Thursday, December 22, 2011

‘Buffy the Vampire Slayer’ movie looking for new writer


Screenwriter Whit Anderson (Sam Comen)

Dec. 22, 2011

That big-screen revamp of “Buffy the Vampire Slayer” has been dealt a setback — it looks as though the movie’s first-time screenwriter bit off more than she could chew.

GALLERY: "Buffy" stars: where are they now?

Two sources close to the project say that the script submitted this past summer by writer Whit Anderson fell far short of expectations and, in the end, was rejected completely. That’s news that will spark celebration from some longtime “Buffy” fans who were less than thrilled by the prospects of a “Buffy” revival that didn’t involve Joss Whedon. Whedon, now directing “The Avengers” for Marvel,  himself took a few shots at the reboot project — although he did so with a sly wink.

“This is a sad, sad reflection on our times,” Whedon said last November when that deal was announced, “when people must feed off the carcasses of beloved stories from their youths — just because they can’t think of an original idea of their own, like I did with my Avengers idea that I made up myself.”

As for the future of “Buffy”? A new writer is being sought but the entire endeavor may have lost some steam. There also might be some healthy fear among the producers who witnessed a spasm of fan criticism when the project was first publicized.

“If you’re going to bring it back, you have to do it right,” one key player in the project told Hero Complex. “[Anderson] came in with some great ideas and she had reinvented some of the lore and it was pretty cool but in the end there just wasn’t enough on the page.”

— Geoff Boucher


Friday, September 9, 2011

'Buffy the Vampire Slayer:' Where Are They Now?


Before "Twilight's" Bella and before "True Blood's" Sookie, one woman reigned over the fang-toothed creatures of the night: Buffy the Vampire Slayer.

Sarah Michelle Gellar became a teen queen thanks to the hit TV series "Buffy the Vampire Slayer," which took the small screen by storm between 1997 and 2003. She's returning to TV this fall with the thriller "Ringer," in which she plays a woman on the run who takes on the identity of her twin sister after she mysteriously disappears.

Speaking of disappearing -- while some of the cast of "Buffy the Vampire Slayer" failed to transition from the drama into bigger and better Hollywood projects, others, including Gellar, have stood the test of time. Below, check out what Gellar and four of her "Buffy" co-stars have done since the show went off the air:

Sarah Michelle Gellar

As Buffy, Gellar fought to rid the fictional town of Sunnydale, Calif., of its supernatural annoyances. She won six teen choice awards for that role and scored a Golden Globe nomination. Gellar co-starred in a few popular movies during her "Buffy" reign, including "I Know What You Did Last Summer" (where she met her future husband, Freddie Prinze Jr., whom she married in 2002) and "Cruel Intentions."

Gellar's movie career floundered for much of the '00s. While her 2004 horror movie "The Grudge" was a box office success, its sequel flopped. At 34, she's thrilled to be returning to TV, and her real life role of taking care of her 2-year-old daughter has kept her in shape to kick butt on camera again.

"I just chase my toddler," she told "Access Hollywood" about staying fit. "That pretty much keeps me on my toes and puts me to bed by 8:30!"

David Boreanaz

Playing Angel, Buffy's forbidden vampire lover, David Boreanaz captured the hearts of teenage fans the world over. After two years on "Buffy," he starred in the spin-off "Angel," which ran from 1999 until 2004. Soon after his professional associations with the underworld ended, Boreanaz, now 42, found a new character on "Bones," in which he plays Special Agent Seeley Booth.

While his career has sailed smoothly, his personal life hasn't fared quite as well. Last May, he admitted that he cheated on his wife, Playboy Playmate Jaime Bergman, multiple times, including with Rachel Uchitel, one of the women linked to Tiger Woods' extramarital affairs. Boreanaz and Bergman still remain together with their two children.

Alyson Hannigan

Every vampire slayer needs a partner in crime, and Alyson Hannigan played Gellar's as Willow, "Buffy's" shy nerd turned magic maven. In 1999, Hannigan scored the role she's probably best known for apart from "Buffy" -- playing band geek Michelle Flaherty in the "American Pie" series of movies. (For people of a certain age, "This one time, at band camp" remains a beloved catchphrase.)

In 2005, Hannigan, now 37, returned to TV with "How I Met Your Mother." Her personal life is as constant as her presence in Hollywood -- she married actor Alexis Denisof in 2003 (who has also appeared on "Buffy," "Angel" and "How I Met Your Mother"). Together, they have a 2-year-old daughter.

Seth Green

Seth Green's "Buffy" alter-ego was Oz, Willow's guitar-playing/werewolf boyfriend. That role was the start of a successful Hollywood career. Green, now 37, has had a number of memorable roles, including Dr. Evil's son in the "Austin Powers" movies, the dork in "Can't Hardly Wait," the voice of Chris Griffin on "Family Guy" and himself on "Entourage."

He also serves as the co-creator and producer of the TV comedy series "Robot Chicken." Last year, he married actress Clare Grant.

Michelle Trachtenberg

Fun fact: Vampire slaying is genetic. It made sense, then, to introduce Michelle Trachtenberg as Dawn, Buffy's little sister, in season five of the series. Along with her role on "Buffy," Trachtenberg built her career by starring in teen-centric movies like "Ice Princess" and "17 Again."

More recently, she's indulged in the manipulative (sometimes psychotic) Georgina Sparks, the scheming outsider on TV's "Gossip Girl." In real life, the 25-year-old Trachtenberg is a fixture of young Hollywood, and can often be caught party hopping with her co-stars Blake Lively and Leighton Meester.

ABC News


Morrow-TV: Sarah Michelle Gellar chose 'Ringer' after 'Buffy'

Unlike many actors, Sarah Michelle Gellar won't dismiss her past so easily.

Going into "Ringer," her new adventure series (debuting 9 p.m. EDT Tuesday, The CW), she's well aware that her fans from "Buffy the Vampire Slayer" are still out there and very focused.

"When picking a show, I took into consideration who my fans are, because, let's be honest, I mean, we were a midseason replacement on The WB, based on a failed movie, 'Buffy the Vampire Slayer.' If it wasn't for the outpouring of fans, and the journalists, too, supporting us, we would have been canceled after four episodes," Gellar told reporters recently.

"And I think as an actor, sure you want to stretch and you want to do different things, but I think it's also our job to think about who our fans are and what they want to see, too.

"Because, let's be honest, ultimately that's why we do it. I mean, I do it to entertain the people that want to watch what I do."

Gellar quit "Buffy" after several years because she was burned out on the demands of doing an hourlong comedy-adventure. She was in her mid-20s when she walked away from the show. Since then, she's gotten married, started a family and gone on to big-screen roles. Now in her early 30s, Gellar is ready to tackle weekly series work again.

"Ringer" has some faint similarities to "Buffy." While the new show has no supernatural elements, it does have a Hitchcocklike style -- double crosses, double lives and threats from every corner.

Gellar is once again in the thick of danger. She's tough and smart in the three roles she has here: Bridget, a former prostitute and recovering drug addict; Siobhan, who is Bridget's wealthy identical twin with a shady life; and Bridget-as-Siobhan, which has Bridget on the lam and assuming Siobhan's identity after Siobhan is assumed dead.

The switching from character to character has been a juggling act for Gellar, but one she relishes.

"It's interesting. I think it's like children," she says of the three roles.

"When you're each one, you have to love each one individually and understand that one. So when I'm Bridget, I feel that all of Bridget's motivations are hers, and Siobhan is wrong. And when I'm Siobhan, everything Bridget does is wrong.

"I try to get into the head of each of them."

Scripps News



Saturday, August 20, 2011

Spike and Cordelia Are Getting Married (on Supernatural)

Yes, Buffy alums James Marsters and Charisma Carpenter will be playing an unhappily married couple of the fifth episode of Supernatural's seventh season, titled "Shut Up, Dr. Phil." It's not exactly earth-shattering news, but it's one of those fun nerd nods Supernatural seems to like to slip in where it can. And I'm always kind of pleased to see Carpenter getting work. What do you think the odds are of her hitting on San and/or Dean? One in 1.0025?

Topless Robot 

Friday, August 12, 2011

Teen First U.S. Death by Vampire Bat


Published August 12, 2011

A Mexican teen became the first person in the United States to die from a vampire bat -- and the Centers for Disease Control warned that the bats may be spreading in the country.

The 19-year-old migrant worker contracted rabies from a bite on his heel from the blood sucker on July 15th, 2010. He was bitten in Michoacan, Mexico, 10 days before he left for the United States to work on a sugar cane plantation in Louisiana. The Center for Disease Control (CDC) only just confirmed on Friday, Aug. 12, that his death was the first such case in the U.S.

"This case represents the first reported human death from a vampire bat rabies virus variant in the United States," said the CDC and Prevention in its Morbidity and Mortality weekly report.

The teenager became ill two weeks after the bite, having not received a rabies vaccination. He had a particularly aggressive case of the disease with an incubation period of 15 days as opposed to the average 85 days seen in other human rabies cases in the United States.

He sought medical attention for fatigue, shoulder pain, a dropping left eye and numbness of the left hand. He also developed respiratory distress and a 101.1-degree fever, according the the CDC's report.
On August 20, he was officially diagnosed with rabies after test results of his spinal fluid confirmed the disease. Postmortem test on the teen's brain tissue confirmed "the variant to be a vampire bat rabies virus variant," the CDC said.

In its report, the CDC also urged the public to avoid vampire bats and get vaccinated.
Although vampire bats are typically found in Mexico, Brazil, Chile and Argentina, "research suggests that the range of these bats might be expanding as a result of changes in climate," the CDC reported.

