
Put simply, Season 4 of Angel was absolutely amazing. Although the season ended a little flatly on the action side of things, like Buffy Season 2, it ended on a more emotional note. As I discussed in a previous article, the continuity in these shows is a huge part of their appeal. These shows were made for DVD. I certainly am not able to sit down at the same time every week and watch these kinds of shows and I don't own a TiVo or DVR. All I can do is buy the DVDs, however that doesn't do much to keep the show on TV (or put it back on in Angel's case). It greatly saddens me that I am not able to support great shows such as this by watching them on TV on a regular basis.
Season 4 has an epic feel to it. Those familiar with the series will remember that the end of Season 3 saw Angel being imprisoned in a coffin at the bottom of the ocean by his Connor, his own son, and Justine, a woman bent on revenge on all vampires no matter what their alignment. All the previous loose ends from previous seasons of Angel find themselves being tied up in this season of the show.

As always, action sequences and special effects in Angel are top notch. It's always impressive what Whedon was able to accomplish on a limited budget on this show. There's an especially impressive battle in the middle of the season with The Beast on the top of a building that includes some great slow-mo and impressive fight choreography and wirework. There's also a sequence with the sky raining fire that is quite breathtaking.
The focus in Whedon's work, though, has always been in character development and he again comes through in spades. Continuity is a key factor in this season as there is not a single stand-alone episode. It allows the characters to develop more completely and equips the audience with a background of knowledge about the character. In fact, the show has more than once been called a 'vampire soap opera,' including by its own characters. They fall in love, triangles form, they break up and get back together again all in this season. Specifically, Fred and Gunn hit the rocks, Wesley continues sleeping with Lilah (the evil lawyer from Wolfram & Hart) and Angel tries to patch up with Cordy. All of these events are lent even more weight by the Apocalpytic events surrouding them, once more giving the show a more epic feel. Angel and Buffy have also always had a neat tounge-in-cheek way of telling their stories and Angel never seems to drop the ball in this regard either. This goes double for Angel, as Season 4 further explores the dark sides of each character, including an incident between Fred and Gunn, as the grey area becomes even more indiscernable from the rest of the story.
These questions come up often in Season 4. Buffy was always a very black-and-white show. There were always demons and/or vampires to kill, they were invariably evil and it was Buffy's job to kill them. Part of the appeal of Angel is that it has always tried to explore the grey and dark areas of its characters' psyche. The ultimate grey area is exposed in Season 4 as the team wrestles with the price of world peace in a slave state versus free will and chaos. Is world peace worth the loss of our freedom of thought? Would the world really be a better place if we were forced into being nice all the time? Season 4 asks all these questions but leaves the answer up to the audience to decide.

Read on for a more in depth dissection of Season 4's events but be warned...
!!! SEASON 4 SPOILER ALERT - YOU HAVE BEEN WARNED !!!
Lorne makes his return this season. It seems like he's been stuck into the comic relief role this time around and that is fairly disappointing. What good is having a zen master living at your place if you don't even use him? Admittedly he did produce the brain-exploding prophecy of The Beast but that's about the only useful function he exercised this season. It wasn't even that useful since the AI team got their asses kicked when they found him anyways.


Speaking of finding your way back into the light, Faith makes another appearance this season as well. I started watching Angel before I saw Buffy, so the Faith character has always fascinated me. She follows the rocky path to redemption as well as Angel and, to a lesser degree, Wesley. Faith reminds us of this path and that "with great power comes great responsibility."
Angelus shows his ugly face this season, making this his third outing since the beginning of Whedon's Buffyverse. He has always excelled at sowing discord among friends and this time out he puts the whammy on the entire team at the same time - all from the confines of his 9x10 cell. Whenever Angelus comes out to play, David Boreanaz has an absolute field day with the character. He curses Angel's goodness, breaks confidences and uses it all as ammunition in his assault and torture on his former compatriots' minds. I thought it was an very nice touch when Evil Cordelia used Angel's soul as leverage to control Angelus. Threatening to put Angelus "back in his box," EC and the writers demonstrate Angelus' only vulnerability other than the sun and wooden stakes to the heart. Also, the way he was brought forth was breathtaking. Fooling Angel into thinking he had achieved perfect happiness seems like the perfect way to extract his soul and made up the coolest episode of Angel I've yet seen.

There was lots of quality developments going on with Connor too, but this was another character that they decided they'd throw away rather than deal with. Or, perhaps more accurately, Angel decided that he simply couldn't handle raising a son with such a fucked up sense of right and wrong. Instead, they simply wiped his brain and quite literally threw him off the show. I really would have enjoyed seeing Connor develop from a vessel for an ill-concieved world domination scheme into an actual fully fledged member of the cast. Alas, it just wasn't in the cards.
Angel has finally seem to become a moral rock - and that happens to be a bit boring. I liked the edgy, brooding, unstable Angel better. Nowadays he is a bit more cavalier about his exploits and that's sure fun to watch too but if history is any indication, that won't last for long. Buffy's lightly demented sense of humor was what gave it a lot of its charm and Angel seems to have fallen into that groove as well. He's too comfortable right now and I'm sure that another moral curveball is right around the corner. Watching the way he reacts to these issues is the reason we watch the show.

Is world peace worth losing our autonomy? That's a such a hard question to answer that I don't really think there is a wrong answer. Each idea has its merits. On the one hand, you have world peace: everyone loves each other (especially Jasmine), there is no more killing or violence, and everyone is perfectly happy. On the other, there is no more ability for creative thought other than worshipping Jasmine. Accordingly, the arts would suffer horribly and our entire culture would be wiped out and replaced with an image of Jasmine. Arguably, the merging of all cultures is a prerequisite of world peace, but building that kind of world on top of that prerequisite is definitely a high price to pay.
View wydren's response to this review here!
Wow, you're waaaaay off on Season 5. Forget all you think you know, finish Buffy, then watch the damn season. They wrap up everything almost perfectly. Oh, and "Nowadays he is a bit more cadaver"...He is a bit more of a corpse? I do not think that word means what you think it means. Overall, good review.
ReplyDeleteWhat? No long-winded response? :)
ReplyDeleteHeh, you're right. I meant Cavalier. Witness the magic of the edit button.
ReplyDeleteJust wait till I get more time.
ReplyDelete