and an entity that's been haunting him, one that's soon going to expand its grasp to the rest of the Scooby Gang and the world at large... These early episodes really do capture the feel of the first few seasons of the series, a very welcome change after the grim year that came before it. This is one of the stronger opening salvos of Buffy; it typically seems to take the writers a few episodes to regain their footing, but I really like all of the episodes on the first couple of discs in this set. "Him" is played pretty much for laughs, revolving around a football player whose letter jacket makes him irresistable to the fairer sex, compelling Dawn, Buffy, Willow, and Anya to take drastic and wholly over-the-top measures to win his complete adoration. Three of the season's best episodes run back-to-back. "Same Time, Same Place" follows Willow's return to the group, still reeling from the near-apocalyptic events of the previous year and further disheartened when she's apparently abandoned by her friends. Buffy and company really are there for Willow, but the problem is that there are kind of two separate and distinct "there"s. The cannibalistic Gnarl is one of the most effectively creepy creatures of the show's entire run, and his confrontation with Willow is unsettling and horrifying...and I mean that in the best possible way. "Help" quickly follows, chronicling Buffy's quest to save the life of an awkward, introverted poet who foretells her own death. Although I really like all of the first batch of episodes, this season has two particularly strong stand-outs. Following the excellent "Same Time, Same Place" and "Help" is "Selfless", which features Anya returning to form as a mass-murdering vengeance demon, a decision that awes her demonic coworkers and conflicts her former friends as Buffy must make a difficult decision. The episode makes use of flashbacks from several vastly different time periods and juggles drastically different tones. We see what led young Aud to become the vengeful Anyanka in a hysterical glimpse back at her life with her wench-drenched, troll-hating brute of a husband, Olaf. There's also a flashback to "Once More, With Feeling", complete with a new musical number, followed by a brutal, brilliant cut to the present. The other standout is "Conversations with Dead People", an inventively structured episode penned by four different writers. The title is a decent enough synopsis, as a number of characters communicate in varying forms with the dearly departed. Buffy allows herself to be psychoanalyzed by a recently-risen Psych major, Dawn is haunted by a poltergeist that takes on a shockingly familiar image, Willow is delivered a message from a lost love one, Spike goes out on the town, and the remnants of last year's nerdy Troika return to Sunnydale. "Conversations with Dead People", the seventh episode, is where the season peaks, and it's all downhill from there. The decline in quality is particularly noticeable by the time "Bring on the Night" rolls around, a tailspin from which the season never really recovers. I'm about to drone on for, I dunno, a dozen paragraphs about why that is, so if you're up to the challenge, grab a cheese sandwich and ready your mouse's scroll button. The season's shape-shifting, incorporeal Big Bad talks incessantly about how evil it is. Buffy prattles on endlessly about how evil it is. Everyone and everything Buffy comes in contact with does the same. That's one of the fundamental problems with this season -- as frequently as we're told that this is a primordial evil...the stuff that makes garden-variety evil cower in its bedsheets...I never really felt any sense of dread. Buffy's pitted against something that's not corporeal, its plans are largely ineffective, and its ultimate goal is poorly defined. I would have liked to see the villain...y'know...do something. It's all talk, no show. I get that they were trying to take more of a psychological approach, but the execution flounders. Season seven also expands upon the concept of 'Potentials' hinted at in previous years...Slayers in waiting...scores of girls who may take the mantle of the Slayer when the current one falls. The basic idea dates back to season two, where Kendra was said to have been raised by a Watcher years before she was ever called as a Slayer. As with most everything in this main arc, the execution is tremendously poor for a number of reasons. For starters, the cast is bloated. There are too many supporting characters for any of them to get much individual face time (well over thirty at one point), and for a character-driven show like Buffy, this isn't a particularly good thing. It's odd that the Slayerettes as a group are given so much screentime, yet hardly any of them are fleshed out with much of a personality. Second, many of the actresses chosen to portray these Slayerettes really just aren't that great. To lend a sense of scope to the situation, these girls were shuttled to Sunnydale from all corners of the globe, and to try to convey that, most of them have accents...accents that are far, far more terrifying than any of the demons or beasties in this season. They're cardboard cutouts that are boring and ineptly used, and everytime they're on-screen (especially their Faux Metal Jacket training sequence), I found myself stifling a groan. Although I can't stomach any of the Potentials, to the point where the mere mention of the word "potentials" makes me froth at the mouth and convulse uncontrollably, the worst of the lot is Kennedy. She almost seems like a Mary Sue character in some dreadful fan-fic hosted on Angelfire.com or something. The bratty, intrusive Kennedy's tight integration into the main group seems entirely undeserved, and despite Joss Whedon's claims to the contrary, she has zero chemistry with Willow. In general, season seven feels like Joss Whedon and company had a clear beginning, a clear ending, and a few key plot points scattered along the way. What they hadn't bothered to sketch out in advance is how to navigate across those points, and especially near the middle of the season, everything feels muddled and unnecessarily prolonged. There isn't much of a distinction between episodes, which is rare for the series, and by the end, it's all just an indistinguishable blur. There are too many expanses where nothing happens, and in the last five episodes, the writers rush to cram in an overwhelmingly large number of concepts and ideas. It's clear that this season of Buffy wasn't shepherded by a strong showrunner. Plot points are introduced and then quickly dropped or outright bungled. There's a tremendously significant event with Dawn in "Conversations with Dead People" that's later dismissed with an explanation that doesn't jive with what we've learned by that point. An "is he or isn't he?" question revolving around Giles is extended for far too many episodes for the sake of a fairly lame joke. A disruption in the Slayer line is ominously pointed at as the impetus for the havoc, but that's immediately forgotten. Buffy insists the line runs through her, even though it's been firmly established previously that this is not the case. She's shown to have extensive resources at her disposal, but she rarely takes advantage unless it in some way directly involves Spike. Come on, the fate of the world is in your hands -- instead of griping about the tiny size of your army, call in for reinforcements. One recurring creature is shown as being virtually indestructible, bringing Buffy to the brink of death. Later in the season, an army of these beasts are unleashed on Sunnydale (and no, not by the season's villain), and even ordinary people like Dawn and Anya are knocking them off without breaking a sweat. The evil force claims to have plans for Spike and seems to have gone to great lengths to manipulate him, and...to what end? No idea. This being is shown as taking the form of Buffy and Spike around various monsters, but this seemingly obvious stab at psychological torture is rarely directed towards any of Buffy's friends or soldiers. (Then again, torture isn't exactly its strong suit since this is the same entity that tried to drown a vampire. Yeah, drowning a creature that doesn't breathe. Brilliant.) If this force has an army of minions willing to do its bidding to the death, why assign someone as ineffective and unproven as Andrew a key murderous task? Next to nothing is resolved until the season finale, and what few threads are wrapped up seem unsatisfying. I get the sense that the writers were making it up as they went along, as the season lacks a strong sense of flow from one episode to the next, probably because the staff was too busy lining up their next jobs to direct any effort towards their current gig. The trademark sparkle of Buffy's dialogue is gone. The series finale makes use of multiple deus ex machinas, one of which was introduced on a series on a different network. Once the story gets underway, all semblances of personalities for the central characters fade away. Something about having characters quip about having butchered people just doesn't ring true. Characterization doesn't seem to be a concern at all this year -- it's all about furthering the arc, only there isn't enough substance to that story to run for the bulk of a season. The end result is having uninteresting characters do uninteresting things to service a bland story and to pad out a 22-episode order. Andrew is shoehorned in for comic relief -- the same reason Anya's given any screentime once the main arc is underway -- but he's unbearably grating. I inexplicably thought he was funny the first time through, and although my opinions of the season were incrementally more positive with a second look, Andrew became excruciating. Too bad it couldn't be Jonathan, a character who at least has some history with the series, in his place. In a season where so many established characters are glossed over, Andrew somehow manages to snag an episode virtually all to himself. "Storyteller", which was largely shot on video from Andrew's perspective as an amateur documentarian, manages to be intermittently funny, particularly when it flashes back to the previous year's dweeby Troika. Since the central arc is wholly unable to be good for any length of time, "Storyteller" predictably fumbles with an eye-rollingly corny finale. The writers did eventually clue in that it might be a good idea to give Buffy something to hit in a season revolving around an incorporeal entity. Enter Caleb, a misogynistic mass-murdering preacher who isn't creepy, unsettling, or the least bit interesting, no matter how much of a body count he racks up or how much I may like the actor portraying him. I refuse to talk about Ashanti's guest-starring role this season, and in typing that, I've already wasted more time on the subject than it deserves. The central characters don't fare much better. Sarah Michelle Gellar seems wholly disinterested once the primordial evil story lurches into second gear, reduced to a frigid, self-righteous bitch who's an incredibly poor leader yet demands everyone march in lockstep. Everyone recognizes what an inept leader Buffy is except for herself and Spike, apparently unaware that the writers have decided that Buffy is always right, even if her decisions fly in the face of all logic. Buffy's idea of leadership is prattling on for hours at a time with extended speeches. There's a certain homogeneity to her speeches -- "People will die. Girls will die. I'm a girl and a person, therefore, I'm doubly at risk of dying." You could cut the season's runtime by a full episode if Buffy had been a little more terse with her rambling speeches. Willow, Giles, Anya, and Xander are all wasted, with the dull, lifeless Willow suffering the most. Xander only seems to be present to fix windows and drive people