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THE ZEPPO (3x13)
A review by Mikelangelo "MikeJer" Marinaro

Writer(s): Dan Vebber
Director: James Whitmore, Jr.
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- Review

In one of the most unique episodes of the entire series things that are normally important to the show are made meaningless. Most episodes of BtVS and television in general adopt a standard A-B plot scheme (sometimes it's A-B-C). The A plot is always the focus of the episode; the most important thing. The B plot is usually some small character issue that's relegated to the background. It seems obvious that the A plot of this episode is going to be this pending apocalypse, but very quickly we start to notice that something is very wrong and it appears to be the fault of the director. The apocalypse thread isn't getting the screen time it would normally warrant and instead the entire episode is about Xander! It turns out the A plot is Xander's journey for self confidence and the B plot is an apocalypse via the hellmouth. This is weird and twisted stuff which will make for a different review. Instead of hitting on specifics I think I'm just going to let my thoughts flow as they come and see what happens.

There's one scene in particular which sums up the entire episode, and I'm not sure yet if it sums it up in a positive or a negative way. This moment is when we jump in the middle of a melodramatic moment between Buffy and Angel crying about death and impending doom. Then Xander walks in, asks if he can help, then walks off and lets the melodrama continue. I think the intent is to let the audience mock and laugh at all the Buffy and Angel angst we've had to endure this season. While this is amusing to me on some level I kind of feel awkward about mocking what the show's like some of the time.

I think there's an important distinction I must make between this kind of Buffy and Angel angst and the bunch we usually see. In this episode, we come into the middle of the melodrama. We don't know what's going on, we don't understand their motivation for feeling as dire as they do, so there's no way we can sympathise with them. This gives the viewers of the show a chance to stand back from the usual fare and get a genuine chuckle at their angst. I don't think I need to feel bad about laughing at Buffy and Angel here. If I dropped into the middle of a big sequence of Romeo and Juliet without any explanation of their motivations, I can be assured that I'd probably find it equally ridiculous and laughable.

So I think with that distinction better laid out I can appreciate this episode more. We somehow are able to 'mock' the series without actually mocking it. That takes some careful writing and directing to pull off, so kudos to writer Dan Vebber and director James Whitmore Jr. Fortunately, the fun 'mocking' ploy isn't even the core of the episode. What we also get is so much character development for Xander that the impact won't fully sink in for many years to come.

While I really enjoyed seeing Xander's personal adventure I think it still could have been done a lot better. Having reanimated corpses be the catalyst for this ride is ultimately too corny to work. There are some genuinely amusing lines, sure, but the added corniness is not necessary to get the point across. I like what happened with Jack before the corpse stuff started and the ending bomb scene could have still been pulled off had Jack been human. This is the biggest mistake of the episode.

Early on Xander tries to convince Buffy and the gang that he's useful in their weekly demon skirmishes. He obviously doesn't do a very good job because everyone agrees to keep Xander out of the fighting for a while. The next day Cordelia amusingly lets her fury loose on him in a way that reminds us of her S1 days. She obviously has personal motivation to be snarky with him for what he did to her. Buffy later sends Xander to buy donuts for the group and that doesn't help matters either.

All of this leads Xander on a mission to discover what the "essence of cool" is. His first subject is Oz, who as Xander points out, is "more or less 'cool'." Oz doesn't seem to be able to provide Xander with any concrete answers, but Xander does come to the proposal that being cool means having a 'thing;' something that people can identify you with. Fast forward a bit and now we see "car guy" Xander. He thinks that maybe this stylish old car will make him 'cool.' Well, in some ways it does. Right away an attractive blond girl comes onto him and wants to go riding around in the car. He ends up taking her to the Bronze where he then sits there bored out of his mind. Xander gets a taste of being 'cool' and discovers he doesn't like it at all. He is so bored of hanging out with a 'cool' person that he even jumps up in excitement when Angel walks in and wants his company!

After some crazy antics with some reanimated corpses Xander eventually picks Faith up after a fight and they head off to her apartment. This is where Faith's logic kicks in: fight with no kill leads to sex. So she comes onto Xander and he doesn't do much to resist. I must admit that I'm a bit surprised Xander would have sex with someone he doesn't know very well. Sure he got excited about her stories about being nude and rassling aligators in "Faith, Hope, and Trick" (3x03), but this is a big jump from that. We saw Oz show sexual restraint with Willow in "Amends" (3x10), but I guess Xander's the type who will have sex with just about any girl who jumps on his lap and isn't under a spell. I can't say I respect him for that but it does make for some amusing future storylines (Anya in S4 for example).

