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The episode where Doyle dies heroically. When you know what's coming, it's really moving. And the whole series has a low-key string of very moving/funny moments.

Unfortunately, like many important episodes of TV series, if you don't know what's coming, the tragedy is somewhat undermined by comparison with too many other episodes where they pretend someone is in serious danger of death, to create a fake feeling of excitement, and then it all turns out ok at the last minute.

Wesley

Although Wesley's appearance in the next episode sort of represents the retreat from noir-ness I talked about yesterday, I do appreciate that they did make him a much richer character than before: although he always has a core of the hopeless nerd, now, and especially later on after the sea burial, he has a lot more layers too.

Rogue Demon Hunter

Wesley: I'm a rogue demon hunter.
Cordelia: What's a rogue demon?

This is pretty funny. But it doesn't really work, because both demons, and demon hunters, are habitually rogue, so the question isn't so much why Cordelia was misunderstanding, but why she questioned either interpretation.

ETA: The Powers that Be

In Angel, we're introduced to the concept of "the powers that be", presumably some sort of intangible forces of goodness or at least order. Unfortunately, they never really seem to specify what they are. They seem good -- maybe -- but also irritatingly cryptic, presumptuous, ungrateful and rude. You never know if you're supposed to believe they're good, or not.

Date: 2011-02-18 04:04 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] midnightmelody.livejournal.com
Rogue - I took this as Cordelia assuming that 'rogue' is a proper noun in this case. Most Buffyverse demons have names. So then I think it works.

On the Powers That Be, isn't the lack of knowledge about TPTB the point? Not that TPTB are themselves unclear, but that the characters don't know anything about them? It's the 'what is God' question of the pre-medieval period.