Buffy 7x10 Bring on the Night

In fact, she was supposed to be at first.

[spoiler]And ultimately, she is at the end, too. :([/spoiler]

It’s OK. Tree pretty. :stuck_out_tongue:

explain to me why holding Spike underwater is torture. vampires don’t breathe, do they?

I remember getting into arguments over this scene.

I maintain that vampires don’t need to breathe and therefore can’t drown, but their human bodies “remember” the sensation, even if the danger isn’t real.

It’s like waterboarding.

“You, uh, better not hog the covers.”
“Does she want to eat?”
“Huh? What?” :smiley:

“how long have you followed Buffy?”

huh, didn’t know the Slayer was on Twitter :smiley:

interesting theory. I like

And the Turok-Han kicks Buffy’s ass. :eek:

and later, they’ll be killable by potentials. where’s the logic?

yeah, The First is googleable. silly silly Buffy

900,000+ hits for “evil” on the web in 2002? I wonder how many there would be now?

ETA: About 530,000,000 results (0.18 seconds)

M Night Shamalamadingdong lied to us?!?!?!??

Conservation of Ninjutsu

“I’m like Vader in the last five minutes of Jedi.” :smiley:

Note the “BPI” trash bin. :slight_smile:

interesting link, gracias :slight_smile:

BPI? is that related to the distinct Terminator-vibe I’m getting?

From Wikipedia:

The Turok-Han army’s performance in the final battle of the series is noticeably worse than the performance of the first Turok-Han. While the first Turok-Han nearly killed Buffy, forcing her to use every possible resource to defeat it the second time around, the later Turok-Han seem evenly matched against the newly activated Slayers and even normal humans such as Xander and Dawn. In the audio commentary for the episode, creator Joss Whedon explains he is aware of the continuity issue with the Turok-Han’s powers. He acknowledges that early in the season the demon was nearly unstoppable, yet in the final episode the Slayers can defeat the Turok-Han much more easily. Whedon explains that the story behind the season/episode he wanted to get across to viewers was more important than the continuity.

“They want an apocalypse? Well, we’ll give them one.” :cool: