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Chosen

 
TV Episode:

Buffy the Vampire Slayer: Chosen

 
  • Director: Joss Whedon
  • Main Cast: Emma Caulfield
  • Release Year: 2003
  • Run Time: 60 minutes

Plot

Buffy (Sarah Michelle Gellar) interrupts her tender reunion with Angel (David Boreanaz) long enough to dispatch Caleb (Nathan Fillion) quite violently once and for all. Afterward, Angel says he can smell Spike (James Marsters) on Buffy. The Slayer admits that Spike now has a soul and is "in her heart," but she professes no desire for a relationship with either of her undead suitors. Instead, she wants to discover the person she's destined to become -- if, that is, she makes it through the impending conflict. To that end, Angel hands over a magical champion's amulet to be used against The First, then heads back to L.A. to form a second line of defense. Back at home, Spike is apoplectic with jealousy about Angel's return, but he accepts the amulet and shares another chaste, tender night with Buffy. A visit from The First, however, interrupts the Slayer's sleep -- and gives her a brilliant idea about how to defeat her nemesis. The Scoobies, the slayers-in-waiting, Faith (Eliza Dushku) and Buffy head to Sunnydale High to open the Seal of Danzalthar and wage war on The First's Turok-Han army. As Buffy and the slayerettes stream through the Seal, Willow (Alyson Hannigan) and Kennedy (Iyari Limon) complete a powerful spell to release the immense energy inside the Scythe and "call" every potential slayer in the world at the same time. Their potential now realized, the junior slayers join Buffy and Faith in kicking some serious Turok-Han butt. Injured in battle, Buffy once again receives a visit from The First, but the being's triumph is short-lived. Spike's amulet suddenly kicks in, punching a hole through the Hellmouth and turning Spike into a sort of magical magnifying glass for the sunlight that shines through. The Turok-Han army goes up in smoke and the entire town of Sunnydale begins to collapse into the Hellmouth. As the slayer brigade flees, Buffy professes her love for Spike even as his shining body begins to disintegrate. Cackling joyfully, Spike orders Buffy to save herself, and she does -- running across the tops of crumbling buildings and leaping onto the school bus that has become her army's unlikely rescue vehicle. Buffy and her allies are left to stare at the ruins of Sunnydale, mourn their losses -- including Anya (Emma Caulfield), who died protecting Andrew (Tom Lenk) from The First's bringers -- and contemplate their future in a world full of slayers. Originally broadcast May 20, 2003, on UPN, "Chosen" marked the 144th and final episode of the cult-favorite series. Although star Sarah Michelle Gellar officially pulled the plug on the show when she decided against renewing her contract, creator Joss Whedon said in interviews that he preferred to go out on top rather than allowing the series to linger past its creative peak. Fans were left with one final mystery: How would James Marsters join the cast of spin-off series Angel when his character, Spike, had died saving the world? ~ Brian J. Dillard, All Movie Guide
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Wikipedia: Chosen (Buffy the Vampire Slayer)
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"Chosen"
Buffy the Vampire Slayer episode
Episode no. Season 7
Episode 22
Written by Joss Whedon
Directed by Joss Whedon
Guest stars Anthony Stewart Head
   (Giles)
Eliza Dushku
   (Faith)
Nathan Fillion
   (Caleb)
David Boreanaz
   (Angel)
Tom Lenk
   (Andrew)
Iyari Limon
   (Kennedy)
Sarah Hagan
   (Amanda)
Indigo
   (Rona)
D. B. Woodside
   (Principal Wood)
Production no. 7ABB22
Original airdate May 20, 2003
Episode chronology
← Previous Next →
"End of Days" "The Long Way Home"
List of Buffy the Vampire Slayer episodes

"Chosen" is Episode 22 of Season 7 and the series finale of Buffy the Vampire Slayer.

Contents

Plot synopsis

Summary

"Chosen" depicts the events leading to and including the final battle between the potential Slayers, organized by Buffy and her associates, and the First Evil. In this episode, Buffy and her friends fight the First Evil and in the end, stand victorious.

Expanded overview

A bloody Caleb rises and Buffy finally kills him with the scythe by slicing him in two from the crotch up. Angel gives Buffy an amulet intended to be worn by someone ensouled, yet more than human. He tells her he will fight alongside her, but she turns him down, asking him to instead organize a second front in case she loses to The First. They discuss Spike, his soul, and Buffy's feelings for him. When Angel asks about the future, and if he has a place in it Buffy explains that she still needs to grow up. As he walks into the shadows, echoing his very first appearance, Buffy tells him there might be a future for them, but it will be a long time coming, if ever. He walks off after saying "I ain't getting any older."