"Expansion of vampire bats into the United States likely would lead to increased bat exposures to both humans and animals (including domestic livestock and wildlife species) and substantially alter rabies virus dynamics and ecology in the southern United States," the health agency warned.


Wednesday, June 22, 2011

MOVIE BLOG: Can vampires be redeemed?

By Naomi Creason, Sentinel Reporter, June 21, 2011   The Sentinel - cumberlink.com

With "Twilight" (finally) ending next year with the second part of "Breaking Dawn," there may be a chance for vampires to get some redemption and earn their way back into the horror genre.

Vampires have always been a safe villain to cast in a movie, but we're seeing plenty of overkill in movies and TV shows when it comes to the bloodsuckers. Given that "The Vampire Diaries," "True Blood" and "Being Human" are doing so well on the small screen, I doubt we'll see any less vampires in the future.

However, after Sweden's "Let the Right One In," we may finally get to see some vampire entertainment that doesn't necessarily revolve around pretty (and sometimes sparkly) people. There's movement going ahead on the "Buffy the Vampire Slayer" reboot as well as the action-horror "Abraham Lincoln: Vampire Hunter," but it's two other movies with potential release dates next year that could add a little bite to the genre.

There was news yesterday about some screenplay work on "The Passage," which is set to be directed by Matt Reeves, who directed "Cloverfield" and "Let Me In." Reeves' movie didn't differ too much from the original Swedish movie, but critics loved it nonetheless. Given Reeves' handling of "Let Me In," it bodes well that "The Passage" could also be something worth watching.

I'm not as enthusiastic about the plot of "The Passage," which follows the cliche of a scientific experiment gone wrong and the eventual horde of vampires, who can apparently read minds. However, Reeves was able to make the "found footage" and monster movie genres into something interesting with "Cloverfield," so I'm willing to see what he does with this.

The other vampire movie that seems like it will be worth more than a "vampire movie" label is an untitled one to be directed by Jim Jarmusch, who made "Coffee and Cigarettes" and "Broken Flowers." If combining Jarmusch with vampires wasn't odd enough, he also managed to assemble an amazing cast with Tilda Swinton, Michael Fassbender and Mia Wasikowska. Swinton rarely takes bad roles, and Fassbender and Wasikowska already proved they work well together in "Jane Eyre." There isn't much information about the movie other than it will be set in Detroit and Tangiers and will be a "crypto-vampire love story" (yeah, I don't really know what that means either), but the pairing of director and cast alone will make this something to look out for in either 2012 or 2013.

While there's still more than a little unknown about these projects and more vampire movies on the horizon, I think I'll be happy with leaving the likes of "Twilight" behind me and watch something that may actually reinvent the horror movie villain.

What do you think of these new vampire movies? Will vampires get their edge back or will "Twilight" overshadow the movie monster? Leave a comment or email me at ncreason@cumberlink.com.

Cumberlink

Monday, May 16, 2011

Gellar: New 'Buffy' movie is 'dumbest idea ever'



Several cast members of the much-beloved series "Buffy the Vampire Slayer" have weighed in on the upcoming Joss Whedon-less "Buffy" movie, and now Buffy herself, Sarah Michelle Gellar, has made her feelings known.

"It was a movie. It's been made. It stars Kristy Swanson. They don't need to make another one," she said in an interview with CNN on Tuesday. "I think it's a horrible idea! To try to do a 'Buffy' without Joss Whedon? To be incredibly non-eloquent, that's the dumbest idea I've ever heard!"

Gellar is planning to return to series television for the first time since 2003 in a pilot for CBS called "The Ringer."

"I miss television, I do. It took me a while to understand that I missed it," she said. "Eight years is a really long time, especially at my age, being so young and not knowing other things and you realize you miss the familiarity, you miss the crew, you miss - it's almost like summer vacation and seeing your friends after the break."

Gellar went on to say that having a child motivated her to seek the stability of a regular series. It's also motivated her to join with the "Nestle Share the Joy of Reading Program," and to consider possibly writing a children's book in the future.

"It's a tough market to crash," she said. "It's been on my radar for a very long time. I've never fancied myself a writer, so we'll see."

Gellar visited the Los Angeles Public Library's historic Central Library on Tuesday to promote the program, which encourages continued reading over the summer.

"I love books. I'm constantly afraid that we're moving into this digital era where books are going to go away," Gellar says. "To me books are the basis for everything in life. Reading is how we function, it's not just creative imagination and creative play, it's how we function as human beings, as adults, and if you can instill that at a young age that's a skill they have for life."

CNN

Wednesday, May 4, 2011

Buffy Resurrected

Madison-made independent comedy horror, ‘Dead of the Night’ brings back badass female lead

By Ann Rivall

It may not be the next “Citizen Kane,” but it possesses a measure of that norm-defying moxie necessary to promote cinematic industry change.

“Dead of the Night” — an independently made Madison film and the brainchild of local producer and writer Robert Love — is not your typical comedy horror.

For one, this low-budget indie — all funded by Love himself — is set in Wisconsin and described as a fusion of “Buffy the Vampire Slayer” and “Friday the 13th.” Two, it boasts of a badass female lead actress, University of Wisconsin senior Morgan Boland, who is bestowed with a palpable dose of chutzpah, well-suited to combating zombies and pesky demons aiming to disrupt an FBI mission.

She is woman, hear her roar.

Influenced by director Joss Whedon’s strong female lead personified by Sarah Michelle Gellar in the “Buffy the Vampire Slayer” series, Love and his fellow film producer Jeff Skubal, wanted to create a comedy horror that strayed from the male lead mold by developing the character of Paige — a tenacious self-confident woman who unapologetically asserts her dominance and leaps into the realm of macho.

“As a storyteller, I’ve always been attracted to strong women,” Love said in a recent interview with The Badger Herald. “So often women are portrayed as the sidekick to the guy, and what I liked so much about Buffy was that she was the hero, she’s in charge and she’s got that strength of personality to be the superpower, and so that’s what I wrote Paige to be. She’s a woman; she’ll get in fights.”

Originally cast as an extra when “Dead of the Night” production began over two years ago, Boland impressed Love, who had initially written the part with a different actress in mind. After eventually revolving through three different leading ladies and continually coming back to the extra that impressed him, Love settled on Boland — a UW theatre major who most recently appeared in the University Theatre production of “Eurydice.”

And if Love was searching for the right woman to take on the role of a commanding female presence incarnated in his Paige, he surely found it in Boland. She exudes an equal match of confidence and humility as she traverses the uncharted acting platforms of comedy and film.

“I think I’ve discovered through the process that I’m more like Paige than I realized,” Boland said. “I really love how this character really bluntly speaks her mind. She’s not going to sugarcoat anything, and I find myself in the same situations sometimes.”

Both relative newcomers to the experience of shooting a full-length feature film, Love and Boland each reflected on the adventure of seeing a project stem from an idea and morph into what has become the visionary baby of Love’s that Boland occasionally baby sits with her creative input.

Love is a writer and voice over director for Raven Software — a Middleton-based computer game developer of real world and science fiction game software — and has produced two film shorts, “The Plan” and “The More Things Change,” prior to dipping his toe in the feature-flick pool.

Drawing on an initial acquaintance with film gained while working for Raven and reinforced while shooting his first two shorts, Love was able to call on that specific knowledge base when developing “Dead of the Night.”

“The biggest difference between the short and the full-length film is the time commitment. It’s a huge, huge time commitment, but it’s also so much more rewarding,” Love said. “You get all these different pieces together and all these different people working so hard. I’ve shown the actors scenes, and it’s cool to see when they laugh at the right parts and you really get the emotions where you want to.”

Making the transition from the stage to on-camera proved to be an interesting artistic learning opportunity for Boland who had previously only been a cast member of a local student-produced film. With this being her first full-length film, Boland immediately noticed the task of emotional readiness screen actors are expected to tackle when shooting various, disjointed scenes typical of the sporadic production style of full-length films.

“Before doing film I used to think film actresses had it so much easier because they only had to memorize one scene at a time and theatre people have to memorize the whole show, but film is a lot harder in the sense that you have to jump into that moment no matter what it is,” Boland said. “With theater you can ride that momentum through the show and it can be a lot easier to get yourself to those moments.”

As an actress who has had minimal experience with comedy, Boland is also learning to hone her comedic chops — a theatrical skill of Boland’s that both Love and “Eurydice” reviewers praised the young leading lady for.

“Bob kept telling me I had great comedic timing, and I kept saying, ‘I do?’ It wasn’t until I read a ‘Eurydice’ review and they mentioned my comedic timing that I began to believe it,” Boland said.

For Love, comedy is his niche.

“Comedy really speaks to me; I think that’s my strength as a writer,” Love said.

His first comedy short, “The More Things Change,” allowed Love to explore the genre, and after receiving strong audience encouragement for his writing, decided to pursue the humor of horror with “Dead of the Night.”

“What makes comedy work so well is having some tension in there, and that’s why horror comedies work out really nice,” Love said. “We’re not really a horror per se because we’re not about the blood, we’re not about the violence — it’s mostly about the comedy.”

Citing the “horror renaissance” that has captivated mega-plexes across the world with blockbusters like “Twilight,” and TV series such as “The Vampire Diaries,” Love and Skubal knew that combining the wry intrigue of demonic, otherworldly creatures disrupting the placid nature of a Wisconsin backdrop would make for a clever Joss Whedon-like romp that celebrated a strong female commanding the film’s comedy and action.

“The women in the film always stand up and fight. I want to portray these women as strong,” Love said.

Though the marriage of comedy and horror has been spoofed in numerous “Scary Movie” installments, Love predicted his own genre union in “Dead of the Night” would at one moment present a captivating, edge-of-your-seat scene for viewers, and in the next let the crowd breathe a sigh of comedic relief with a deadpan line delivery.

