Life Serial: Difference between revisions
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{{Infobox television episode |
{{Infobox television episode |
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| title=Life Serial |
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| caption=The Trio, (L-to-R) Warren, Jonathan and Andrew are established as the seasons' antagonists. |
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| airdate = {{Start date|2001|10|23}} |
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| airdate=October 23, 2001 |
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*[[Danny Strong]] as [[Jonathan Levinson]] |
*[[Danny Strong]] as [[Jonathan Levinson]] |
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*[[Adam Busch]] as [[Warren Mears]] |
*[[Adam Busch]] as [[Warren Mears]] |
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*[[Amber Benson]] as [[Tara Maclay]] |
*[[Amber Benson]] as [[Tara Maclay]] |
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*Paul Gutrecht as Tony |
*Paul Gutrecht as Tony |
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*[[Noel Guglielmi]] as Vince |
*[[Noel Gugliemi|Noel Albert Guglielmi]] as Vince |
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*Enrique Almeida as Marco |
*Enrique Almeida as Marco |
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*[[Jonathan Goldstein (actor)|Jonathan Goldstein]] as Mike |
*[[Jonathan Goldstein (actor)|Jonathan Goldstein]] as Mike |
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*Clint Culp as Bartender |
*Clint Culp as Bartender |
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*Mark Ginther as Horned Demon |
*Mark Ginther as Horned Demon |
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*[[Alice Dinnean]] as Mummy Hand |
*[[Alice Dinnean|Alice Dinnean Vernon]] as Mummy Hand |
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| episode_list = List of Buffy the Vampire Slayer episodes |
| episode_list = List of Buffy the Vampire Slayer episodes |
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| season_article = Buffy the Vampire Slayer |
| season_article = Buffy the Vampire Slayer season 6 |
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| prev=[[Flooded (Buffy the Vampire Slayer)|Flooded]] |
| prev = [[Flooded (Buffy the Vampire Slayer)|Flooded]] |
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| next=[[All the Way (Buffy the Vampire Slayer)|All the Way]] |
| next = [[All the Way (Buffy the Vampire Slayer)|All the Way]] |
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}} |
}} |
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"'''Life Serial'''" is the fifth episode in the 6th season of the television series ''[[Buffy the Vampire Slayer]]''. The episode aired on October 23, 2001 on [[UPN]].<ref>{{Cite web |last=Dellamonica |first=Alyx |date=2013-07-08 |title=Buffy the Vampire Slayer Rewatch: World's Silliest Jobs, Slayer Edition |url=https://www.tor.com/2013/07/08/buffy-the-vampire-slayer-rewatch-worlds-silliest-jobs-slayer-edition/ |access-date=2022-06-19 |website=Tor.com |language=en-US}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web |date=2010-11-12 |title=Buffy / Angel: "Fredless"/"Life Serial" |url=https://www.avclub.com/buffy-angel-fredless-life-serial-1798166522 |access-date=2022-06-19 |website=The A.V. Club |language=en-us}}</ref> The episode was praised for its innovation and [[surreal humour]]. |
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"'''Life Serial'''" is the 5th episode of season 6 of the television series ''[[Buffy the Vampire Slayer]]''. |
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==Plot |
==Plot== |
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[[Buffy Summers|Buffy]] returns from her visit with [[Angel (Buffyverse)|Angel]] |
[[Buffy Summers|Buffy]] returns from her [[offscreen]] visit with [[Angel (Buffyverse)|Angel]] but refuses to talk about it. The Scoobies discuss Buffy's future. Buffy agrees to [[Academic audit|audit]] the classes [[Willow Rosenberg|Willow]] and [[Tara Maclay|Tara]] are taking until the next semester starts. Meanwhile, the [[Trio (Buffyverse)|Trio]] prepare for their competition to test Buffy, setting up their van with high-tech monitoring equipment. |
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⚫ | At school, Buffy finds herself overwhelmed by a class she takes with Willow, being baffled by the [[postmodern philosophy|postmodern jargon]]. Buffy later meets up with [[Tara Maclay|Tara]] for Art History, but before class begins [[Warren Mears|Warren]] tags her with a tiny device that causes time to fast-forward. Buffy is dazed as the world whizzes around her; when she finally notices the device Warren planted on her, it self-destructs and puts Buffy back in normal time. |
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The [[Trio (Buffyverse)|Trio]] prepares for its competition to test Buffy, setting up their van with high-tech monitoring equipment. |
