(no subject)
May. 7th, 2009 09:56 amAn interview with Juliet Landau about the upcoming Dru comic here.
At the very end of the interview, in response to a suggestion that 'some people may blame Drusilla for spoiling Buffy and Spike's chances for love', Juliet responds, "If you put things in perspective, Spike and Dru were together for 150 years and he and Buffy were together for a year and a half. How many people can say they've had a love affair for 150 years?"
Thoughts on this, and on Spike/Dru behind cut.
Juliet is of course right. However, I don't know about anyone else, but I've always found Spike and Dru's 150 year love affair rather nebulous. This is because we saw so very little of it in the show, except for how it ended. Yes, a few little blanks are filled in over the years - notably in FFL, LMPTM and Destiny - but really, we know very little about their life together in those 150 years.
We know they appear to have stayed with Angelus and Darla at least some of the time early on, including during the trip to Rome in TGiQ and in Romania in 1898, and Spike and Dru are still with Darla when Angel returns to her in China in 1900. After that, beyond knowing they revisited Rome in the '50s (ciao!) and must at some point have been in Paris, because Dru hated it, and in Vienna because they slaughtered an orphanage there, and in Prague where Dru was hurt by a mob, we know precious little about what they got up to. There's no sign of Dru in 1943 (presumably she had better things to do than attend a free virgin blood party) or in NYC in 1977. This doesn't necessarily mean that she was off doing her own thing but can lead you to assume that the two of them weren't completely inseparable.
Anyway, what I'm getting at is that we really didn't see much of their 150 year relationship on screen. We have to take its existence largely on trust. That, to me, makes it hard to get invested in it. Buffy and Spike, and for that matter, Angel(us) and Darla, we saw play out on screen in front of us in all their technicolour nuanced glory, and that makes them far more immediate and real.
So basically, Juliet can say whatever she likes, and no doubt the comic she's co-writing will stress how much more important she thinks Dru was to Spike than Buffy ever was. It's natural that she would want to stake a claim for the character, who she clearly loved playing. But really, a comic book is not going to fill in those blanks in the way seeing a relationship play out on screen does, and for that reason alone - though there are plenty of other reasons too - Spike and Buffy will continue, in my eyes, to far outweigh Spike/Dru in importance.
Thoughts? I also have a post brewing about how odd it is that comic book writers/fan boys in general - even those who obviously do love the character a great deal - seem to have an irresitible urge to tear Spike down and make him look like an idiot. That's for another day, though.
Also, for the record, I am looking forward to Juliet's story.
At the very end of the interview, in response to a suggestion that 'some people may blame Drusilla for spoiling Buffy and Spike's chances for love', Juliet responds, "If you put things in perspective, Spike and Dru were together for 150 years and he and Buffy were together for a year and a half. How many people can say they've had a love affair for 150 years?"
Thoughts on this, and on Spike/Dru behind cut.
Juliet is of course right. However, I don't know about anyone else, but I've always found Spike and Dru's 150 year love affair rather nebulous. This is because we saw so very little of it in the show, except for how it ended. Yes, a few little blanks are filled in over the years - notably in FFL, LMPTM and Destiny - but really, we know very little about their life together in those 150 years.
We know they appear to have stayed with Angelus and Darla at least some of the time early on, including during the trip to Rome in TGiQ and in Romania in 1898, and Spike and Dru are still with Darla when Angel returns to her in China in 1900. After that, beyond knowing they revisited Rome in the '50s (ciao!) and must at some point have been in Paris, because Dru hated it, and in Vienna because they slaughtered an orphanage there, and in Prague where Dru was hurt by a mob, we know precious little about what they got up to. There's no sign of Dru in 1943 (presumably she had better things to do than attend a free virgin blood party) or in NYC in 1977. This doesn't necessarily mean that she was off doing her own thing but can lead you to assume that the two of them weren't completely inseparable.
Anyway, what I'm getting at is that we really didn't see much of their 150 year relationship on screen. We have to take its existence largely on trust. That, to me, makes it hard to get invested in it. Buffy and Spike, and for that matter, Angel(us) and Darla, we saw play out on screen in front of us in all their technicolour nuanced glory, and that makes them far more immediate and real.
So basically, Juliet can say whatever she likes, and no doubt the comic she's co-writing will stress how much more important she thinks Dru was to Spike than Buffy ever was. It's natural that she would want to stake a claim for the character, who she clearly loved playing. But really, a comic book is not going to fill in those blanks in the way seeing a relationship play out on screen does, and for that reason alone - though there are plenty of other reasons too - Spike and Buffy will continue, in my eyes, to far outweigh Spike/Dru in importance.
