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| Writer: | Rebecca Rand Kirshner |
| Director: | David Solomon |
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This is a decent, if flawed, episode about the horrors of illness. The episode succeeds when it focuses on Joyce and it fails when it focuses on the semi-lame demon from space. I say 'semi' because in the sequence at Buffy's house the creature is pretty effective in its creepiness being in the midst of the sadness that is looming all over that home. Another problem I see is a pace that is just a bit too slow. This one's a mixed bag, although more excellent acting all around causes it to get its point across successfully.
Even though Joyce is out of it most of the time, she's really the focus of everyone's concerns here. I can understand her not wanting to wait around in a hospital for her operation. That'd drive me crazy too. Willow getting the Summers' family individual presents to help cheer them up is both sweet and kind. I especially like the beer hat for Joyce and the homework with yoyo for Buffy (very fun continuity there going way back). Joyce's sudden snap into abrasive words is pretty jarring. Later on she says, "No reason to get upset? Oh, right, sorry, I must just think there is because of my brain tumor!," which is also very abrupt and scary to hear her say, especially in front of Dawn as I'm so used to Joyce being so soft-spoken and kind. I have to say that I'm a bit surprised by how fast Joyce's symptoms manifested. I guess the writers didn't want to drag out the "Joyce is ill" subplot for too long, and I have to say I think it was a wise decision.
I also found Joyce's randomness in speech back at the house later to be really effective. It's creepy in a realistic way that really hits home for me. I've gone through losing someone to a disease, and I've seen that person do a lot of weird and random stuff. I really appreciated seeing Joyce unaware of what she's saying, randomly thinking it's breakfast time and insulting Buffy. Joyce's rambling upstairs, when there's actually the demon right above her, is really sad to see. I have memories of being in Dawn's position of hearing a sick loved one through the wall having lots of pain and confusion in a room adjacent to mine, it's scary and not at all easy.
The emotion-filled final scene with Joyce asking Buffy to promise to protect and take care of Dawn in case she doesn't make it is really tough to see. Buffy's expression when she hugs her mom is one of sadness and fright that this might be it; she really might lose her mom. The very final shot of the doctors taking Joyce away into surgery is obviously intended to make us think that was really her farewell. I now, in retrospect, love the way Whedon handled this plot thread. We get all the goodbyes, tears, and promises early on in the season. Then Joyce seems fine again only to suddenly die later from a complication of the surgery taking place now. This way we get all the goodbye talk out of the way and can simply experience the shock of an unexpected death without feeling completely cheated from losing a beloved character.
All throughout the episode Buffy is trying to hold herself together. She turns on the radio while washing dishing to drown out her mom's loud rantings from upstairs. Unfortunately the sound of a crazy happy radio song combined with the mundane task of washing dishes that undoubtedly her mom would usually take care of, are the things that finally work to make Buffy emotionally break down all the way. SMG is heart-breaking in this scene. I so feel for her (as I often do), and she makes me want to be there to offer some comfort because she looks so genuinely scared and sad; an excellent, realistic scene. In classic Buffy fashion, she faces her pain alone.
There's some other interesting bits to talk about besides Joyce and Buffy though. The gang's patrol without Buffy and Willow's giddiness after staking two vamps in the intro is highly amusing. I'm sure Buffy expected Riley to be there helping out, but instead he's started the vamp suck jobs, sulking over Buffy not wanting him every second of the day. It's at this point where I lose my sympathy for Riley -- he's gone too far here, although I still understand why he's doing it.
The Willow/Tara scene on the rooftop is really sweet. She says that looking at the stars is supposed to make you feel all insignificant, but that instead they make her feel like she's a part of them and therefore significant. I can't help but see this as a bit of a commentary on Willow. Before she had many friends, or many self-confident ones, she essentially viewed herself as an insignificant nerd. Just remember back to how she reacted when Buffy said, "Uh, Hi! Willow, right? ," and she replied "Why? I-I mean, hi! Uh, did you want me to move?" in "Welcome to the Hellmouth" (1x01). Now, over the years of becoming part of the Scooby family, she's much more secure with herself and feels much more significant.