Back at the house, Dawn angrily kicks Buffy in the shin for having Xander try to take her away from Sunnydale in the previous episode. Spike is in the basement, working out his anger on a punching bag with a crude drawing of Angel's face on it. He asks for the amulet, whose exchange he had witnessed from the shadows, and she explains that it is very powerful and meant only for a champion. She then hands it to him. Buffy tells Spike coyly that Faith still sleeps in her bedroom and she has nowhere to sleep. Spike says he doesn't want Buffy downstairs with him, because he still has his pride. When Buffy starts to walk upstairs, he says he doesn't have any pride at all when it comes to her and he says she can stay.

Late at night, as Buffy and Spike are sleeping in each other's arms, the First appears to taunt Buffy in the form of Caleb. His words give Buffy a plan; when Spike wakes up, Buffy tells him that she now knows that they will win.

The next morning, Buffy unveils her plan to the potentials off-camera. Afterward, Willow expresses to Kennedy her concerns about using magic again. She says this is the most powerful magic she will have attempted and asks Kennedy to kill her if it turns bad. Faith and Principal Wood also have a discussion while preparing the school for the battle. Wood demonstrates that he understands her defensiveness over getting emotionally involved with men and asks her to give him a chance after the battle. During the night, Buffy goes to the basement, where she apparently spends her last night with Spike.

The next morning, everyone arrives at Sunnydale High in a yellow school bus. The Potentials head to the seal in the basement while Kennedy helps Willow set up her spell in Principal Wood's office. After trying to give a farewell speech, Andrew is dragged off by Anya. Dawn leaves to set up her post with Xander, determined to see her sister again. Principal Wood leaves to wait at his post for Giles. The core four share a moment talking about going to the mall after saving the world which causes Giles to say "the earth is definitely doomed," echoing the end of the second episode of the first season of Buffy. Xander and Willow walk down the hallway with Buffy before each one peels off, leaving Buffy walking alone to the seal. The Potentials, Faith and Spike are waiting, and the potentials/slayers cut their hands to open the seal with their blood. They climb down the hole in the ground and come face to face with the army of Turok-Han. The Ubervamps spot Buffy, Faith and the Potentials, and attack. "Come on, Wil," Buffy pleads.

Willow sits in Principal Woods' office, the scythe before her. While chanting a spell, she places her hands upon the scythe, and both she and the scythe light up in an ethereal glow and her hair turns white, the opposite of Dark Willow. A flashback to Buffy's final speech to the Potentials reveals that Willow is channeling the essence of the scythe in order to activate Potentials all over the world. Defying the tradition of only one slayer per generation, Willow's spell will raise an army strong enough to do battle with The First. As Willow performs the actual magic, Kennedy tells Willow that she is a goddess. "And you're a Slayer," Willow replies. Kennedy takes the scythe to Buffy, who is deep in the fight with Faith and Spike against the army of the Turok-Han, numbering in the thousands.

As she pauses to give orders, Buffy is stabbed through her abdomen from behind by one of the Turok-Han and falls to the ground. She passes the scythe to Faith and asks her to hold the line. As she lies on the ground, she sees several Slayers fall, including Amanda. In the halls of the school, a few Turok-Han make it to the surface and attack the group guarding the entrances. A small group of Bringers also appear and attack. During the battle, Anya is bisected by a Bringer. Andrew fights until he is overwhelmed. Principal Wood is brutally stabbed by a Bringer who is then killed by Giles. Xander and Dawn take on some Turok-Han who are disintegrated by sunlight when Dawn throws open a skylight window, but more follow. In the Hellmouth, the First then appears to Buffy as a mortally wounded Buffy herself, saying "What more do you want?". Ordering The First to "get out of my face!" Buffy arises with renewed determination and knocks several Turok-Han off the ledge. Other Slayers are reinvigorated as well. Just then, Spike's amulet consumes him in blue light and blasts a hole upward into the sky. The sunlight is channeled through the amulet and in powerful rays that begin dusting the ubervamps. The ground begins to shake and rocks tumble. The few surviving Slayers start to flee. Buffy tells Spike to do so as well, but he insists on finishing it. They share a quiet moment as the world crumbles around them. With tears in her eyes, Buffy tells Spike she loves him, to which he replies, "No you don't. But thanks for saying it." He orders her to leave as he has to stay and finish the job. Buffy leaves and Spike disintegrates as the Hellmouth collapses.