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⚫ | Buffy works with [[Xander Harris|Xander]] at his construction job, telling him about the time situation at school before she is introduced to Tony, the boss. [[Andrew Wells|Andrew]] summons demons from the van, which trash the construction site before Buffy kills them. Unfortunately, Buffy knocks Tony unconscious and the construction men she saves refuse to admit they were saved by a girl. Xander gets mad at Buffy for bringing slaying to his workplace, though he realizes that something unusual is happening. However, he is still forced to fire her. |
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⚫ | At school, Buffy finds herself overwhelmed by a class she takes with Willow. Buffy later meets up with [[Tara Maclay|Tara]] for Art History, but before class begins [[Warren Mears|Warren]] tags her with a tiny device that causes time to fast-forward. Buffy is dazed as the world whizzes around her; when she finally notices the device Warren planted on her, it self-destructs and puts Buffy back in normal time. |
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⚫ | Buffy learns about working at The Magic Box from [[Rupert Giles|Giles]] and [[Anya Jenkins|Anya]] as [[Jonathan Levinson|Jonathan]] begins a spell to [[Time loop|loop time]] until Buffy satisfies a customer. Buffy assists a man with a candle sale and then goes downstairs to fetch a live Mummy's hand for a customer, but the hand attacks her and she is forced to kill it, which also kills the sale. Events start to repeat as Buffy must help the customers and fight the mummy hand over and over again, being reduced to tears out of frustration. She is stuck in an unsolved dilemma, but soon Buffy is able to end the spell by telling the woman she will order the hand instead of going downstairs to fight with the one they already have. Stressed out by the repeating time and the job itself, Buffy walks out. All the while, the three villains keep scores on their Buffy attacks. |
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⚫ | Buffy works with [[Xander Harris|Xander]] at his construction job, telling him about the time situation at school before she is introduced to Tony, the boss. [[Andrew Wells|Andrew]] summons demons from the van, which trash the construction site before Buffy kills them. Unfortunately, Buffy knocks Tony unconscious and the construction men she saves refuse to admit they were saved by a girl. Xander gets mad at Buffy for bringing slaying to his |
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⚫ | Later that night, Buffy gets drunk with [[Spike (Buffyverse)|Spike]] at a bar where he plays poker (in a [[visual pun]], they use kittens as currency for the [[Glossary of poker terms#kitty|kitty]]) and searches for information. After the poker game ends badly, Buffy rants to Spike about the new low her life has reached with her inability to understand school or get a decent job. Buffy and Spike notice a black van; the Trio notices Buffy approaching with alarm. |
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⚫ | Buffy learns about working at |
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⚫ | Jonathan, disguised as a demon, appears from behind the van and threatens Buffy, but she beats him down while the van drives away. With the use of smoke to confuse the slayer and vampire, Jonathan runs away and complains to Warren and Andrew, who realize they now have much information on Buffy's fighting style that can be used against her. Buffy begins to recover from her drunken state and complains to Giles about her life. He consoles her and offers her a cheque to help pay for all the expenses. Buffy says she is happy that Giles will always be there, but the look on Giles's face suggests that he might not always be. |
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⚫ | Later that night, Buffy gets drunk with [[Spike (Buffyverse)|Spike]] at |
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==Production== |
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The wriggling and murderous Mummy hand was portrayed by the hand of [[Alice Dinnean|Alice Dinnean Vernon]], who had worked on ''[[Sesame Street]]'' and ''[[The Muppet Show]].'' Vernon was also one of the puppeteers in the ''Buffy'' spin-off ''[[Angel (1999 TV series)|Angel]]'' episode "[[Smile Time]]."<ref>{{Cite web |title=Episode Guide - Life Serial |date=18 June 2014 |url=https://www.bbc.co.uk/cult/buffy/indetail/lifeserial/trivia.shtml |website=BBC |access-date=January 8, 2024 |language=en-US}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web |date=30 May 2005 |title=Alice Dinnean Vernon |url=http://offline.buffy.de/www.restlessbtvs.com/trivia/alice-dinnean-vernon/index.html |website=The Buffy and Angel Trivia Guide |publisher=Restless BtVS |access-date=January 8, 2024 |language=en-US}}</ref> |