The major fault of this episode is the space demon, which is silly even before we find out what it is. How is it that no one can see this huge thing crawling around the ceiling? It's called 'peripheral vision' people! However, the demon's a lot more effective when in Buffy's house, mostly because you can't really see it very well. It actually becomes a bit creepy during this sequence. Overall, though, I feel this episode does its job well of showing us the very icky horrors of illness and its affect on the people around it. It's also a lot better than I originally thought. Flawed, but nonetheless good.
| - | Minor Pros/Cons (+/-) |
| Pros: | |
| + | I believe the same guy chained up by Glory in "No Place Like Home" (5x05) is the crazy guy that can tell Dawn's the Key here and says there's "no data" there. |
| + | Willow says, "I don't wanna be the one to find the bodies anymore." "Doomed" (4x11) comes to mind. |
| + | Riley calling Graham makes sense. It's cool to see a helicopter on this show. We don't get to see stuff like that very often. |
| + | I love the book that's titled "Meteors and You." |
| + | Riley hanging up on Willow and getting really back 'into' the whole military club. |
| + | Spike showing up stealing pictures of Buffy only to be hilariously attacked by the demon. |
| + | We find out Glory's minions work for Ben, that he has a connection to Glory, and that he's cleaning up "her mess" again. It's good he's actually part of the plot, although I'm not sure what killing the crazy people really accomplishes. |
| - | Foreshadowing |
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| - | Quotes |
| WILLOW: | Care package! Special delivery for the Summers girls. Now, let's see what I have in this sack of mine. Oh, I feel just like Santa Claus, except thinner and younger and female and, well, Jewish. |
| WILLOW: | All right. Dawn, to keep you busy. |
| DAWN: | Ooh, spells! Thank you, Willow! |
| BUFFY: | You got her a book on spells. The girl who can break things by just looking at them, now has a book to teach her to ... break things by looking at them? |
| WILLOW: | You know what's weird? |
| TARA: | Japanese commercials are weird. |
| TARA: | See those stars over there? (points) "Short man looking uncomfortable." (points) Uh... "Moose getting a sponge bath." Umm... "little pile o'crackers." Tha-that was a bit of a stretch. You do it. What would you call ... mm, that one? (points) |
| WILLOW: | Hmm, let's see. A huge flaming meteor about to crash into something! |
| XANDER: | Look at how teeny Mercury is compared to, like, Saturn. Whereas in contrast, the cars of the same name- |
| GILES: | Xander, please, we have work to do here. |
| XANDER: | I still don't get why we had to come here to get info about a killer snot monster. |
| GILES: | Because it's a killer snot monster from outer space. I did not say that. |
| - | Score | Learn about the Grading Scale |
| 80/100 |
B ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ |
A bit flawed, but otherwise very good. There's a lot of intelligence, character relevance, and/or fun here, but a few nagging problems keep it from rising higher.
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| - | Screencaps |
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Comments (30)
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| 1. | as always...Sep 3, 2006 (Sun)View This Person's Comments | Link | |
| ...great review. nothing to add, all the significant plot points added. imo in the beginning of s.5 there's not enough Spike (except fool for love), just a random thought... |
| 2. | CareySep 3, 2006 (Sun)View This Person's Comments | Link | |
| Awesome review! Yeah, this episode was pretty creepy for me, so I like how they slipped in a bit of humor with Spike. =] |
| 3. | DingdongSep 4, 2006 (Mon)View This Person's Comments | Link | |
| I've always held that LtF is a lot better than everyone makes it out to be, and I really liked the madness story. I also liked the first real hint of how Ben was involved in things. It steps the arc up just enough in the background. The Space Demon was sometimes bad, but no more than Buffy's normal MOTWs are, so it didn't particularly bother me. It's definately not any worse than the snake in the previous episode. The most commmon criticism from people seems to be "It has a monster from outer space. Unforgivable"! I really don't get why it's such a big deal for people, it's not even intergral to the plot. Get over it. |
| 4. | JerrySep 4, 2006 (Mon)View This Person's Comments | Link | |