around, Giles is reserved mostly as a setup for a single joke, and Anya doesn't even get a chance to offer much comic relief since that's now Andrew's department. Despite being incomprehensibly powerful (or, yeah, I know, because of it), Willow's now regressed to a point where she's even less confident than she was seven years earlier. Without treading too far into spoiler territory, when a character from the past returns this season, she winds up spouting off gems like "Dude, I've got mad skills." Remember when IM away messages and message board signatures used to be peppered with quotes from the series? Season seven doesn't give fans much to work with. Basically, anyone who's not Buffy or Spike is shoved deep into the background, and only a couple of writers seem to have any clue how these characters should act or talk. That strong sense of friendship from years past has been dissolved, and their pre-apocalypse chat in the season finale -- one of the only times they seem to speak to each other outside of rousing speeches -- feels completely wooden and stilted. Despite having ranted at length about the season already, there are a few other things I feel obligated to gripe about. First, think about the different settings where the Scoobies had once met. The high school library, Giles' home, The Magic Box were all impressive, almost ominous sets. Where does most of season seven take place? Buffy's boring living room, which characters rarely seem to stray from unless they're heading to a cave, a basement, or faceless back alley. Then there's the matter of bland fight choreography, which is frequently obscured by quick cuts or low lighting, turning the Slayer mythology into a rape metaphor, and serving up numerous female empowerment angles that make the Spice Girls' chants of "girl power!" seem subtle by comparison. All enthusiasm I had for Buffy was sapped away by the time the series finale rolled around. The plan for the final battle makes no measure of sense, considering how little Buffy knew about Deux Ex Machina Mark Deux (well, admittedly, it did come with an instruction manual), and events seem to unfold in the wrong order. The final sacrifice, which consists of little more than standing around as a quasi-human jewelry rack, would quickly be undermined the following year in Buffy's sister...errr...brother series on the WB. Season seven, although it still suffers from a number of fundamental flaws, plays better on DVD than it did when originally aired. UPN's scattershot scheduling hampered the pace even further than the shoddy work of the staff writers, and the story works better when viewed in a more compressed period of time. This is the weakest of Buffy's seven season run, but it's not unredeemably, unwatchably bad, and there are enough episodes I like that I'd still recommend it as a purchase for fans of the series. Video: As has been the case for all of the domestically released Buffy sets, these episodes are presented as they aired, which would be at an aspect ratio of 1.33:1 preferred by series creator Joss Whedon. The quality is variable, but on the whole, it's fairly typical of the way the past couple of seasons have looked, with some steeper peaks and valleys. Sometimes it looks incredible, such as the footage of Willow and Giles in pastoral England, which is some of the best-looking footage from the entire run of the show. On the other end of the spectrum are episodes like "Selfless", which doesn't seem as well-defined as most of the rest of the set. Long stretches of "Showtime" seem artificially sharpened, and "Potential" looks less like a shiny, newly-minted DVD and more like it should have a TNT bug in the lower-right hand corner. "The Killer In Me" somehow manages to run that entire gamut, mixing in some impressive looking footage, some noisy, dismal dreck, and some parts that look like Mutant Enemy whipped out an old Bell & Howell Super-8 camera. Generally, the image is decently sharp and often fairly grainy, similar to the way these episodes looked when they originally aired, though still substantially improved over my murky UPN affiliate. Audio: Buffy is presented with a set of solid Dolby Digital stereo surround tracks, encoded at the usual bitrate of 192Kbps. The rears get a decent if unremarkable amount of use, and the subwoofer nicely accentuates the numerous punches and kicks throughout the season. Dialogue generally comes through well, and there are no concerns with intelligibility throughout. The real highlight of the soundtrack is the score by Robert Duncan, who's kindly made selections from his work available for download on his website. Each episode also includes dubs in French and Spanish, subtitles in English and Spanish, and closed captions. Supplements: Each of the six discs in this set includes some sort of extra material. The first disc features an audio commentary with writer Joss Whedon and director/co-executive producer David Solomon for "Lessons", the season premiere. Like most of the commentaries in this set, it's very laid-back, chatty, and funny, and they talk about shooting the English countryside scenes on Anthony Steward Head's lawn, keeping all sorts of nefarious chunks of information secret while casting, and, hey!, complaining about the overuse of the Summers house throughout the season. Also tacked on is an updated version of Willow's demon guide on the DVD-ROM portion of the disc. Disc two sports a pair of commentaries, and perhaps not coincidentally, they're on my two favorite episodes of the season. David Solomon returns for "Selfless" and is joined by writer Drew Goddard. They discuss the origins of Aud's name, penning six pages of D'Hoffryn gabbing about a bathroom, and the process of guilt-tripping an exhausted Joss Whedon into writing another song. Goddard is featured again on the second commentary on this DVD, alongside writer/co-executive producer Jane Espenson, director Nick Marck, and actors Danny Strong and Tom Lenk. Their notes include an opening song written by Joss Whedon and Angie Stone, the semi-chaotic process of cobbling together an episode written by four people with minimal prep time, explaining the lack of Amber Benson in this episode, and elements dropped from earlier drafts of the script. Espenson also clarifies the ambiguous re-appearance of one character, even though I don't think her explanation is supported by what's shown on-screen. The third disc doesn't offer any audio commentaries, but it does include the four-and-a-half minute featurette "Buffy: It's Always Been About The Fans". The fandom-centric featurette includes comments from Joss Whedon, Jane Espenson, James Marsters, Buffy fan mag writer Abbie Bernstein, the hosts of the Succubus Club radio show, and, of course, numerous Buffy fans from the 2003 Posting Board party. Disc four's "The Killer In Me" serves up audio commentary by David Solomon and writer Drew Z. Greenberg, who note the orchid-growing side business of Nerf Herder's frontman and also mock Iyari Limon, who was originally slated to appear on this track but had to bow out after it was rescheduled. Although all but one of the commentaries on this set are frequently played for laughs, this is the most joke-y and least informative of the bunch, but it's enough of a blast to listen to that I don't really mind. Drew Goddard appears in both of the audio commentaries on disc five. He's joined on "Lies My Parents Told Me" by director David Fury and actors James Marsters and D.B. Woodside. This is the most serious and most subdued commentary on the set, and some of the highlights include cleaning up some unconvincing digital rain and trying to shoot around helicopters and a mariachi band. Goddard's again joined by a cast member in "Dirty Girls", where he's paired with Nicholas Brendon. Nick rattles off his favorite episodes of Buffy, and they chat about how the girls in the fantasy sequence were named after relatives of Goddard's, shooting one scene with a spinoff in mind, and discussing aborted plans for the death of one extremely major character. The sixth and final disc of the set features the bulk of the extras. The last commentary is, appropriately enough, for the final episode of the series. Writer/director Joss Whedon comments on "Chosen" with his trademark dry sense of humor, quipping about fan reception to the relationships in Buffy's life, admitting the numerous conveniences of the plot, pointing out a menstrual metaphor, and noting the difficulties in shooting the epic battle sequence. Disc six is packed with several different featurettes. "Season 7 Overview - Buffy: Full Circle" runs right at thirty-six minutes, including comments from Joss Whedon, Marti Noxon, Jane Espenson, Rebecca Rand Kirshner, David Fury, Drew Goddard, David Solomon, Drew Z. Greenberg, Douglas Petrie, Alyson Hannigan, James Marsters, Michelle Trachtenberg, Tom Lenk, Anthony Stewart Head, and D.B. Woodside. Like the season six set, this overview strays from the usual episode-by-episode assault and examines specific characters and plots. I still don't really get what the point of these overviews is supposed to be, though, since they don't really ever seem to offer anything you can't glean from watching the episodes. In "Buffy 101: Studying the Slayer" (13:56), TV Guide's Matt Roush, UCLA's Vivian Sobchack, and USA Today's Robert Bianco apply a critical eye to the themes of the series. The featurette is too short and too riddled with lengthy clips from the series to be really insightful, but it's handled decently enough. "Generation S" (8:22) focuses on the Slayerettes, offering brief interviews with several of the actresses behind these characters. Interspersed between notes from Felicia Day, Iyari Limon, Indigo, and Sarah Hagan are additional comments by Jane Espenson, Joss Whedon, and David Solomon. In "The Last Sundown" (8:44), Joss Whedon runs down some of his favorite episodes and comments on the series as a whole. A three minute outtake reel features the usual flubbed lines, uncontrollable bursts of laughter, and random goofing around. Finally, there's five minutes of footage from the series' wrap party, mostly brief comments about the show and gushing over the brilliance of Joss Whedon. Interviewed are Whedon himself, Marti Noxon, Alyson Hannigan, James Marsters, Anthony Stewart Head, Alexis Denisof, Michelle Trachtenberg, Julie Benz, Juliet Landau, Nicholas Brendon, and Emma Caulfield. If you've been waiting for this DVD set to watch these episodes for the first time, hold off on the extras until you've made it all the way through, and try to avoid glancing at the spoiler-riddled menus and packaging as much as you can. If you own any of the past five Buffy sets, you know what to expect from the menus, packaging, and presentation, so I won't bother to rehash that same info again. As has been the case on the R1 sets for quite a while now, the 'Previously...'s have once again been lopped off. In Fox's overeagerness to remove those segments, they excised an explosion that opens one episode. Whoops! I don't get what the tremendously big deal would be in including those portions and offering a chapter stop afterward, but whatever. The 'Previously...' from season five's "The Gift" is presented as an anamorphic widescreen Easter Egg, available by selecting the 'B' icon to the left of "The Last Sundown" on the featurette submenu. Conclusion: The final season of Buffy the Vampire Slayer features a lot of interesting ideas, but weak storytelling, poor characterization, and an overall lack of focus make this what I'd consider the most disappointing of the series' seven season run. Although around half of the episodes in this set range from mediocre to excruciatingly dull, I like the other half enough to recommend this DVD set to Buffy fans, especially considering how entertaining the audio commentaries are. Recommended.