“For comedy to work well you need a wind up of the tension and then the release,” Love said. “If you’re careful with your comedy you don’t throw off the men or the women, which you can tend to do.”

“Horror is also in itself funny,” Boland added.

Readying themselves for a Madison screening in July at Sundance Theater, Love and Boland reflect back on the experience of surviving their first feature-length film together and credit Skubal’s creative level head for guiding the pair’s imagination.

“I really love the creative process, and I really do think that strong art is very collaborative and that collaboration itself can only make it stronger,” Boland said. “I think we work together to tell a great story.”

“I’m extremely proud of this project,” Love said. “This has been like climbing Mount Everest in your bare feet, and I could not have done it without the enthusiasm of Morgan and Jeff.”

“Dead of the Night” will be shown at Sundance Theater in July. For the most up-to-date information regarding the film’s progress and future viewing opportunities, visit the film’s Facebook page.

badgerherald.com

Buffy remake slays childhood memories

By: Romeo Mora

It seems like every movie studio loves to reboot beloved franchises and bastardize the collective childhood memories of diehard fans. In the past few years Batman, James Bond and Star Trek reboots have flooded multiplexes. No one can blame studios for making an easy buck. And, thanks to "Twilight" and the ensuing vampire craze, greedy producers now have their sights set on "Buffy the Vampire Slayer."

According to the Hollywood Reporter, Fran Rubel Kuzui, director of the original 1992 Buffy film, and her husband Kaz Kuzui are planning to release a remake by 2012 without the involvement of "Buffy" creator Joss Whedon. The article makes it clear that the movie will not incorporate the original supporting characters or feature the mythology of the series.

For those who are not familiar with Whedon, he wrote the original movie script and managed to resurrect the box office failure into a successful and critically acclaimed primetime series that resulted in the spin off, "Angel." He created a world win which vampires and monsters are metaphors for growing up. His work was well received by the world of academia and several scholarly articles about the series dealing with themes such as gender roles and violence have been published. So, what's the big deal?

Imagine some yuppie movie executive picking up a copy of "Star Wars" and deciding to keep Luke Skywalker, now played by Justin Bieber, while getting rid of Han Solo, Chewbacca and Princess Laia, and combining C-3PO and RD-D2 into a disembodied voice coming from a iPhone 4.

The major obstacle this "Buffy" remake faces is the backlash for not including Whedon in the process and purposely ignoring key elements from the popular television series. As they are prepping the movie, Whedon has been writing about Buffy in comic book format, which continues the story of the TV series. It's hard to understand why the built-in audience that producers hope to engage would want to subject themselves to such water-down version of Buffy. It does not have to be a carbon copy, but if the essential canon and characters of the series were kept and tweaked for a modern audience, similar to J.J. Abrams's 2009 re-imagining of "Star Trek," then it could be successful.

The Kuzuis need to fix a few things before hardcore Buffy fans begin to entertain the idea of watching the film. First, Buffy needs her friends. The supporting characters allow for Buffy to be grounded in the real world, therefore allowing her to deal with mundane, everyday problems that make her relatable to the audience. In addition, Kuzui needs to capture the spirit of Whedon's writing style and incorporate the language and mythology. "Buffy" was known for its witty dialogue infused with pop culture references and its abuse of the English language. Also, Whedon cleverly use its mythology to demonstrate that high school was literally hell, and you don't have to be a slayer to survive it. It's a message that has become more important during a rise of bullying in schools. Without these elements, Buffy is forced to devolve into a blonde valley girl without depth.
When it comes down to it, all producers want to do is preserve the warm memories of fans than drive a wooden stake through their heart and steal the cash. Regardless of what fans want, the Kuzuis have a script in hand and are planning for a 2012 release. And, being the sucker that I am, I will be standing in line during the opening weekend. I know. I'm a sucker.

Whedon himself best expressed the frustration and annoyance regarding this remake when he replied to E! reporter Kristen Dos Santos in an e-mail.

"This is a sad, sad reflection on our times, when people must feed off the carcasses of beloved stories from their youths-just because they can't think of an original idea of their own, like I did with my Avengers idea that I made up myself. I always hoped that Buffy would live on even after my death. But, you know, AFTER. I don't love the idea of my creation in other hands, but I'm also well aware that many more hands than mine went into making that show what it was. And there is no legal grounds for doing anything other than sighing audibly. I can't wish people who are passionate about my little myth ill."

csusignal.com


Sunday, April 24, 2011

Whedon announces Avengers film start


Written by Jason Comic Books, News Apr 24, 2011

Geek Messiah Joss Whedon has announced, or E-nounced (see what I did there?) that THE AVENGERS will begin filming following Zombie Jesus Day.

“Tomorrow we start shooting (I THINK I’m legally permitted to say that). Day one. That’s right. We’ll be shooting the pivotal death/betrayal/product placement/setting up the sequel/coming out scene”

Whedon’s statement was made on the popular fan zine Whedonesque.com

Whedon also stated that he was still working on BUFFY pages for the upcoming “Season 9″ of Dark Horse Comics BUFFY THE VAMPIRE SLAYER and that regarding THE AVENGERS he is trying to “figure out what the movie is about already.”  adding, “I’m pretty sure it’s about the JUSTICE LEAGUE”

While Whedon’s note was squee inducing (a grown man JUST wrote that) it sadly gives fans/obsessive’s/me nothing particularly substantial with regard to what exactly he will do with Iron Man, Captain America, Thor, and the rest when THE AVENGERS soars into theaters next summer.

My bet? Skrull musical.

veryaware.com

Wednesday, April 13, 2011

Hellmouth Revisited

My best friend in college bemoaned the finiteness of movies. They are too short-lived and it’s all over before we’re ready to let go. Television series, on the other hand, endure for multiple years if they possess the right ratings. Characters accompany us for months; we incorporate them into our long-term schedules. Their regular return is a valuable payoff for our investment. For Ava, Buffy the Vampire Slayer was a perfect example of a long running series that provided enough gratification through its seven televised seasons. She and I kicked off our sophomore year watching all of the episodes of Buffy. After warning me that the first few episodes were a smidgen campy, she assured me that the series was brilliant and that I’d love it. I enjoyed the series, which was made more fun by her enthusiasm for it. We moved onto Angel, and eventually the rest of the Joss Whedon canon. The routine was often dinner, homework, Buffy, more homework, followed by Buffy with the stream of our chats and pleasant digressions.

Over the summer, she died in a car accident. It devastated her family, our community, and me. Her sweet, strong mother gave me Ava’s DVD collection. It included Thai bootleg DVDs of Buffy, each with a customized, embossed sticker proclaiming it as part of Ava’s library. For a while I couldn’t bear to touch the DVDs for fear of smearing the precious fingerprints she left behind.

When I tried to think of the laughs we had, I smiled when recalling Buffy’s fashion choices (cranberry pleather pants!) and Spike’s fondness for spicy foods (Vampire tongues are less sensitive, was our theory). Ava’s comments about Buffy triggered a smile even when the grief was suffocating the good inside me. One night, unable to sleep, I gingerly slid open a DVD box and watched an episode. Feeling the need for a tearful release, I began with the pilot episode. At first, it felt heretical to watch Buffy without Ava. But Ava’s voice settled into each episode and it comforted me that my memories of her could still be so vivid. The memories of her comments and quips soothed me when I felt lonely. 

I soon reached season five, and braced myself for the sixteenth episode: “The Body.” Buffy’s mother, Joyce, unexpectedly dies of an aneurysm. This is the rare episode in which there is no Big Bad to blame nor an apocalypse at stake. Set to no soundtrack, Whedon claims he was trying to express the “boredom” of loss right when it happens. The countless amount of minute things you notice in grief but are unable to filter out of your mind come across clearly in “The Body.” In the background of one scene, a wind chime clinks prettily while Buffy vomits from shock of Joyce’s passing. The scene reminded me of how bizarre it seemed to me that birds chirped while I wept. And, indeed, it was a boring realization that the sun would rise no matter how I felt about it—that the outside world progressed regardless of my participation in it.

 In addition, I discovered that the impulse to find reasons for such random and insignificant events was in vain. Identifying the purpose for events in narratives are generally easy—events are crafted to serve a coherent plot. “The Body” helped me let go of the idea that nothing happens without a reason. Sudden loss is discordant to our general understanding of the world. In Buffy’s universe, where the demons are kitten-eating evil incarnate, few questions asked, it’s especially poignant that Joyce dies of a natural cause. The story about a girl with the gift to destroy vampires and stave off a series of apocalypses who is coping instead with her mother’s sudden death is unexpected, and an entirely different formula. I recognized in watching “The Body” that my control of the direction of my life is less certain than I believed. There are unperceivable forces beneath an opaque surface of understanding. This goes for both mild-mannered undergrads and Slayers. Part of maturing, for both Buffy and me, was growing to tolerate this through the cruel lesson of loss.

As the Buffy series is set in high school, one of its major themes is the experience of adolescence. Buffy learns her limitations, and that taking the part and shape of a strong woman arriving from girlhood necessitates some loss. Watching the show a second time, I felt far more sympathetic towards Buffy and appreciative of its steady pacing. Moreover, it became a way to honor Ava. In an earlier stage of grief, I dreaded that I was somehow leaving her behind by growing up without her. Through revisiting Buffy I learned how to carry the memories of her with me through my adolescence and college graduation. The television series she was so passionate about, enough to watch it with me from the beginning for a second time, stays relevant to me. And so does she.  