| Mike, I think something you missed about LTF is the idea that Willow still depends on Buffy, and gains some of her self worth from her. When the gang is out discovering what the asteroid left behing, Willow wants desperately to get Buffy, but she also knows that she cant. For Willow, Buffy is still her security blanket, she is still the person that brought Willow out of the shell she created for herself, and in that sense, Willow is very much the follower at this point. Whats even more important is that LTF also highlights the other person that provides Willow with a security blanket in Tara. Its in an interesting character study for Willow here. Also, yeah the crying scene is simply heartbreaking, and its appropriate that it happens with nobody around because it highlights the pressure that Buffy feels as the "strong one", the lonliness of being the slayer, and her martrydom complex all in a single scene. Nobody can you see me cry, id rather not be weak and die... |
| 5. | Ryan-RBSep 4, 2006 (Mon)View This Person's Comments | Link | |
| I've never understood the hatred for this episode, myself. I don't know if i would've given it an 80, but a 70 or 75 at least. It's exceptionally creepy and despite the 'space' aspect, not badly conceived at all. In fact, had the script devoted more time to it, it could've been a very interesting idea. |
| 6. | JakeSep 7, 2006 (Thu)View This Person's Comments | Link | |
| Good point Jerry |
| 7. | RickFeb 25, 2007 (Sun)View This Person's Comments | Link | |
| It scored a 78 on my rating system, even though I tried to rate it lower (which tells me its not that bad). I know this will sound unusual, but I think the scene between Buffy and Joyce in the hospital is one of the saddest and one of my favourite scenes in the entire series. I have never loved either one of these two characters more than this...great job Kirshner. |
| 8. | jessMar 6, 2007 (Tue)View This Person's Comments | Link | |
| "It's good he's actually part of the plot, although I'm not sure what killing the crazy people really accomplishes." -- The mental ward was already overflowing at the hospital and I'm sure it would be detrimental to Sunnydale and Buffy's slaying to have a bunch of crazy people wandering around. He summoned the demon to prevent this. |
| 9. | AliApr 29, 2007 (Sun)View This Person's Comments | Link | |
| This is such a sad episode and it's so sad cause we know what's gonna happen. The scene where buffy is cring is so sad especially with the happy music playing in the background, it really shows how completely scared alone and sad she is. I also find the scene between her and her mom totally touching and moving. It is so heartbreaking to see her crying all by herself, and having to be the strong one (once again) for her mom and dawn, i think that this season is by far the most hard and traumatic for her charcter (yes more then seosen 6 ), i felt like her charcter became a punch bag for the writers.Sad so sad and it's only the begining |
| 10. | LatoyaMay 1, 2007 (Tue)View This Person's Comments | Link | |
| Its funny. I had recently watched this episode and realized how much I loved it. Buffy taking care of her mother and Dawn, Buffy sobbing as she washes dishes, Willow selfishly wanting Buffy to solve the Alien/Demon problem even though Buffy has so much familial stres on her right now, just Buffy in general having to be "the strong one" that protects and nurtures and fixes all the problems when she is only 19 and is so scared. Episodes like this are the reasons why Buffy is my favorite character. I love that Spike snuck into her house to steal pictures of her. Some of which we see in Crush. And that she took his hand when she got up off the ground after killing the Alien Demon. |
| 11. | NixJul 10, 2007 (Tue)View This Person's Comments | Link | |
| The high-speed symptom manifestation is actually not that unrealistic. The brain is amazingly resilient and can hide the symptoms of a growing tumour for ages, and then *wham* it abruptly fails and heaps of strange symptoms come out of nowhere. (It is odd that it happens so soon after the headaches start, though.) |
| 12. | AustinAug 29, 2007 (Wed)View This Person's Comments | Link | |
| I'd like to make a comment about something no one has mentioned yet and that is about how Riley's vamphore thing is affecting him. As is customary with this series, I think this is a pretty obvious metaphor for a drug addiction and the effect it has on you and your friends, if I'm not mistaken, he misses patrol to get a fix and as a result, the scoobies find themselves in real danger. it's also interesting to note how quickly it begins to affect him. He just started last week and already he is abandoning commitments and hurting his friends. Also I'm glad that Joyce has Buffy promise to take care of Dawn, because even though she makes it through the operation, I have no doubt that Buffy is thinking about her promise in the Gift. I would even go as far as to say that if she hadn't made this promise (everyone knows how strong death-bed promises are) that she might have even considered Giles' PoV about sacrificing Dawn for the greater good. Not that she would have likely done it, but it would have no doubt have been considered an option. |
