Listening to Fear
Episode 5.9
Reviewed
by Sanguine
Much
Madness is divinest Sense-- To
a discerning Eye-- Emily Dickinson The wise fool, the madman who has uncanny knowledge,
who speaks truth in spite of his muddled brain is a frequent visitor in western
literature. In Listening to Fear, written by newcomer Rebecca Rand Kirshner, the
wise fool conceit is used to great, and sometimes painful, effect. For in this
case, the wise fool is Buffy's own very sick mother. As the title Listening to Fear indicates, this
episode dealt with the ramifications of hearing the truth, even as it is seen
through lunatic eyes. Aside from Joss Whedon's The Body, it was the most painful
episode for me to watch all season. Any child who has seen his or her parent
become delirious or delusional through the ravages of illness know how
"true" some of the moments in this episode were. Dawn desperately
pulling the pillow to her ears as she fruitlessly tried to block out her
mother's raving. Buffy turning up the radio in the kitchen (a radio that played
an incessant loop of ultra-cheery salsa music), but then breaking into tears
over the mundane task of the dishes. Neither Buffy nor Dawn was successful in
"drowning out" the truth of their mother's situation: Joyce is
desperately (and perhaps terminally) ill. The episode opens in the hospital with the two girls
sitting on the bed with their mother. Joyce finds out that it will be two more
days before she can have the operation, and is not pleased. She advises Buffy to
go home. Joyce knows her daughter has a duty; a duty that is more important to
the world than waiting around a hospital with her sick mother. Buffy, with
forced cheerfulness, replies that Riley will be filling in. We then cut to a big fight with Xander, Willow , and
Giles in the graveyard. They are being attacked by several rather butch-looking
vampires and things are not looking good. Hey, where's Riley? Hmmmm. Willow
comes through, driving her stake home not once but twice. You go grrrrl! The
Scoobies then discuss the obvious absence of Buffy's commando boyfriend who (as
a quick cut shows us) is . . . unfortunately letting a vamp-ho make a very personal
withdrawal from his blood bank. Riley, Riley, Riley. Not good. The look of
self-loathing on his face as the vamp trull sucks says it all. He is horrified,
but addicted to the pleasure. Again, I am reminded how much they rushed this
storyline and how profound it could have been if they had really examined some
of Riley's motivations. Riley had been "addicted" before. He had been
pumped full of performance-enhancing drugs for years by the Initiative. When
they were out of his system, he almost died from the withdrawal. As soon as he
went back to being an ordinary mortal, insecurity came rushing in, and once
again he found himself succumbing to addiction, one that would have eventually
led to increased power if he ever decided to let his vamp trull go all the way.
Many have discussed whether his visits to the vamp-ho constituted him
"cheating" on Buffy sexually or was it the betrayal of a drug addict,
a betrayal of Buffy's trust? I believe it was both things simultaneously. The
vampires' penetration of their fangs has always, from Bram Stoker onwards, been
a metaphor for sexual penetration. We know that Buffy experienced intense
pleasure when vampires chomped and noshed upon her. So there is undoubtedly a
sexual element to what Riley is doing. But he is also an addict. He seeks the
dangerous, but exquisite, pleasure that the vamp trull provides, even though he
knows it might kill him. Riley, quite simply was, and probably is (somewhere in
Belize), one screwed-up puppy. Damn. He was just getting interesting and angsty,
then he took off Into the Woods. Ah well. The cast was too big anyway. Too many
storylines, not enough time. That should be the theme song for this season! Meanwhile, back at the hospital, Santa Claus (except
thinner and younger and Jewish) has come to visit the Summers' women. The
endearing Willow comes, bearing a sack of goodies and, in a much-needed moment
of levity, reveals her gifts. A beer hat for Joyce. Uh-huh. Spells for Dawn. And
homework for Buffy. "Homework? I don't believe in tiny Jewish Santa
anymore!" The fun doesn't last for long; Joyce makes the first of many
bizarre statements: "I'd rip it in half and stick it in bed with me."
Everyone is horrified. Joyce's descent into madness has begun. Out in the hallway, the girls stand in front of a
poster that bears the image of a stylized head opened at the top with rays of
light emanating from it. The poster exclaims, "Open your Mind." With
this clever and very subtle device the writer and/or director seems to be
telling us something. Glory's brain-suck maneuver literally opens people's
minds, allowing them to see the truth behind the façade of reality. The
Summers' women will also be asked to open their minds, as wise fools tell them
things they don't want to hear. Speaking of which, one of Glory's brain-drained
madmen wanders up to Dawn in the hallway of the hospital. As in the episode The
Real Me, the madman sees that she is "empty" and has "no
data." Dawn is understandably upset and is even more distraught when, later
in the episode, her own sanity-challenged mother tells her, "You're
nothing. You're a shadow." Perhaps Joyce's choice of words is significant.