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==Themes== |
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Reviewer Ingrid Grace Russmann contends that it is one of the show's "most [[Meta (prefix)|meta]] episodes, a commentary on the series as a whole": |
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{{Blockquote |text= Time loops are not exactly a convention of the vampire subgenre, but "Life Serial" used the device so effectively that it became a viable construct for future magic-based shows to emulate. The sixth season of Buffy is probably the series' darkest, between Buffy's post-death identity crisis and Willow's magic addiction—not to mention the multiple embodiments of toxicity that antagonize Buffy from all sides. When Spike is not attempting to seduce Buffy into embracing the possibility that she is no longer human, the Trio is waging a campaign to make her life a living hell (dimension), for their own amusement. It is hard to say which of these storylines is more sinister: Spike's actions bear all of the classic characteristics of an abusive boyfriend, but the Trio's war on the Slayer is as relentlessly cruel as [[Cyberbullying|online harassment]]. ... Buffy begins the episode with optimism; at her construction site, she delivers a monologue that effervesces positivity, breaking the viewer's heart with its irony. She ends the episode very near despair, held back from the brink only by the tenuous grasp of her Watcher.<ref>{{cite web |last=Russmann |first=Ingrid Grace |date=9 July 2022 |title=Meta-Stakes: Buffy's Take On The Time Loop |url=https://gamerant.com/buffy-vampire-slayer-time-loop/ |website=GameRant |access-date=10 December 2023}}</ref>}} |
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* The title of the episode is a pun on the breakfast cereal [[Life (breakfast cereal)|Life]]. |
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* [[Logan's Run (1976 film)|Logan's Run]]: When Warren plants the time dilation device on Buffy, he uses the codename "Logan 5" and refers to Buffy as "the runner." |
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* [[Monty Python]]'s [[Dead Parrot sketch]]: During the [[time loop]] sequence, the Trio references the famous sketch with "This mummy hand has ceased to be!" "This is an ex-mummy hand!" This same sketch is also referenced when Buffy attempts to sell the stabbed mummy hand to the woman. The woman says the hand is now dead, only for Buffy to respond that it's just "playing dead," mimicking the shopkeeper's insistence to the customer in the Parrot Sketch that the parrot is still alive. |
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The website Women at Warp compares the time-loop situation with the ''[[Star Trek: The Next Generation]]'' episode "[[The Game (Star Trek: The Next Generation)|The Game]]." "One of ''TNG''{{'}}s most iconic episodes, "Cause and Effect" sees the ''Enterprise'' repeatedly exploding, as the crew tries to learn how to stop it. In Sunnydale, a trio of nerds test Buffy by setting a series of puzzles for her to solve, including a time loop where Buffy attempts to sell a mummy hand to a Magic Box patron over and over again. The Buffyverse drops a self-aware reference though, as [[Andrew Wells|Andrew]] says, "I just hope she solves it faster than [[Data (Star Trek)|Data]] did on the episode of ''TNG'' where the ''Enterprise'' kept blowing up." Bonus points: later on, Buffy accompanies Spike to a poker game, a subtle nod to the ''Enterprise'' crew's favorite game."<ref>{{Cite web |last=Eley |first=Candice Renee |date=16 March 2020 |title=10 Times Buffy the Vampire Slayer Mirrored Star Trek: The Next Generation |url=https://www.womenatwarp.com/10-times-buffy-the-vampire-slayers-plot-mirrored-star-trek-the-next-generation/ |access-date=23 December 2023 |website=Women at Warp |language=en-US}}</ref> |
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* [[Groundhog Day (film)|Groundhog Day]]: The sequence in the Magic Box is similar to the film's main plot. |
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* [[Star Trek: The Next Generation]]: Andrew describes the time loop they have put Buffy into as being "like that episode of TNG" in which the [[Enterprise-D]] continually explodes ("[[Cause and Effect (TNG episode)|Cause and Effect]]"). |
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* [[The X-Files|X-Files]]: Warren responds, "Or [[Fox Mulder|Mulder]], in that ''X-Files'' where the bank kept exploding" (Season 6 episode "[[Monday (The X-Files)|Monday]]"). |
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* [[James Bond]]: The Trio has a protracted argument over actors who have played James Bond: [[Sean Connery]], [[Roger Moore]] and [[Timothy Dalton]]. Warren insists that ''[[Moonraker (film)|Moonraker]]'' was inexcusable. ''[[Dr. No (film)|Dr. No]]'', the first film of the Bond series, is also mentioned. |