| 13. | tillySep 16, 2007 (Sun)View This Person's Comments | Link | |
| i love the "cheery" music that buufy puts on the radio and heard it on another tv clip the other day, no one knows what it is do they? |
| 14. | buffyholicNov 22, 2007 (Thu)View This Person's Comments | Link | |
| I had no idea this episode was so hated. It has no reason to be, it´s a pretty good episode. I also wanted to cry with Buffy, because we know what is gonna happen later on. |
| 15. | RichieJan 3, 2009 (Sat)View This Person's Comments | Link | |
| I'm with the other posters on this one - I really can't understand anyone hating this ep. Although I agree with MikeJer's comments on the pacing and MoTW (although the scene towards the end in Buffy's house more than makes up for this in my book) I would probably have given it an 85. Despite it's flaws, the acting is so brilliant I feel it deserves a bit more. Another often hated character - Dawn - pulls out a great performance as well, totally believable. I've always though that Michelle T is great in S5, but goes rapidly down hill from then on. |
| 16. | EmilyMay 27, 2009 (Wed)View This Person's Comments | Link | |
| Richie, I have to disagree with you about Michelle T. The only part that she did really well in this episode was the screaming for Buffy. Other than that, it felt like it usually does- very forced and trying too hard. Especially the part where she says, "You promise?" I cringe every time I see that. |
| 17. | SeleneJul 11, 2009 (Sat)View This Person's Comments | Link | |
| More foreshadowing: While in one of her Rack-induced states, Willow imagines herself out among the stars, like she's a part of them. |
| 18. | LucySep 8, 2009 (Tue)View This Person's Comments | Link | |
| I quite like this episode, but it always bugs me that Riley gets the commandoes to go into Buffy's house, but it never gets commented upon. It happens right at the end of the episode, so you only see Buffy and Spike's confused faces, but you'd think that Buffy would get angry that Riley's involved army/government guys in her job. She was pretty against it when he suggested getting them involved in the whole Glory thing. |
| 19. | Katie JOct 12, 2009 (Mon) @ 1:08pmView This Person's Comments | Link | |
| Not one of my favorites. I often skip over it when watching season five, but this review encouraged me to sit down and watch. I realized that the ratio of plot/character development to funny dialogue is too high. This is not surprising after S4, not to mention the hefty amount of plot that needed covering in S5: Glory with assorted mythologies, new sister, mom dying, Riley relationship fading fading. It's a lot, and there is not much room left for frivolous fun. |
| 20. | JammyJuJan 5, 2010 (Tue) @ 6:31pmView This Person's Comments | Link | |
| That music when Buffy is crying really detracts from the emotion. Seriously, it's so cheesy! >_< |
| 21. | AlanJan 6, 2010 (Wed) @ 11:57pmView This Person's Comments | Link | |
| I'm watching the series through for the first time, so I try to avoid spoilers, so, telling me exactly how and when Joyce is going to die was a bummer.
Otherwise, I couldn't help think when seeing Riley with the vamp it really looked at the start like she was giving him a BJ. The Queller demon was very lame. It "hitched a ride" on Buffy's car to their house? Sure. |
| 22. | vixJun 4, 2010 (Fri) @ 12:05amView This Person's Comments | Link | |
| I just wanted to second Austin's comment about Buffy's Promise to Joyce. I think it has a profound affect on her actions in The Gift. I read alot of sites and stuff about Buffy And I feel like its one of the small details that nobody ever mentions or I at least I haven't seen mentioned anywhere |
| 23. | SeánOct 5, 2010 (Tue) @ 5:20pmView This Person's Comments | Link | |
| @ Alan, I'm also watching the series for the first time but it does say at the top of every review on this site that the review may contain spoilers from ANYWHERE in the show! I have to disagree with people saying Michelle T is a bad actress. I hear that Dawn becomes pretty much unbearable in S6 but right now I think the writers have just made Dawn too petty and immature and sadly poor Michelle Tratchtenberg has been given the title of most annoying regular Buffy character. I think Michelle, Sarah and Kristine all played a blinder on the acting front in this episode! |
| 24. | teoNov 1, 2010 (Mon) @ 2:15pmView This Person's Comments | Link | |
| you forgot to say how fierce and brave was Dawn defending her mother against the demon thing. that was great! |
| 25. | Nathan.TaurusNov 18, 2010 (Thu) @ 11:07pmView This Person's Comments | Link | |
| teo: Dawn was brave in doing what she did, I agree.
