(SPOILER)
Discuss Angel: After the Fall #4.
Since no one's started a discussion thread and I received my copy today...
(Issue-specific link doesn't appear to be up on IDW website yet. Will change when one appears)
February 21 2008
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Who didn't like seeing those old friends? That was some good... damn... dialogue...
[ edited by patxshand on 2008-02-21 03:17 ]
patxshand | February 21, 06:17 CET
So. We see Lorne, and we have Groo back, but how much is Wesley's existence tied to W&H's building? And why is Lorne some kind of a Lord? It seems he's back to running an R&R venue, likely as a neutral zone.
Oh, Angel has a dragon, but how cool is a midnight black Pegasus?
The issue #5 cover shows a short haired gentleman in the top left position. Groo has long locks in this issue, so either he's cutting them off, or that's someone else. I'm going to bet on the former.
We now know conclusively (well, as much as it's possible to...) that Angel did NOT turn Gunn himself. It further appear that Angel and Wes are convinced W&H took away Angel's vampirism, which begs the question why W&H never did so before. So... who knows? Does Spike? Connor? Is the reason it's awkward to be around Nina because one accidental love nip could make Angel a lycanthrope now?
Interesting, and perhaps Freudian, typo (s/calvary/cavalry/) on page 6.
More random thoughts as they arrive...
jclemens | February 21, 06:22 CET
patxshand | February 21, 06:28 CET
I bought the cover.
Poor Wes. All getting dead-ed, ghostified and then re-de-materialized.
I was so happy to see Lorne-cakes and Groo.
XanFan32 | February 21, 06:43 CET
See my theory is basically this.I've always felt that you can't sign away a prophecy and the shanshu was still Angel's even though he would believe it to be gone.It would make him all the more deserving of it due to him willing to give it up.
In this issue Angel believes it can't be the shanshu because he signed it away and he and Wes figure it must be W&H who made Angel human to make him helpless now in this environment.
But what if it wasn't actually The Senior Partners who made Angel human as he and Wesley assume?What if it was TPTB and this really is the shanshu?That would be a big twist later on in ATF and a pretty big mind blower for Angel.I could see something like that being revealed.
Buffyfantic | February 21, 06:54 CET
Buffyfantic, excellent thought. I noted the assumption, but really didn't follow through. We've had Shanshu since S1. While it might have been an interesting plot device to have Angel be willing to, and think he was, in fact, signing away the prophecy, that would be more of a psychological test from the Black Thorn, rather than an actual rewriting of a prophecy--Sahjhan tried that and it still came true, despite every world-altering effort to undo it. So, yeah, I agree that it makes sense for Shanshu still to be in play.
jclemens | February 21, 07:07 CET
jclemens | February 21, 04:07 CET
Yeah and also Wes notes in this issue that even though W&H sent them and the city to this hellish place,they don't control it as much as they would like even though they are trying to.But they're are other forces at work here that W&H have nothing to do with.Now this of course leads into Gunn's plans which probably aren't part of The Senior Partner's direct agenda but I think it could also be alluding to us that something like TPTB could still be in play in some way.
I just wouldn't rule out the possibility that Angel and Wes are wrong about signing the shanshu away and W&H making Angel human.It's very in character for Angel to assume something like this and actually learn he was wrong later on in the season or in this case the series.It's just such a Jossian thing to reveal and to have had it happen like this to Angel.
[ edited by Buffyfantic on 2008-02-21 05:22 ]
Buffyfantic | February 21, 07:32 CET
I loved seeing Loren doing so well, with such a fabulous environment. I loved seeing Groo back, in style (comic books are the BEST when it comes to stuff like dragons and flying horses). I am really wondering what Illyria's deal is. This is a great series, it is all really exciting. I'm loving the artwork, the writing, and every single thing about it!
embers | February 21, 07:36 CET
Angel will either have to make a deal with W&H whereby he is returned to his former status in exchange for removing LA from hell; OR Gunn will turn Angel, and he'll have to be re-ensouled (again).
I could be eight miles wrong, but I will be shocked if Angel is still human when all is said and done.
jlp | February 21, 09:05 CET
I was kind of miffed about how OK Lorne was in spite of his last actions before The Fall.
CowboyCliche | February 21, 09:19 CET
Just sayin'. May mean nothing.
bobw1o | February 21, 09:53 CET
The Dark Shape | February 21, 10:18 CET
jclemens | February 21, 11:54 CET
It's a good point about Angel needing to stay clear of Nina even if he would like to be around her -- she still thinks he's a vampire, and there would be no reason not to indulge her wolfish instincts to give love bites. Although, given his current lack of superpowers and his soon to be discovered lack of healing magic, he may want to consider a hook-up precisely so he can get that always-kinda-wolfy deal that she has.