DVD TALK REVIEW OF BUFFY SEASON 6


Buffy the Vampire Slayer's sixth season polarized longtime fans of the show, inspiring lengthy tirades on innumerable message boards about how this was either the worst season of the series' run or its best. When these episodes originally debuted, I was squarely in the "worst" camp. The season seemed unrelentingly dark to me then, forcing its characters to endure an incomparable amount of suffering with no hope or happiness in sight. Immediately after each episode would air, I'd rant about how the characters I'd come to know over the past few seasons were scarcely recognizable and how far the quality of the writing had plummeted. Still, a handful of episodes appealed to me enough that I thought I'd revisit this season with its release this week on DVD. I wouldn't say I've had a complete change of heart having torn through this season a second time -- there are still some grating flaws I can't overlook -- but I have a greater appreciation for these episodes having watched them again in quick succession.

"The Gift", the season five finale, ended with Buffy dead and buried after battling deranged fallen goddess Glory. Dying is kind of old hat for Buffy, and I don't think I'm giving too much away by revealing that the show's title character quickly gets over the whole death thing. Although the ensuing gang of biker demons is corny, I thought her return from the grave in the feature-length "Bargaining" hit all the right notes. Her reappearance is heartbreaking and almost horrifying, and it avoids undermining the events that concluded the previous season. Rather than just toss her back in this mortal coil as if she'd never left, Buffy is distant and depressed, not quite the elated response her friends were expecting to see. The opening of the season offers an evenhanded blend of humor and drama, particularly the early escapades of the Troika. The all-nerd supersquad -- robotics whiz Warren (Adam Busch), clumsy sorceror-lite Jonathan (Danny Strong), and summoner Andrew (Tom Lenk) -- is widely disliked in Buffy circles, but I have to admit to really getting a kick out of them. They added a well-needed dose of geeky comedy to the season, which made the bitter pill of the agony Buffy and friends endure later on easier to swallow. The darker spin the three of them eventually take also resonates more having seen several episodes worth of their giddiness at being supervillains. I also thought the aftermath of Buffy's return, seen in "After Life", "Flooded", and "Life Serial", worked well as she tried to find her place in the world (and her friend's worlds) after being plucked from the afterlife. These episodes also manage to strike that perfect balance between humor and drama, keeping me laughing while still feeling awful for Buffy as she's stuck with a flooded basement she can't afford to repair, later discovering that the only place she fits in with the Scoobies is eviscerating demons. Another early highlight is "Tabula Rasa", where a spell gone awry robs the Scoobies of their memories. The comedy occasionally leaves a bit to be desired, such as a groan-inducing loan shark, but it works more often than not. Of special mention from this chunk of the season, of course, is the musical episode "Once More with Feeling". The version presented here is the original broadcast, a few minutes lengthier than your average Buffy installment. Although the concept of characters in an established drama singing and dancing for an hour screams 'gimmick', it's not a standalone episode, tying in heavily to the previous episodes of the season and setting up some of what would soon follow. The songs are surprisingly good, particularly impressive considering that they were written by someone without much of a musical background. A soundtrack CD is available separately for anyone who's interested.

I think a large part of the reason I was once so down on season six is that the mediocre episodes are all bunched up together. It's particularly noticeable with this boxset since there's a grand total of one particularly strong entry across discs three and four. These episodes revolve around Buffy's newfound self-destructive relationship, Willow's dangerous addiction to magic (I promise to complain about this in depth momentarily), Buffy's new gig slinging burgers, Dawn feeling ignored, and the excruciatingly dull and thankfully brief return of Agent Riley Finn to Sunnydale. I recognize that fast food is not a glamorous lifestyle, but the writers treat it like Buffy's whoring herself out on the docks or something. If she can't escape from her problems, at least the invisible Buffy story "Gone" gives her the opportunity to disappear for a while. Might be a good retreat for her, but its shoddy voiceover work and "so long, coppah!" dialogue kinda makes me wish this episode would disappear too. The only episode on the middle two DVDs that I found compelling was "Dead Things", where the Troika, previously seen as just a comic foil, take a considerably darker turn. I also liked chunks of "Smashed", which is a well-written episode even though some of the main plot points rub me the wrong way.

After dragging in the middle, the season closes out with a series of strong episodes. "Hell's Bells" features the chaos of a wedding between a human raised in a dysfunctional family and his millennia-old former vengeance demon fiancee, the aftermath of which is explored in "Entropy". One of the season's best is "Normal Again", which questions the reality of what we've seen for the past six seasons, and Buffy's assault on her possibly-delusional friends and family is as chilling as anything seen up to that point on the series. The darkness pervasive throughout much of the season culminates in "Seeing Red", which has two monstrous turning points I not surprisingly can't discuss in an attempt to stay as spoiler-free as possible. Its fatal closing events lead into the three-episode arc that rounds out the season. Similar to Angelus' appearances on both Buffy and Angel, the immeasurably powerful antagonist in these final episodes tear down the main characters, often echoing what's running through my mind as a viewer. As always, I can muster some complaints -- the clumsy misdirection with Spike's storyline, the text of a climactic speech, an energy blast directed towards a god of death -- but I'd still rank it as one of the stronger closings to any of Buffy's seven seasons.

Every season of Buffy up to this point has pitted the Slayer against a "Big Bad", some sort of seemingly indomitable force with the fate of the world invariably lying in the balance. One summary I've frequently read about Buffy's sixth season -- and hey, the title of one of the extras on this DVD set -- is that the Big Bad this time around is life. The biggest struggles are frequently internal to the group -- floundering relationships, destructive addictions, financial woes, kleptomania, responsibility, feeling as if one doesn't belong, facing an uncertain future, dealing with an unbearable present. The foe Buffy and friends face most frequently is themselves; self-loathing is a dominant theme, and the once tightknit group is torn asunder. Nearly every relationship is ripped apart as various episodes focus on marriage, sex, infidelity, and even attempted rape and murder.

It's welcome to see each of the main characters featured prominently, a juggling act the following season would fail to accomplish, even if not all of the individual arcs work. Dawn is frequently pointed to as one of the weak links in the series, and although she didn't bug me in season five, her incessant fingernails-on-chalkboard whining makes her difficult to relate to here. The most botched arc is Willow's addiction to magic. When the season opens, Willow is shown resorting to sorcery haphazardly, using it to perform even the simplest, most menial tasks. Her thirst for power and disregard for the inevitable consequences begin to separate Willow from her friends. Then, the season takes a U-turn. It's no longer a compulsion to use magic as a crutch that's the crux of Willow's problem. No, if they tossed in a thirteen-year-old Helen Hunt leaping out a window, Buffy would be virtually indistinguishable from an ABC afterschool special. The writers at Mutant Enemy pound the "Magic is a drug!" nail into the ground so overbearingly that it ceases to be a metaphor. Every conceivable clich� is whipped out -- humiliating herself by visiting a dealer in a rundown shack, hallucinating soaring through outer space, vacant-eyed dances, sobbing in the shower, bringing an innocent down with her, cold sweats, gulping down gallons of water...hell, her supplier's name is one letter off from spelling "Crack". Think of a cross between Permanent Midnight and Desperate Lives teeming with the walking undead. Reefer Madness was more restrained than this. In the episode "Gone", Buffy states that candles are like bongs to a witch, and there's a lame gag where a baggie of sage is mistaken for pot. There's no subtlety, and the general concept of a drug-like addiction to magic hadn't been hinted at in five previous seasons of heavy magic use from various characters.