Salon

Wednesday, April 6, 2011

Zombies, Reavers, Butchers, and Actuals in Joss Whedon's Work


By Gerry Canavan 4 April 2011

For all the standard horror movie monsters Joss Whedon took up in Buffy and Angel—vampires, of course, but also ghosts, demons, werewolves, witches, Frankenstein’s monster, the Devil, mummies, haunted puppets, the Creature from the Black Lagoon, the “bad boyfriend,” and so on—you’d think there would have been more zombies. In twelve years of television across both series zombies appear in only a handful of episodes. They attack almost as an afterthought at Buffy’s drama-laden homecoming party early in Buffy  Season Three; they completely ruin Xander’s evening in “The Zeppo” later that same season; they patrol a Los Angeles neighborhood in “The Thin Dead Line” in Angel Season Two; they stalk the halls of Wolfram & Hart in “Habeas Corpses” (4.8) in Angel  Season Four. A single zombie comes back from the dead to work things out with the girlfriend who poisoned him in a subplot in “Provider” in Angel Season Three; Adam uses science to reanimate dead bodies to make his lab assistants near the end of Buffy Season Four; zombies guard a fail-safe device in the basement of Wolfram & Hart in “You’re Welcome” in Angel Season Five.

That’s about it—and most of these don’t even really count as zombies at all. Many can talk, and most exhibit a capacity for complex reasoning and decision-making that is totally antithetical to the zombie myth. Not a one of these so-called zombies seems especially interested in devouring our heroes’ delicious flesh. Of the aforementioned episodes only “Dead Man’s Party” and “Habeas Corpses” really come close to evoking the wonderfully claustrophobic adrenaline rush of the shambling, groaning zombie horde that has become so popular in American horror since George Romero’s genre-establishing Night of the Living Dead series: a small group of people, desperately hiding within a confined, fortified space, with nowhere to run and no hope for survival when the zombies finally penetrate their defenses.

In interviews Whedon frequently cites Romero as a major influence on his work. In one he describes his early ambition to become a “a brilliant, independent filmmaker who then went on to make giant, major box office summer movies” as “Spielberg by way of George Romero”; in another he credits Romero with writing strong, complex female characters long before either James Cameron or Whedon himself came around. In a video interview with fear.net Whedon describes Romero as “a huge influence,” adding that Romero “is the only really ambitiously political filmmaker in that genre—and the Night of the Living Dead trilogy is just an incredible example of what can be done with gut-wrenching terror.”

Why then are there so few (and such poor) zombies in the early Whedon canon? We might speculate that filming a properly immense zombie horde would have risked busting the budget for the series, an ever-present concern for supernatural and science fiction series on television, especially on UPN and the WB. A properly ravenous horde, too, might have made Broadcast Standards and Practices rather nervous; American television’s very first zombie-themed series, AMC’s gory hit The Walking Dead, only made it to cable last year. When cost and potential censorship are not a factor, Mutant Enemy turns to zombies almost immediately; Whedon wrote a zombie horde attack on the Slayer castle in the first arc of the Buffy Season 8 comic, “The Long Way Home,” and zombies have been a common fixture in Buffy video games as well.

But let me suggest there’s something more at work. First, despite his admiration for Romero, Whedon seems to exhibit a strong preference for the original Haitian zombi—a nightmarish transfiguration of slavery into a curse that continues even after death—over George Romero’s mindless, ravenous consumer of flesh. The American horror zombie is a corpse without a mind, wandering aimlessly in search of food and governed by pure instinct; the zombi, in contrast, is only sometimes a revivified corpse, and is more commonly a traumatized but still living person whose will has been replaced with the will of the zombie master and whose body has been put to work. Whedon fairly frequently makes his characters pedants on this point; in “Some Assembly Required” Giles scolds Xander when he suggests that zombies might feed on the living, and Wesley does the same thing to Gunn in Angel’s “Provider” (3.12), dismissing flesh-eating as a myth (though Wesley’s zombies still “mangle, mutilate, and occasionally wear human flesh”). Anya says it again in Buffy Season Six’s “Bargaining, Part I,” when Xander speculates that their resurrection spell might have accidentally turned Buffy into a zombie who will attempt to eat their brains: “Zombies don’t eat brains, anyway, unless instructed to by their zombie masters. Lotta of people get that wrong.” (Alas, Romero!)

Remembering Whedon’s oft-stated political ambitions for the Buffy franchise, a second reason why zombies receive so little attention emerges. “The first thing I ever thought of when I thought of Buffy: The Movie,” he explains on the DVD commentary track for the first episode of Buffy, “Welcome to the Hellmouth,” “was the little blonde girl who goes into a dark alley and gets killed in every horror movie. The idea of Buffy was to subvert that idea, that image, and create someone who was a hero where she had always been a victim.” As he says this he’s talking, interestingly enough, over the very first scene of the series, which features not Buffy but Darla, playing the part of a misleadingly naïve high school girl who lures an unsuspecting boy into a deserted classroom before unexpectedly revealing herself as a vampire and going for his throat. The scene subverts and reverses the horror movie cliché; the sketchy football player turns out to be the victim, while the blond ingénue turns out to be a killer.

That scene—like countless later scenes featuring such lovable and charismatic vampires as Angel, Spike, Drusilla, Dracula, The Master, Harmony, Mister Trick, and Holden—just wouldn’t work if a dead-eyed, lurching Darla were groaning incoherently, covered in pus and blood, her skin falling off. This is the difference between vampires and zombies: despite superficial similarities in appetite, bad skin, and ghastly undeath, vampires are characters, they are agents, they are (despite everything else) people. The popularity of the vampire as a figure for both transgressive heterosexual lust and queer sexuality—both on Buffy and in popular successors like True Blood—could never be located in the zombie, as the zombie is never a possible point of identification or romance but is always hopelessly, permanently, intractably Other. The Hollywood zombie popularized by Romero is not a person but a force of nature: it can’t be reasoned with, it certainly can’t seduce us, and it cannot ever be redeemed. It doesn’t want anything but to gnaw on your bones.

Of course, most vampires in the Buffyverse never get the sort of elaborate backstory of Angel, Spike, or Darla; most are actually so much like zombies that to include both might have seemed frankly redundant. The random monster-of-the-minute vampires who jump out snarling in dark alleyways are zombielike in their hunger, apparently slaves to their impulses and just as fundamentally disposable as any individual zombie in a horde. Giles lays out this proposition early in the series when he insists that “A vampire isn’t a person at all. It may have the movements, the memories, even the personality of the person it took over, but it’s still a demon at the core. There is no halfway” (“Angel”). But Whedon can’t seem to stick to this edict over the course of the series; where in the beginning all vampires must be killed, with Angel as the sole exception only because of the infamous Gypsy curse that re-ensouled him, by the end of the series Spike is able to choose to seek out the return of his soul out a desire to be a better man, and even as vapid a vampire as Harmony is, by the end of Angel, able to voluntarily give up human blood altogether without much difficulty at all. Central to Whedon’s vision of postmodern horror is a layering of complication and contradiction in his characters that presents itself, especially as the series goes on, as a kind of mania for addition: Buffy is a ditzy cheerleader who is also a Slayer; Angel is a vampire with a soul and a soul-loophole; Willow is a nerd who becomes a witch and becomes a junkie and then gets better; Spike is a nebbish poet who becomes a vampire and falls in love and gets chipped by the government but remains fundamentally evil until he eventually goes off to win back his soul, and that’s not even counting the post-hypnotic suggestions implanted in his mind by the First Evil or the time he briefly becomes a ghost after sacrificing himself to save the world…

Vampires and the other creatures Joss favors in Buffy and Angel are about all addition; they’re humans, plus a little something more. But zombies are typically about subtraction, about the expression of a fundamental, irrecoverable lack. As Marina Warner notes in her essay “Our Zombies, Our Selves,” the difference between vampires and zombies originates in the problem of will: “Unlike phantoms, who have a soul but no body, zombies and vampires are all body—but unlike the vampire who has will and desire and an appetite for life (literally), a zombie is a body which has been hollowed out, emptied of selfhood” (Phantasmagoria 357). Warner’s definition points at the common thematic thread linking the Romero-style consumer-zombie with the original Haitian producer-zombie: both are stories of “soul-theft” (357), the evacuation of individual will in favor of either mindless herd instinct or whims of the enslaving zombie master. This soul-theft manifests itself in myriad ways; most relevant to the Buffyverse zombie is the fact that unlike vampires (who as Warner notes sometimes even dictate their own autobiographies, as in Anne Rice’s Interview with a Vampire), the zombie cannot speak at all, replicating the tongue-mutilating punishment sometimes inflicted on slaves (358). (Perhaps this is still another reason Whedon shied away from vampires in Buffy; zombies offer little opportunity for his famous Buffyspeak.)

Whedon and the Mutant Enemy writing stable ruin nearly every one of their early attempts at zombie stories by refusing to let this fundamental lack remain unfilled. They can’t let zombies just stay zombies. In the Marti Noxon-penned “Dead Man’s Party,” for instance, which condenses the typical zombie home invasion plot to about twenty minutes, the instinct driving the zombies is not the desire for food but to reacquire a mask Joyce has foolishly hung in the Summers’ home. When one of the zombies is able to acquire this object, the mask turns the character into a kind of zombie god—which among other things grants it that power zombies never have, the power of speech. “I live, you die,” the zombie god asserts, just before things devolve into the usual fistfight.