Xander learns things about himself and he has a growing confidence within, but it takes him a long while to fully seize that confidence and lets it rise to the forefront. We see this again and again from this episode to "The Replacement" (5x03) to "Hell's Bells" (6x16). Xander shows a moment of self confidence here when he confronts Jack in the basement of the school and gets him to defuse the bomb. He shows even more maturity when he doesn't feel the need to tell the Scooby Gang what he did and again when he lets Cordelia's snarky comments go without a response. It's important to realize that this is just a temporary attitude, at least in this episode. People don't change overnight, it takes time and many reminders before we finally "get it." This is what happens to Xander throughout the series as he slowly does 'get it.' I feel that by S7 he finally begins to grab a hold of his life and lets that confidence he's always had inside him finally play a more prominent role in his personality. Lets not forget that by series end he's still only in his early twenties. Buffy's cookie dough speech in "Chosen" (7x22) applies not just to her but to all the main characters.

This is a unique episode that dances on some very fine lines and comes out mostly successful. I'm not a fan of the reanimated corpses plot thread but everything else ranging from the A and B plot swap and Xander's moments of self confidence all sit well with me. On top of all that there are some fantastic lines given to Xander which constitute some of his best in the entire series.


- Minor Pros/Cons (+/-)
+  Willow doing spells to help the gang fight.
+  The episode essentially pushes the apocalypse storyline to the background.
+  Oz eating Jack at the end and then being "oddly full" the next morning.
-  The werewolf howl.

- Quotes
BUFFY:  (worried) Xander, one of these days, you're gonna get yourself hurt.
FAITH:  Or killed.
BUFFY:  Or both. A-and, you know, with the pain and the death, maybe you shouldn't be leaping into the fray like that. M-maybe you should be... fray-adjacent.

BUFFY:  Uh, what do we do with the trio here? Should we burn them?
WILLOW:  (smiles) I brought marshmallows.
:  (everyone gives her a look)
WILLOW:  Occasionally, I'm callous and strange.

JACK:  (not amused) What are you, retarded?
XANDER:  No! No, I had to take that test when I was seven. A little slow in some stuff, mostly math and spatial relations, but certainly not challenged or anything.

XANDER:  I mean, you yourself, Oz, are considered more or less cool. Why is that?
OZ:  Am I?
XANDER:  Is it about the talking? You know, the way you tend to express yourself in short, noncommittal phrases?
OZ:  Could be.
XANDER:  I know! You're in a band! That's like a business-class ticket to cool with complementary mojo after takeoff! I gotta learn an instrument. Is it hard to play guitar?
OZ:  Not the way I play it.

XANDER:  You girls need a lift?
BUFFY:  What is this?
XANDER:  What do you mean, what is it? It's my thing.
WILLOW:  Your thing?
XANDER:  (emphatically) My thing!
BUFFY:  (frowns uncertainly) Is this a penis metaphor?
XANDER:  (sighs heavily) It's my thing that makes me cool. You know, that makes me unique. I'm Car Guy. Guy with the car.

GILES:  Um, to try and contact the Spirit Guides. They exist out of time, but have knowledge of the future. I have no idea if they will respond to my efforts, but I have to try. All we know is that the fate of the entire world rests on it. Did you eat all the jellies?
BUFFY:  (innocently) Did you want a jelly?
GILES:  (petulantly) I always have a jelly. I'm always the one that says 'let's have a jelly in the mix.'
WILLOW:  We're sorry. (tattles quickly) Buffy had three.

JACK:  I'm gonna carve you up and serve you with gravy. You piss me off, boy. Now you pay the price. First the eyes, then the tongue. I'm gonna break every one of your fingers.
XANDER:  You gonna do all that in forty-nine seconds?

- Score
85/100
B+
Just misses the mark of excellence. Essentially, a great episode that's rough around the edges and/or slightly flawed. Extremely fun to watch.

- Screencaps


- Comments (13)

1.robgnow   Apr 15 2007
Here's my only problem with this episode, but its a big one. I just can't buy the premise that Buffy would push Xander in fray-adjacent territory this late in the series. If this episode had happened in S1 or better yet (since there was better writing then) the beginning of S2, I'd be fully on board.

Rob

2.Ausitn   Aug 23 2007
Yes but then it would have been akward because willow wasn't a witch, oz wasn't part of the gang yet, but by placing the episode here, we are left with only xander being powerless, which is a big part of his confidence issues he has to work out in this ep. This is really the only time this worked because soon anya comes into his life and he is not as alone anymore.

3.AeC   Sep 14 2007
I just rewatched this the other night, and about midway through, I thought, "Rosencrantz and Guildenstern in Sunnydale" (perhaps "Rosencrantz and Guildenstern are Undead" would have been more apt). It doesn't remotely parallel Stoppard's play, but I do wonder if the "minor character in the A role" aspect was in some part an inspiration.