Thoughts? I also have a post brewing about how odd it is that comic book writers/fan boys in general - even those who obviously do love the character a great deal - seem to have an irresitible urge to tear Spike down and make him look like an idiot. That's for another day, though.
Also, for the record, I am looking forward to Juliet's story.
no subject
Date: 2009-05-07 09:43 am (UTC)Spike and Buffy on the other hand constantly push against each other, with the potential for disaster (like in S6), but also with the potential to be something amazing. In a year and a half they might not have changed each other (because you can't really 'change' people), but they brought out so much in each other that had been hidden before.
/rabid shipper ;)
I do love Dru though.
(PS. Did you see Mad Men? It was so good!)
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Date: 2009-05-07 09:58 am (UTC)Yes, I did. It was wonderful, wasn't it? I've been meaning to make a post about that too, but I got distracted.
I agree with you about Dru. It's impossible to say for sure, of course, because we saw so little of it, but the Spike/Dru relationship does come across as rather static in many ways. This is partly due to her insanity and partly, as you say, down to their lack of evolution. It's not for nothing that David Fury wanted them to be the vampire couple that Angel disposed of in Heartthrob. Their relationship is similarly static and rather OTT and childish to that of James and Elizabeth.
I think Angelus and Darla was rather different, personally, but that's probably a post for another day and may well simply be because that we saw so much more of it. Part of its interest does in fact stem from the fact that both parties denied they were in love with the other.
And apologies for multiple comment editing.
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Date: 2009-05-07 10:02 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2009-05-07 10:05 am (UTC)I also agree that Spike made his choice pretty clear, and if Crush doesn't make it clear enough, his rejection of FE Dru in season 7 certainly does.
However, I suppose you can't expect Juliet to see it that way.
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Date: 2009-05-07 10:33 am (UTC)I need to pause for a moment here, because I've never heard that one before. That would have been devastating... Blimey. I could see there was a Spike and Dru vibe, but I had no idea James and Elizabeth were actually a replacement...
Part of its interest does in fact stem from the fact that both parties denied they were in love with the other.
That's true - I didn't mean to talk Angelus and Darla down so much. I still think I might prefer them in retrospective though.
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Date: 2009-05-07 11:23 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2009-05-07 01:12 pm (UTC)Which is false, and bad writing, in my not-so-humble opinion. I like to think that there would have been growth, and subtle changes, over the course of the relationship. Personally, I think the relationship had to have been rather unhealthy, in ways. Co-dependent at best and mutually harmful at worst. Drusilla was off her rocker, and Spike was her caregiver for much of their time together.
I was downright irritated that Dru didn't become the Big Bad for season 2 after arising from the church rubble. She was a fun character who deserved more screen time - but I think the writers weren't up to her. Or they were intimidated by her. Still, I think she makes the perfect series villain - super-powerful but so capricious she could undo her own plans for no reason at all! "Oh, shiny thing!"
I digress. Obviously, Spike got way more screen time than Dru, and we know he has an over-the-top romanticism - probably brought about by reading too much Victorian romance. (Conveniently likely for his character, so I assume it's true. The boy was all over the epic poetry and arthurian re-tellings and that.)
And his character has so many contradictions - like how he can be so impatient and yet so patient. He must have had gobs of patience to put up with Dru in her fits - and my favorite scenes of them in Season 2 are when he shows tender patience. But because Dru was always unstable, always needing care and nursing - he was more in love with the idea of her, I think, than her. She was his fair princess, forever unobtainable (through her own madness). But from her point of view, he must have been a much-needed stability.
Spru! Spru forever!!!!! I think it's a relationship that deserves exploration. I think it informed Spike's love of Buffy, and his relationship with Buffy is in part about him growing beyond that sort of objectifying love into a real relationship.
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Date: 2009-05-07 02:14 pm (UTC)And, I admit, fanfic Spuffy though I am, I have affection for Spike/Dru. I don't however think of it as some backwards evil fairy tale. We know that Dru also had an ongoing thing for "Daddy". This wasn't any sort of darkside true love -- I don't quibble about the 100 year love affair though (not sure where the last fifty comes from), because it was. It did start in 1880 and it did go on until the late 1990s. I don't think it was perfectly continuous as clearly there were breaks. But I do think of it as a profoundly significant relationship for Spike. Not an eternal one, mind you. But deep and significant. But, then again, I'm one of those that doesn't believe there's only "one true love" in someone's life. There's no limit to love and one can have more than one "true love" in a lifetime, much less lifetimes.