Similar problems abound in most of the other Buffyverse zombie episodes I’ve mentioned. None of them really scratches the zombie itch, in part because none of them are really about zombies at all; they’re just about dead people who come back to life. To tackle the zombie, Whedon has to move from horror to the realm of science fiction, a place where the contemporary zombie of 28 Days Later, I Am Legend, and The Walking Dead is a little more at home. In distinction from the original Romero zombie—which is generally a universal condition, cause unknown, affecting every dead body on the planet whether they’ve been bit by a zombie or not—the contemporary zombie is generally a biological contagion, very commonly a disease that has escaped from a government laboratory. The new, science fictional zombie reflects Vivian Sobchack’s observation in Screening Space: The American Science Fiction Film that “the horror film is primarily concerned with the individual in conflict with society or with some extension of himself, the science fiction film with society and its institutions in conflict with each other or with some alien other” (30); the old-style horror zombie reflected (as in Romero’s Dawn of the Dead) a monstrous emptiness at the core of everyday American life, while the new zombie is something that’s been done to us, something foreign that’s invaded from outside. (Sobchack puts this in terms of the sort of chaos created by the monster; the horror monster generates “moral chaos,” while the science fictional monster generates “social chaos.”) This difference in scale is certainly reflected in Whedon’s shift from horror to science fiction; Tracy Little’s four-word summary of basically every Buffy plot—”high school is hell” (“High School is Hell: Metaphor Made Literal in Buffy the Vampire Slayer, in Buffy the Vampire Slayer and and Philosophy: Fear and Trembling in Sunnydale, p. 282-293)—reminds us just how local that show remained over the course of its seven seasons, almost never leaving its tiny California suburb. Firefly and Dollhouse, in contrast, take place at the margins of worlds are so vast we only ever see the tiniest sliver of what’s really going on.

If in horror zombies are scary, in science fiction they become utterly apocalyptic. And both Firefly and Dollhouse turn out somewhat unexpectedly to be centered on this aspect of the zombie; on these narratives the zombie becomes a limit for society, its final destination. In creating this bleak vision of a zombie future Joss, true to form, finds a way to transform the zombie lack into a new type of excess—performing a clever kind of subtraction by addition that allows him to make the zombie function as something more than just a hole where a character used to be.


Zombies in Space: 'Firefly' / 'Serenity'

In Firefly—Whedon’s gone-much-too-soon “space Western” from 2002-2003—Romero-style zombies appear as rampaging space maniacs called Reavers. In the television series we never actually see a Reaver; they appear only in the form of rumors, whispers, and threats, and occasionally in the form of a distant spaceship on the viewscreen. But we can be certain that they’re zombies. Described both as “men gone savage on the edge of space” and “men too long removed from civilization,” Reavers will “rape us to death, eat our flesh, and sew our skins into their clothing; and if we’re very very lucky they’ll do it in that order,” as Zoë memorably warns Simon in the show’s original pilot. The mere mention of Reavers brings panic to everyone on board, causing Inara to bring out what appears to be a suicide kit and causing even resident tough-guy Jayne to abandon any hint of machismo. Human beings transformed into monsters, Reavers are now simply outside the family of the human altogether: “Reavers ain’t men. Or they forgot how to be. Now they’re just nothing. They got out to the edge of the galaxy, to that place of nothing, and that’s what they became” (“Bushwhacked” 1.3). They likewise exist beyond life and death. The crew’s first close-up vision of a Reaver vessel directly suggests a kind of undead status; they figure out it is a Reaver ship because it is operating suicidally without radioactive core containment.

Over the course of the television series neither the audience nor the crew ever actually sees a real Reaver; the closest we some is the survivor of the Reaver attack in “Bushwhacked,” who has been so traumatized by what he has witnessed that he begins to associate, transforming into a Reaver himself. This is the first way Whedon makes the zombie’s lack into an excess; it becomes trauma:

They made him watch. He probably tried to turn away—they wouldn’t let him. You call him a “survivor?” He’s not. A man comes up against that kind of will, only way to deal with it, I suspect… is to become it. He’s following the only course that’s left to him. First he’ll try to make himself look like one… cut on himself, desecrate his own flesh…then he’ll start acting like one.

Sure enough, this is exactly what happens: he tattoos himself, splits his own tongue down the middle (giving himself the zombie’s muteness), and soon after begins to run violently amuck.

We only finally see Reavers in Serenity (2005), which begins when a bank heist the crew is engaged in is unexpectedly interrupted by a Reaver attack on the planet. The animalistic sound effects that accompany Reavers in the film—as well as the quick-cut flashes that represent River’s psychic flashes of the violence in their minds—have been borrowed directly from zombie cinema, most directly the various “fast zombie” films that came in the wake of 28 Days Later. The Reavers’ actions, as much as the cinematography, suggest the extent to which they have been modeled on zombies; when they capture a man during the crew’s escape, they begin to eat him, and when Mal takes pity on the man and shoots him through the skull, the Reavers immediately drop the corpse. River understands why: “They want us alive when they eat us.”

For much of the film the early Reaver attack seems to be an entirely gratuitous action sequence for a film that is otherwise about the attempts of the crew of Serenity to evade an uncannily serene government agent, known only as The Operative, dedicated to retrieving the fugitive River. But near the end of the film the central importance of the Reavers reemerges with newfound clarity; the “campfire stories” about men driven mad by the blackness of space turn out to have just been just fairy tales, obscuring the more disturbing truth that Reavers are actually the accidental byproduct of deliberate Alliance governmental experiments with behavior-modifying drugs intended to pacify the population. The Reavers aren’t killers at all; they’re victims too. Recalling the concept of “blowback” coined by the Central Intelligence Agency euphemistically to denote the inevitable unintended consequences that result from its efforts, the Alliance state has become a monster itself in a doomed effort to perfect the human. Like colonial powers and imperial militaries right here on the Earth-That-Was, the Alliance outlives its usefulness to become itself the greatest impediment to its self-proclaimed mission of civilizing the Outer Planets and bringing light to darkness. This is the peril that political theorist Achille Mbembe has called “the mutual ‘zombification’ of both the dominant and the apparently dominated”; in the structures of domination that arise in of the colonial system and survive into the postcolonial era, both parties are ultimately sapped of their vitality.

In her essay for the Jane Espenson-edited anthology Finding Serenity, Mercedes Lackey argues that this is why the ’Verse, despite its futuristic trappings, feels so real to us:

    “…the rules by which this dystopia operates are familiar. The Alliance uses a lot of the same psychological weapons on its own people that all the major governments of the world used back when I was growing up and are still using today. Demonization of the enemy, even the construction of enemies that don’t exist, create the fear of nebulous threats and the willingness to sacrifice freedoms for security. (p. 63-64)

Taking up where Romero’s politicization of the zombie left off, Whedon again transforms the zombie’s lack into an excess—not of any individual person but of the very notion of Homeland Security, its unacknowledged dark side and its secret truth. Reavers terrorize the Alliance at the edge of civilized space—but it was the Alliance that put them there.

But this critique of state power is still not Whedon’s final turn of the screw. Where Whedon ultimately takes the zombie mythos is in the discovery that the only way to defeat zombies—whether ravenous Reavers or zombie governmental institutions that now exist only to perpetuate themselves and their own power—is not to be more alive than they are, but to be more dead. This strategy of judo-like reversal mimics the logic of the original Haitian zombi myth, where the flipside of the zombi’s enslavement is his capacity to defy the limits of both death and pain. Alongside the legend of the enslaved zombi, then, we have from controversial anthropologist Wade Davis a description of the related legend of the Bizango, a zombified outcast who functions not as a ghoul but as a protective spirit for the community, as well as the importance David Cohen and C.L.R James have placed on voodoo rituals as a means of communication, military coordination, and morale-building during the 1791 Haitian revolution. In their recent “Zombie Manifesto” Sarah Juliet Lauro and Karen Embry point to this history to suggest that the zombie, in its position at the boundary between subject and object, rebel and slave, life and death, is still the best metaphor we have for what it means to resist power.

In accordance with this political prehistory of the zombie, the last hour of Serenity is one long, continuous reprisal of that ubiquitous scene in zombie cinema in which a live human must attempt to pass for a dead one in order to escape an otherwise hopeless situation—only our characters aren’t exactly pretending. First Mal orders his crew to retrofit Serenity as a Reaver vessel, complete with a leaking containment core and corpses lashed to its exterior, so they might pass safely through Reaver space. By the time they arrive at the site of the final confrontation with the Alliance, most of the crew has by now accepted that this is a suicide mission and that they are all already dead: “Do you really think any of us are gonna get through this?” In the midst of all this hopelessness, with much of the crew seriously injured or already killed, River is finally able to access consciously her super solider training and dives headlong into a battle with a group of Reavers that has also made landfall on the planet, singlehandedly killing them all. The shot that lingers on River after this battle is over makes it clear: animal-like, uncannily unfeeling, and completely covered in blood, River has essentially become a Reaver herself.

The same happens to Mal. In his fistfight with the Operative at Mr. Universe’s mainframe, the Operative is winning as always—until the Operative punches Mal in the back and appears to disable him. (The Operative is using his own super solider training here: the targeted punch, like the “touch of death” from a kung-fu film, is intended to temporarily paralyze one’s opponent by overwhelming their muscles’ ability to move.) The Operative takes a moment to gloat: “You should know there’s no shame in this. You’ve done remarkable things. But you’re fighting a war you’ve already lost.” He turns his back—allowing Mal to strike. He’d had that particular nerve cluster removed as a result of an injury he’d received during the war. Already metaphorically dead—his nerve cluster literally so—and with nothing left to lose, Mal is just enough of a zombie to finally win the fight.