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* [[Star Wars]]: Andrew spray paints a mural of the [[Death Star]] from ''Return of the Jedi'' on the side of the Trio's van, and the van's horn plays the ''Star Wars'' main theme. |
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* Tara makes reference to watching ''[[SpongeBob SquarePants]]'' with Willow to Buffy during Buffy's speed problems at college. |
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* The sculpture shown in the pages of Tara's "[[Renaissance]] book" before her art appreciation class is called the [[Ecstasy of Saint Theresa]], and is more accurately described as [[Baroque]]. |
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* Black vans similar to the one used by The Trio were used in Joss Whedon's other project ''[[Dollhouse (TV series)|Dollhouse]]''. |
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==Continuity== |
==Continuity== |
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In the next episode, "[[All the Way (Buffy the Vampire Slayer)|All the Way]]," Buffy refers to the Mummy's hand again: "Don't blame me if we keep having this conversation over and over..."<ref>{{Cite web |title=06x06 - All The Way |date=November 8, 2001 |url=https://transcripts.foreverdreaming.org/viewtopic.php?t=8410 |publisher=Forever Dreaming |access-date=February 3, 2024 |language=en-US}}</ref> In "[[Bring on the Night (Buffy the Vampire Slayer)|Bring on the Night]]," Xander tells the Scoobies, "It's a loop, like the Mummy hand. I'm doomed to replace these windows for all eternity."<ref>{{Cite web |title=07x10 - Bring On the Night |date=December 20, 2002 |url=https://transcripts.foreverdreaming.org/viewtopic.php?t=8438 |website=Buffy the Vampire Slayer Transcripts |publisher=Forever Dreaming |access-date=February 3, 2024 |language=en-US}}</ref> |
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===Arc significance=== |
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* Crossover with ''Angel'': A meeting between Buffy and Angel takes place immediately before this episode (between the corresponding Angel episodes "[[Carpe Noctem (Angel episode)|Carpe Noctem]]" and "[[Fredless]]"). It is the subject of [[Jane Espenson]]'s ''Buffy/Angel'' comic, ''[[Reunion (Buffy comic)|Reunion]]''. |
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* The good demon Clem, who will later befriend Buffy and the other Scoobies, appears for the first time playing kitten poker. He is credited as "Loose Skinned Demon". |
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* Buffy shows how she would rather hang out with Spike than the other Scoobies. The two now share common interests which will lead to their physical relationship later in the season. |
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* Though it could have been inferred from previous episodes, the specialties of all of the Trio members are established; Warren's is technology, Andrew's is demon summoning, and Jonathan's is magic. |
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* Although Buffy is back with the Watchers' Council, which pays its Watchers (including Giles) and appears to have financially supported other Slayers such as Kendra, no one appears to think of asking them to put Buffy on their payroll. This may be because Kendra was a one-off, or the show's creators wanted Buffy more grounded; to face financial crisis with no true 'happy ending'. |
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==Reception== |
==Reception== |
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''[[Vox (website)|Vox]]'' ranked it as #84 in their list of "Worst to Best" episodes, with the view that it "is maybe more ''clever'' than genuinely ''good'', but boy, is it clever! Buffy has her abilities tested both by a drooping bank account and three feisty nerds who want to see just what she's capable of, mostly because they can. A rare funny episode in a dour season."<ref>{{cite web |last=VanDerWerff |first=Emily |date=10 March 2017 |title=Every episode of Buffy, ranked, in honor of its 20th anniversary |url=https://www.vox.com/culture/2017/3/10/14807808/buffy-the-vampire-slayer-every-episode-ranked-20th-anniversary/ |website=Vox |access-date=10 December 2023}}</ref> |
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The Futon Critic named it the 15th best episode of 2001.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.thefutoncritic.com/reviews/2002/01/04/the-50-best-episodes-of-2001-number-20-11-12228/20020104_bestof2001/|title=The 50 Best Episodes of 2001 - #20-11|work=The Futon Critic|author=Brian Ford Sullivan|date=January 4, 2002|accessdate=August 2, 2010}}</ref> |
