Smashed (Buffy episode)

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Smashed
Buffy the Vampire Slayer episode
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Episode no. Season 6
Episode 9
Written by Drew Z. Greenberg
Directed by Turi Meyer
Guest stars Danny Strong
   (Jonathan)
Adam Busch
   (Warren)
Tom Lenk
   (Andrew)
Amber Benson
   (Tara)
Elizabeth Anne Allen
   (Amy)
Production no. 6ABB09
Original airdate November 20, 2001
Episode chronology
← Previous Next →
"Tabula Rasa" "Wrecked"
List of Buffy the Vampire Slayer episodes

"Smashed" is the 9th episode of season 6 of the television series Buffy the Vampire Slayer.

Contents

[edit] Plot synopsis

[edit] Summary

Willow, sad and lonely without Tara, figures out a way to turn the metamorphosed Amy from a rat back into human. Feeling newly liberated, they decide to go out and have some fun. In the meantime, Spike discovers that the chip in his head gives him no pain when he punches Buffy. After verifying that the chip appears undamaged and still causes him agony when he harms humans, Spike tells Buffy she is no longer quite human, that she "came back wrong."

Willow and Amy go over to The Bronze where a couple of guys try to intimidate them. They perform a spell on the boys to make fun of them, but soon they begin to perform more and more complex spells and the Bronze fills with weird things, strangely dressed people, mutations and so on. Willow is beginning to have a taste of her real power and she likes it.

Spike assaults Buffy and they battle until Buffy unleashes her desire and kisses him, initiating such violent sex that the abandoned house in which they were fighting collapses around them.

[edit] Acting

[edit] Main cast

[edit] Recurring role

[edit] Production details

Steve Tartalia, James Marsters' stunt double, says he knocked himself out during the last scene, in which Buffy and Spike fall through the ceiling. "On that fall," he says, "our legs got tangled in the breakaway ceiling, and it caused us to tilt at an angle so that my head would be the first thing to hit the ground. And it did, and it knocked me out. Basically, I came to with some flashlights and smelling salts."[1] Stunt coordinator John Medlen also hurt himself during this episode, while demonstrating how Spike should swing from the chandelier. The chandelier broke, he fell 7 feet, and the chandelier landed on his face, breaking his nose.[1]

A longer, more intense lovemaking scene was originally filmed for the finale of the episode, but cut out. The clip still makes the rounds occasionally in Whedonverse fan circles.

[edit] Writing

In his DVD commentary, writer Drew Z. Greenberg says that in his original conception of Willow's confrontation with the homophobic men at The Bronze, he intended for Willow to cast a spell on the men so that they couldn't stop kissing each other. Joss Whedon vetoed the idea because he did not want to portray people's sexuality as changing in an instant and he did not want to portray same-sex kissing as a punishment.

[edit] Music

Wikiquote has a collection of quotations related to:

[edit] Euphemisms

Three consecutive episode titles in the sixth season are euphemisms for drunkenness or being under the influence of narcotics in American English: Smashed, Wrecked, and Gone. Willow's descent into her addiction to magic becomes dizzying and frightening.

[edit] Cultural references

  • Spike's comment, "You can play Holodeck another time..." is a reference to Star Trek.
  • Xander is looking at a D&D manual.
  • The boys calling Willow 'Ellen' was a reference to Ellen Degeneres who, like Willow, is a lesbian.

[edit] Translations

  • Italian title: "Il diamante ghiacciato" ("The Frozen Diamond")
  • German title: "Alte Feinde, neue Freunde?" ("Old Enemies, New Friends?")
  • French title: "Écarts de conduite" ("Misdemeanours")

[edit] Continuity

[edit] Arc significance

  • This episode marks the beginning of Spike and Buffy's sexual relationship.
  • Amy is returned to being human after being a rat since the middle of the third season.
  • It also marks Willow's conscious slide into using magic casually and dangerously. Because she is lonely after losing Tara, using magic becomes a comfort and a way for her to feel powerful and in control of her world. Transfiguring Amy from rat to woman gives her a friend who won't monitor her overusing and abusing magic and thus, Willow freely gives into her darkest impulses. As Anya says, "Responsible people are so concerned with being good all the time that when they finally get a taste of being bad, they can't get enough." Willow, who has been the most dependable of the Scoobies up to this point, can't get enough, which leads her to irresponsibility and addiction as the season progresses.
  • Both Buffy and Willow are out of control -- their fears about themselves become what leads Buffy and Willow into a destructive relationships, one sexually, one magically. Unlike other seasons, where Buffy and Willow are shown having long conversations, there are few times in season 6 when Buffy and Willow actually confide in each other and speak honestly. Buffy approaches Willow to have a serious conversation in this episode, but Amy's presence throws her off and she leaves without having voiced anything real. Thus, this episode typifies the season-long theme that self-involvement often leads to self-destruction.

[edit] Timing

  • Stories that take place around the same time in the Buffyverse:
Location, time
(if known)
Buffyverse chronology: Fall 2001 - December 2001
(non-canon = italic)
L.A., 2001 Buffy/Angel novel: Cursed
L.A., 2001 A3.01 Heartthrob
Sunnydale, 2001 Buffy UPN promos: Scooby Gang talk about Buffy
Sunnydale, 2001 B6.01 Bargaining, Part One
Sunnydale, 2001 B6.02 Bargaining, Part Two
L.A., 2001 A3.02 That Vision Thing
Sunnydale, 2001 B6.03 After Life
L.A., 2001 Angel book: Sanctuary
L.A., 2001 A3.03 That Old Gang of Mine
Sunnydale, 2001 B6.04 Flooded
L.A., 2001 A3.04 Carpe Noctem
Sunnydale, 2001 Buffy comic: Reunion
Sunnydale, 2001 B6.05 Life Serial
L.A., 2001 A3.05 Fredless
Sunnydale, 2001 Buffy graphic novel Willow & Tara: Wilderness
Sunnydale, 2001 Buffy book: Blood and Fog
Sunnydale, 2001 B6.06 All the Way
Sunnydale, 2001 Buffy graphic novel: Note from the Underground
L.A., 2001 A3.06 Billy
L.A., 2001 Angel anthology book:The Longest Night
Sunnydale, L.A., Monster Island, 2001 Buffy/Angel novel: Monster Island
L.A., 2001 Angel book: Endangered Species
L.A., 2001 Angel book: Impressions
Sunnydale, 2001 B6.07 Once More, with Feeling
L.A., 2001 A3.07 Offspring
Sunnydale, 2001 B6.08 Tabula Rasa
L.A., 2001 A3.08 Quickening
Sunnydale, 2001 B6.09 Smashed
L.A., 2001 A3.09 Lullaby
Sunnydale, 2001 B6.10 Wrecked
L.A., 2001 A3.10 Dad
Sunnydale, 2001 B6.11 Gone
L.A., 2001 A3.11 Birthday
Sunnydale, 2001 Buffy graphic novel: Creatures of Habit
Sunnydale, 2001 Buffy graphic novel: Death of Buffy: Withdrawal
Sunnydale, 2001 B6.12 Doublemeat Palace
L.A., 2001 A3.12 Provider

[edit] References

[edit] External links