Zombies in Cyberspace: 'Dollhouse'

In Dollhouse Whedon takes this twist on the zombie myth still further, focusing more directly on the original myth of an immortalized slave that stands behind Romero’s ghouls to explore the unexpected agency to be found even in positions of extreme powerlessness. Dollhouse depicts a world in which (mostly female) human bodies might be fully stripped of their autonomy and be made zombis, subject entirely to the whims of the computer programmers who can now write and rewrite the human brain as well as any hard drive. “Dolls” are programmed with new personalities in order to fulfill various one-off jobs that are almost always involve satisfying the sexual fantasies of the extremely rich and powerful. The Dolls themselves are nominally volunteers, having signed a contract (if, in some cases, under duress) in exchange for a large cash payout at the end of their tenure and (often) a promise that some aspect of their personal psychology will be reprogrammed to make them happier people afterwards—but real questions linger about the extent to which you decide to can sign away the very power to make decisions.

In an episode that features in-universe news reporting on “urban legends” about the Dollhouse, “Man on the Street” (1.6), one woman, dressed as a Wal-Mart employee, suggests she would be quite happy to work as a Doll even without this payment: “So being a Doll, you do whatever, and you don’t gotta remember nothing, or study, or pay rent, and you just party with rich people all the time. Where’s the dotted line?” This woman’s eagerness reinforces the wisdom of another interviewee, an African-American woman who angrily denounces the very idea that workers in the Dollhouse are “volunteers”: “There’s only one reason why a person would volunteer to be a slave: if they is one already. Volunteers. You must be out of your fucking mind.”

When the newscaster interviews a college professor, perhaps a teacher of biology or cognitive science, he takes a much more aggressively nightmarish view of the possibility of the Dollhouse:

Forget morality. Imagine it’s true. Imagine this technology being used. Now imagine it being used on you. Everything you believe, gone. Everyone you love, strangers. Maybe enemies. Every part of you that makes you more than a walking cluster of neurons dissolved at someone else’s whim. If that technology exists, it’ll be used. It’ll be abused. It’ll be global. And we will be over as a species. We will cease to matter. I don’t know. Maybe we should.

Consent, in this light, becomes merely a formality; the Dollhouse will get us all in the end. The immediate suggestion of the episode, however, is that this professor is importantly and chillingly wrong: the technology already exists in the real world in the form of the narcotizing spectacle of the entertainment industry, especially television itself. The next and final interviewee in “Man on the Street,” who appears immediately following a commercial break, drives this point home: “You think it’s not happening? You think they’re not controlling you? Don’t worry about it. Just sit back and wait for them to tell you what to buy.” The question is not, from this perspective, whether you might somehow be turned into a Doll, unknowingly operating according the whims of corporate interests that own both your labor power and your free time; the question is whether it’s happened already, without your even noticing, without anyone even bothering to complain.

As the series goes on Whedon pushes these questions of consent and control to one side to focus instead on a more traditional sci-fi complication. The imprinting technology turns out in the end to be fundamentally and fatally flawed; in its efforts to produce perfect slaves—to produce a zombie lack that can be filled with the sexual pliability the Dollhouse sells—the Dollhouse technology produces instead more excess in the form of a entirely new type of consciousness, one that (like the folkloric Haitian zombi) is capable of resisting and subverting the imprinting technology and repurposing it towards its own ends. Over time, the amnesiac Dolls begin to remember. And through this power of memory the Dolls slowly gain control over their unique situation; the characters portrayed by the show’s starring cast become increasingly autonomous actors, ultimately becoming protectors of both each other and the society of large. Their hybrid status—no longer their original unitary selves, but each containing a new multiplicity—gives these characters an entirely new sort of human agency. This is especially true in the case of Eliza Dushku’s Echo and Alan Tudyk’s Alpha, both of whom slowly patch together new composite personalities that are the sum of all the imprints who have been uploaded into their minds. Alpha, whose original personality already contained strongly violent tendencies, is driven mad by multiple personality disorder, becoming a brilliant but murderous sociopath in his quest for revenge against the Dollhouse (in fairness he eventually gets better). Echo is more successfully able to organize all her Dolls inside a new, multitudinous personality and, driven by an urgent empathy, seeks to awaken and liberate the other Dolls and bring down the Dollhouse that enslaves them.

In much the same way as his original vision for Buffy, in Dollhouse Whedon creates an unexpected heroine out of a character who would traditionally be figured as a passive victim in need of rescuing. Despite the clichés of the genre and the hopelessness of her situation, Echo rescues herself. And in the process the very formlessness of the Doll state, its malleable plasticity, becomes her greatest strength; the living death of the zombi, in essence, gives her a twenty-first century superpower: the ability to reprogram herself however she likes.

In “Epitaph One,” the episode originally intended to serve as a possible series finale before the show was unexpectedly renewed, we see our first glimpse of the unexpected way this story ends. The episode skips ahead ten years to a post-apocalyptic Los Angeles; the ruined city is in flames. What has happened is never made precisely clear—but Los Angeles is now divided between “actuals” (unmodified humans), “dumbshows” (pacified wanderers in the base Doll state), and “butchers” (berserk killers suggestive of nothing so much as Romero’s ghouls or Firefly’s Reavers). Finally, our two species of zombies get to meet—and the results are not pretty. As the episode proceeds we discover that the Dollhouse technology has somehow gotten loose, broadcasting “signals” of varying kinds across all communications media that transform actuals into either dumbshows or butchers. Civilization has been destroyed in an ongoing orgy of universal zombification—TV finally and forever turning all our brains to mush.

In Season Two’s series-concluding follow-up, “Epitaph Two”—continuing the plot thread begun in “Epitaph One”—we discover the 2019 versions of the series’ regular cast are still alive, hidden from the apocalypse in an agricultural enclave in the deserts of Arizona. In a sense they’re partially responsible for what has happened to the world; not only did Topher and Adelle selfishly abet the Rossum Corporation’s drive for better and better technologies of control, but the rebelling Dolls’ victories over Rossum ironically introduced the unstable power vacuum that made the global Dollpocalypse possible in the first place. Echo and the others are still fighting the remnants of Rossum as well as periodic hordes of butchers, but things are not going well; this is not a war which can be won.

Finally Topher announces that he has come up with a miraculous plan to “bring back the world”; bouncing blanket signals off the atmosphere, he believes he can simultaneously return every imprinted person to their original, actual state. It gives nothing away to tell you the plan is ultimately successful; this is, in the end, television, and happy endings are always the order of the day. At the end of “Epitaph Two” confused dumbshows and former butchers begin to wake up out of their fog into a completely transformed world. We see nothing of what they’re thinking, or of what sort of world they might actually construct from the ruins of ours. The focus instead is on our Doll heroes, most of whom have chosen to remain inside the Dollhouse for a year until the de-imprinting signal fades and it’s safe for them to reemerge. Completely unexpectedly—and, given that the show began with the Dollhouse as an obvious metaphor for human trafficking and the sex industry, somewhat disturbingly—most of our Doll heroes decide they don’t want to be restored to their original, actual selves. They’ve become something new, something powerful, something posthuman; in becoming Dolls, they’ve gained much more than they’ve lost, and they don’t want to go back.

Pop Matters

Tuesday, March 29, 2011

Colin Farrell accidentally disses his 'Fright Night' remake


by Anthony Breznican

Colin Farrell caused a rumble when he seemed to diss his own movie in front of thousands of theater owners on Tuesday at the group’s annual CinemaCon convention.

But really, he was taking a knock at himself.

The wisecracking Irishman was there to show off the first footage of his upcoming horror remake Fright Night, as a vicious but bored-to-(un)death vampire who moves into the suburbs next to a suspicious teen (Anton Yelchin). The 34-year-old actor was a big fan of the 1985 cult-favorite, which starred Chris Sarandon in the bloodsucker role, and told the audience of theater owners: “I heard they were remaking Fright Night and went, ‘Ah, god, remake! Hollywood, so dull!’ And I read the script [by Buffy the Vampire Slayer and Mad Men alum Marti Noxon] and really hoped I didn’t like it, and I did. It was fun. But I was a fan of the original. I probably saw it when I was 12 years of age, and loved it.”

Okay, so far, so good. Farrell went on to talk about his friendship with director Craig Gillespie and praised his previous movie Lars and the Real Girl. But then he continued.

“Meself, as a fan of the original, it doesn’t change. I don’t think I’ll have a copy of this version in my library, but I have the original at home,” Farrell said, drawing scattered nervous laughs. “And since [the old film] still exists, maybe this [new] film will bring that film to a whole new audience and maybe some fans of the original, like myself, can enjoy this one as well.”

He then threw it back to Gillespie who said, haltingly, “There are … other actors in the film, as well,” garnering more chuckles from the crowd.

Backstage, Farrell was kicking himself. “Yeah, I knew that would be picked up!” he told EW. “What I meant was [I wouldn't own it] because I’m in the f—ing thing!” He said he cringes when he watches himself. “It’s always uncomfortable.” Even his sister said “D’oh” to Farrell after hearing what he said onstage. But the actor says he’s a fan of the new Fright Night now, too. He endured watching himself in the film, and said he “enjoyed the romp that it was for two hours.”

Fright Night comes out Aug. 19, and Gillespie says true vampire fans will enjoy seeing their favorite creatures be true monsters again. “There’s an extremeness to the vampires in the original Fright Night, and we wanted to keep that in this,” said the director. “This is not a Twilight, or a romantic thing. This is almost like a vicious, sexual predator.”

Farrell showed a cell phone image of himself in full-on creature make-up with stringy white hair, knotted face, and blood-soaked, razor-sharp jaws. The idea is the more angry or threatened the vampire, the more of a fiend it becomes.

Jerry, Farrell’s character, is many centuries old and has a laid-back attitude about killing. In footage previewed at CinemaCon, he casually digs a hole in a family’s backyard, yanks their gas pipe from the ground, filling their house with fumes and igniting it in a fireball — all to force them from the home so he can prey on them. He does it all as lackadaisically as someone taking out the trash.