KingofCretins | February 21, 15:27 CET
I'm intrigued by the Hagun Shaft deathstick Loan Shark (I almost typed Lorne Shark...that would be fun) gave to Spike, who then cast it off to Spider. Not the wisest decision ever, right? Because she seems pretty much down with the bloodlust when it comes to killing Angel.
UnpluggedCrazy | February 21, 15:49 CET
AthenaMuze | February 21, 19:07 CET
The Shanshu prophecy isn't a contract, it's a prophecy. And as far as we know, W&H had nothing to do with its origin.
jclemens | February 21, 19:10 CET
(It doesn't help that the art is inconsistent, but let's not pile on.)
I'm enjoying the book well enough, but it pales in comparison to Joss's writing on the Buffy comic - the one-off issue #5 of Buffy was in the top five or six things Joss has written, to my mind. Still, I admire Lynch for jumping into this crazy story with both feet, and his characterization of Angel is in line with the stark S2/S3 vision of the character (though I miss the more petulant, gregarious Season Five Angel myself - even knowing he would be out of place in Hell).
Angel Season Six points up how damn fine Brust's Firefly novel is - and how remarkable is Brust's ventriloquism in that work. I'll keep up with the comic, but given the bold steps the new Buffy is taking, the new Angel isn't top-rank stuff right now.
I'd love to see Joss take a crack at scripting Angel himself; but apparently he sometimes takes vacations from comics to do this thing called 'TV,' and I'd like to see if he can hack it...
waxbanks | February 21, 20:21 CET
Brian Lynch | February 21, 21:31 CET
KingofCretins | February 21, 21:56 CET
Seeing how Angel first discovered he was human was amazing. It was also really nice to see that in the midst of all that carnage he was actually really concerned for Gunn. Gunn seems to be blaming Angel, at least partially, for his current status, but we see that Gunn was pretty close to the forefront of Angel's mind at the time.
Lorne showing up made me do a happy dance in my chair. Looks like he managed to swing a sort of Caritas, because I can't see how else he'd manage to hold that area without constant demon attacks trying to take it from him.
Groo showing up was also awesome. Groo had his own little unique way of speaking that I found hilarious, and Brian did an excellent job at writing it. Big kudos for that.
I never tied Wesley vansihing to Gunn distroying W&H, so good on all you smart people who did!
Now some wild speculation and junk:
First off, Angel turning human. I personally think it was W&H's doing, because my wild theory that I came up with while going to bed last night is that they are punishing Angel and co. for going against them collectively by bringing Hell to L.A. as well as individually. We saw in "I Will Remember You" that Angel had to give up being human in order to continue his fight. Likewise he gave up Shanshu in season five (though I always interpreted the Shanshu to mean that he would be able to die as a human, though not necessarily live as one). Having to be human and be far more vulnerable than he actually is in a time where he really needs his supernatural abilities is certainly a punishment.
Likewise we see the Wesley has been punished by not only not being allowed to move on, but being forced to look like "I wear glasses and fall down a lot" Wesley and not "I'm scruffy and will shoot you in the knees" Wesley.
Gunn, I also think, has been/is being punished, but not by being turned. We learn really early on in Buffy that when a person is turned they actually die, and a demon just takes over their body and has their memories and mannerisms and whatnot. Gunn seems to have a bit of a Sam Lawson thing going on, where there's just something off with him. He seems to hate what he is, whereas most vampires relish in it. He took that picture out of W&H, which is either going to be a "who to kill" checklist, or a spark of lingering humanity, something vampires aren't supposed to have. Though, it's possible that the mythology is just being switched up a bit to better suit the plot. Which happens.
I'm not sure about Lorne or Spike, but Illyria seems to have something going on. I don't know what was going on behind that big heavy door, and her time powers seem to be going all wonky, so that might be some sort of punishment?
That just about ends my speculation. I really enjoyed this issue, and can't wait for the next one.
Nolan | February 21, 21:57 CET
More seriously: What I managed to leave out of my previous comment is that if Whedon were taking editing passes on Lynch's Angel scripts as he does with his Buffy writers', I'd probably be falling all over myself to praise Lynch's brilliance and ability to capture voices, etc. What's missing on the Angel, to my eye, is the characteristic snap and seemingly effortless multifacetedness of Joss's own writing. That's not much of a strike against Lynch (though we could also talk about the general holding-pattern feel of #4, which doesn't seem to be just a function of its place in the narrative). I am enjoying the book, and I let more negativity into that last comment than was my original intention. Still, it's not ringing cherries every page, which Joss's own writing tends to do. (Which is why I'm posting here and not at anonymesque.com or somesuch.)