Fans of the show who prefer to pretend the UPN era of Buffy never took place should still consider picking up season six as a purchase or at least a rental. The season played much better for me the second time through; I think it helps to go in already having seen some of its twists and turns, not to mention not having to wade through UPN's staggered broadcast schedule. The plotting isn't as tight as I would've liked, the season drags pretty heavily in the middle, the dialogue isn't up to what I consider to be Mutant Enemy's usual standards, and I'm convinced the season would've benefitted with a few rays of sunshine to break through all the darkness. Still, I think other fans who shared my initial disappointment may look at season six of Buffy the Vampire Slayer differently with another viewing.

Video: I've prattled on about Buffy's aspect ratio twice before, and I'm not going to bother rehashing those arguments here. These episodes, with one exception, are presented full-frame, the way they were intended to be seen. This set includes the one episode of the series that was shot specifically for widescreen, the letterboxed "Once More with Feeling". Buffy fans with 16x9 displays may be disappointed to hear that this episode isn't presented in anamorphic widescreen. It may also be worth noting that the image in "Once More with Feeling" is heavily windowboxed to help compensate for overscan. Steering away from aspect ratios for a moment, the sixth season of Buffy is the best looking to date. It's sharp and detailed, offering a wide variety of colors when given the opportunity. The visuals can get as dark literally as the season is figuratively, and black levels and shadow detail all hold up even in the most dimly-lit sequences. There are, as expected, no print flaws and no particularly noticeable edge haloing. Some film grain is present, but not to any greater extent than I'd expect from a television series, and it's compressed in such a way that the grain doesn't devolve into a big messy block of digital artifacts. "Once More with Feeling" is particularly impressive, and despite not benefitting from 16x9-enhancement, it's indistinguishable from a feature film. The visual end of this set is really nicely done, and it's a monstrous leap up from what I've been seeing on cable.

Audio: The sixth season of Buffy is accompanied by a set of Dolby Digital 2.0 surround tracks in English, French, and Spanish, each encoded at a bitrate of 192KBps. The 'surround' component is light, largely just reinforcing the score and various bits of music tossed in. Aside from established acts like Bush, Sarah McLachlan, and Michelle Branch, this season continues Buffy's tradition of shining the spotlight on lesser-known groups, this time including the likes of Man of the Year and Halo Friendlies. Activity in the lower frequencies is decent but unremarkable. Dialogue is one of the hallmarks of the series, and it generally comes through, marred by some infrequent flickers of distortion. The overall quality is pretty typical for a TV-on-DVD release. Subtitles have been provided in English and Spanish, and all of its episodes are closed captioned.

Supplements: Each of the six discs in this set has at least something extra tacked on, totalling around nine and a half hours. Uninitiated viewers should hold off on viewing the extras until finishing the season in its entirety because of the sheer number of spoiler-riddled discussions. The first disc offers a commentary for "Bargaining" with writers David Fury and the touching, incredibly maudlin Marti Noxon. Despite commenting on a two-part episode, there really aren't that many lengthy gaps scattered throughout. They cover a lot of ground in this hour and a half, including Emma Caulfield's gradual progression to becoming Sarah Michelle Gellar Mark II, the meaningless of the numbers on their wardrobe, George Lucas' jaunt to the Buffy set, the proper pronunciation of the name of composer Thomas Wanker, unsatisfying plot points, an originally more graphic sacrifice scene, Joss requesting that Marti avoid watching the Buffy movie, neatly combed post-resurrection hair, an uninviting premiere for new viewers, crazy scaffolding...okay, I think that list is long enough.

"Once More with Feeling" is lavished with the special edition treatment on disc two. First up is a half-hour peek behind the scenes courtesy of David Fury. It compiles footage snapped both during and between takes, compares that raw material to the polished product, and takes viewers into production meetings. We get a glimpse of the choreography, the actors belting it out in the recording studio, and the application of some of the make-up effects. It's a candid look at what goes into making an episode, and this is not only the best extra on this season set of Buffy, it's perhaps the best of any of the six DVD boxsets to date. Singalong versions of "I've Got a Theory / Bunnies / We're Together", "I'll Never Tell", and "Walk Through the Fire" are also provided. It's footage from the episode with the lyrics on-screen, not karaoke in the sense of having the vocals removed. Joss Whedon's commentaries are always a highlight of these DVD collections, and this being such a key episode of the series, he contributes one for "Once More with Feeling" as well. He hardly stops to take a breath for the duration. Joss tackles every conceivable angle, from the intentions of particular songs, incorporating the cast's individual talents into the tunes and dance numbers, suspension of disbelief, the role of Disney animation as a source of inspiration, learning to play guitar specifically for this musical, and trying to avoid making the episode seem like an event. Joss' rapid-fire wit carries through with this commentary as well. An Easter Egg is hidden on the Language Selection menu for the episode, by the way. Selecting a hidden symbol to the left of the "Subtitles" label reveals some footage from a signing of the soundtrack.

This third disc includes another of the most entertaining and informative extras on this set, an hour-long panel discussion at the Academy of Television Arts and Sciences. It was taped on June 18th, 2002 with creator Joss Whedon, director of photography Raymond Stella, production designer Carey Meyer, show runner Marti Noxon, and cast members Nicholas Brendon, Alyson Hannigan, James Marsters, and Michelle Trachtenberg in attendance. The discussion revolves almost entirely around season six and its aftermath, focusing heavily on the musical, set design, taking characters to such a dark place, the more lurid aspects of the season, taking a more literal approach to storytelling rather than relying so much on metaphors, Joss' work ethic, and the challenges of shooting a show like Buffy. Also on this disc is a commentary by writer Drew Z. Greenberg for "Smashed", the first episode where he had the opportunity to see his name onscreen in the familiar Buffy font. It's a good track, including notes about the headaches associated with using exotic languages for spells and striving for proper 1979 Boba Fett accuracy.

The "Buffy Goes to Work" featurette on disc four runs just over five minutes in length, featuring Jane Espenson, David Solomon, David Fury, Drew Z. Greenberg, Michelle Trachtenberg, Adam Busch, Christopher Buchanan, Joss Whedon, Steven S. DeKnight, Alyson Hannigan, and Rebecca Rand Kirshner reminiscing about their first jobs and noting what their dream gigs would be.

Disc five includes a pair of commentaries. The first is for "Hell's Bells", and Emma Caulfield was originally going to contribute to the track. Instead, she left director David Solomon and writer Rebecca Rand Kirshner to take it alone. Neither have all that much to say other than brief, scattered little quips. A better writer/director pairing quickly follows with "Normal Again", featuring commentary by Rick Rosenthal (Halloween II) and Diego Gutierrez. It's a little dry and slow-moving at first, but it gets better as it goes along. As this was a favorite episode of mine, I appreciated the commentary, particularly their discussion about the ambiguity of the varying realities "Normal Again" presents. The performances and the structure of the episode are also frequent topics of discussion. Though not labeled as an extra, disc five also includes a callsheet for "Normal Again" on the DVD-ROM portion of the disc.

