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Flakmag.com Buffy The Vampire SlayerThe Legacy of Joss Whedon : How Buffy has changed TvSaturday 10 March 2007, by Webmaster Ten years ago, on March 10, 1997, the cult television series Buffy the Vampire Slayer premiered on the now-defunct network The WB. Based on a unsuccessful motion picture of the same name, no one gave the show much of a chance at the time, especially since no one was giving The WB much of a chance to begin with. But succeed it did, for seven seasons, in many ways changing the television landscape - and for the better - in the process. Created by Joss Whedon, a third-generation television writer, Buffy centered on a high school girl serving as her generation’s "chosen one" in the battle of good-versus-evil, with "evil" primarily manifesting in the form of vampires. Neither the name of the series, nor any one-sentence synopsis, however, does justice to what the series actually became: a female-empowering, life-as-metaphor, genre-mixing concoction of great characterization, dialogue and storytelling. Whedon would go on to create two other television shows, Angel and Firefly. Buffy ended in 2003, Angel in 2004, and Firefly was cancelled by FOX after only eleven episodes in 2002. But ten years after Buffy premiered, Whedon’s legacy lives on. His most important contribution (besides the often-cited creation of a strong female heroine who paved the way for the likes of Sydney Bristow and Veronica Mars) is the concept of the self-contained season. Not knowing if the series would last, Whedon crafted the first season of Buffy as a self-contained story, and each subsequent season followed a similar blueprint: Buffy Summers had to face a "Big Bad" intent on destroying the world, only to thwart and defeat said Big Bad by the season finale. It is a concept that Veronica Mars utilized its first two seasons, and one that Heroes likewise seems intent on following in its inaugural. Whedon’s influence goes beyond this particular story-telling device, however, and many shows owe credit to his ground breaking efforts. Some cases in point:
In professional sports, one way to measure a coach/manager’s legacy is by how many of their assistants move on to become successful with other teams. For a television creator/executive producer, a corresponding measure would be how many of their writers move on to find success with other series. And in the case of Whedon, the list is impressive. Shawn Ryan, a writer during season two of Angel, went on to create The Shield. Tim Minear, who worked on both Angel and Firefly, served as executive producer on the short-lived Wonderfalls, and co-created the new FOX drama Drive, scheduled to premier in April. There are also numerous shows that have hired Whedon alumni as writers, a virtual roll-call of the most critically-acclaimed series from this decade: 24, Alias, Battlestar Galactica, CSI, Gilmore Girls, Grey’s Anatomy, Lost, The O.C., Rome, Smallville. When Angel was cancelled during its fifth season, Felicity/Alias/Lost creator J.J. Abrams immediately snagged two of that series’ writers for his own shows. He told Zap2It at the time (Dec. 10, 2004): "You desperately try to find the best people out there to work with. I felt slightly like an ambulance chaser, but... I know he (Whedon) has an amazing ability to find these great writers." Both Whedon and Abrams recently directed back-to-back episodes of NBC’s The Office. Kristen Veitch of E! referred to them as "the two best TV directors alive" in her Feb. 12, 2007 blog post, and watching the Whedon outing, entitled "Business School," it is easy to see why. The scenes within the confines of Dunder-Mifflin were filmed in a very rapid, quick-in, quick-out fashion, keeping the light-hearted plot of a bat on the loose moving at a swift pace. But when the story switches to Pam’s art school exhibition, which serves as the emotional crux of the episode, Whedon uses slower, steadier camera movements to add to the scene’s impact. In both cases, his direction proved effective. But it was a morsel, simply an hors d’oeuvres to whet our appetites. Although Whedon has not officially "retired" from television, he has been putting his efforts into both motion pictures and comic books as of late, leaving fans to patiently wait and wonder when he will return to the small screen; one can only hope that a full-course meal will again be in the offering from Whedon in the not-so-distant future, adding to his already impressive legacy. |