For [livejournal.com profile] rubytitania...

Nov. 7th, 2005 02:13 pm
teylaminh: (Spuffy - with or without)
[personal profile] teylaminh
...the accompanying letter from Joss Whedon with the Angel 5-season box set, as promised...

Note: will contain spoilers for those who haven't seen any/all of Angel...



Dear Angel fan...

"...and she'll have a love interest, a mysterious stranger named Angel who turns out to be a vampire!  But a vampire with a soul, curse to walk the night in eternal remorse for his evil deed..."

No wait.  That's way too cheesy.  Nobody will ever buy that.

Such were my thoughts as I developed the TV show "Buffy the Vampire Slayer".  I knew Angel wouldn't (forgive the pun) fly.  I was frantic.  And then something wonderful happened.

I totally didn't come up with anything better.

So this guy was born, and not only did people buy him, they loved him.  I loved him, at 76% platonically.  I loved him enough to create, with my partner in crime David Greenwalt, his own show, "Angel".  And then it got weird.  Well, weirder.

The thing is, "Buffy" was a simple premise that developed into a complex show.  "Angel" was not a simple premise, not for guys like Dave and me.  We couldn't just have a noble, handsome, dark hero rush in and save various days.  We tried.  That ain't life.  We found that "Angel" needed to be a show about our darkest journeys, not unlike Buffy except that Buffy had a grounding; she had a destiny, an arc, a posse.  We knew where she had to go.  We had NO IDEA where Angel had to go.  And so he went everywhere, anywhere: up, down, good, bad, left, farther left... off the edge of the world and home for supper and the thing is, it ended up being as much or more about our own lives than Buffy was.  We weren't 'chosen' (not for sports, anyway).  We had no destiny.  we lived on the edge of chaos, personally, narratively... even as Angel surrounded himself with more and more of a family (and we found more and more wonderful actors for David Boreanaz to play against), that central core of warmth and safety that Buffy enjoyed was missing.  The result is before you in toto: the long, strange trip that is five years in the life of a vampire.  Not long enough, I would argue, but plenty with the strange.  For your listy goodness, a few of the moments herein that made my life worth living:

--Angel locking a roomful of lawyers in with two peckish vampire gals.
--Buffy swearing never to forget her time with Angel, right before she does.
--Faith in the rain, begging Angel to kill her.
--Princess Cordelia.
--Darla's horrified accusation, "While Spike - SPIKE - was out killing a Slayer, you were out saving Missionaries!... From me." (True emotional Vampire logic, courtesy of Tim Minear.)
--Lilah dressing up like Fred to seduce Wesley. (Gentlemen, start your therapists!)
--Any and all karaoke.
--Fred and Wesley, deeply drunk.
--Gunn in the White Room, meeting his match.
--The biggest, bloodiest and most personal Spike/Angel fight we've ever shot.
--The silliest, most pointless Spike/Angel argument we've every shot.
--Dude, puppets!

With no star to guide us, we sailed into waters filled with dragons and mermaids and a few really impressive icebergs.  We made some of most compelling television, reinventing season by season, show by show, moment by moment.  This is our odd little odyssey, and no, we never did reach the shores of safety, but that's sort of the point.  We don't go through the Hell of existence - the pain, the drama, the meaninglessness and confusion - because it's safe, or simple, or will end happily now or evera fter.  We do it because nobody every came up with anything better.

So enjoy it.  I did.

Joss Whedon

I love that Joss writes his characters like he talks. :)  That's why Firefly is so recognisably his...
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