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Date: 2009-05-07 02:14 pm (UTC)I'm not sure if anyone but Fury saw Spike as so disposable at that point, and looking back, I can't see how it would have worked since Spike and Dru had already split up, but I think the whole 'serial killers in prison' argument in season 5 of BtVS made Fury so annoyed he might well have thought that getting rid of Spike was a good thing. I do have a vague memory of there being talk about sending Spike to AtS.
It's a good thing Joss/Greenwalt ignored him anyway, just as they ignored what Tim Minear wanted to do to Darla. He wanted her to return in Heartthrob and to be spying on Angel through a window at the Hyperion and then to be accidentally staked by a tree branch. Typical silly fanboyish stuff, in fact.
I still think I might prefer them in retrospective though.
I really loved them at the time. One of the best 'ships in either show IMO.
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Date: 2009-05-07 02:18 pm (UTC)She clearly didn't. I think the interviewer has just couched the remark in a very stupid way, and what Juliet says in answer might not even be in response to that particular form of words.
They do make a lovely couple, but as I said, I find their relationship hard to grasp, partly because Dru is so bonkers and because in retrospect, Spike seems so immature.
I almost feel I can imagine Dru and Riley, but that's because he's so huge and I imagine him being all protective of her. Then I remember that he doesn't actually like women like that, if Buffy and the Sambot are anything to do by.
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Date: 2009-05-07 02:23 pm (UTC)Unfortunately, that does tend to happen, though of course fanfic can fill in the blanks (usually in a more satisfying way than the comics, I suspect).However, I think the problem is exacerbated with Dru because she's mad and it's very hard to get a grip on the character. Have to say, you do it very well. Pretty much the best I've ever read.
I'm sure the Spike/Dru relationship was as you describe it. A bit Sid and Nancy, except that Dru didn't end up dead. I think she was meant to be more important in the latter half of season 2 than she actually was - Angelus's consort - but Joss opted to keep Spike alive and went for the threesome conflict instead.
I think it's a relationship that deserves exploration. I think it informed Spike's love of Buffy, and his relationship with Buffy is in part about him growing beyond that sort of objectifying love into a real relationship.
I agree (at least, in theory), and intellectually I know Spike/Dru has to be given equal weight with Spuffy, but I don't think its longevity gives it more weight, as Juliet does.
Anyway, I hope you'll write more Spike/Dru one day. I do love what you've written so far.
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Date: 2009-05-07 02:26 pm (UTC)I think it's a very badly put phrase by the interviewer - unless it's a spoiler for the comic, which I hadn't thought of until now. Hmm.
But deep and significant.
Oh yes, I agree, but I don't think it more significant than Spuffy because of its longevity, as Juliet appears to be saying here.
And agree. People aren't restricted to 'one true love' in a lifetime, no matter what some of the nuttier representatives of a certain 'shipper group (who, oddly, all love Spike/Dru) would have you believe.
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Date: 2009-05-07 02:27 pm (UTC)Oh wow. You know, I'm suddenly struck by the thought that Dru's possible Season 2 story was played out on AtS using Holtz. In Season 2, it was highlighted that Dru did bear resentment for what Angelus did to her family. And it was emphasized that she had been a nun. Go over to AtS and we actually have the plot of Angelus stalking someone (just as he stalked Dru) who was ostensibly "good" and then destroying his family, destroying innocence (Holtz children), and turning the stalkee into the obsessee vengefully out to destroy Angel and strip him of everything. The victim became the villain... and more than kinda 'won'.
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Date: 2009-05-07 02:30 pm (UTC)What a perfect way to end her arc... Not.
One of the best 'ships in either show IMO.
Fair enough. I just wonder how they would have played out in 'real time' as opposed to fragmentary flashbacks. Not that I don't freaking adore the flashbacks.
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Date: 2009-05-07 02:31 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2009-05-07 02:37 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2009-05-07 02:46 pm (UTC)I agree that Spuffy has more weight in canon - it's a part of the moving arc - but I think the length of the Spru relationship does give it weight to make it hard to dismiss. I mean, they /had/ to dismiss it in canon, specifically, or we wouldn't as an audience have 'bought' Spike's moving on to Buffy. I do think that in that, um, episode, "Crush", was it? - they had to do that episode because of the weight of Dru and Spike's relationship, even if it was off-camera.