“He’s very, very practically minded, just to survive,” Farrell laughs.

insidemovies

Saturday, March 26, 2011

Kristy Swanson, the original Buffy the Vampire Slayer, to guest star on 'Psych'

March 23, 2011 06:20 PM EDT

by Meredith Jacobs

Even though almost everyone automatically thinks of Sarah Michelle Gellar when they hear of Buffy the Vampire Slayer, she wasn't the first actress to take on the role. That would be Kristy Swanson, who played Buffy in the movie that came out before the series hit television. Now she's going to be guest-starring in an upcoming episode of the next season of Psych.

According to TVGuide, Swanson's character is Marlowe Viccellio, described as "mysterious." Lassiter notices her, but Shawn and Gus think she's the one responsible for a  "vampire-style" murder "after the police find a blood-drained body." So this time, instead of playing the character that hunts vampires, Kristy Swanson is potentially playing the vampire-like character in the episode, "This Episode Sucks." That's a nice play on words in the episode title, don't you think?

It sounds like it has potential to make for a pretty funny Psych episode, and it will be interesting to see just what the "vampire" twist turns out to be. Criminal Minds had an episode, "The Performer," which had the BAU team looking for an unsub that behaved like a vampire—all because of the persona a rock star took on onstage. Will this turn out to be similar?

What do you think of Kristy Swanson guest-starring on Psych?

Gather


Tuesday, March 15, 2011

Super Director Hears Joss Whedon's Film The Avengers Has the Best Script for a Marvel Movie Ever


By Pietro Filipponi
Published: March 14, 2011 - 2:56pm

While promoting his upcoming action-comedy Super at the South by Southwest Film Festival, James Gunn had nothing but praise for Whedon's take on Marvel Studios' upcoming superhero film.

In the summer of 2012, Marvel Studios will release a film that is both a great gamble and crowning achievement. The Avengers, the largest ensemble superhero film produced by a major motion picture studio in cinematic history, will feature characters who have previously been showcased in their own, respective ventures (Iron Man, Thor, Captain America, Nick Fury, Black Widow and the Hulk) and ones newly introduced into the Marvel Cinematic Universe (Hawkeye and a plethora of yet to be revealed names). Joss Whedon, of Buffy the Vampire Slayer and Firefly cult fame, will direct the film, and is already deeply immersed in pre-production happenings.
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After formally announcing The Avengers at last year's San Diego Comic Con with the main cast member's introductions and a teaser trailer, very little news about the film has been disclosed. With principal photography right around the corner, as well as three major comic conventions -- C2E2, WonderCon & Comic Con -- it's only a matter of time before fans get all the info they have been waiting for.

Until then, the director of the upcoming superhero-themed comedy Super,James Gunn, offers great praise for the project that should keep the negative speculation at bay:

    “Everybody I know who’s read it says it’s by far the best script for a Marvel movie ever. I’m very, very excited about it. Nobody loves superheroes more than Joss. He’s really got his heart in the right place.”

The director was not as kind in his appraisal of Warner Brothers vision for handling the DC universe in film adaptations.

    "Warner Bros. is obviously fucking up. They don’t know how to make a good superhero movie unless Christopher Nolan is involved to save their lives.”

The Avengers is scheduled to hit theaters on May 4th, 2012, and will unite Captain America (Chris Evans), Thor (Chris Hemsworth), Iron Man (Robert Downey Jr.), Black Widow (Scarlett Johansson), Hawkeye (Jeremy Renner), the Hulk (Mark Ruffalo), Maria Hill (Cobie Smulders), Phil Coulson (Clark Gregg) and Nick Fury (Samuel L. Jackson) for the first time in cinematic history.

Daily Blam

Monday, March 14, 2011

James Marsters Mentions Piccolo and Other Sci Fi Projects

In a recent interview with San Diego LGBT Weekly, James Marsters was asked about his current, favorite and future roles in which he discusses Piccolo in Dragonball and Lex Luther.

Aside from your roles in Buffy and Torchwood, you have a long list of other great credits. What are some of your favorites? What are you working on now? What roles are coming up for you?

You actually want me to plug myself? OK, here goes, but I warn you. I’m shameless. Favs: Buzz Aldrin in Moonshot, Piccolo in Dragonball and recording the books of The Dresden Files (available on iTunes). Now: Victor Hess in Hawaii Five-O. Coming up: Lex Luther in D.C. Universe, a sprawling new online game that was described as “the greatest Superman movie that they will never make” at this year’s Comic-Con, hopefully a new TV series (can’t talk about it … very hush, hush) and more Dresden.

He also discusses his other roles in other Sci Fi related projects.

LGBT Weekly: Most people know you as the sexy and mysterious Spike from Buffy the Vampire Slayer and Angel. Did you ever think Spike would become so popular when you were first presented with the part?

Marsters: No, I was supposed to die in five episodes. Joss (Whedon, executive producer) explained very clearly that he couldn’t wait to kill me. I spent the first year reading the scripts backward looking for my ignoble demise.

How much of an influence were you able to contribute to the character development of Spike?

On the writing, zero. On the costume, zero. On the plots, zero. But an actor can say the words, “I love you,” and make them mean, “I hate you,” or even,” I don’t care about you.” So the truth was that I had a lot of influence. In TV, directors don’t give a lot of direction. It gets actors thinking too much, up in their heads and not in their guts. So unless it sucks, they move on.

Another role our readers would know you from is Captain John Hart on Torchwood. What drew you to this character?

Are you kidding me? John Barryman of course! (A gay actor, Barryman plays Captain Jack Harkness, the show’s lead character.) Getting to kiss him, and then beat the hell out of him was just too good. Plus, the writing. We’ve made all the right people uncomfortable with that show. The theme, “Gay people are kick ass heroes,” is something that I am very proud to have a part in saying.

Comic Book Movie

Wednesday, March 9, 2011

Seth Green, Digitally and Sonically Erased From 'Mars Needs Moms'


Moviemakers can do crazy things with computers these days. They can reverse-age a guy from shriveled old man-baby to healthy, adolescent Brad Pitt. They can make a sixtysomething Jeff Bridges look like he did in 1982  (albeit with a really creepy-looking mouth). And, if they discover that a 37-year-old actor in a performance-capture suit can jump around like a nine-year-old but not really sound like one, they can easily recast the voice part with an actual kid. The animators for the upcoming "Mars Need Moms" pulled off that last trick with "Robot Chicken" star and onetime "Cha-Ching! Guy" Seth Green, reports the L.A. Times:

"During production, the star acted as he would in any performance-capture movie, which requires actors to move in special sensor-equipped suits. Green spent six weeks outfitted in a uniform while also simultaneously performing his lines. But during the post-production process, in which animators used computer imaging to shape the character, filmmakers noticed that Green was able to physically embody a 9-year-old -- imitating the movements and behaviors of a child -- but his voice sounded too mature for the character."

Thus, they found 11-year-old Seth Dusky to come in and dub Green's lines, considering Green is a 37-year-old man who was having some trouble channeling the sound of prepubescence. To review: To nail down how a nine-year-old talks, they had an 11-year-old speak. To nail down how a nine-year-old moves, they motion-captured Seth Green jumping around. That sounds about right.

Green therefore spent weeks in motion-capture dots, prancing to and fro, for a performance that no one will hear or see. (Well, they'll technically see his digitized motions, but you know what we're getting at.) It's possible he played the second Winklevii brother.

Oh, and Green is still doing publicity for the film he's been mostly erased from. They couldn't really use the computer to put Dusky's voice in Green's mouth on "Conan." 

Yahoo

Tuesday, March 8, 2011

Nicholas Brendon, James Marsters, Clare Kramer Talk 'Buffy' Memories at Seattle Comicon


Monday, March 07, 2011

Meghan Carlson Senior Writer, BuddyTV

It's sometimes hard to believe that Buffy the Vampire Slayer went off the air in 2003, especially when you get around a bunch of super-fans, as I did this Saturday at Seattle's Emerald City Comicon. The mini-mecca for all things nerdy played host to Buffy alums Nicholas Brendon (Xander), James Marsters (Spike) and Claire Kramer (Glory, season 5), as well as Felicia Day (Vi), and, eight years after it went off the air, the Buffy panel still packed the largest room in the convention center.

"How long do you think Buffy will be a staple at events like this?" my friend, a fellow Buffy lover, mused as we sat in the hall and waited for Brendon, Marsters and Kramer to take the stage at their anticipated panel session. "As long as events like this exist," I said, looking around at the tittering crowd, which included lots of costumes, ranging from Avatar to Dr. Who to Star Trek to X-Files characters, but looked mostly made up of run-of-the-mill folks in everyday attire. Buffy is a classic, beloved by nerds and non-nerds alike, and that love--like the vamps of its lore--shows no signs of dying anytime soon.

Brendon, Marsters and Kramer, who are making the regional comicon rounds over the next few months, clearly share in that sentiment, and were at turns thoughtful, funny and nostalgic as they took questions from the audience about their time on the series. So, enough from me. Here are the best bits from their Buffy Comicon chat, in their own words:

Did you get to keep your trademark red dress?
Clare Kramer: "No, I didn't. I think they sold it on eBay."

What was your favorite thing about being on Buffy?
Nicholas Brendon: "My favorite thing was doing it. Being there from the conception of it and watching it grow into this pop culture crazy whirligig thing."

How about least favorite?
NB: "Shooting "Beer Bad." [Ed. note: The audience cracked up, recalling the drunken Neaderthal-centric plot of "Beer Bad," also considered by some fans as the worst Buffy episode ever.] That it's a Xander-ific episode hurts my soul."