On the way out of the school, the Slayers find Andrew crouched in a corner. Xander yells for Anya, whose dead and mangled body lies nearby. Dawn pulls him out. Faith is the last onto the bus and it pulls away, with Dawn looking through back for Buffy. Buffy, in the meantime, has climbed to the roof of the school and is running along rooftops trying to outrun the enlarging crater. She leaps onto the top of the bus. Watching as the bus speeds off out of town, the entire town collapses into itself.

The ground stops shaking. Everyone gets off the bus. Xander asks Andrew about Anya's death. He comforts Xander by telling him that Anya died saving him. Faith looks after a wounded Principal Wood. While Kennedy, Vi and a few others tend to the wounded newly made Slayers, everyone joins Buffy as they look at the large crater which was once Sunnydale. Giles asks how this could've happened, since everyone either died or is alive and with them. With sad eyes, Buffy answers with one word: "Spike". A silence follows, as everyone remembers their fight. Giles mentions that they should go to Cleveland as there's another Hellmouth there and lots more work to do. An exhausted Faith responds, "Can I push him in?". Dawn ponders, "What are we going to do now?" Buffy slowly begins to smile as she contemplates the future.

Acting

  • Sarah Michelle Gellar, Nicholas Brendon, Alyson Hannigan, Anthony Stewart Head and David Boreanaz are the only actors to have appeared in the first and final episodes of the series.
  • According to Joss Whedon's commentary, David Boreanaz was only available for 7 hours to film his scenes.

Starring

Special guest star

Guest stars

Co-starring

  • Felicia Day as Vi
  • Mary Wilcher as Shannon
  • Demetra Raven as Girl at Bat
  • Katie Gray as Indian Girl
  • Lisa Ann Cabasa as Injured Girl
  • Ally Matsumura as Japanese Girl
  • Kelly Wheeler as School Girl
  • Jenna Edwards as Trailer Girl
  • Julia Ling as Potential with Power #2

Production details

Writing

Season Seven explores the fundamental separation between the Slayer and other people, which the series finale turns upside down.[1] As J. Lichtenberg points out in her essay on heroism in the Buffyverse, Buffy is a hero because she makes her own rules. "Finally an adult, Buffy rejects the fate laid out for her by the Council of Watchers and a couple of old men millennia ago," Lichtenberg writes. "She finally achieves her goal of normality - not by changing her own nature, but by making others like her."[2]

In a BBC interview before this episode aired, writer/director Joss Whedon said, "If nobody cries... then I've definitely failed. It's really emotional - you're supposed to laugh, cry and gasp with excitement - as well as take away a beautiful feminist message."[3] He acknowledges that the magic unleashed from the scythe in this episode is "somewhat convenient," but as a writer, it was more important for him to get to the show's message of empowerment by showing what Willow's magic and Buffy's status as the Slayer means to each of them.[4] He also admits that the Turok-Han vampires in this episode are far easier to kill in this episode than in previous episodes (in which Anya noted their tough chest bones make staking them extremely difficult) because "Again, I was more interested in the showing the empowerment than I was in the continuity."[4]

Whedon knew he "wanted to kill somebody... brutally and suddenly and never really pay it off. I wanted a death that was a real middle-of-the-battle death — the opposite of the Spike death, perfect, noble."[5] Emma Caulfield stated at the beginning of Season 7 that this would be her last season on Buffy, even if the show was renewed for another season,[6] and so Caulfield was happy to have Anya be the character who was killed.[7]

The scene in which Giles, Buffy, Xander, and Willow are together in the hallway before they eventually split off into their separate parties mirrors a scene in "The Harvest", in which Buffy, Xander, and Willow ignore Giles completely and walk off talking to each other leaving Giles to remark to himself, "the earth is doomed." In this episode, the same thing occurs when Buffy, Xander, and Willow ignore Giles completely and walk off talking to each other and Giles is left standing there alone where he comments that "The earth is definitely doomed."

Cultural references

  • Charmed: Willow exclaims the line "Oh My Goddess!", which Whedon later revealed to be a reference to the Charmed episode of the same name. Both supernatural series originally aired on the WB, with Angel eventually becoming a "companion series" to Charmed on Sunday nights.
  • Dawson's Creek: When Angel returns to help Buffy and shows jealously towards Spike, Buffy gets annoyed and says, "Are you just going to come here and go all Dawson on me every time I have a boyfriend?" implying that Angel's emotions echo that of Dawson Leery, the love-lorn and sensitive title character of the show, which also aired on the WB.