There aren't ten writers in TV or comics whom I'd put on par with Joss Whedon for moral seriousness and line-to-line musicality and structural ingenuity. But Angel Season Six is solid work and I'm looking forward to the rest of the series; hopefully I didn't burn too much goodwill by failing to say so in the first go-round.
waxbanks | February 21, 23:24 CET
waxbanks | February 21, 23:25 CET
Another thought, destruction of W&H: how does this affect human Angel? And... go!
Groo! Lorne! Can't wait for the next one.
leafblown | February 21, 23:37 CET
leafblown | February 21, 23:57 CET
But was it W&H who drew up the contract? Not really clear.
On the other hand, Archduke Sebassis said, "Through that document, the prophecy can be undone." But never said how.
I'm enjoying ATF, but there are more than a few moments when I'm totally lost, the last three panels of page 11, for example.
Oh, and add me to those who totally missed the disappearance of Wesley with the trashing of W&H. But...Wesley looks to be in the next issue, so...
Chris inVirginia | February 22, 00:32 CET
I'm sure all will be revealed, but on some levels, I'm hopelessly confused.
Chris inVirginia | February 22, 01:05 CET
archon | February 22, 01:48 CET
Nah, Future Spike is in Transmetropolitan. Did you spot the clue? Also the Necronomicon? Too cute for words.
Also Whedonesque's fourth mention in a comic book btw.
Simon | February 22, 01:53 CET
Caroline | February 22, 02:03 CET
The first mention was in that Marvel Spotlight issue on Joss Whedon and John Cassaday, second was in an issue of Runaways when BKV talked about his favourite websites, third mention in the latest issue of Buffy season 8 and then the current issue of After The Fall.
Simon | February 22, 02:09 CET
One question, though. The picture that Gunn takes from W&H: which woman is which? I wanna say Fred's the one on the left, and Cordy's the one on the right.
Normally, I have a lot of trouble distinguishing characters in these issues, but that was the only one this time.
QuanticoMVP | February 22, 02:39 CET
swanjun | February 22, 03:39 CET
DaddyCatALSO | February 22, 03:53 CET
I agree with the people who think Angel went all mortal because of the prophecy. There are always loopholes in contracts and I am willing to bet that willingly signing away this prophecy would actually qualify as a loophole. We need to remember that the Black Thorn thought Angel was on their side, so they wouldn't have known about his true intentions when he signed that contract. Also, you know it would be true heartbreak if Angel gave up his humanity under the assumption it was the result of W&H pulling strings, only to find out later that he deserved that humanity.
Oh, I can't wait for the next issue now!
ninjapigeon | February 22, 04:23 CET
As a relative comic-newbie, I'm having more trouble keeping up with the "Angel" comics than the "Buffy" comics. Sometimes I need multiple re-reads to grasp what's going on, but the overall "what did I just read/see?!" of season 6 has been fab, what with Gunn and Angel's big reveals in issues 1 and 3. I can't wait for more!
uptheapples | February 22, 06:18 CET
It's just a thought...
Whistler | February 22, 08:25 CET
Chris inVirginia | February 22, 08:35 CET
Maybe that's the deal -- in one fight, you have Groo fighting in Angel's place, and in another fight, you have human Angel and Spike continuing to work through their unending issues with each other.
KingofCretins | February 22, 08:50 CET
Brian Lynch | February 22, 09:41 CET
How dare you have a mapped-out storyline that is serious and actually makes sense! Bow down to what we think would be amusing!
UnpluggedCrazy | February 22, 10:40 CET
Brian Lynch | February 22, 11:44 CET
As for the contract vs. prophesy stuff... Well I think it's been proven that prophesies in terms of Angel are never what they seem to be. I think that throwing a contract in the mix could be a part of the whole deal, much like rewriting the darn thing to prevent something from happening and thereby making it all possible anyway (even the bogus bits). Confusing? Yeah well time travel will do that to ya.
I just think it's silly to just assume that Angel can't void it with a contract. Of course he can. Maybe it was never going to be his, maybe it is but with restrictions that the contract puts into play. Regardless, it seems too neat and easy to just say "Oh well it's a PROPHESY so a contract CAN'T really impact it." Sure it can, and I would be stunned (disapointed even) if it didn't.