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In 2023, ''[[Rolling Stone (magazine)|Rolling Stone]]'' ranked this episode as #100 out of the 144 episodes in honor of 20th anniversary of the show's ending, calling it "one of the lighter episodes... A very Bond-villain inspired move which fits their characters, and most of the episode plays for some good laughs."<ref>{{cite web |last=Francis |first=Jack |date=20 May 2023 |title=‘Buffy the Vampire Slayer’: Every Episode Ranked From Worst to Best |url=https://www.rollingstone.com/tv-movies/tv-movie-lists/buffy-the-vampire-slayer-ranking-every-episode-worst-to-best-sarah-michelle-gellar-joss-whedon-1234735428/season-6-episode-5-life-serial-1234735649/ |website=Rolling Stone |access-date=24 May 2023}}</ref> |
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In their recap, [[TV Tropes]] notes that some of the episode's humor derives from [[visual pun]]s; for example, that "in card games the betting pool is often referred to as ''the kitty''" and that the [[Nerd|genre-savvy]] Trio naturally have a [[Kill switch|Big Red Button]] for their Destruct Mechanism. Meanwhile, some of the [[creepiness|creepy]] effects include the Trio's [[sousveillance]] of Buffy by way of [[hidden camera]]s in their black van, as well as an "Unnaturally Looping Location": "In an effort to escape the time loop, Buffy tries to walk out the Magic Shop's front door only to find herself entering the shop from the back, much to Giles and Anya's puzzlement."<ref>{{cite web |url=https://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/Recap/BuffyTheVampireSlayerS6E5LifeSerial |title=Recap / Buffy The Vampire Slayer S 6 E 5 Life Serial |website= TV Tropes |access-date=10 December 2023}}</ref> |
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Reviewer Mark Oshiro writes of the characterization, "This episode ''is'' funny, but I think the writers don't ignore how disturbing some of this is ''or'' how taxing the tests the Trio give Buffy are for her. ... The true brilliance of their characterization is the sheer accuracy of the portrayal of bored, white middle class nerds. It's ''perfect''. Each one of the three is geeky about a particular thing, and yet they still manage to find a million things to bicker over in that condescending, know-it-all tone... [O]f ''course'' they wouldn't namedrop ''[[Groundhog Day (film)|Groundhog Day]]'' during Jonathan's task. It's not obscure enough; instead, they make reference to a ''[[Star Trek: The Next Generation|Star Trek]]'' [[Cause and Effect (Star Trek: The Next Generation)|episode]] and [[Monday (The X-Files)|one of my favorite episodes]] of ''[[The X-Files]]''. ... The Trio are so engaged with banal minutia and this endless list of facts about fictional worlds that they don't ever truly think about what they're doing. To them, Buffy Summers is merely an object, an obstacle they study and gather data on by tormenting her for an entire day. ... It's this combination of misogyny and carelessness that makes the Trio frightening."<ref>{{cite web |url=https://markwatches.net/reviews/2012/07/mark-watches-buffy-the-vampire-slayer-s06e05-life-serial/ |title=Mark Watches 'Buffy the Vampire Slayer': S06E05 – Life Serial |last=Oshiro |first=Mark |date=6 July 2012 |website= MarkWatches.net |access-date=10 December 2023}}</ref> |
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==References== |
==References== |
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==External links== |
==External links== |
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{{wikiquote|Buffy the Vampire Slayer#Life Serial|Life Serial}} |
{{wikiquote|Buffy the Vampire Slayer#Life Serial|Life Serial}} |
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* {{ |
* {{IMDb episode|0533455|Life Serial}} |
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* {{tv.com episode|buffy-the-vampire-slayer/life-serial-70475|Life Serial}} |
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{{Buffy episodes}} |
{{Buffy episodes}} |
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[[Category:Buffy the Vampire Slayer |
[[Category:Buffy the Vampire Slayer season 6 episodes]] |
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[[Category:2001 American television episodes]] |
[[Category:2001 American television episodes]] |
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[[Category: |
[[Category:Television episodes written by Jane Espenson]] |
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[[Category:Television episodes written by David Fury]] |
[[Category:Television episodes written by David Fury]] |
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[[Category:Time loop television episodes]] |
Latest revision as of 12:41, 5 April 2024
"Life Serial" | |
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Buffy the Vampire Slayer episode | |
Episode no. | Season 6 Episode 5 |
Directed by | Nick Marck |
Written by | David Fury Jane Espenson |
Production code | 6ABB05 |
Original air date | October 23, 2001 |
Guest appearances | |
| |
"Life Serial" is the fifth episode in the 6th season of the television series Buffy the Vampire Slayer. The episode aired on October 23, 2001 on UPN.[1][2] The episode was praised for its innovation and surreal humour.