What about you, James Marsters? Least favorite thing about being on Buffy?
James Marsters: "Bleaching my hair. In a lot of closeups there would be bloody puss dripping down my face. I had to bleach his hair every episode because vampire hair isn't supposed to grow."

And how about you, Clare?
CK: "I loved kicking ass. I also liked working with the writing. It was a lot of monologue, free play, lyrical almost."

How much of the plots did you know in advance?
JM: "We were lucky if we got a full script."
NB: "I found out Xander was losing his eye by reading the script. I thought Willow would heal it, but then all of a sudden I was in the hospital."
CK: "I found out I was a god by reading the script."
NB: "Often times I'd find things out after we shot it, which was ... interesting."

What do they think of the Buffy comics?
NB: "I think Xander having sex with Dawn is kind of ... I guess art imitates life, so whatever. [Ed note: He was clearly joking.] I still see Michelle [Trachtenberg] as a 14 year old."
JM: "I saw Michelle on the cover of Maxim and I was like, "Michelle, that's very racy!'"
NB: "... But I'll buy two, please."

What have you been up to lately? New projects?
CK: She said she's been directing, and will appear in the movies Endure and The Dead Ones, which is a "Sixth Sense type movie."
NB: "I've been taking a lot of baths. I fell out of my shower a couple weeks ago and took the curtain down with me. I've been taking about three or four baths a day."
JM: He was recently on Smallville, and is lending his voice to the Dragonball Evolution movie. He's been doing a lot of voiceover work. He also spoke about his role on the UK series Torchwood: "It's a subversive show that's taking down the lie that gay people can't be heroes."

Why do we learn on Buffy that vampires have no breath, but then we see that Spike smokes?
JM: "We really didn't know what we were doing. We were making it up as we went along. We didn't have a rule book." James went on say that at first he was told that he "couldn't sweat on camera," because vampires don't sweat. But then they were spending so much time powdering his face between action sequences ("I sweat like a monkey!") that "finally, Joss [Whedon] just goes, "Screw it, vampires sweat when they fight!"

Favorite season of Buffy?
CK: Season 5, of course!
NB: "I always get them messed up. I think season one because it was so magical. Not for the content, but just for what Sarah [Michelle Gellar], Alyson [Hannigan] and myself were going through. It was a magical time in my life that I'll never forget until God takes me from this green earth."
JM: Season 5. "I got to get beat up a lot by Claire, which is a lot more fun than it sounds."

On playing a character who goes "insane":
JM: "The truth is, I learned during that period that being a method actor is dangerous on TV. On movies and in plays there's an end point, but on TV it just keeps rolling, year after year." He went on to describe what it was like to play Spike when he grew a soul and was haunted by his former victims: "I had to think of everything I felt guilty about all through my life and beat myself up about it. I fell into a heavy depression."
CK: "I didn't view Glory as crazy. She was who she was. I approached her as I would any other character. I had a lot of fun playing her. I viewed her from the egotistical side."

Why did all the guys "turn into p*****s" when they fell in love with Buffy? [Ed note: This question got BIG laughs from the crowd, as did James' response.]
JM: "Because that's what happens to a man when he falls in love."

What was it like for Brendon to play Xander, a male "damsel in distress"?
NB: "I finally kinda grew a pair by the end. I lost an eye and grew a pair."
JM: "Xander IS Joss. That's how he sees himself."

What do they think of the fan fiction?
NB: "Like the gay stuff between Xander and Spike?"
JM [seems genuinely surprised]: "That exists?"
NB: "Listen there's no such thing as bad press. As long as were not terrorists. No, even if we are terrorists. As long as you keep caring."

Finally, where can fans find them online?
Nicholas Brendon: You can follow him on Twitter, and find him at NickBrendon.com (where you can find a list of his upcoming appearances!) and VeryBadKoalas.com.
Clare Kramer: You can follow her on Twitter here and at her website, ClareKramerOnline.com.
James Marsters: He's on Twitter too, his official website is here, and he's also active on Facebook, where he recently posted an essay about Egypt which he told the crowd he's "quite proud of." His music will soon be available on iTunes.

BuddyTV

Nathan Fillion's long road to Castle


Edmonton-raised actor Nathan Fillion has made a career playing confident characters you love despite (or maybe because of) their brash confidence. Think his current incarnation as self-assured mystery writer Richard Castle on ABC's hit Castle.

By Jenelle Riley, Reuters March 8, 2011

LOS ANGELES (Back Stage) - Nathan Fillion expertly walks the fine line between obnoxious and charming, on screen that is.

He has flawlessly embodied confident characters you love despite (or maybe because of) their brash confidence. Think Firefly leader Malcolm Reynolds, Dr. Horrible hero Captain Hammer, or his current incarnation as self-assured mystery writer Richard Castle on ABC's hit Castle.

In real life, Fillion is decidedly more easygoing. Perhaps it's a Canadian thing; Fillion was born and raised in Edmonton, the son of teachers who, as a child, he can remember adults approaching on the street to thank for changing their lives. Those parents, he says, helped instill in him a sense of gratitude and appreciation.

Of his prolific career, he says, "I think I've been really good at surrounding myself with really talented people. I've picked the right coattails to ride on."

Despite having won countless numbers of dedicated fans from his time on such cult series as Firefly and Buffy the Vampire Slayer, not to mention starring on hit shows like Desperate Housewives, he maintains, "I don't expect anybody to know who I am."

Q: YOU WERE STILL IN COLLEGE IN CANADA WHEN YOU BOOKED THE ROLE OF JOEY BUCHANAN ON ONE LIFE TO LIVE ... HOW WERE YOU ABLE TO LAND THE JOB OUT OF CANADA?

Fillion: I had just barely passed one of my courses and was thinking I would go back for a summer session to pull up my GPA, and the phone rang and a lady casting out of New York for One Life to Live had found a tape that I had sent the year prior to Vancouver for a Canadian movie that I didn't get. And that tape went from Vancouver to L.A. to New York without my knowledge. Just casting directors passing it on over the course of a year. They called me and said, "If you're still interested, we'll fax you a script, you FedEx us a tape. Three weeks later, I'm living in New York City."

Q: YOU PERFORMED THEATRESPORTS WITH THE RAPID FIRE THEATER COMPANY, IMPROVISING A SOAP OPERA EVERY WEEK. WAS THAT GOOD TRAINING FOR DOING AN ACTUAL SOAP OPERA?

Fillion: They're two totally different animals. Nothing could have prepared me for the kind of work that was ahead of me on daytime. It's a 44-minute program every day that they put out. One scene will be seven minutes or 10 minutes, and you just keep going and you don't stop. I can't even imagine going back now, even having had that boot camp. But my experience there was so positive. If I wanted to learn something, there were people that have been there 30 years who are willing to say, "No problem, let me help you."

Q: WAS IT THEN HARD TO LEAVE, PARTICULARLY AT THE HEIGHT OF YOUR POPULARITY ON THE SHOW?

Fillion: I had a great storyline between Erika Slezak and Robin Strasser, the two heavy hitters on our show. And it was incredibly difficult to fail between those two. But the guy who played my uncle, Bob Woods, sat me down two years into my three-year contract and basically told me how things were going to unfold and how I had a choice in front of me. He encouraged me to move to Los Angeles and try it out.

Q: YOU SEEMED TO WORK A LOT RIGHT OUT OF THE GATE.

Fillion: When I moved out to L.A., I got four or five jobs in a row that were fantastic. I did Saving Private Ryan and Blast From the Past and I did these guest spots that I had a great time on. And then I went for nearly a year without working. Still auditioning; sometimes five times a week, and I couldn't get anything. I was paying my rent on credit and waiting on a tax return so I could pay off my credit card bill. I was so anxious to work again. I didn't want to do anything else; I didn't want to wait tables, I wanted to continue acting. I wanted that feeling back of going to work every day and collaborating with people and doing good scenes. I was reaching for the phone to call One Life to Live to ask about coming back. And the phone rang and it was for a guest shot on a sitcom with Faith Ford. I did that and the following week I got a job on a sitcom next door to it, which was Two Guys, a Girl and a Pizza Place. I did 10 episodes with them, and they invited me back as a regular. And I did two seasons.

Q: YOU HEADLINED FIREFLY FOR JOSS WHEDON BUT HAD ACTUALLY AUDITIONED TO PLAY ANGEL ON HIS SHOW BUFFY THE VAMPIRE SLAYER ORIGINALLY. DID YOU HAVE ANY IDEA WHEN YOU DIDN'T GET THE FIRST JOB IT COULD LEAD TO SOMETHING BETTER DOWN THE ROAD AND THIS ONGOING COLLABORATION WITH WHEDON?

Fillion: Not at the time. You understand your job as an actor is to audition. Your job is to go out there and look for work ... When Joss found out that I auditioned for Angel -- he didn't know -- he felt bad. He said, "I don't remember you." I told him not to worry, I never made the first cut ... And when Firefly was cancelled, he said, "Come and do the last five episodes of Buffy for me." And then, of course, Dr. Horrible.

Q: WAS THE JOB ON CASTLE AN OFFER?

Fillion: I had a holding deal and a stack of scripts to look at. I was going through them all and I remember reading it, I was 15 pages in, and I turned to my girlfriend and said, "I'm going to read this out loud to you. You tell me if you don't think this would be a ball to play." We laughed and laughed and read our way through the script. I was working on Desperate Housewives at the time but only for the year. And the Castle producers were kind enough to come to my trailer for a meeting. I told them, "Stop looking. I'm your guy. I can do this, I know just what to do." Which I've never done!

Montreal Gazette