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Angel

Angel Season 5 - Ew.com Review

By Ken Tucker

Sunday 18 April 2004, by Webmaster

SHADOW OF THE VAMPIRE ’’Angel’’’s Boreanaz

The WB’s cancellation of Angel — only five more episodes to go — has inspired fans to fill TV critics’ desks with postcards and letters protesting its demise (Angel Avengers, your sorrow and rage are duly acknowledged). Any show that turns its title character into a felt-covered puppet for a week clearly deserves some affection. And with ’’Angel,’’ creator Joss Whedon has shown a gift for incorporating such silliness into a season-long, nuanced contemplation of the price people pay for the atonement of wrongdoing. If anyone could escape the Chris Carter Curse — creating one genius series (in his case, ’’The X-Files’’), then spending years wringing less satisfying variations from it (’’Millennium,’’ ’’The Lone Gunmen’’) — Whedon would seem to be the most likely to succeed.

But thanks to his writers’ attempts to distinguish the show from ’’Buffy the Vampire Slayer,’’ ’’Angel’’ has resembled a teenager suffering an identity crisis: What began as a vampire noir morphed into a sci-fi wig-out, which in turn became the current supernatural law-office series. At the end of last season, David Boreanaz’s title character and buddies including Wesley (Alexis Denisof), Gunn (J. August Richards), and the waif Fred (Amy Acker) accepted job offers at Wolfram & Hart — ’’an evil, multidimensional law firm,’’ as Fred has called it. Angel’s reasoning was that he’d use his position to fight the good fight from within the belly of this corporate beast of all bad things. The show’s writers, however, have had other ideas, like tempting Gunn to unleash an evil spirit who immediately inhabited (and may or may not kill) Fred. Key protagonists have plunged into the Wrath, a ’’holding dimension’’ of awful terror, and Angel himself is overwhelmed with a paralyzing realization: ’’Everything we do is a distraction’’ from the coming apocalypse. Angel this season has carried undercurrents of guilt, moral doubt, and confusion that make Kafka seem like a staff writer for ’’Hope & Faith.’’

At the risk of loosing the Angelic furies upon myself, I gotta say the apocalyptic mumbo jumbo was always the weakest element of ’’Buffy,’’ and it doesn’t play any better here. Ditto the transformation of wabbity Wesley into foxy Wesley — seducer and, lately, dewy-eyed mourner of Fred. ’’Angel’’ is wildly uneven: Sometimes it’s an absolute blast (James Marsters’ gleeful guffaw as Spike, ’’You’re a wee little puppet man!’’ was priceless); sometimes it’s a dead-end street (the whole Connor, grown-son-of-Angel subplot was where I exited the series for a spell). For a show with such superb acting — all honor to Boreanaz, who’s got macho vulnerability down to a smooth essence not achieved since James Garner in his ’’Rockford Files’’ days, and to Amy Acker, who has gone from victim to sexpot to villain without ever hitting a false note - ’’Angel’’ is surprisingly rife with leaden lines like ’’Rules can be broken; all you have to do is push hard enough.’’

That said, it’s still dismaying that ’’Angel’’’s lead-in, ’’Smallville,’’ with its stubbornly inert plots (no flying is one thing; no narrative momentum is another, guys), should remain on the air even though its ratings, like ’’Angel’’’s, have fallen off this year. And unlike ’’Smallville,’’ Whedon has been able to ring new changes on resonant themes. In the March 3 episode, for example, Gunn began losing the intelligence boost that Wolfram & Hart implanted in him and desperately did not want to, as he put it, ’’go back to being just the muscle’’ (that’s TV code for ’’the stereotypical Strong Black Man’’). So in return for remaining a brainiac lawyer, he inadvertently unleashed the season’s Big Bad: Fred as the leathery Illyria and her ’’army of doom.’’ This is at once an extremely ingenious reworking of the Robert Johnson myth (black man sells soul to devil in return for immense talent) and a groaner of a plot turn, since it sets up the series for a climax all too reminiscent of — you know...Buffy.

Earlier this season, Wesley said, ’’Time is not on our side.’’ To which Spike retorted, ’’Nobody is on our side.’’ This beleaguering is what makes ’’Angel’’’s fan base so passionate; it’s also what has kept ’’Angel’’ locked in adolescence, unable to fully mature. It’s sad that for a show with so much complex talent on and off screen, we’ll never be able to watch it grow up.

Grade: B+


3 Forum messages

  • > Angel Season 5 - Ew.com Review

    18 April 2004 17:16, by Mike

    he inadvertently unleashed the season’s Big Bad: Fred as the leathery Illyria and her ’’army of doom.’’

    Illyria is def. not the Big Bad...these guys have no idea what theyre talking about...

  • > Angel Season 5 - Ew.com Review

    19 April 2004 10:07, by Anonymous
    I don’t understand how this writer can write something without actually reviewing the facts. It is widely known the Illyria is not the big bad for this season. As for the apocalyptic battles, the entire series is centered on an apocalypse and Angel being a champion whose fate is not known in THE apocalypse (you know, the one coming up in 5 episodes). This guy needs to do his homework.
  • > Angel Season 5 - Ew.com Review

    19 April 2004 21:41, by Anonymous

    The main gripe I have with this reviewer is the fact that he said that the apocalytic stuff amounted to mumbo-jumbo. I would liken the show to "24" for reference. In the series, Jack Bauer is trying to stop something from happening in a 24-hour period. Without the "something", "24" would just be a show about a guy’s life during the span of a day. The Buffyverse without end-of-the-world stuff is pretty much like watching someone at work, doing what they have already done a million times before.

    I know there were some missteps (Connor and Cordelia together did not tickle my fancy), but all and all, I like this season the best. I would dare say that I like this better than "Buffy", although I am a littled biased: While I do like strong-willed female characters, sometimes the show came dangerously close (particularly toward the end) to we’re-better-than-men, combat-booted style feminism that somewhat disturbed me. That being said, there are still few equals to either show.