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HELPLESS (3x12)
A review by Mikelangelo "MikeJer" Marinaro

Writer(s): David Fury
Director: James A. Contner
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- Review

An emotionally gripping episode that tests the previously thought solid relationship between Buffy and Giles to the extreme while also being one of the better 'horror' episodes in the entire series' run. On a show with a less capable show-runner, this episode would have been a solid but forgetful episode. With Joss Whedon in charge things go in, once again, completely new directions. Relationships, jobs, locations, and even life itself isn't a given on this show. Each of those things could change for any of the characters in an instant, as the death of Jenny Calendar in "Passion" (2x17) and the firing of Giles here demonstrates. This is what stand-alone episodes are supposed to do!

The episode begins with Buffy and Angel training together. It's really fun seeing them playing around in an innocent way, but as soon as she jumps on top of him things heat up extremely quickly. This unreleased sexual tension makes her want to go out and patrol right away. Buffy doesn't get her sexual fix so now she wants to go kill something. Faith's "hungry and horny" theory continues to gain points. This eventually leads to the scene at night where Buffy gets dizzy in the middle of a vampire fight. Her stake then gets turned around and she almost gets staked herself. This action is unusual and exciting to see. Note that she actually does get stabbed with her own stake in "Fool for Love" (5x07).

Buffy later explains to Giles what happened. He of course knows what's going on and lies to protect the truth of the "the test" from her. The 'test' itself is interesting to consider but is ultimately nonsense. Is this excercise really helpful and will it make Buffy stronger? Perhaps in some ways, but it's still a violation of her body and fundamentally wrong. Not only that, but Quentin Travers seems to toss aside Giles' concerns about Buffy's life. The most likely way the Slayer can fail this test is to die. Is that the purpose? Either the Slayer is strong enough or let a new one be called? All this seems completely ridiculous to me. If a Slayer is still alive by her eighteenth birthday that should be proof enough of her ability. It would have been useful to know more about the specifics of the test because I see it as something that would never be done by an organization trying to help in the fight against evil, especially not in today's world.

The slow removal of Buffy's strength is underpinned by the father-daughter theme running through the episode. Buffy gets all excited that her dad is coming to take her to the ice show. She soon discovers that he bailed on her. After this huge disappointment she decides she has had enough of her dad's antics and realizes that he won't ever be there for her. At this point she does her best to accept that fact and move on with her life. Occasionally, though, we see just how much her father's absence in her life has hurt her. She makes her feelings painfully clear in "Forever" (5x17) when she says, "I can call my bastard father again to tell him that his ex-wife, our mother is gone." Even as late as "Normal Again" (6x17) we see her wishing her parents were still together, in love, and there to take care of her.

With her father's neglection exposed she next turns to Giles to be that father figure for her. He's completely distracted by his 'job' to notice her cries for fatherly love. It's pretty touching that she'd even ask him to go with her and shows just how far these two have come together since the beginning of the series. Unfortunately this makes it extra painful to see him put her in a trance so he can stick a needle in her. Poor Buffy just can't win today and I feel terrible for her.

When it begins to look doubtful that she'll get her powers back, Buffy begins to consider life without powers again. In reality this is actually what she's always wanted and explains this to Willow. The problem is that she knows about the supernatural world now and can't turn her back on fighting it, powers or not. She realizes with some finality that she'll never have a normal life, even if the Slayer responsibilities were pushed aside, so she can finally be at some kind of peace with her life. This is why she's so quick to ask Giles if he's found out anything about her weakness. We don't actually see Buffy complaining much about living a normal life after this episode.

All of these threads come together in the saddening library scene where Giles shocks Buffy with the news that he is poisoning her with muscle relaxants to make her weak. All that painstaking trust that was built between these two people has been violently destroyed in this massive betrayal of Buffy's body and trust. She literally is having trouble even believing what Giles is telling her, and I can't blame her.

This is the very first time Buffy catches a glimpse of this part of Giles' personality. Giles is always willing to do whatever is needed for the "greater good." While he never fully supports this 'test' he does go along with it until things begin to get out of control. He ends up ignoring council orders and goes to help Buffy fight the vampire because he realizes that the test is actually stupid and isn't for any "greater good." However, we see this "do what needs to be done" side of Giles come out again at several important junctions in the series, most notably in "The Gift" (5x22) when he kills Ben and again in "Lies My Parents Told Me" (7x17) when he stalls Buffy so that Wood can kill Spike.

I really enjoyed the entire ending "hide and seek" horror section where Buffy is trying to rescue her mom without her powers. It's all genuinely creepy including the very well-acted moment when Buffy pulls out a cross, shaking but determined, and then the vampire grabs her arm and puts the cross on his stomach and keeps pulling it lower and lower getting some kind of satisfaction out of the pain. Buffy is naturally scared and disgusted by it and runs off.

All of the above would have made a really good episode, but courtesy of Whedon we get even more. Giles gets fired because, as Quentin puts it, he has a "father's love" of Buffy. Hearing what Giles gave up to help her begins to heal the wounds of his betrayal. After Quentin leaves, Giles comes over to Buffy and in a tender moment, takes the wet cloth Buffy was using to wipe the blood off her forehead and cleans it for her. Buffy will never be able to 'fully' trust Giles again after this episode even though much of it is recovered from his after-the-fact actions.

