"Grave" as "Becoming, Part Three"
The text below is by Alanna; many of the ideas are from discussions
on IRC. Credit goes to the many people who participated in those
chats; my apologies for not being able to remember specific names.
The parallels between season two's finale, "Becoming",
and season six's finale, "Two to Go" and "Grave",
are both obvious and subtextual. Both episodes ended seasons focusing
on growth, with characters shifting allegiances to moral constructs
and each other, and both capped dark seasons. If you look closely
at the two episodes (focusing on "Grave" and "Becoming,
Part Two"), the parallels are almost deliberate, leading one
to wonder if perhaps "Grave" was meant to be "Becoming
III".
DIALOGUE
1. One of many memorable lines of B2 is Spike telling Drusilla,
"I don't want to hurt you, baby.... Doesn't mean I won't."
In TTG, Buffy begins to physically take on Willow. She says, "I
don't want to hurt you." After Willow punches her across the
room, Buffy retorts, "I said I didn't want to. Didn't say I
wouldn't."
2. When Kendra arrives in town, Buffy teases, "Let me guess.
Your Watcher has informed you that a very dark power is about to
rise in Sunnydale." In Grave, Giles comes back after a long
absence. He tells Buffy, "There's an extremely powerful coven
in Devon. They sensed the rise of a dangerous magical force here
in Sunnydale. A dark force fueled by grief."
3. Willow threatens Buffy: "It was me who took you out of
the earth. And now? The earth wants you back." Four years earlier,
Buffy threatened Angel with, "You're going to hell," to
which he responded, "Save me a seat."
4. As the power swells inside her, Willow says, "I've never
been so connected. It's like... I can feel... everyone." Though
no specific dialogue mirrors this in Becoming, it has a very similar
feel to Angel's wonderment as he first senses Acathla's power.
5. Buffy advocates re-souling Angel because she wants him back
the way he was. When discussing Willow's condition in Grave, Giles
tells Buffy, "Should she survive... you ought to know, Buffy,
that there's no guarantee she'll be as she was."
RELATIONSHIPS (ROMANTIC AND PLATONIC)
1. In both episodes, Buffy has to take down/destroy someone she
loves in order to save the world. Both times, something has overcome
the other person (Angel and Willow) to make them "not herself/himself."
2. Unlikely couples begin to emerge, though the fruition isn't
seen (or may not be seen) until the next season's premiere: Willow
and Xander in B2, Giles and Anya in Grave.
3. Xander pleads with Willow not to die before he can tell her
everything he needs to say (this also happens in a slightly different
manner in Grave). Anya pleads with a badly injured Giles not to
die because she has so much she wants to say to him.
4. Demons work against their natures to help save the world. Spike
forms an alliance with Buffy in B2; Anya -- now a vengeance demon
again -- works with the others to fight Willow.
5. We see many parallels between the not-quite-villains in both
episodes. Spike has been the (secondary) Big Bad all during season
two, yet he fights alongside Buffy. Jonathan was a member of the
Trio, yet he shifts back and forth between helping out the Scoobies
and fleeing with Andrew. Drusilla and Andrew want to continue hurting
the SG, while Spike and Jonathan help them.
THE DARK SIDE
1. Angel, Drusilla and Spike torture Giles both physically and
emotionally, using his memories of Jenny Calendar to crush his spirit
and reveal information. Willow tortures Giles in Grave, yet her
motives are more visceral: she simply wants to inflict pain out
of bitterness and revenge.
2. Both Angel and Willow taunt those to whom they were formerly
so close, and both seem to take glee in causing pain. Their words
are deliberately personal and hurtful.
3. The Big Bads have an emotional breakdown in the end, once they've
realized just what they have done. Angel is re-ensouled and collapses
in Buffy's arms. Willow's power fades and she collapses in Xander's
arms, after he has told her over and over how much he loves her.
4. In B2, Buffy leaves town because she cannot handle her (emotional)
world after it has been destroyed. She wants to give up and run
away from it all. In Grave, she returns to the fold, to life. After
her world was pulled back from the brink of destruction, she forges
a new commitment to life. Buffy was separated from her loved ones
by her grief, but she takes the grief and uses it to forge new ties.
5. All of the characters emerge into the bright light of day at
the end of both episodes.
6. And, of course, the "evil" vampires (Angel and Spike)
are given a soul and -- possibly -- redeemed for their past crimes.
The difference is that Angel doesn't know about the re-souling and
doesn't appear to want it at all. Spike, however, journeys to Africa
specifically so he can regain his soul. He does this so that he
can stop hurting Buffy and become the man she deserves. Angel revels
in the loss of his soul and once it's gone, he attempts to destroy
Buffy for making him feel like a man.
PLOT/ACTION/VISUALS
1. Giles knows the secret that will save the world. In B2, he knows
of Acathla's true purpose and the way to harness its power. In Grave,
he is the only one with a true understanding of how to fight Willow.
2. Formerly semi-passive characters come into their own. Willow
becomes powerful with the resouling spell, which hints at her future
as a Wicca to be reckoned with. Dawn picks up a sword and begins
to fight alongside Buffy, perhaps foreshadowing her future in season
seven as a Slayer/Warrior.
3. Angel calls on the effigy of a demon in B2 (Acathla). Willow
calls on the effigy of a demon in Grave (Proserpexa).
4. Dawn and Angel both pick up swords, with the scenes filmed in
such a way that calls our attention to the swords as a deliberate
symbolic move.
5. Demons cause earthquakes.
6. The main Scooby hangout is the setting of some of the worst
violence: the library and The Magic Box.
7. Willow uses her Resolve Face: "I'm not joking this time,
Xander. Get out of her way." Of course, the emotions are quite
different each time.
And in conclusion, the most obvious parallel:
The closing sequence is filmed in slow-motion, full of Very Deep
Thoughts... with musical accompaniment by Sarah McLachlan. :)
|