We learned in last week's episode (not -so-coincidentally called Shadow) that
Joyce herself has a shadow, a low-grade glioma. Why does Joyce call her
"daughter" a shadow? Did her daughter cause her illness? Is she simply
referring to the fact that Dawn is not really there? Or is it a perhaps an
indication that, while important for the world, her power can cause great
destruction. We later learn that the Knights of Byzantium want to destroy her
because she is dangerous. Could it be possible that in the wrong hands she could
cause great evil? Shortly after the upsetting scene in the hospital the
big bad o' the week makes his slimy appearance. It's (to quote Giles) "a
killer snot monster from outer space"! When I first heard Buffy was going
all extraterrestrial on us, I scoffed. "What! Where's Mulder and Scully
when you need 'em?" But the Queller Demon, unlike the endearingly cheesy
snake from Shadow, was genuinely scary in spite of the fact it was a man in a
rubber suit who looked remarkably like Fluke Man from the X-Files. The
creepiness was achieved through camera angles (kudos David Solomon).
Particularly effective was the use of the Queller-Demon cam; i.e., some
sequences were shot from the creature's point of view. Also effective was the
sequence in which Buffy and Dawn think Joyce is just ranting delusionally (and
the audience thinks so too) until the camera pans up to the ceiling to reveal
the Queller Demon. Freaky! The final fight sequence at the Summers' home is well
executed. Things are always more frightening when someone (or something) has
intruded into your own personal space. And speaking of intruders with personal
space issues, Spike bursts out of the basement and nonchalantly asks Buffy,
"Did you hear something?" Geez. It's like he lives there or something!
After Spike's lame attempt at covering his ass (Yeah, I was, um, stealing stuff!
Yeah! That's what I was up to) Buffy sees him put something that looks
suspiciously like pictures of her in his duster pocket. Why didn't this ring
some major alarm bells? I guess she was distracted by the big slimy Queller
demon that attacked a screaming Spike. Unfortunately, Spike, in his struggle
with Mr. Snotty, knocks Buffy's knife out of her hands, but he redeems himself
when he throws it back to her as she struggles on the floor with the Queller.
Buffy dispatches the Queller in no time flat and Spike lends her a gentlemanly
hand to help her off the floor, which she accepts. Just at that moment Riley and
his band of G.I. Joes (Riley has, unbeknownst to the Scoobies, called in some of
his Initiative buddies to help with the Queller) burst through the door and see
Buffy and Spike clasping hands. Very, very bad timing. This little display won't
help Riley's insecurity about Buffy and vampires. Buffy ignores Riley and runs
upstairs to her mother, giving Spike the opportunity to point out that once
again Riley wasn't there when Buffy needed him: "You missed a real nice
time." As Xander found out earlier in the episode, the
Queller Demon needed to be summoned. So, who did it? Ben, the innocuous intern
isn't as innocuous as he seems. He tells Dreg, who notably is nowhere near as
obsequious to Ben as he is to Glory, that he was "cleaning up Glory's
mess." Hmmm. The plot thickens. This episode was full of wonderful moments and witty
dialogue. Although Kirshner is new to Buffy, she wrote plausibly for all the
characters. Xander is useful (he finds out about the Queller Demon) and has
completely transcended buttmonkeydom in this episode. Anya is hilarious with her
concerns about Riley's sterility and her observations about the snot monster:
"I'm sure it frisked about like a fluffy lamb." The scene between Tara
and Willow in which they named the constellations was particularly sweet. But
one of the most touching exchanges occurred after Joyce's insane-yet -lucid
realisation that her daughter is nothing but a "shadow." Buffy advises
Dawn not to listen to the wise fools, even if the "fool" in question
is her mother. Try not to listen, even though they might articulate some of your
deepest fears, the things that you know deep down are true. The creation of the
character of Dawn, Buffy's teenage sister who doesn't really exist, has allowed
Joss to explore the painful nuances of adolescent angst with a crystalline
clarity. Dawn's "emptiness," her existential crisis, has become a
powerful metaphor for the emptiness and alienation many experience during that
most horrible period of growing up: adolescence.