To sum it up, I thought this episode was great. It had loads of darkness, raw emotion, and lasting importance which were all brought to life by the wonderful acting of Anthony Stewart Head and Sarah Michelle Gellar. My only complaints involve wondering why the vampire needs to take pills and some pacing issues. Otherwise this is another top-notch episode to add to the amazingly consistent third season.


- Minor Pros/Cons (+/-)
+  Seeing Cordelia fend off a guy who threw Buffy is shocking.
+  Finally seeing other members of the Watcher's Council.
+  Angel's explanation of how he met Buffy before she was a Slayer.
+  A bruised and betrayed Buffy shoving the flowers her dad sent her into the trash.
+  The creepy and sick vampire is a really good foe for a weakened Buffy.
+  Buffy pouring holy water into the crazy vampire's pill glass.
+  Cute ending scene in Buffy's kitchen. Xander can't open the peanut butter jar either.
-  The early scenes with Quentin Travers are really awkward.
-  The scene where Giles finds the massacare at Sunnydale Arms goes on a bit too long.

- Foreshadowing
  • Buffy's dad bails on her, apparently because of work. We find out later that he's off in Spain with a secretary "living the cliche" and that he decides to completely abandon Buffy.

- Quotes
XANDER:  An ice show? A show performed on ice. And how old are we again?
WILLOW:  I went to Snoopy On Ice when I was little. My dad took me backstage and I got so scared I threw up on Woodstock.
BUFFY:  Look, I know you guys think it's just a big, dumb, girlie thing, but it's not. I mean, a lot of those skaters are Olympic medal winners. And every year my dad buys me cotton candy and one of those souvenir programs that has all the pictures, and okay, it's a big, dumb, girlie thing, but I love it.
OZ:  It's not so girlie. Ice is cool! It's water, but it's not.

BUFFY:  I think it might be time to put a moratorium on parties in my honor. They tend to go badly. Monsters crash. People die.
WILLOW:  But eighteen is a big one, Buffy. I mean, you can vote now. You can be drafted. (smiles) You can vote not to be drafted.

WILLOW:  Aha! A curse on Slayers. Oh, no. Wait. I-it's lawyers.

BUFFY:  (RE
ANGEL:  You really like it?
BUFFY:  Of course I do. It's sweet and thoughtful and... full of neat words to learn and say like 'wilt' and 'henceforth'.
ANGEL:  Then why'd you seem more excited last year when you got a severed arm in a box?


- Score
95/100
A
A sharply written episode consisting of zero major mistakes. Usually develops characters in a meaningful manner and is a joy to watch on repeat viewings. Near perfect, but not quite there.

- Awards
  • Most Shocking in S3

- Screencaps


- Comments (23)

1.bookworm   Apr 04 2006
question: Buffy's without power, she was attacked by a vampire couldn't fight him, the life of her mother was at risk, everybody already knew that Angel was alive and that they were seeing each other. Why didn't she go to him for help?

I can imagine it's quite difficult to locate Faith (they got along quite well at that point) and time's a major thing, but all she would have needed to do was call Angel (or head over) and ask him to meet her there...

of course, it wouldn't have been that creepy and she wouldn't have passed the test, but duh...

I'm seeing a major change in her behaviour from s.2 "passion" until that point: in "passion" Buffy said: "Every time something like this happens, my first instinct is still to run to Angel..." and now she hasn't any powers and she's doing it alone, doesn't (even) want HIM anymore to take care of her when lives of loved ones depend on her ability to fight vampires...

and anybody is wondered that she doesn't let Riley take care of her in season five, when she's pumped up with power and he's just with normal human strength???

2.mikejer   Apr 08 2006
I just wanted to say that you pose a good question on "Helpless." I don't have the answer to it though. That's just a decision the writers decided to make, likely for a bigger impact.

3.Grounded   Apr 09 2006
Angel is living the mansion at this point right? Does he have a phone?

4.bookworm   Apr 11 2006
it's very likely (that Angel has a phone) because in Graduation Day Pt.1 he had contact with Giles, who wanted him to help Buffy with the volcanologist-thing. and I'm way sure that Angel didn't pass by at the library.

I'm quite on the "writers-impact"-side too. Maybe Buffy needed the proof for herself (way down) that she will be able to handle herself without the power, because she's scared of the impacts of less strength.
- QUOTE -
"What if I just hide under my bed, all scared and helpless? Or what if I just become pathetic? Hanging out at the old Slayer's home, talking people's ears off about my glory days, showing them Mr. Pointy, the stake I had bronzed."
Or maybe they really wanted to show an estrangement between Buffy and Angel (or Buffy and everyone).

5.Fallen   Apr 11 2006
And they also had to find a way to begin healing the break between Buffy and Giles. She needs to go on her own to regain her own strength and she needs to get help from Giles to repair their bond. The writers think out the story that needs to be told, the growth that the characters need to make, and the plot follows.