The bulk of the extras are located on the sixth and final disc. "Life Is the Big Bad" is a half-hour overview that takes a different approach to the material than those on previous Buffy boxes. Rather than just go episode by episode with their recaps, the featurette examines individual characters and what happens to them throughout the course of the season. The participants include most of the writing staff and a handful of actors -- Joss Whedon, David Fury, Jane Espenson, Doug Petrie, David Solomon, Steven S. DeKnight, Drew Z. Greenberg, Rebecca Rand Kirshner, Michelle Trachtenberg, Alyson Hannigan, and Adam Busch. Another lengthy collection of interviews is the 43 minute "Buffy the Vampire Slayer - Television with a Bite", a TVography that aired on A&E. The overview covers Buffy's origins as a movie, its incarnation as a TV show that the major networks resisted, its rise to popularity and critical reception, crafting a spinoff, and the business of network leaping. Many key episodes and events are touched upon, with special emphasis paid to "Earshot", "The Body", and "Once More with Feeling". Most of the principals are interviewed, including Joss Whedon, Gail Berman, Anthony Stewart Head, Michelle Trachtenberg, Alyson Hannigan, David Boreanaz, Marti Noxon, James Marsters, Emma Caulfield, and...wow, that's rare...Sarah Michelle Gellar. A fair amount of behind the scenes footage, even some glimpses of storyboards, are also provided. James A. Contner and writer David Fury chime in with a commentary for the season finale "Grave". Some of my favorite bits in their track centered around what didn't make it into the final episode, including some intended dragon slayage (which made me smirk, considering one of the last lines of dialogue of the Buffyverse from a couple days ago) and an aborted sewer brawl. They also speak at length about how some of the effects were accomplished, and there are even some comments about Sarah Michelle Gellar's questionable on-cue laughs. It's also revealed that although Joss didn't write or direct the season finale, a first for Buffy, he did pen the climactic speech. The last of the set-top-accessible extras is an outtake reel that captures a couple minutes of flubbed lines and uncontrollable bursts of laughter. Readers with a DVD-ROM can also tap into Willow's Demon Database, which lists the nasties from the first six seasons of the series.

As has been the case with the other box sets up to this point, the "Previously on..."s are still missing in action domestically. Each disc features a set of animated 16x9-enhanced menus, and the traditional length episodes are divided into somewhere in the neighborhood of fifteen chapters. A set of brief liner notes provides synopses for the episodes on each disc, and another insert notes the seventh and final season of Buffy will be released on DVD this October.

Conclusion: Despite detesting it when it first aired, I found myself with a great appreciation of the penultimate season of Buffy the Vampire Slayer with a second viewing. This being their tenth Mutant Enemy box set, Fox Home Video has a pretty firm grasp on what Joss Whedon's fans want on their DVDs, and this set includes a solid assortment of extras alongside the expected improvements in video quality. Though I consider this season to be a few steps down from the series' creative pinnacle, this collection of Buffy the Vampire Slayer's sixth season still comes recommended.

DVD TALK REVIEW OF BUFFY SEASON 5



Season four of Buffy the Vampire Slayer tore apart the core group. Buffy had moved away from home to attend college, separating her from her mother, and Spike's meddling and unavoidable internal strife splintered the Scooby Gang. After regrouping to defeat the piecemealed demonic cyborg Adam, Buffy and company once again became a family, and they remain cheerfully reunited as season five begins. In fact, not only are they a sunny, happy family again, there's a new addition in their ranks. That fresh face belongs to Buffy's bratty fourteen-year-old sister Dawn (Harriet the Spy's Michelle Trachtenburg), who's startlingly new to established viewers of the series, but gratingly familiar to its central cast of characters. Season five also introduces the double-X-chromosome-fueled evil of Glory, a banished god driven insane by her quarter-century stint in our realm. Glory and her legion of bumpy-headed, adjective-spouting worshippers are in search of The Key, a mystical ball of energy reshaped into a form that she can't identify but that she's determined to hunt down regardless. The Key has been entrusted to the Slayer, and a mad god proves to be a much more formidable opponent than any she's faced before.

This DVD release of fifth season of Buffy the Vampire Slayer spreads its twenty-two episodes across six discs. A list of the titles and brief synopses of each follow, and though I tried to go as light on spoilers as possible, pretend I inserted the requisite spoiler warning here anyway.
  1. Buffy vs. Dracula: I've been disappointed in the premieres of every season of Buffy since I started watching in 1998 with one sole exception, and this episode isn't it. Season five begins with forty-two of the most interminable minutes of the entire run of the series. The title provides all of the plot summary that's necessary: Dracula (played by Rudolph Martin, who quickly reprised the role in the TV movie Dracula: The Dark Prince) comes to Sunnydale with a bunch o' gypsy parlor tricks in tow. He not only thirsts for the Slayer's blood, attempting to seduce Buffy into begging to be turned. Drac's hypnotic abilities put Xander under his thrall, and his subsequent bug-chomping, excuse-fumbling behavior is this episode's only real highlight. Buffy vs. Dracula ends on a "Bobby Ewing in the Shower"-ish note, leading directly into...
  2. Real Me: "Harmony has minions?" Buffy's newfound teenage sister is properly introduced, scribbling rants about her older sister, Buffy's Scooby pals, and her so-called life in general into a series of angst-drenched journal entries. Dawn also presents herself as the perfect target for Harmony, who somehow has assembled a gang of undead thugs hellbent on offing the Slayer once and for all.
  3. The Replacement: "It's a robot! It's an evil robot constructed from evil parts that look like me, designed to do evil." After taking a blast meant for Buffy during a junkyard scrap, Xander wakes up the next morning surrounded by even more filth than usual. As he trots back from a literal dump to one that's a spot more figurative, Xander notices someone bearing a strikingly similar resemblance to himself getting dressed in his parents' basement. Someone's stolen Xander's life and is...well, living it better than he ever was, scoring a promotion, a swanky apartment, and the complete and total adoration of seemingly everyone in arm's reach, all in the space of a single day. Both of the Xanderseses are convinced the other must be destroyed, but if Xander kills himself, he dies. That last snippet makes more sense in the context of the episode, which I'm liberally semi-quoting.
  4. Out of My Mind: The Initiative did some heavy plumbing in Riley's body when he was under their control, heightening his strength and endurance. Their tinkering is beginning to take its toll -- he can't feel any pain whatsoever, and his heart is racing at the steady clip of 150 beats per minute. The shattered remains of the government's underground monster hunters are offering to provide the surgery necessary to restore him to normal, but an uncooperative Riley, convinced that being normal isn't enough for Buffy, darts off. Buffy enlists Spike's help in bringing Riley to the good doctor, but the neutered vampire has plans of his own, he says with an ominous trailing ellipsis...
  5. No Place Like Home: Disc two, and...hey, time for the season arc! Buffy takes her first chomp out of the meat of season five in No Place Like Home. A shiny sphere and the semi-coherent rantings of a madman lead Buffy to explore the supernatural as the cause of her mother's recent medical problems. She enters a trance to unveil whatever spell may be at its source, but it's a different member of her family that's unwittingly unnatural. Buffy learns about Dawn's origins and has her first run-in with the well-coiffed goddess Glory.
  6. Family: The first of three episodes in season five penned 'n helmed by Buffy creator Joss Whedon, Family takes place as Tara is about to turn twenty years old. Tara's family storms into town unexpectedly, not to spin noisemakers or belt out copyrighted well-wishes, but to drag her back home. Tara's father grimly states that the women of their family bear demon blood, undergoing an unpleasant transformation as they enter their second decade. Tara, wanting to hide her true face from her friends, casts a spell on them so that they can't see demons, which...Sunnydale? Probably not the best idea, especially with a vengeful Glory assembling a small army of marrow-sucking Lei-Ach demons to disembowel the Slayer.
  7. Fool for Love: Buffy nearly meets her end, not from a rogue slayer, a key-craving deity, or a battalion of demonic hunters, but a single, garden-variety vampire. As she recovers from taking a stake to the gut, Buffy becomes determined to learn where the Slayers before her failed, turning to the one person with the information she requires: Spike, who offed two of their number. Spike speaks at length to Buffy about how he became a vampire and how he bested two of the Chosen. This episode is the Buffy-half of the similarly flashback-y Darla in Angel's second season.
  8. Shadow: The Scoobies continue their quest for information about the Big Bad, finding it rather difficult to research an entity referred to as That Which Cannot Be Named. They even fail to recognize her when she strolls into the Magic Box to pick up some items necessary to summon Sobek. The not-particularly-menacing Egyptian snake god is searching for The Key that Glory so desperately craves, and as if that weren't enough tumult, Joyce's condition worsens, and Riley's floundering relationship with Buffy leads him to a dark, fanged place.
  9. Listening to Fear: Joyce's surgery is rapidly approaching, and though it's just two days away, she can't bear to spend another moment in the hospital. Buffy convinces the doctor to let her take her mother home, but she winds up with something extra in tow -- a Queller demon. This extraterrestrial creature preys on the mentally ill, and Joyce Summers is the next entree on the menu.
  10. Into the Woods: Mom's operation goes well enough that Buffy and Riley head home to celebrate, and pretend I said 'celebrate' while making a finger-quotes gesture and leering suggestively. Riley skips out while Buffy snoozes, and Spike drags the Slayer to get a firsthand glance at some of Captain Cardboard's extracurricular activities. This puts an extensive strain on their relationship, and when Riley's offered the opportunity to join the Army in clearing a demon infestation in South America, he hands the decision over to Buffy. The Slayer, meanwhile, has her hands full with a group of vengeful vamps who don't appreciate their profitable nest being charred to the ground.
  11. Triangle: "That's insane troll logic!" Although Glory hasn't reared her head in a surprisingly high number of episodes, Giles heads off to England to seek the assistance of the Watcher's Council. While he's away, Anya and Willow have a spat at the Magic Box that results in the summoning of a seven-foot-tall, hammer-wielding troll (played by Abraham "Kube!" Benrubi) that coincidentally happens to be a former flame of Anyanka's.
  12. Checkpoint: The Watchers Council arrives in Sunnydale with extensive information about Glory, data they're determined to withhold until they're convinced that Buffy's skills and strategies are sound. While Quentin Travers and company attempt to get Buffy and her friends to leap through as many hoops as possible, Glory pays a visit to the Summers household in search of The Key. Also, another group of players enter the game hunting for The Key, and though their intentions are different than Glory's, their terms are every bit as unacceptable.
  13. Blood Ties: Buffy finally informs her friends about Dawn's true origins, and their subsequent uncomfortable behavior around her inspires Dawn to seek out information at the Magic Box, where she too learns the truth. Dawn understandably has difficulty accepting the news, and after her disturbing initial reaction, she runs off to the hospital to try to learn more about herself. She chats about it with Ben before discovering his connection with Glory, placing her in even more danger.
  14. Crush: Dawn goes missing one evening, and as Buffy rallies the troops, the Slayer swings by Spike's lair only to find...well, Dawn, listening attentively to one of William the Bloody's tales of carnage and assorted mayhem. On the tense walk back to the Summers homestead, Buffy asks Dawn if she has a crush on Spike, only to have that conversation derailed when Dawn points out Spike's obsessive adoration for the Slayer. Buffy has some creepy encounters with a well-meaning Spike, but when he's spurned in no uncertain terms, he begins to gravitate back towards Drusilla, who's recently rolled back into town.
  15. I Was Made to Love You: April is determined to find Warren, whoever that is, stopping to ask everyone she encounters and knocking on every door in Sunnydale with complete disregard for time. She was made for lovin' him, baby, and when she thinks Buffy is an obstacle to her manufactured love, April goes all Westworld on her.
  16. The Body: Buffy and her friends suffer the greatest loss of their lives.
  17. Forever: The grieving continues as Angel stops in to pay his respects. Dawn attempts to deal with the heartache with a resurrection spell, learning about the process from a well-intentioned Willow and enlisting Spike's assistance in acquiring some of the necessary ingredients. This sort of sorcery is dangerous and unreliable, and as Dawn performs the ritual, Glory finds out more about the form The Key has taken.
  18. Intervention: "We will bring you the limp and beaten body of Bob Barker!" Glory is aware of the general form the The Key has assumed and that it has some sort of connection with Buffy, so she dispatches her acolytes to observe the Slayer's friends in the hopes that they will discover its precise appearance and location. While Buffy takes a pleasant jaunt to the desert with Giles for a vision quest, Glory's henchmen mistake the affection between Spike and his newly-created Buffy-Bot as a hint of Key-ness and spirit him off for some torture-riddled interrogation.
  19. Tough Love: Glory mistakenly believes she's identified The Key. When she discovers that her assumption is incorrect, she takes the opportunity to feast on her victim's brain, leaving an incomprehensible, babbling mess behind. Despite Buffy's pleas, Willow immerses herself in the darkest magics to exact her revenge.
  20. Spiral: After one narrow escape too many from Glory, Buffy and company hit the road to try to keep The Key out of her clutches. They're pitted against the Knights of Byzantium, whose mission statement involves killing The Key, and the Scoobies eventually find themselves barricaded in an abandoned gas station with one of their number severely wounded. They reach out to Ben for some much-needed medical assistance, unaware of his connection to Glory.
  21. The Weight of the World: Having carried the titular weight of the world on her shoulders since high school and reeling from Glory snatching Dawn, Buffy shuts down. As Willow enters her mind to try to return her to normality, Glory makes final preparations for a ritual bloodletting that will decimate reality as we know it, fighting an internal battle against both Ben and her own guilt.
  22. The Gift: As Glory begins the process of unraveling reality, Buffy and company launch a final assault, one from which not everyone will escape alive.
I find myself embroiled in discussions about Buffy the Vampire Slayer with disturbing frequency, and one inevitable question is the mainstay "what's your favorite season?" There's bound to be a handful of people who chime in with season two and some frightening people I'd just as soon not talk to who point to six or seven, but more often than not, it's seems to be seasons three or five that gets the nod. My preference admittedly lies with season three, but it's not difficult to see why season five is so popular with fans of Buffy, and I'd also rank it as one of my favorites. Its underlying theme is family, and considering that some of these characters were relegated to the sidelines and barely recognizable in the seasons that would follow, it's wonderful to see everyone together here. The group is slimmer than in the outset of season four -- Oz and recurring peripheral characters like Jonathan and Amy are nowhere to be seen -- but the core is as inseparable as they've ever been. I also found it interesting to see the progression of the relationship between Buffy and Dawn. The walls are torn down when they learn the truth about their memories of the past fourteen years, yet their relationship is gradually rebuilt on different terms, drawing them even closer than they had ever been before. Although Dawn is frequently pointed to as the season's weakest link -- at least judging from the reception on message boards, she grated on quite a number of nerves -- I liked the character and felt her addition to the group dynamic contributed greatly to how much I enjoy season five.

