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Title: Love Is Hell
Description: spike DVD


prophecy girl - October 14, 2005 09:03 AM (GMT)
QUOTE
Latest ‘Buffy’ DVD set will leave Spike fans feeling cheated
By Mike Moody
The Brownsville Herald

October 14, 2005 — “Spike: Love is Hell,” the latest character-themed DVD collection of “Buffy the Vampire Slayer” episodes from Fox Home Entertainment, offers fans of the show and those uninitiated into the “Buffyverse” four solid hours of cutting social commentary, cheeky humor, pointed drama and well-executed action. But, the set fails to do what its glossy cover box promises: deliver the best “Buffy” episodes featuring the ever-evolving British punk vampire character called Spike (James Marsters).

Creator Joss Whedon’s underrated, genre-blending show took many dark and unexpected turns throughout its seven-season run (five years on The WB and two on UPN).

Whedon wrote season-long arcs that allowed his characters to grow and change and even die. Every “Buffy” regular, from bookish Willow (Alyson Hannigan) to everyman Xander (Nicholas Brendon) to the titular character herself (Sarah Michelle Gellar), evolved throughout the series in unexpected, sometimes hard-to-watch, but indisputably satisfying ways. Nifty beheading scenes and zeitgeist-capturing dialogue aside, “Buffy’s” true merit rested in its unflinchingly honest and entertaining examination of how a band of outsiders keeps its integrity intact when faced with its demons, figurative and literal.

Arguably, platinum blonde, leather coat-wearing Spike is the character that faced the most demons on “Buffy.”

After having it easy as a wise cracking harbinger of death for hundreds of years, he becomes impotent, depressed and nearly insane throughout the series when faced with a newfound humanity, analytical glimpses into his destructive past and dismissal from the love of his life. But, you wouldn’t really get all that with this set of episodes.

”Spike: Love is Hell” features the character’s introductory episode “School Hard” written by David Greenwalt. In this second season episode, Spike roars into the town of Sunnydale, Calif., and quickly establishes himself as the new big bad by feasting on parent-teacher night attendees at the local high school. In tow is evil gal pal Drusilla (Juliet Landau) — the Nancy to his Sid. The episode sets Spike’s reputation as the evilest of the evildoers and cleverly apes “Die Hard” and “Three O’Clock High” while referencing Woodstock, “Star Wars” and the Boxer Rebellion.

Next up is an inexplicable entry from season two titled “Lie to Me,” written by Whedon. The episode has a lot to say about friendship, subculture and young people’s need to belong, but it says nothing new about Spike. The character is given little to do but act menacing and feast on an “all-you-can-eat moron bar” of vampire wannabes.

“Lovers Walk” from season three finally displays how three-dimensional Spike can be. Episode scribe Dan Vebber starts to unravel the character’s bad guy exterior by giving him a broken heart, a softer veneer and the best jokes in the episode (“I may be love’s bitch, but at least I’m man enough to admit it.”).

The episode also paints Spike as a sensitive character who relates his mind-altering insight into other characters’ relationships. It’s one of the funniest Spike episodes ever written, and Marsters plays the comedy like a pro, but it still should have been shelved in favor of any of a number of later episodes from seasons five, six or seven that have to do with Spike’s struggle for redemption.

Season five’s “Fool for Love” is the gem of the pack. Not only does Douglas Petrie’s script reveal more about the character than ever before, the episode is expertly shot, directed, plotted and acted, cleverly balancing dark drama, humor and intense action. The flashback scenes (which recall many Merchant-Ivory and ‘70s “blaxploitation” filcks) reveal new dimensions of Spike’s character and set the stage for his transformation from evildoer to reluctant champion.

With its long arcs and emphasis on character development, “Buffy the Vampire Slayer” is a natural for this kind of collector’s set. “Spike: Love is Hell” serves as a nice primer for those new to the series, but “Buffy” fans would be better served by purchasing any of the seven complete seasons on DVD.

mmoody@brownsvilleherald.com




in short, keep your DVD

Laura - October 14, 2005 09:25 AM (GMT)
Doesn't Spike already have a DVD in those collections they released with Angel, Faith etc? :blink:

prophecy girl - October 14, 2005 09:31 AM (GMT)
i think it's the same one but with new packaging

buffy_fan1 - October 14, 2005 05:41 PM (GMT)
QUOTE (Laura @ Oct 14 2005, 09:25 AM)
Doesn't Spike already have a DVD in those collections they released with Angel, Faith etc? :blink:

Yes Spike does have is own DVD it's part of the Slayer Collection and correct me if I'm wrong but it has exactly the same episodes as this "new" DVD ;)

The last watcher - October 14, 2005 05:48 PM (GMT)
QUOTE (buffy_fan1 @ Oct 14 2005, 05:41 PM)
QUOTE (Laura @ Oct 14 2005, 09:25 AM)
Doesn't Spike already have a DVD in those collections they released with Angel, Faith etc? :blink:

Yes Spike does have is own DVD it's part of the Slayer Collection and correct me if I'm wrong but it has exactly the same episodes as this "new" DVD ;)

Anyone would think they were contemplating a Spike spinoff.... :ponder: :shrug: <_<


Nice write up of the show in general though..... :thumbsup:

prophecy girl - October 15, 2005 01:55 PM (GMT)
yep, i checked the old spike DVD, there are the same episode, just new packaging :rolleyes:

Laura - October 17, 2005 09:17 AM (GMT)
Just realised it's a R1 DVD, so they must be starting their own version of the Slayer collection.

buffy_fan1 - October 17, 2005 07:36 PM (GMT)
QUOTE (Laura @ Oct 17 2005, 09:17 AM)
Just realised it's a R1 DVD, so they must be starting their own version of the Slayer collection.

I though DVDs were realised in the US first so wont The Slayer Collection be out there already :ponder:

Cardelia - October 18, 2005 12:47 AM (GMT)
I don't think there are any R1 Slayer collection discs.

Laura - October 18, 2005 10:54 AM (GMT)
QUOTE (Cardelia @ Oct 18 2005, 01:47 AM)
I don't think there are any R1 Slayer collection discs.

David's right, they don't seem to be flooding the market over there with 'best of' DVDs like they are doing here <_<
And we were getting the season DVD releases quite far ahead of the US , they released S7 at around the same time but they were behind us up until that point.

prophecy girl - October 18, 2005 11:02 AM (GMT)
it was probably due to a WB/UPN contract with fox ... here there was nothing stopping them releasing the box set/DVD before the serie was shown on the beeb.

buffy_fan1 - October 18, 2005 06:00 PM (GMT)
Thanks for the info It's nice to see UK Buffy fans getting something first for a change :thumbsup:

prophecy girl - October 21, 2005 10:28 AM (GMT)
too bad for the beeb who was losing some watchers because they already had the box set/DVD :lol:




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