Plot
[edit]Buffy returns from her offscreen visit with Angel but refuses to talk about it. The Scoobies discuss Buffy's future. Buffy agrees to audit the classes Willow and Tara are taking until the next semester starts. Meanwhile, the Trio prepare for their competition to test Buffy, setting up their van with high-tech monitoring equipment.
At school, Buffy finds herself overwhelmed by a class she takes with Willow, being baffled by the postmodern jargon. Buffy later meets up with Tara for Art History, but before class begins Warren tags her with a tiny device that causes time to fast-forward. Buffy is dazed as the world whizzes around her; when she finally notices the device Warren planted on her, it self-destructs and puts Buffy back in normal time.
Buffy works with Xander at his construction job, telling him about the time situation at school before she is introduced to Tony, the boss. Andrew summons demons from the van, which trash the construction site before Buffy kills them. Unfortunately, Buffy knocks Tony unconscious and the construction men she saves refuse to admit they were saved by a girl. Xander gets mad at Buffy for bringing slaying to his workplace, though he realizes that something unusual is happening. However, he is still forced to fire her.
Buffy learns about working at The Magic Box from Giles and Anya as Jonathan begins a spell to loop time until Buffy satisfies a customer. Buffy assists a man with a candle sale and then goes downstairs to fetch a live Mummy's hand for a customer, but the hand attacks her and she is forced to kill it, which also kills the sale. Events start to repeat as Buffy must help the customers and fight the mummy hand over and over again, being reduced to tears out of frustration. She is stuck in an unsolved dilemma, but soon Buffy is able to end the spell by telling the woman she will order the hand instead of going downstairs to fight with the one they already have. Stressed out by the repeating time and the job itself, Buffy walks out. All the while, the three villains keep scores on their Buffy attacks.
Later that night, Buffy gets drunk with Spike at a bar where he plays poker (in a visual pun, they use kittens as currency for the kitty) and searches for information. After the poker game ends badly, Buffy rants to Spike about the new low her life has reached with her inability to understand school or get a decent job. Buffy and Spike notice a black van; the Trio notices Buffy approaching with alarm.
Jonathan, disguised as a demon, appears from behind the van and threatens Buffy, but she beats him down while the van drives away. With the use of smoke to confuse the slayer and vampire, Jonathan runs away and complains to Warren and Andrew, who realize they now have much information on Buffy's fighting style that can be used against her. Buffy begins to recover from her drunken state and complains to Giles about her life. He consoles her and offers her a cheque to help pay for all the expenses. Buffy says she is happy that Giles will always be there, but the look on Giles's face suggests that he might not always be.
Production
[edit]The wriggling and murderous Mummy hand was portrayed by the hand of Alice Dinnean Vernon, who had worked on Sesame Street and The Muppet Show. Vernon was also one of the puppeteers in the Buffy spin-off Angel episode "Smile Time."[3][4]
Themes
[edit]Reviewer Ingrid Grace Russmann contends that it is one of the show's "most meta episodes, a commentary on the series as a whole":
Time loops are not exactly a convention of the vampire subgenre, but "Life Serial" used the device so effectively that it became a viable construct for future magic-based shows to emulate. The sixth season of Buffy is probably the series' darkest, between Buffy's post-death identity crisis and Willow's magic addiction—not to mention the multiple embodiments of toxicity that antagonize Buffy from all sides. When Spike is not attempting to seduce Buffy into embracing the possibility that she is no longer human, the Trio is waging a campaign to make her life a living hell (dimension), for their own amusement. It is hard to say which of these storylines is more sinister: Spike's actions bear all of the classic characteristics of an abusive boyfriend, but the Trio's war on the Slayer is as relentlessly cruel as online harassment. ... Buffy begins the episode with optimism; at her construction site, she delivers a monologue that effervesces positivity, breaking the viewer's heart with its irony. She ends the episode very near despair, held back from the brink only by the tenuous grasp of her Watcher.[5]
Cultural references