There are several outstanding entries this season. In some of the earlier episodes, the writers didn't seem to have a clear idea what to do with Spike, and he felt shoehorned in rather than an essential aspect of the show. Several instances arose where he'd randomly show up wherever the Scoobies happened to be, and a "Spike?! What are you doing here?" would inevitably follow. These brief appearances still often wound up being some of the most entertaining parts of those episodes, most memorably a five word explanation as to why he was lurking outside the Summers homestead. Although I didn't buy the group's continued reluctance to stake him early on, he becomes an integral part of the series with Fool for Love, my second favorite episode of the season. That extended glimpse into Spike's past not only provides some of the most impressive fight choreography of this twenty-two episode set, but a great deal of insight into what lies beneath that brash exterior, making a seasoned killer into a sympathetic character without betraying or disregarding continuity. Much of the cast has an episode that similarly shines the spotlight brightly on them -- Dawn in The Real Me, Xander in The Replacement, Riley in Out of My Mind, Tara in Family -- but their presence is weighted well throughout the season, and no one spends any time with sagging shoulders on the bench.

The Body is unspeakably brilliant, perhaps the most agonizingly emotional hour of television I've ever watched. Lesser series would have been unable to resist the temptation to devolve into a 'very special episode', drenched in weepy remembrances and syrupy music. The power of The Body lies in its stark realism. There isn't a note of music throughout, relying on exceptional performances and masterful direction to convey the heartache and sorrow. Whedon doesn't force the material on the viewer in the hopes of getting an emotional response; one of the most effective moments comes when Buffy delivers the news to Dawn. We don't discern a single syllable that's uttered, but voyeuristically watching the delivery alongside Dawn's classmates through a window is enough. It's appropriate that the first two episodes of the season to be written and directed by Joss Whedon were The Body and Family. Although surface similarities between the two are slight, the underlying message is the same: this isn't a group of friends or thrill-seeking monster hunters, but a family. The Body is not only the best of the season, it's the pinnacle of the 144 episodes that aired throughout Buffy's seven years, and it is without question one of my favorite episodes of any television series, ever.

I can't be as positive about other aspects, though, such as Marti Noxon's vampire suck-shack that's a heavy-handed precursor to her frying-pan-over-the-head "magic is like drugs!" analogy the following year. Part of what drags season five down for me is this year's girl, the crazed goddess Glory. She in some ways reminds me of the Mayor -- immeasurably more powerful than her form would suggest, overflowing with quirky and silly personality traits... The primary difference is that Glory doesn't sell 'menacing' in quite the same way as Mayor Wilkins. I get the concept -- Buffy's never faced a villain that was the least bit similar to herself, and the petite, blonde, self-involved, fashion-obsessed, immensely strong Glory bears more than a passing resemblance to what we've seen of Buffy over the years. Doting, unthreatening fanatics reaching for adjectives to best describe their adoration for her, speeches about the splendor of bubble baths and the lack of quality shopping in Sunnydale, and a final� where she's whomped over the head with a Lane Bryant plus-sized troll hammer didn't really pull me in. Why the Mayor works for me and she doesn't, I dunno, but Glory doesn't strike me as a particularly effective villain, despite the havoc she wreaks on-screen. The sheer amount of repetition doesn't help either as so many of the scenes with Glory are virtually indistinguishable from one another: bumpy minions lavish her with praise, Glory gets miffed that she doesn't have The Key, and reiterates that she really, really wants it. The less said about the morphing, the better. The irrepressibly over-the-top Glory isn't a bad villain by any stretch, but she's not a great one either. It's to the season's credit that it still works despite a somewhat lackluster Big Bad: to make an obligatory potshot at the exceptionally dull seventh season of Buffy, this wouldn't always be the case.