4.Austin   Oct 5 2007
My Favorite Quote from this ep and one of my all time favs is this:

Xander: But gee Mr. White if Clark and Lois get all the good stories, I never be a good reporter!

Giles: Huh?

Xander: Jimmy Olson Joke sir, pretty much gonna be lost on you.

Giles: Sorry

Xander: It's OK

and then later

Cordelia: You must feel like Jimmy Olson

Xander: Yeah, I was just talkin' to Gi-Hey!


5.buffyholic   Oct 24 2007
This is a very unique episode and that´s one of the reasons I find this so amusing. Everything in this episode is seen through Xander´s perspective and I like it. Everything is so exaggerated like the apocalypse stuff or the scene between Buffy and Angel. Very funny.

6.Plain Simple   Nov 29 2007
I also didn't like the raising of the dead part very much. It also creates some continuity issues with later parts of the series.

The mask at the beginning of S3 resurrects the dead, but only as brainless zombies and also in S5, when Dawn resurrects Joyce she comes back as a zombie who is not really her anymore. The only time I think someone was succesfully resurrected except for in this episode, was Buffy in S6, but that costed a lot of effort and knowledge of magic. So much even that when Willow later tries to resurrect Tara it fails. But in this episode everything seems so simple!

7.Kyarorin   Mar 16 2008
I think that the difference between what Jack did here and what Willow does later in the season is because Willow actually cares about the state of Buffy and Tara (meaning that she wants to ressurect them as human). Jack and his gang don't care about that, so they don't bother to do it the formal way. And about the brainless part, well, Jack raised a bunch of undead frat guys. Is there really much of a difference? XD

And the reason Willow couldn't ressurect Tara was because it was part of natural human events, while Buffy's was the result of a mystical hell-portal thingy. Also, Osiris's urn got broken, which technically means that Osiris can no longer be properly invoked in raising the dead.

8.Ianu   Mar 18 2008
About the mocking that you mentionned earlier on in this review, one thing that I've always liked about this series is its ability to make fun of itself. There are things the writers stick into this series that is purely for that function, which is why I didn't even think of feeling bad when I watched this. My favourite example of this is the Xander (I think) and Anya dialogue in Potential:

Xander: A slayer. Makes sense, I guess. Remember that thing about they share the same blood or whatever?

Anya: Yeah, I never got that.

9.Llinnae   Jun 12 2008
This is a higly amusing episode (like others I love it when the writers mock themselves!)but my only complaint would be that since the episode is based mainly on Xander's search for self-confidence (as with other episodes ex. "the Replacement") i think that it would be made all the more better if Xander actually did get more confortable in his own skin as the series progresses. On the whole I see a slight change in character, but does Xander ever build much more confidence?

10.Nix   Jun 30 2008
Hang on. Something doesn't make sense here.

The Hellmouth is directly under the library, right?

But... the bomb in the basement was directly under the library.

So is the basement part of the Hellmouth? It didn't look terribly Hellmouthy, if you ignore the menacing bastard with a bomb and the werewolf. (And boyoboy can he ever project menace.)

(I suppose the other interpretation is that the Hellmouth's depth in realspace is tiny; that it wanders off into a hell dimension almost at once. Or perhaps I am, yet again, overanalyzing this.)

11.Rekidk   Nov 23 2008
What I found most interesting about this episode was the feeling it created. It's hard to describe, but it's something like this:

People live DIFFERENT lives - as one person does one thing and has one experience, another person is doing another thing and is having an entirely different experience. An event which majorly impacts one person's life might be unimportant in another's life.

Seeing the Hellmouth storyline from an outside perspective (in which the pending apocalypse is, frankly, unimportant) is fascinating to me, and the 'different people have different experiences' thing is summed up in the closing scene where Xander chooses not to share his adventures with the Scoobies.

I know this is sort of echoing the statements everyone else has made, but I thought I'd just throw my two cents in. =)

12.Sanjuro   Nov 30 2008
This might be the most quotable Buffy episode there is, because none of it relies on context. There's the Jimmy Olsen, the "Is this a penis metaphor?", "I'll call ya!" as the girl runs away terrified, "There was no part of that that wasn't fun," and my personal favorite:

Jack: You didn't squeal. That was decent of you. I like you.
Xander:...Yay?

13.Paula   Dec 15 2008
Is the bit with Xander (nearly) being forced to join a gang a nod at the movie American Graffiti, I wonder? For all I know the plot device has been in more generic use, but there are a lot of similarities between this episode and Curt's adventures in the movie - which also covers the goings-on of one night, as it happens.


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