Good: * Xander talking about the cars/planets of Mercury and Saturn. * Meteors and You. * Buffy shocked at her mother saying the buttons at cross-walks are not connected to anything. * The alien was pretty freaky. * The nice ending. Bad: * How did no one see the alien on the ceiling at the hospital. How did the alien hitch a ride with Buffy. How did the alien get inside the Summers' home. * How could Spike stay in the basement the entire time Buffy cried, Joyce was attacked and Buffy was attacked. He would have helped long before he was found. |
| 26. | WvethMar 16, 2011 (Wed) @ 10:39amView This Person's Comments | Link | |
| I really love Joyce. I think she is a fantastic character played by a fantastic actor, and it just -kills- me to watch her losing her mind like that... I'm glad it's confined to this episode, pretty much, but it just breaks my bloody heart. So hard. |
| 27. | deadlegoMay 10, 2011 (Tue) @ 10:06amView This Person's Comments | Link | |
| In this episode i think the hospital scenes are great and very moving. My mum has severe mental health problems that started when i was 16 and it was terrifying. I had to look after my two younger brothers or they would have been taken into care. Having experienced how frightening it is to first see your mother behaving so strangely and saying things that were complete fantasy, I believed it in this episode. I could totally relate to what both buffy and dawn were feeling and their reactions and found the acting of everyone surrounding that (buffy, joyce, dawn and willow) very realistic and moving. Unfortunately I hated the whole demon from outer-space plot very bad. I thought the demon looked very fake and the coincidences of it following joyce, and willow and tare just happening to be star watching that night, and the idea that ben would summon a killer demon to kill patients considering how much he seems to care about his patients, and Riley turning up just when he did, and spike just happening to be in the basement, all very very unlikely. We have to suspend our disbelief often with the plots in BtVS (not the fantasy elements which are mostly beliveable from an 'in world' perspective, more often how the coincidental plots serve the characters) but this is a step to far. Unfortunately this thoroughly spoils the episode for me and is one of my least favourite BtVS episode. Subjectively i hate this one and would like to give it an 'F' if it was based on how enjoyable (or not!) i found it, but objectively on mike's scale i rate it at a 'C+'. |
| 28. | ChristianeMay 12, 2011 (Thu) @ 9:31amView This Person's Comments | Link | |
| My favorite scene is Joyce talking to the demon and the girls trying to ignore her and fearing that their Mom is losing her mind while she is in real danger. That's sooo great done by all of them. |
| 29. | SusanJul 8, 2011 (Fri) @ 9:25amView This Person's Comments | Link | |
| I re-watched this last night and then re-read your excellent review. I agree with nearly everything you said, but I believe that the "semi-lame demon from space" was really quite effective in the story. Despite the lack of much explanation of where it came from I really do feel that once the action moved to the Summers's house the creepy factor really escalated. Seeing Joyce from the creature's vantage point was very effective in heightening the suspense along with the camera shots of Dawn in the next room trying to block out her mother's crazy talk totally unaware of the very real demon that she's talking to. I was also impressed with the background music throughout the episode and felt that it conveyed a sense of eeriness and foreboding to the story. The only thing that I really didn't like was the music playing while Buffy was washing dishes. I get that she was probably trying to cover up the sound of her sobbing but I can't believe that she would have kept that music on. In my opinion, it was totally out of character for her. Other than that , I found this episode to be one of the few that kept me on the edge of my seat because of being scary and I believe I would have rated this a bit higher than you did. |
| 30. | Gemma Dec 10, 2011 (Sat) @ 1:23pmView This Person's Comments | Link | |
| When i watched this episode i spent some time contemplating the idea of show rather than tell. Joss is famous for visualising metaphors in Buffy-verse and this episode is no exception. The Queller demon serves to make palpable Joyce's brian tumour and the escalating situation surrounding Buffy and the other characters as the season comes to its final fight scenes and plot climax. This episode, as you said Mike deals with illness and this episode is a scary, not for the whimsical evil snot monster from outer space but seeing Joyce encroaching on the line of madness. The prominent perception i took from this episode are the emotions and feelings that would be soaring through Buffy, the principle that Buffy has all these powers, the ability to heal quickly but she can't do anything to save her mom resonates sympathy from us, perhaps the most we have ever shared with her; we don't all kill her vampire boyfriends or die and come back but many of us have witnessed a loved one loose to an illness and there isn't anything we can do to alleviate their pain and all of us are far too aware of a human beings vulnerability. This episode acts as a volley to speed some subplots along, Riley's slow isolation and final scenes are escalated here in his failing to turn up for a patrol. Spike taking photos of Buffy from her basement will lead to the Buffybot. Also seeing the scenes with Joyce rambling nonsense and her touching moment with Buffy begging her to take care of Dawn if she wasn't to make it through the surgery leads us to believe Joyce may not make it though and looking retrospectively we know she doesn't. There are some less turbulent scenes in this episode, the humour with WIllow being shaky after dusting two vampires, Giles and Xander's exchange about an evil snot monster from outer space was my favourite scene! The bottom line is that although this episode was a little slow in places nothing about it felt contrived. The only flaw was possibly the notion of the Queller, but seeing it in those final scenes in Buffy's house were certainly creepy. A well written episode. One i never skip over. |
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