6.Grounded   Apr 11 2006
Yeah, but it's hardly fair to say Buffy wouldn't ask Angel for help if her life was in serious danger. It's a plot hole, for sure.

7.bookworm   Apr 11 2006
her life at danger, well not so much the point. her mother's life at danger: big big point!!!

8.Dingdong   May 10 2006
By the way, Mikejer, in your review for Helpless - which I more or less agree with - you said you wondered why the Vampire needed to take pills. I personally think the addiction was deliberately induced into th addiction by the Watcher's Council, to give them a hold on him, and possibly to make the test for the slayer slightly more controlled, giving her a specific flaw to look for, and exploit. Possibly also to make it less easy for the Vampire to kill her if she lost. Of course, the test is barbaric, anyway, but it makes sense that the Watchers' Council would have done something like that.

9.Grounded   May 10 2006
I always assumed he was psychologically dependent on the pills from before becoming a vampire. I believe they mention he was in an asylum?

10.mikejer   May 10 2006
Yeah, I think Grounded's right. But I do agree that they likely picked a vampire with a tangeable weakness for this test, so the Slayer has at least some resemblence of a fair chance. Still, bad test!

11.Dingdong   May 10 2006
I disagree here, mainly because when humans are sired, weaknesses of the flesh most of the time disappear. Mind problems do not, as is evidenced by Dru, but physical shortcomings such as illnesses and addictions do not seem to on the show. You could argue that the addiction was purely psychological, but somehow it seemed very physical to me.

12.Grounded   May 10 2006
But as you say, 'weaknesses of the flesh' disappear after siring, so how can it be physical?

13.Dingdong   May 11 2006
As I said, weaknesses of the flesh disappear after siring, but that doesn't mean they can't be induced. After all Spike had to use a wheelchair after "What's my Line" and so its just as likely the Watchers' Council could induce an addiction to pills.

14.Grounded   May 11 2006
Sounds like a hell of a lot of trouble to go to since they already have the guy chained up in a box...

15.Dingdong   May 11 2006
This are the reasons I think they might have indced the addiction. As you might have seen in the episode, having him locked in the box was hardly the most reliable precaution.

16.Grounded   May 11 2006
I'm not quite sure how inducing a drug dependency works as a precautionary measure...

17.robgnow   Apr 15 2007
I would say its mostly psychological on Kralik's part. Drug dependency can be a powerful mental block for anyone and we have to assume that when he was human his drugs made him feel better. But we also know that vampires can be affected by common enough drugs... knock out darts and alcohol just being two. It's certainly possible that even if he 'woke up' with no physical dependency, he quickly 'relapsed' into needing them due to his psychological dependency; especially if you go out on a limb and say that his symptoms (i.e. that bellowing in pain) was psychosomatically induced.

I generally don't like having to explain things that writers should take the time to, but I've been able to justify Kralik's flaws to myself. Especially since he's not the point of the series, the Buffy/Giles relationship is.

Rob

18.TheGuySlayer   May 19 2007
Awesome episode i really like it

19.Austin   Oct 5 2007
Interesting note that Angel gives Buffy an old (I think 1st edition) book and in real life SMG collects old books thought that was a nice touch

20.buffyholic   Oct 24 2007
Amazing episode and one who just gets better with each viewing. So many wonderful moments, like when Oz and Xander discuss the different types of kryponite, when Xander cannot open the jar or my favourite when Giles cleans the blood of her forehead. Wonderful acting, just wonderful.

21.Woohoo1729   Dec 10 2007
Great episode, and great review, Mike!

Two issues: (1) I also questioned the effectiveness of the test upon initial viewings, but it makes sense for the twisted Slayer mythology--a slayer may make it to her eighteenth birthday due to circumstances other than her ability to slay vampires--maybe she's locked up in jail or an asylum and cannot perform her duties, or perhaps she's just flat-out refused to fight demons and has masterfully escaped the slayer duties. This would pretty much halt the slayer line for a good number of years. The Council just wanted a failsafe to deal with these situations. But obviously, these are just ways for me to justify the merits of the test; it is admittedly kind of hokey and probably thought up by the writers for the purpose of this particular episode.

(2) I saw the pills as merely characterizing how mentally-unstable and therefore more frightening Kralik is. He's crazier than your normal run-of-the-mill vampire! I feel like for all of its merits, one thing that BtVS kind of fails at is consistency in explaining the relationship between a vampire and his/her human persona.

22.Kyarorin   Mar 16 2008
Considering that it's the pills that get the people from the Watcher's council killed in the first place, my guess is that they were part of a pre-existing condition he already had. They probably wouldn't even need to subdue him that way in the first place. All they would've needed is a trank gun and two guys to ship him off.

Other than that, I pretty much agree with all that has been said.

23.Katzchen   Sep 24 2008
Re: the purpose of the test. I figured it was BECAUSE the Slayer was turning eighteen, becoming an adult; the Watchers' Council needs the Slayer to be young, impressionable, and easily controlled so she can work for their agenda. Once the Slayer's an adult, she might start to think for herself, not be so easily controlled, go against the Council's wishes, so (to them) it makes sense to get rid of her before she can grow up and have the next impressionable, controllable young girl called.


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