My interest waned in the last couple of episodes leading up to the final�, beginning with Spiral. First of all, the Knights of Byzantium? What a tremendously silly, ineffective idea. Although I thought portions of the gas station barricade worked well, the consistently ham-fisted acting of the knights and their horseback assault on a Winnebago failed to get the desired reaction from me. Buffy also chucks an axe into the chest of one of the Knights, and it's mentioned that a total of ten fell in that initial battle. Giles is quick to insist a couple of episodes later that Buffy could never kill an innocent human, but assuming that an edged weapon embedded in the gut tends to be fatal, I don't quite get how he (or Buffy near the end of season six) could be so sanctimonious unless he didn't get the memo. At least the knights don't show up again, despite not having accomplished their holy mission. The following episode, The Weight of the World, is near-plotless and trudges along at an excruciatingly slow pace. The penultimate episode of the season is a little late to cram in that sort of filler, and...oh, the morphing...the low-rent, excessive morphing...

Quite a number of fans point to The Gift as one of the high points of the season and the series as a whole. I'm not really one of them. I thought the way everyone in the group played a significant role in the assault was excellent, and I promise to try my best to avoid a snarky comparison to the eerily similar series final�, Chosen. It's kind of hard to bitch excessively about some points without wading into spoiler waters, but I'll give it a shot anyway. The 'blood' substitution doesn't make any sense to me, and there isn't any support in previous episodes that would give that theory any credence. I found it interesting that a detailed ritual for bloodletting had been determined and written in detail centuries beforehand, despite the fact that there was no assurance whatsoever as to what form The Key would assume. It's possible that those prophecies are remarkably comprehensive and cover every possible contingency, but if the monks had shaped The Key into the form of a pecan log, would it too need to be annointed and draped in a ritual dress? I dunno. And then there's the suggestion that Anya, with whatever minimal magical abilities she possessed before becoming a vengeance demon, created a Troll God? Anya can, or at least could, create gods? If so, why not try to get someone with the power and resources the Scoobies possess to do the same? If not, and this is clearly outside the scope of the episode, how does a standard-issue troll elevate to deity status? Perhaps Anya's deep and abiding love for capitalism caused her to upsell the value of Olaf's hammer, or maybe I should repeat to myself that it's just a show and I should really just relax. The Gift encapsulates my feelings of the season as a whole: it boasts some genuinely wonderful parts and on the whole I'd say I liked it, but the story just didn't draw me in as much as I would've liked. Part of my lack of overly abundant enthusiasm of the episode stems from the fact that it follows so soon after The Body, an episode that has lasting consequences...finality. It's difficult to appreciate a sacrifice to the same extent when you know that the series has been renewed for two more seasons and that they're not going to continue without a certain character. Although there were consequences of this action shown in season six, the near-immediate undoing greatly minimizes its effectiveness. The Gift can serve as a series final� for those who'd prefer to plug their ears and pretend that the UPN era never took place, and I'd imagine there's a contingent of fans whose collection of these box sets will end here.

Clearly, I spend too much time debating the minutae of Buffy on a variety of forums. This review is the longest I've written to date, and there's little need for me to have gone into such detail. More concisely distilled: if you've watched previous seasons of Buffy and enjoyed them, then you'll probably feel much the same way about season five as well. If not, then...yikes, you've wasted an impressive amount of time making it to this point in the review. The fifth season of Buffy the Vampire Slayer is a largely strong collection of episodes in an excellent series, and it's deserving of a spot on the DVD shelf of any remotely enthusiastic fan.

Before tackling the technical aspects of this release, it's worth noting that many fans have been clamoring for the return of the series' "Previously on..."s for quite some time now. I suppose Fox thought that their inclusion would be superfluous, and I have to admit that I don't really have a strong preference one way or the other. Still, they would have been nice to have as a reference anyway, and there are several instances where the music that opens an episode seems abrupt without them. The Gift, which marked the 100th episode of Buffy the Vampire Slayer, certainly suffers from that jumpy start. Even worse, though, The Gift debuted on network television with an incredibly impressive rapid-fire montage of clips from the ninety-nine episodes that preceded it, and that too has been left off of this DVD release.

Video: Season five of Buffy the Vampire Slayer, as has been the case with the four previous seasons in region one, is presented full-frame. For those who may not be aware, Buffy is filmed in widescreen, and the flat 1.78:1 image is cropped to 1.33:1 for broadcast on television. Overseas DVD releases of Buffy, starting with its fourth season, have been in anamorphic widescreen, reproducing the entire 1.78:1 frame. When a full-frame season four was preparing to roll around stateside, there was a bit of a backlash from viewers who wanted to see the entire widescreen image. Buffy creator Joss Whedon penned an insert for the set that described his compositional intentions and that the 4x3 image best reflected his vision. Season five doesn't include a similar insert, but the same holds true. Whedon talked about the series' intended aspect ratio in an interview with IGN this past June.
"It's not a widescreen show. We shot it in a TV ratio, and I am very, very specific with the way I frame things. To arbitrarily throw - and I love widescreen, but Buffy was never a widescreen show. It was an intimate, TV-shaped show. To arbitrarily throw wider borders on it, to make it more cinematic when I very specifically framed it... See, that is not the way I framed it. That's not the way it was meant to be seen, and therefore that's not the way I shot it. I'm preserving what I shot. The DVD is there to preserve what we made, for eternity. What we made, very specifically, was a certain shape. So I'm sure there'll be widescreen copies and there'll be arguments about what's better, but I'm not interested in - and I mean, I love widescreen. I'm a widescreen fanatic, when something's wide. When it's not, then I want to see it the way it was meant to be seen."
Whedon points out a specific instance in his audio commentary for The Body. Admittedly, this tired example is cited frequently on message boards, the television equivalent of Pee-Wee's Big Adventure or Willy Wonka and the Chocolate Factory in discussions of open-matte presentations, but I'll spout it off just for the sake of being complete.
"We're actually coming up on one of my favorite shots that I ever composed, and it's very simple, which is this: very simply, it's an over where I squeezed her in the frame as much as possible so that it's like she didn't have room to maneuver... A normal over would have been her with a tiny slice of his shoulder. Instead, I let his shoulder own the frame. I took his eyes out of the frame to show the experience of literally being trapped, being blocked off from reality. It's an obvious thing, not great filmmaking, but when I did it on the day when I saw the over and thought, 'he's a little too much in the frame. Oh, keep pushing it...keep pushing. Give her less room...give her less room.' It excited me."
The full-frame image, as seen on the R1 DVDs and domestic television broadcasts.

