"Are we tracking a real tunnel, or symbolic?"
The first thing we see in this new season is the face of a
nasty looking demon, accompanied by a sinister musical cue… then he starts
singing and giving of vibes of being rather camp, and a thoroughly nice chap. A
nice bit of misdirection, although it probably works better on first viewing,
as I immediately recognised Lorne, as we shouldn't yet be calling him, and
having sad thoughts about Andy Hallett's untimely death. It'll be interesting
to see how often he appears during the first part of the season and when we can
start thinking of him as a regular.
Speaking of new regulars… J. August Richards has been
promoted to the opening titles, and gets to meet Cordelia and Wesley in a
splendidly awkward scene that speaks volumes about the sort of instinctive
racial stereotyping that sometimes happens even amongst the most liberal of us.
But the opening sequence of this semi-relaunch episode also re-establishes the
existing trio. Cordelia, after last season, is now so committed to the cause
that she abandons a very promising audition at the beep of a pager (how
quaint!), while Wesley is, er, good at darts, and by now a very different
character from the klutz he used to be.
There's a little Wolfram and Hart stuff, with a bit of Darla
and an introduction to Lindsey's new hand, but this episode is focused more on
a weird, extra-dimensional mediaeval court. Interestingly, Angel seems to be
moving away from straight horror fantasy to magical, extra-dimensional
weirdness with demons that might as well be aliens. It's a distinctive style,
very different from Buffy, and I like
it, in spite of the occasionally dodgy costumes.
This brings us rather nicely to Lorne's karaoke bar, with
its extremely diverse clientele, and the interesting conceit that Lorne can
read the emotions and, up to a point, the fate of people when they sing.
Already, on his first appearance, he's a great character. Also, we get to see
Angel massacre Barry Manilow although, sadly, I don't mean that literally.
Most interesting, of coursed, is Angel. He's brought down
from the highs, and possible hubris, of the Shanshu prophecy when he makes a
mistake. And yet he redeems himself by literally taking on the role of a modern
day knight errant to make amends. A deeply chivalrous man in twentieth century California… again,
echoes of Raymond Chandler.
It's deeply satisfying, too, and deeply thematic, to see
Angel bonding so well with Faith, in prison. The two of them have so much in
common. It's the perfect place to end.
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