Spike's insanity
Apr. 6th, 2013 12:48 pm![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
Someone once said that it would have been interesting if Spike had been sane when he came back with the soul. That it was a bit of a cop-out for him to be crazy, because of course Buffy would feel sorry for him.
I have mixed feelings about this. On the one hand, I can see their point. The show has definitely relied on Buffy-feeling-sorry-for-Spike to deal with the things he’s done to her. “Intervention”, for example. Both the viewers and Buffy are encouraged to feel sorry for tortured Spike, so that we can forgive him for the sexbot. Obviously, the fact that Spike endured the torture to protect Dawn is what makes him one of the good guys again, but the torture itself helps to regain our and Buffy’s sympathy after the events of “Crush”, and the ordering of the Buffy bot.
On the other hand, I think it’s good that Buffy has to take care of Spike in early S7. It forces her to stop playing the “I-hate-you-but-you-can-come-into-my-house” game, i.e. where she insists that she hates and despises him while simultaneously letting him into every part of her life. She’s never had to put any work into her relationship with Spike: He was there when she wanted him to be, and there when she didn’t. Spike needing her help in early S7 forces her to ask herself if Spike, and her relationship with Spike, is worth putting effort into, and if so, why?
On the other hand, I really liked their interactions in “Beneath You” when he seemed to be sane…it would have been interesting to have more of that.
On the other, other hand I think it’s interesting that the way the writers handled the attempted rape was by, essentially, having Spike gradually lose or give up all power and control to Buffy, culminating in the basement scene in “Never Leave Me” where he tries to convince her to kill him, and fails, losing that last little bit of control (“You don’t know me. You don’t even know you.”). And putting Buffy in a position where she has all the control and she is very careful to treat Spike well and not misuse it is a good way of showing that she’s not S6 Buffy anymore (“I don’t hate like that. Not you, or myself. Not anymore.”).
I have mixed feelings about this. On the one hand, I can see their point. The show has definitely relied on Buffy-feeling-sorry-for-Spike to deal with the things he’s done to her. “Intervention”, for example. Both the viewers and Buffy are encouraged to feel sorry for tortured Spike, so that we can forgive him for the sexbot. Obviously, the fact that Spike endured the torture to protect Dawn is what makes him one of the good guys again, but the torture itself helps to regain our and Buffy’s sympathy after the events of “Crush”, and the ordering of the Buffy bot.
On the other hand, I think it’s good that Buffy has to take care of Spike in early S7. It forces her to stop playing the “I-hate-you-but-you-can-come-into-my-house” game, i.e. where she insists that she hates and despises him while simultaneously letting him into every part of her life. She’s never had to put any work into her relationship with Spike: He was there when she wanted him to be, and there when she didn’t. Spike needing her help in early S7 forces her to ask herself if Spike, and her relationship with Spike, is worth putting effort into, and if so, why?
On the other hand, I really liked their interactions in “Beneath You” when he seemed to be sane…it would have been interesting to have more of that.
On the other, other hand I think it’s interesting that the way the writers handled the attempted rape was by, essentially, having Spike gradually lose or give up all power and control to Buffy, culminating in the basement scene in “Never Leave Me” where he tries to convince her to kill him, and fails, losing that last little bit of control (“You don’t know me. You don’t even know you.”). And putting Buffy in a position where she has all the control and she is very careful to treat Spike well and not misuse it is a good way of showing that she’s not S6 Buffy anymore (“I don’t hate like that. Not you, or myself. Not anymore.”).
no subject
Date: 2013-04-07 08:58 pm (UTC)Angel did try to return to Darla and continue as if nothing had changed. I wonder, if he had the option, would he have gotten rid of it? Spike was in a different position having sought it out himself, and knew that losing it would just return him to the no-man's-land between man and monster he had been stuck in since getting the chip.
no subject
Date: 2013-04-08 04:14 am (UTC)Mind you: all of this goes for Angel at this specific point in his timeline, only two years with a soul. (Which I think is a fair comparison with Spike in late s7 or in s5 of AtS.) Angel later is at different points both better and worse. Among other things, he's both settled into the soul-having state and aware this - or the memories of being Angelus - doesn't prevent him from acting badly. I always thought it was one of the better retcons/fleshing outs that AtS that to clarify Angel didn't spend the entire century between getting cursed and meeting Whistler living of rats in the gutter. The two lenghier interludes we hear about - the McCarthy era story from "Are you know or have you ever been..." and the WWII submarine tale - being cases in point, showcasing simultanously Angel's good and bad qualities, neither of which depend on his inner demon. I.e. the compassion for Judy and the leaving everyone to the paranoia demon after they lynched im = both Angel with a soul. Ditto for trying to keep both the human crew of the submarine and Spike alive on the one hand and pragmatically and ruthlessly siring the submariner on the other. Btw, that moment between Spike and Angel in the last flashback when Spike, re: Angel letting the newly sired submariner swim various miles to the shore, says "you really are a dick" and Angel replies "yes, I really am" with a look that makes it clear to Spike he's now getting kicked off the boat as well and expected to swim the rest is one of my favourite small moments. Because I'm like Joss: Angel being petty reliably cracks me up. I mean, sure, it's actually to Spike's benefit, if not humanities, because if he kept him on board he'd have had to hand him over to the proto-Initiative, but that's definitely not the only reason why he make him swim the rest.