[ edited by AthenaMuze on 2008-02-22 18:07 ]
AthenaMuze | February 22, 12:18 CET
archon | February 22, 13:02 CET
I loved this issue. Lorne’s words were spot on! We all already knew Lorne was coming and had guesses that Groo will too, but it still made me squeal to see them (loved the black winged horse! So knighty. hee). Can’t wait for the next issue, maybe we’ll finally get a hint into the mystery of time travel blinks past/future that gave us Baby!Angel and *cough* uber-future yummy leather Slayer!Spike lol (I’m guessing Illyria is not feeling well) and what Gunn is up too. And poor Wes *pets him* he’s coming back, we know, but how will Angel react? Hmm.
ETC "dimension"
[ edited by Mirage on 2008-02-22 17:46 ]
Mirage | February 22, 16:22 CET
I honestly don't have a hard time following either Season 8 or "After the Fall" -- you've just got to go in knowing they are being told at a much different pace. Season 8 is, figuratively speaking, a 22 episode TV season. "After the Fall" is a 4 or 6 hour mini-series, at least from what we were told about it being 12 issues. Granted, I also read them really carefully when I do the transcripts and always find I totally missed something when I read it the first time.
My own personal fanwank for how, if it needed to be explained, Angel signing that prophecy could have actually led to his current situation is that Angel wasn't signing it away, he was signing over the fulfillment of it. As in, without signing, the Shanshu would have been fulfilled based on chance, or per the plan of the Powers. But, by signing, Angel was actually agreeing to hand the decision over when or if the prophecy is fulfilled to the Senior Partners -- with the expectation being that they never would allow him to be human.
That interpretation would make it both a prophecy *and* a contract :)
KingofCretins | February 22, 16:32 CET
Now, W&H's interest in him was supposed to be that the vampire with a soul would play a huge part in the apocalypse, but no one knew whether for good or evil. W&H wanted to encourage him to be on evil's side. So one thing that might make sense is that W&H decided that he had made his choice against evil and therefore transported him to a place where they could make him human and therefore not be the vampire in question.
I agree, I don't think that all of LA was transported to hell, though I would think that it looks like it to those who were transported.
I was also very impressed by how on target Lorne's voice was. I have to go back and read it again for other stuff, but that struck me right away.
One thing I don't get. If Lorne and Illyria/Spike are both in positions as Lords of LA, why in the world is he challenging the Lords in such a way that they cannot help him. Cordellia thought Angelus was smarter than Angel. Did he lose he rest of his smarts when he became human. Is the demon inside of him the only thing with any intelligence and he has reverted to the guy in the alley before Darla bit him? Wouldn't that be a kick in the head. Just a thought. ;-)
[ edited by newcj on 2008-02-22 18:19 ]
newcj | February 22, 18:51 CET
I think the Angel series is much more in tune with how the TV series was. I enjoy reading it immensely.
Xane | February 22, 19:39 CET
luis1210 | February 23, 00:22 CET
The mystery guy is Groo? .......you know, it's really hard to sigh and grin at the same time.
Looking forward to reading and stuff.
newcj-I have a screencap of the scroll the Shanshu prophecy is on. It's a very interesting pic. I've always assumed the scroll was more than that but hey, that's just me.
[ edited by menomegirl on 2008-02-22 22:08 ]
menomegirl | February 23, 01:05 CET
Oh well, it was just a thought. ;)
I had already scripted it in my mind. Groo is dressed like Angel, killing the champions. Angel is dressed in Groo's hides and leather and a wig, standing next to Lorne. During the battle Angel complains and makes disparaging comments about Groo's abilities:
"You think that's impressive?"
*mumble* "Show off, I could decapitate a t-rex if I wanted to."
"This wig really itches. *sniff* I bet he's never washed these clothes."
"C'mon, what kind of fighting style is that? Is it kendo, ju-jitsu, akido? Pick a form, pal!"
Lorne gives Angel a withering look, "Angel buns, need I remind you that he's doing you a favor?"
Angel sulks, "Great, now I've been demoted to pastry... again."
Whistler | February 23, 02:48 CET
Mirage | February 23, 10:03 CET
Maybe Brian can get me on with IDW, I have story ideas that would set comicdom on fire. ;)
Whistler | February 24, 12:49 CET
Loved this issue, my favourite so far.
I'm getting used to the art, I think I was conditioned to Buffy, and being a non comic book reader, I just assume everything is the same.
But I loved how the story flowed, from here to there, more dialog and interesting things going on. Loved Angel talking to himself in the battle and I was totally hooked when I first started reading which is a first for me with an Angel comic.
Stuff is confusing, but I kinda like it that way.
I hope Wesley is ok :( Good to see Lorne and Groo.
alexa | February 25, 13:00 CET