So, yeah. I mean. One hundred years. Woah. We can't dismiss it. I don't think it should be weighted as less important than Spuffy - though what that statement even means is problematic. I mean, less important as regards what? Spike's character? The overall story arc of which episode? Which plot? Obviously, when I'm writing Spru, it's more important than Spuffy, but the Spuffy is still important I...
I dunno. How does one weight relationships?
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Date: 2009-05-07 03:12 pm (UTC)I'm going to be weird and say that I think Spike/Dru was mostly an illusion, and that's why Spike was able to shuck it off so easily. (Spike the dedicated lover for 100 years becomes so obsessed with Buffy that Dru dumps him, and then is hopelessly in love with Buffy just one year later. Never made sense to me). Of course, I don't like Spike and Dru -- largely because she was so willing to switch over to Angelus and (as you know) I'm increasingly unhappy with relationships where Spike's love is not returned. But also because I think Spike's destiny was to find effulgence -- and while the Dark Princess phase was essential to the journey, it was also necessary that it be left behind. As for the huge amount of time: vampires don't change -- and our sense of the way time matters is precisely because we do change. So I don't think the 100 years registers for them the way we'd imagine.
Fortunately for me, the IDW-verse is an alternate universe. Interesting to visit, but not where I live.
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Date: 2009-05-07 03:14 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2009-05-07 03:48 pm (UTC)His love for Buffy may have been brief by comparison but it seems so much more understandable and we were able to watch the changes he made for her sake. If he changed himself for Dru (as opposed to for himself) we never knew about it. All the key moments, the pivots of their relationship, are missing. Do we even know for certain that he was there in Prague?
I love the idea of Spike/Dru, but I think it is an idea I have had to create for myself, not something drawn from canon.
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Date: 2009-05-07 03:52 pm (UTC)Oh! Oh I think I get that one!
::waves hand frantically in the air::
::tries to wait patiently for the post::
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Date: 2009-05-07 04:19 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2009-05-07 04:36 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2009-05-07 05:10 pm (UTC)As you well know, I am an unreserved Spike/Dru shipper, which in no way detracts from my Spuffy love. In fact, part of my Spru love is that it funnels so beautifully into Spuffy (after the requisite whirlpool of trauma and strife).
I do see Dru as essentially unchanging, stuck in a permanent childhood by madness. A very, very kinky childhood, it must be said. In contrast, Spike is always changing. He makes himself into exactly the sort of dark knight that appeals to both Dru (fairy tales) and himself (Romantic poetry). He had a very long way to go, from the virgin in the alley, to the mama's boy in the parlor (after being turned), to the scrapper that defies Angelus, to the Slayer of Slayers. He's constantly in motion, constantly trying new things, and I see much of that as his reaction to the stasis of Dru. He never stops trying, and I suspect (in the dark recesses of my shipper brain), that the striving is largely to break through to where his princess is trapped in her tower.
The relationship is tragically one sided, which is why it couldn't last, even with all of Spike's considerable energies shoring it up. But Dru did make her contributions. Simply by noticing him, and singling him out, she turned his world on its axis. I mean that emotionally, not just the death bit. Also, I suspect that by introducing him to the delirious pleasures of physical love, he would have followed her around like a puppy for a couple of decades, even if they hadn't been vampires. (She's a bit of The Blue Angel, or if we're being charitable, Sister Carrie in her effect on a ripe and ready William.)
His enormous amount of practice (117 years, I think we all agree) at changing (contorting?) himself to meet the nuanced needs of his lover, is (to my mind) the very thing that made him capable of winning Buffy. (He won her. I don't care what anybody says. Lalalalalala.) Drusilla made Spuffy possible.
To me, the lack of screen time, while lamentable, just leaves lots of space for Thee Fic. The framing is there, but it's up to us to do the finish work. Hallelujah!
no subject
Date: 2009-05-07 07:14 pm (UTC)And her and Spike were more of a mature relationship, even though she could never admit that and sshe became abusive to him because of that. But it was adult, if warped.
Spike and Dru's thing was more him taking care of her when she needed it and leaving her to do her thing when she didn't. And probably some great, wild, sick sex in between. Angel has alluded to the fact that Dru was fickle and Spike was always enraged by that so I figure there must be some truth to it. But through it all they always came back to each other, until Buffy had Spike's attention.
So theirs was a love affair but not a relationship. IMO. If any of that made sense cuz I am at work and in a rush to get this posted.
Ciao