Quick word: I won't be responding with my own opinions to any comments left in this post, so feel free to answer honestly without fear that I shall pounce upon you. I may have further questions to ask.
How would you describe Spike's role in the comics in Season Nine? And to go further, what is his literal role in the comics? What has he literally been doing? What has been clearly asked of him by any other character or characters? The key words for all this are definitely- literal specifics. I'm looking for less interpretation "if you turn it sideways and squint and read between the lines" type of examples and more for just what has been presented.
Like I said above, I won't be responding with my own opinions. I'm just curious to find out if I've missed something in translation.
How would you describe Spike's role in the comics in Season Nine? And to go further, what is his literal role in the comics? What has he literally been doing? What has been clearly asked of him by any other character or characters? The key words for all this are definitely- literal specifics. I'm looking for less interpretation "if you turn it sideways and squint and read between the lines" type of examples and more for just what has been presented.
Like I said above, I won't be responding with my own opinions. I'm just curious to find out if I've missed something in translation.
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As to declarations of love. Oh dear I somehow doubt we're going to get that......ever. I think Whedon has other plans.
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I don't mind if there aren't ever declarations of love in the comics, cathartic as they might be. So far, we have a Buffy who isn't afraid of telling Spike that she appreciates him or that she'd miss him, and we have a Spike who's said on his own that he has feelings for her. If they're going to utterly destroy all of that, it's going to take a lot more than a season (short of the very doubtfully repeated Twangel route). Instead, they're giving us Buffy and Spike, working together on equal footing. I have no problems with that, regardless of whether or not it turns to romance.
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It just seems like really dumb storytelling to have such a focus on the characters as a 'ship and not explore it at least a little. And they've done dumb storytelling before, yes, but the relationships have usually been well-played. (The only real relationship we saw develop over S8 was slow and subtle but made sense. And Andrew Chambliss writes for TVD, where they specialize in relationships like Spike's and Buffy's- plus, he identifies as a fan of the ship.)
So I think that negativity is understandable, considering parts of last season, but this isn't something I'm negative about. :)