Entry tags:
He's Really Not All That Bad
You know, I think Giles has a bit of an undeserved reputation.
(By the way, I did actually mean that spoiler warning, so
gabrielleabelle, if you're still reading, for goodness' sake STOP.)
Specifically, I'm thinking about the scene in Shells, when Angel rings Giles for help, and Giles refuses.
As a reminder: Fred has died, Illyria has emerged, and Angel, reasoning that "the soul is what matters", tries to contact Willow for help bringing Fred back. And Giles tells him that Willow is currently unable to be contacted, and refuses to help Angel at all, because Angel's still working at Wolfram & Hart.
I've seen a lot of discussion, both fic and meta, of this scene, and almost invariably, people tend to assume that Giles was being presumptuous, and he shouldn't have dismissed Angel out of hand.
And then they decide that, clearly, Willow (and Buffy) would be really annoyed with Giles for doing that (and for behaving just like he did in Lies My Parents Told Me) because, obviously, Fred was lovely and they would definitely have helped her, had Giles just let them know...
I think I disagree.
The thing is, Fred is dead. Very definitely dead.
And I really don't see Willow - season seven Willow - trying to reverse someone's death. Not after the whole pulling-Buffy-out-of-heaven, losing-her-girlfriend-horribly, and-oh-by-the-way-almost-destroying-the-world thing. She just wouldn't.
Sure, she'd be sad (possibly very sad) that Fred had died, but she wouldn't try to bring Fred back. She's done that before.
And Buffy?
Buffy had, not five episodes earlier, sent Andrew in with a squadron of Slayers to back him up, and made it perfectly clear that, while Angel was at Wolfram & Hart, she really didn't trust him.
Giles might have been giving his own opinion, he might have had Buffy right there beside him dictating his every word, he might have been lying about Willow being unreachable... I really don't know. It's possible that he didn't discuss the situation with anyone before turning Angel down. What I don't agree with is the idea that Giles was responding any differently to the way the others would have. Not definitely, anyway.
So, yeah. I think he's getting unfairly blamed for that one.
Just an opinion.
(By the way, I did actually mean that spoiler warning, so
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Specifically, I'm thinking about the scene in Shells, when Angel rings Giles for help, and Giles refuses.
As a reminder: Fred has died, Illyria has emerged, and Angel, reasoning that "the soul is what matters", tries to contact Willow for help bringing Fred back. And Giles tells him that Willow is currently unable to be contacted, and refuses to help Angel at all, because Angel's still working at Wolfram & Hart.
I've seen a lot of discussion, both fic and meta, of this scene, and almost invariably, people tend to assume that Giles was being presumptuous, and he shouldn't have dismissed Angel out of hand.
And then they decide that, clearly, Willow (and Buffy) would be really annoyed with Giles for doing that (and for behaving just like he did in Lies My Parents Told Me) because, obviously, Fred was lovely and they would definitely have helped her, had Giles just let them know...
I think I disagree.
The thing is, Fred is dead. Very definitely dead.
And I really don't see Willow - season seven Willow - trying to reverse someone's death. Not after the whole pulling-Buffy-out-of-heaven, losing-her-girlfriend-horribly, and-oh-by-the-way-almost-destroying-the-world thing. She just wouldn't.
Sure, she'd be sad (possibly very sad) that Fred had died, but she wouldn't try to bring Fred back. She's done that before.
And Buffy?
Buffy had, not five episodes earlier, sent Andrew in with a squadron of Slayers to back him up, and made it perfectly clear that, while Angel was at Wolfram & Hart, she really didn't trust him.
Giles might have been giving his own opinion, he might have had Buffy right there beside him dictating his every word, he might have been lying about Willow being unreachable... I really don't know. It's possible that he didn't discuss the situation with anyone before turning Angel down. What I don't agree with is the idea that Giles was responding any differently to the way the others would have. Not definitely, anyway.
So, yeah. I think he's getting unfairly blamed for that one.
Just an opinion.
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That said--I think if Willow had known the rather extreme consequences (Fred doesn't just die--she's basically erased completely, at least so far as we can tell) she would have attempted to help. But a) Angel's team doesn't know when they call and b) it's probably too late already, unless Willow does something extremely clever. (Actually I do have a scenario, one that Willow could plausibly come up with--we're both pretty smart--but I came up with it at least a year after the episode aired. That's running a bit late.)
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And since his reason for doing so was Connor, and the memory spell means that nobody else even knows about Connor, then Angel would have been unable to give anyone else a good reason why he was working for W&H.
Incidentally, Giles says that Willow is unable to help because she's gone to Tibet and is currently on the astral plane: that does seem like an actual reason why she's unavailable, and not just a feeble "She's washing her hair" excuse. :-) I'm guessing this is part of the "six month mystical walkabout" she went on between seasons 7 and 8.
Although my own theory is that actually, Willow and Buffy and Giles already knew that Illyria was about to rise, and Willow was actually off doing something about it, like destroying that temple that Illyria goes to to summon her army. I've got a half-finished fic around here somewhere going into that in a lot more depth.
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None of the scoobies are crazy about Cordelia, but I think she might have had more luck. That is, if she hadn't been..you know, dead. Which kind of negates the whole argument. But still.
I’m willing to bet the Angel-was-evil-and-killed-Giles-girlfriend-once scenario probably played in at least a little, especially if Giles was the only one in the room. Which makes me think that just about any one of the AI crew would have had more luck calling than Angel..
Ooo..or Spike. Definitely Spike. That’s a whole ‘nother idea.
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That said, that started back in Damage, and if Andrew was telling the truth, it was indeed Buffy's call. I'm sure some personal feelings did come into play, but - Giles was never perfect. He's not a heartless bastard, either, though.
Well, okay, he can act like one sometimes, but so can most people. I still love him.
(I think Angel might have had more luck if he'd said "um, we have a DEMON GOD that might CONQUER THE WORLD, Willow might be helpful, we don't want millions of people to die".)
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Whether or not one views Buffy/Immortal as canon also plays into this - it's far easier to imagine an exasperated Giles making end runs around a Buffy who's off partying. There's also the point that Andrew, a notoriously unreliable narrator, is the person to deliver much of this information about Buffy. If you take the comics as canon, Andrew is outright lying to Spike and Angel in TGIQ - is he doing it on Buffy's orders, or Giles's, or both? There's no way to tell for certain.
So it's possible to construct plausible scenarios either way - Buffy doesn't trust Angel and Giles is doing what Buffy wants, or Giles is doing a lot of stuff behind Buffy's back.
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For that matter, I don't think Spike did either.
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Since I consider S8 canon, Willow had been gone for a year with no one knowing where she went. So Giles was right when he said that he couldn't reach her. *Shrug*
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