[edit]The website Women at Warp compares the time-loop situation with the Star Trek: The Next Generation episode "The Game." "One of TNG's most iconic episodes, "Cause and Effect" sees the Enterprise repeatedly exploding, as the crew tries to learn how to stop it. In Sunnydale, a trio of nerds test Buffy by setting a series of puzzles for her to solve, including a time loop where Buffy attempts to sell a mummy hand to a Magic Box patron over and over again. The Buffyverse drops a self-aware reference though, as Andrew says, "I just hope she solves it faster than Data did on the episode of TNG where the Enterprise kept blowing up." Bonus points: later on, Buffy accompanies Spike to a poker game, a subtle nod to the Enterprise crew's favorite game."[6]
Continuity
[edit]In the next episode, "All the Way," Buffy refers to the Mummy's hand again: "Don't blame me if we keep having this conversation over and over..."[7] In "Bring on the Night," Xander tells the Scoobies, "It's a loop, like the Mummy hand. I'm doomed to replace these windows for all eternity."[8]
Reception
[edit]Vox ranked it as #84 in their list of "Worst to Best" episodes, with the view that it "is maybe more clever than genuinely good, but boy, is it clever! Buffy has her abilities tested both by a drooping bank account and three feisty nerds who want to see just what she's capable of, mostly because they can. A rare funny episode in a dour season."[9]
In 2023, Rolling Stone ranked this episode as #100 out of the 144 episodes in honor of 20th anniversary of the show's ending, calling it "one of the lighter episodes... A very Bond-villain inspired move which fits their characters, and most of the episode plays for some good laughs."[10]
In their recap, TV Tropes notes that some of the episode's humor derives from visual puns; for example, that "in card games the betting pool is often referred to as the kitty" and that the genre-savvy Trio naturally have a Big Red Button for their Destruct Mechanism. Meanwhile, some of the creepy effects include the Trio's sousveillance of Buffy by way of hidden cameras in their black van, as well as an "Unnaturally Looping Location": "In an effort to escape the time loop, Buffy tries to walk out the Magic Shop's front door only to find herself entering the shop from the back, much to Giles and Anya's puzzlement."[11]
Reviewer Mark Oshiro writes of the characterization, "This episode is funny, but I think the writers don't ignore how disturbing some of this is or how taxing the tests the Trio give Buffy are for her. ... The true brilliance of their characterization is the sheer accuracy of the portrayal of bored, white middle class nerds. It's perfect. Each one of the three is geeky about a particular thing, and yet they still manage to find a million things to bicker over in that condescending, know-it-all tone... [O]f course they wouldn't namedrop Groundhog Day during Jonathan's task. It's not obscure enough; instead, they make reference to a Star Trek episode and one of my favorite episodes of The X-Files. ... The Trio are so engaged with banal minutia and this endless list of facts about fictional worlds that they don't ever truly think about what they're doing. To them, Buffy Summers is merely an object, an obstacle they study and gather data on by tormenting her for an entire day. ... It's this combination of misogyny and carelessness that makes the Trio frightening."[12]
References
[edit]- ^ Dellamonica, Alyx (2013-07-08). "Buffy the Vampire Slayer Rewatch: World's Silliest Jobs, Slayer Edition". Tor.com. Retrieved 2022-06-19.
- ^ "Buffy / Angel: "Fredless"/"Life Serial"". The A.V. Club. 2010-11-12. Retrieved 2022-06-19.
- ^ "Episode Guide - Life Serial". BBC. 18 June 2014. Retrieved January 8, 2024.
- ^ "Alice Dinnean Vernon". The Buffy and Angel Trivia Guide. Restless BtVS. 30 May 2005. Retrieved January 8, 2024.
- ^ Russmann, Ingrid Grace (9 July 2022). "Meta-Stakes: Buffy's Take On The Time Loop". GameRant. Retrieved 10 December 2023.
- ^ Eley, Candice Renee (16 March 2020). "10 Times Buffy the Vampire Slayer Mirrored Star Trek: The Next Generation". Women at Warp. Retrieved 23 December 2023.
- ^ "06x06 - All The Way". Forever Dreaming. November 8, 2001. Retrieved February 3, 2024.
- ^ "07x10 - Bring On the Night". Buffy the Vampire Slayer Transcripts. Forever Dreaming. December 20, 2002. Retrieved February 3, 2024.
- ^ VanDerWerff, Emily (10 March 2017). "Every episode of Buffy, ranked, in honor of its 20th anniversary". Vox. Retrieved 10 December 2023.
- ^ Francis, Jack (20 May 2023). "'Buffy the Vampire Slayer': Every Episode Ranked From Worst to Best". Rolling Stone. Retrieved 24 May 2023.
- ^ "Recap / Buffy The Vampire Slayer S 6 E 5 Life Serial". TV Tropes. Retrieved 10 December 2023.
- ^ Oshiro, Mark (6 July 2012). "Mark Watches 'Buffy the Vampire Slayer': S06E05 – Life Serial". MarkWatches.net. Retrieved 10 December 2023.