The 1.78:1 image from an overseas DVD release; the additional information on the sides impacts Whedon's intended composition.
(Thanks to Christian Preischl for providing the above comparison images.)
It's likely that there will still be debate about which aspect ratio is preferable, and there's certainly precedence to suggest that. I'll admit to not having seen Buffy in widescreen, with the obvious exception of season six's Once More With Feeling which aired letterboxed, and I accordingly can't claim to have formed a preference for one over the other through direct viewing. Still, since the series' creator prefers the 4x3 image and that's representative of how the show was originally broadcast, that's enough for me. For R1-based viewers with multi-region capability that are interested in acquiring widescreen DVDs, the overseas sets are still widely available and not particularly pricey. I suppose I should move onto the quality of the presentation, having delved into an unnecessary amount of detail regarding its aspect ratio. It doesn't impress in quite the same way as the second season of Angel, which aired alongside this season of Buffy, but it's still very well done. Grain is pervasive to greatly varying degrees throughout, and sharpness flutters slightly as well from episode to episode. Much of Intervention, for instance, strikes me as softer than I would expect. One moderately frequent authoring issue is shimmering around certain objects, such as the first glimpse of the dining room table in Forever, the fronds of a palm tree in Intervention, the edges of some books, car grills, and shingles, and...say, every third shot with window blinds in the frame. Some aliasing also infrequently creeps in, such as the lines above the newspaper headline in Crush. Blacks are deep, and detail will occasionally slink into the inky background in some of the more dimly-lit sequences. The added clarity the DVD format offers doesn't always work to the series' benefit, making the shoddy Nintendo 64-cutscene-quality CGI and Octaman-grade snake suit in Shadow even more laughable. The overall quality of the presentation is about what I thought it would be -- good, but not particularly remarkable. Audio: Buffy the Vampire Slayer: The Complete Fifth Season includes a set of Dolby Digital 2.0 surround tracks (192Kbps) in English, French, and Spanish. The matrixed monaural rears are more prominent than I recall from previous seasons. The score retains a constant presence in the surround channels, along with scattered ambiance and echoed dialogue in the more cavernous sets. Certain effects like spells and staked vampires are also spread across the soundstage. Bass response, similar to most DVD releases of television series, is nothing particularly impressive. Buffy is renowned for its dialogue, and it's presented cleanly and clearly here, with only a few moments where very light crackling crept in. Subtitles have been included in both English and Spanish, and the set is closed captioned. Supplements: As has been the case with previous seasons of Buffy the Vampire Slayer, this collection of the series' fifth season features an assortment of scripts, featurettes, and audio commentaries. Though the number of commentary tracks has dropped from the previous season -- four, this time, versus the seven included with season four -- what's here is, for the most part, great. The first track accompanies "Real Me", featuring director David Grossman (who also helmed George of the Jungle 2, which co-starred Buffyverse regular Julie Benz) and writer David Fury. This commentary improves somewhat on the Primeval track last go-around, another pairing of Fury and an episode's director, but it still suffers from some of the same problems. It's laid-back and lightly chatty, offering enough meaningful conversation to make it worth a listen, but the slower pacing and sizeable silent chunks probably leave it better suited to being played in the background. I always feel obligated to rattle off some of the highlights for whatever reason, and some of 'em this time around include Mercedes McNab accidentally smearing lipstick all over a supposedly invisible barrier and Tom Lenk chiming in for a pre-Andrew role as a vampiric minion. Much of the conversation revolves around the actors, Michelle Trachtenburg in particular, and there are a few technical notes about specific camera set-ups and the motivation behind them. Doug Petrie is one of my favorite Buffy writers, and his commentaries on previous sets -- Bad Girls and This Year's Girl -- have been among the best non-Joss tracks. He chimes in with the second commentary for season five, disc two's Fool for Love, and it's every bit as fun and informative as his earlier tracks. He talks about how quickly this episode was written, fueled by a crate of Red Bull provided by James Marsters and sneaking away for a snooze after trying out the different beds on the show's sets. Along with pointing out the innumerable sexual metaphors in what he describes as the dirtiest episode he's worked on, Petrie sneaks in references to such movies as Pulp Fiction, The Usual Suspects, Reservoir Dogs, and The French Connection. Engaging and entertaining, Petrie's commentary is well-worth checking out. The third commentary features Jane Espenson discussing I Was Made To Love You, an episode I didn't really put much thought into before listening to the track. I just chalked it up as an entertaining, largely stand-alone episode, but Espenson's comments left me thinking about how heavily it shaped the season to follow, and how the dark events in season six would have been considerably different if a few situations had progressed slightly differently here. The writer talks quite a bit about season six, which was wrapping up as the commentary was recorded, particularly in the changes underwent by certain characters. As has been the case with Espenson's other commentaries, she's talkative and covers a lot of ground, including a plea for an award for "Best Robot Death" and having to research the craft of window repair. Joss Whedon provides the final audio commentary, contributing his thoughts to the episode that's directly lead into from Espenson's, The Body. The best episode of the season nets the best commentary of the set, tackling most every facet of production. Whedon talks about the motivation behind the creative and technical decisions made while filming The Body, such as keeping the momentum going by using as many single takes and few cuts as possible in the more dramatic sequences. For example, there's a particularly intense uninterrupted two and a half minute shot early on where Whedon discusses the elaborate handheld camera movement. He also notes the emphasis on "what's real, what's physical", an approach I hadn't mulled over previously, including Buffy straightening out the clothing on the body and the first on-screen kiss between Willow and Tara. Among innumerable other highlights are a dinner fantasy sequence that owes its origins to opening credits that would have been inappropriate elsewhere in the episode, Alyson Hannigan's plaster allergies, the real-life inspiration behind Willow's determination to find the perfect outfit to wear, and how little resemblance funerals on televisions bear to reality. Discs three and six don't offer any commentary tracks, but they're both teeming with featurettes. The third disc includes four featurettes, running over half an hour total. "Buffy Abroad" (4:14) has Joss Whedon, David Solomon, Jane Espenson, Doug Petrie, Amber Benson, Nicholas Brendon, Anthony Stewart Head, and James Marsters speaking about the international appeal of the series. There are also some dubbed clips in a variety of languages and montages of promotional material and merchandise from around the globe. Casting director Marcia Shulman and Joss Whedon talk about "Casting Buffy" (6:51), noting the characteristics necessary for a role on Buffy and delving into varying degrees of depth of how the individual actors were cast. David Solomon, James Marsters, Michelle Trachtenburg, and Kristine Sutherland also chime in with brief comments. Jonathan Strong hosts the campy "Demonology: A Slayer's Guide" (11:26), which divides the series' night-bumping creatures into categories like "Dead Things That Aren't Really Dead Until Buffy Makes Them Dead" and "I Bet You Thought I Was Human When In Actuality I'm This Really Pissed Off, Hideous Demon". It's not the bland list of nasties I went in expecting, but a detailed look into what went into bringing these creatures to life, both in terms of concept and creation. Aside from the usual featurette mainstays, make-up effects supervisor John Vulich and writers Rebecca Rand Kirshner and Marti Noxon contribute a number of notes. "Action Heroes! The Stunts of Buffy" (11:28) puts its emphasis squarely on, as the title cheerfully suggests, the series' stunts. The featurette includes an impressive assortment of behind-the-scenes footage, both of filming and rehearsal, and it's interesting to clearly see the men and women that double for the principal actors on the show. The doubles for Buffy, Spike, and Dawn comment on their roles and the stunt process in general, alongside stunt coordinator John Medlen, Marc Blucas, David Fury, and much of the gang from the other three featurettes. The extras on disc three around rounded out by a reel featuring two minutes of pale, full-frame outtakes predominately from season three, beginning with a series of brilliantly flubbed lines and the usual on-set mishaps. The last few moments are my favorite, consisting of a montage of faux-Watcher Gwendolyn Post repeatedly whacking Giles over the head and a tiny door that offers a great deal of insight into the morbidly obese demon Balthazar. Disc six continues with the onslaught of featurettes. "The Story of Season 5" (27:49) follows the same structure as the overviews on previous releases, with many of the writers, directors, and actors discussing the season's characters, story arcs, and specific episodes. Among the participants unique to this featurette are Clare Kramer (who turned into Reese Witherspoon in the interim, apparently), Charlie Weber, and Adam Busch. "Natural Causes" (9:19) retreads much of what was covered in Joss Whedon's audio commentary, incorporating a number of clips from the episode and notes from Whedon, David Fury, Jane Espenson, David Solomon, Marti Noxon, Doug Petrie, and two of the episode's actresses. Many of the same folks return for the appropriately titled "Spotlight on Dawn" (7:25), which, aside from a reminder of hints dropped to her arrival in previous seasons, is more of a retelling of Dawn's presence in the season as opposed anything new or insightful. A still gallery features twenty-eight or so production stills. Nothing terribly interesting. There's also a thirty-nine second letterboxed trailer for the console video game Buffy the Vampire Slayer: Chaos Bleeds, which takes place between the episodes Forever and Intervention this season. The game itself is a not-entirely-successful knock-off of the excellent Buffy XBox title and isn't recommended with any particular enthusiasm, but that's another topic entirely. Rounding out the extras on disc six is the DVD-ROM accessible "Willow's Demon Database". The note on the set-top portion of the disc claims that it's for Windows 95 only, but it supports Mac OS 9.x and OS X as well. My PC apparently wasn't in the mood to play it -- the program froze with the first letter of Willow's password the first time around and wouldn't play after that without a reboot. Scattered throughout the six-disc set are scripts for The Replacement, Fool for Love, Into the Woods, and Checkpoint. There are no easily-accessible text files on the DVD-ROM portion of these discs, which would have been a nice alternative to having to continually whack the 'Next Chapter' button on my remote to thumb through a script's pages. The discs' anamorphic widescreen menus boast the same sort of music, animation, and transitions seen in previous Buffy and Angel releases, this time taking on the theme of peering through a keyhole. Each episode is divided into fifteen chapter stops or so. One strange authoring decision is that on twenty-one of the set's episodes, there's a chapter stop immediately following the opening theme to make it quick and painless to skip past. Real Me is the only exception, placing the second chapter stop several minutes afterward. There is no 'Play All' feature to expedite marathon viewing either. The episodes and the discs they're on are listed on a provided insert, tucked into the same style of packaging used for the previous three seasons. Conclusion: The last great season of Buffy the Vampire Slayer, season five hits DVD with a decent presentation and a solid assortment of extras, making for an essential purchase for fans of the series.