Music

  • Robert Duncan - "Every Girl, a Slayer"
  • Robert Duncan - "Slayer Victory"
  • Robert Duncan - "The Final Fight"

Translations

  • French title: "La Fin des Temps - 2ème partie" ("The End of Times - Part 2")
  • German title: "Das Ende der Zeit – Teil 2" ("The End of Time: Part 2")
  • Italian title: On TV "La Prescelta" ("The Chosen One") or, on DVD, "Prescelta" ("Chosen")
  • Spanish title: "La Elegida" ("The Chosen One")
  • Japanese title: "選ばれし者" ("The Chosen One")

Reception and reviews

"Chosen" attracted 4.9 million viewers on its original run.[citation needed] SFX, a British sci-fi magazine, listed "Chosen" the 8th best episode of Buffy (number one was "Hush").

The episode was nominated for both a 2003 Emmy Award in the Category of Special Visual Effects for a Series, and for the 2004 Hugo Award for Best Dramatic Presentation, Short Form.[8]

In the UK, "Chosen" had become the highest rated Buffy episode ever to air on Sky One, reaching 1.32 million viewers.

Promotional advertisement

The 30 second television ad begins with the mention of sponsor Acuvue Cam, cutting to a montage of clips from "Chosen", such as Caleb threatening Buffy, Buffy and Spike in the Hellmouth, Willow enchanted, and Buffy knocking three Turok-Hans off a cliff.

It also features clips from previous episodes of the season, such as Xander lighting a match ("Get It Done"), the Hellmouth seal ("Storyteller"), and Buffy rising from the floor in ("Never Leave Me").

Throughout the ad, the voice over utters: The end is here… Be there when the Slayer takes her last stand. Will this be Buffy's final hour? Or her finest hour? The earth shattering series finale…

The ad concludes with a final mention of Acuvue Cam.

Continuity

Arc significance

  • Sunnydale is destroyed, and the Hellmouth there closed. The "Welcome to Sunnydale" sign is knocked down for a third time in the series, and again because of Spike's actions [the first two being his raucous arrival in "School Hard" and return "Lovers Walk"].
  • The First is foiled in its plans.
  • Anya is killed in battle by a Bringer. Interestingly, Whedon joked about having her killed in the fifth season finale, which was originally intended for series finale.
  • All potential Slayers in the world are now actual Slayers, with the attendant physical strength, instincts, and visions. This is explored further in the Angel episode "Damage".
  • After changing the world and activating all the Potentials, a rift is formed between Buffy and Dawn which would become apparent in Season Eight.
  • Amanda is the only named Potential to die in the final battle. Kennedy, Rona, and Vi go on to have roles in Season Eight. Chao-Ahn and Shannon are both alive at the end of the episode as well, although neither one has made any appearances since then.
  • Spike returns from his apparent death to be resurrected nineteen days later in the Angel episode "Conviction".

References

  1. ^ Miller, Laura (May 20, 2003), The man behind the Slayer, http://dir.salon.com/story/ent/tv/int/2003/05/20/whedon/index.html?pn=3, retrieved on 2007-07-17 
  2. ^ Lichtenberg, Jacqueline (2004), "Victim Triumphant", in Glenn Yeffeth, Five Seasons of Angel, BenBella, pp. 135, ISBN 1-932100-33-4 
  3. ^ Interview with Joss Whedon: The crying game, BBC, http://www.bbc.co.uk/cult/buffy/interviews/joss2003/page1.shtml, retrieved on 2007-07-17 
  4. ^ a b Whedon, Joss, "Chosen" (Commentary by Joss Whedon), Buffy the Vampire Slayer: The Complete Seventh Season on DVD, Twentieth Century Fox, 2004.
  5. ^ Buffy Postmortem: Is Spike Dead?, TV Guide, May 23, 2003, http://www.tvguide.com/News-Views/Interviews-Features/Article/default.aspx?posting={5FDEA1CB-274B-48FD-910B-990971C7706F}, retrieved on 2007-09-28 
  6. ^ Anya's final vengeance, BBC, 22 July 2002, http://www.bbc.co.uk/cult/buffy/news/archive/02072202.shtml, retrieved on 2007-09-28 
  7. ^ Stacy, Greg, FROM THE VAULTS: Emma Caulfield on BUFFY’s final days, http://gregstacy.wordpress.com/2006/12/21/emma-caulfield-on-buffy%E2%80%99s-final-days/, retrieved on 2007-09-28 
  8. ^ Hugo and Retro Hugo Nominations, http://www.noreascon.org/hugos/nominees.html, retrieved on 2008-02-22 

External links

See also


 
 

 

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