The Pack (Buffy episode)

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The Pack
Buffy the Vampire Slayer episode
Episode no. Season 1
Episode 6
Written by Matt Kiene and Joe Reinkemeyer
Directed by Bruce Seth Green
Production no. 4V06
Original airdate April 7, 1997
Episode chronology
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"Never Kill a Boy on the First Date" "Angel"
List of Buffy the Vampire Slayer episodes

"The Pack" is episode 6 of season 1 of the television show Buffy the Vampire Slayer. See also List of Buffy (series) episodes.

Contents

[edit] Plot

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It's a terrific day to be out of school—except that Buffy and her Sunnydale High classmates are technically on a field trip to the zoo. A gang of four kids taunt and terrorize other students, and when one boy does not have the courage to tell Principal Flutie what they have done to him, they "reward" him by taking him with them to the Hyena House even though it is under quarantine. Xander follows to help him, whereas Willow and Buffy are stopped by a warden. He warns the two girls that the animals, fresh from Africa, are said to have special powers. They can even call your name.

In the Hyena House, the hyenas take a flashy-eyed look at the gang of four and Xander. Their eyes flash in return. Only the original victim is spared. None of them notice that they have been standing on a magic symbol of some kind.

Xander is now part of the gang, and his behavior has changed: he is insulting, cruel, tends to scratch himself and smell people. Even more ominous, the school's new mascot piglet Herbert tries to flee when it smells Xander. During dodge ball, Xander hits Willow with an excessively hard throw. The game ends with Buffy the last remaining member of her team and Xander, the gang of four and the victim from the Hyena House on the other side. Instead of attacking Buffy, the pack goes for the boy until Buffy steps in. Later, Xander tells Willow in front of the laughing gang that he won't be needing her help any more and is happy he won't have to look in her pasty face ever again. Buffy watches the exchange, but when she confronts him, Xander walks off with the other four, still laughing. Guided by their noses, the five pay a visit to Herbert's cage. Xander suggests lunch and the piglet squeals in terror.

Giles shows no inclination to believe anything is wrong with Xander except that he is a 16-year-old boy. His attitude changes when Herbert is found, eaten. After checking his books, Giles warns that they could be dealing with a case of possession. Buffy runs to find Xander, and finds the piglet's cage totally demolished. Xander jumps Buffy, pins her to the floor and tries to assault her sexually. Buffy knocks him unconscious with a desk and locks him in the book cage in the library.

When Principal Flutie finds his pig dead, he knows that the original gang of four are involved and calls them into his office. There, they kill and eat him.

Returning from a teacher's meeting to the library, Giles tells Willow and Buffy about what happened to Principal Flutie. Giles and Buffy go see the zoo warden who tells them that he is not surprised by the possession and knows about the magic involved, but is not sure how the students were affected: he hasn't been able to figure out the ritual. Giles supplies the missing information: a predatory act is required, like when the original four students tormented the boy.

Meanwhile, in the library, Xander tries to sweet-talk his way out of the book cage, but Willow sees through his ruse. The other four pack members break into the library, free Xander, and then all five hunt Willow through the corridors of the school. Cornered in a class room, she is rescued by Buffy and Giles. The five turn away from Buffy, and find an easier target, a family in a car. Buffy drives them off there, too, and offering herself as bait, lures them back to the Hyena House where the warden in full war paint is supposed to perform a reverse of the possession spell with Giles' help. Giles realizes that the warden had tried to call the power for himself, but couldn't figure out how until he learned about the predatory act from Giles. The warden knocks Giles unconscious.

Willow reaches the Hyena House before Buffy, and the warden ties her up and puts a knife to her throat, telling her it is the "predatory act" that will trigger the ritual and save the boys. Buffy arrives with the others close behind, and stops in when she sees Willow in peril. The pursuing pack knocks her down, and the warden uses this predatory act to shout a spell that pulls the animal spirits from the five students into himself. His eyes flash and he tries to bite Willow. Xander, freed of the spell, sees Willow in danger and tackles the warden. In the fight, Buffy knocks the warden into the hyenas' pen, where he is eaten. The gang of four flee. When everything is over, Giles staggers in.

The next day, Xander tells Willow and Buffy he does not remember anything, and they shrug the whole episode off with a smile. Giles, walking up to him from behind, points out that he cannot remember reading anything about memory loss during possession in his books, but promises to keep the embarrassed Xander's secret.

[edit] Production

Despite being credited as a series regular, Charisma Carpenter (Cordelia Chase) is absent from this episode. All sequences shot at the zoo were filmed at the Santa Ana Zoo.[1]

One line that was cut was Xander saying “Welcome to the jungle.”[2]
“The Pack” earned itself a Nielsen rating of 2.4 on its original airing.[3]

[edit] Starring

[edit] Guest starring

[edit] Translations

  • German title: "Der Ruf der Hyänen" ("The Call of the Hyenas")
  • French title: "Les Hyènes" ("The Hyenas")
  • Italian title: "Il branco" ("The Pack").
  • Japanese title: "群れ" ("Mure" - "The Pack")
  • Portuguese title: "A Matilha" (The Pack)
  • Spanish title: "La Pandilla" ("The Pack")

[edit] Continuity

Principal Wood: Okay by me. A little authority can be a wonderful thing. Just remember that while you are here to help, you're not here to be their friend. Trust me, you open that door and these students will eat you alive.

Buffy: You heard about Principal Flutie, right?

- Quotes from Beneath You

Principle Robert 'Bob' Flutie was not the last Principle eaten on Buffy. Principle Snyder is Eaten by Mayor Richard Wilkins III at Graduation in Graduation Day, Part Two

[edit] Arc significance

  • Xander's feigned amnesia about his activities while he was possessed is uncovered gradually in later episodes.

[edit] Timeline

  • Stories that take place around the same time in the Buffyverse:
Location, time
(if known)
Buffyverse chronology: Spring 1996 - Spring 1997
(non-canon = italic)
Los Angeles, spring 1992* Film version of Buffy the Vampire Slayer
Los Angeles, spring 1996 Buffy graphic novel: The Origin
Los Angeles, summer 1996 Buffy graphic novel: Viva Las Buffy
Los Angeles, summer 1996 Buffy graphic novel: Slayer Interrupted
Los Angeles, summer 1996 Buffy graphic novel: A Stake to the Heart
Various locations, 1845-1997 WB Buffy promo: History of the Slayer
Sunnydale, January 1997 B1.00 Unaired Buffy the Vampire Slayer pilot
Sunnydale, January 1997 B1.01 Welcome to the Hellmouth
Sunnydale, January 1997 B1.02 The Harvest
Sunnydale, January 1997 B1.03 Witch
Sunnydale, February 1997 B1.04 Teacher's Pet
Sunnydale, February 1997 B1.05 Never Kill a Boy on the First Date
Sunnydale, spring 1997 B1.06 The Pack
Sunnydale, spring 1997 B1.07 Angel
Sunnydale, spring 1997 Buffy the Animated Series unaired four-minute pilot
Sunnydale, spring 1997 B1.08 I, Robot... You, Jane
Sunnydale, spring 1997 B1.09 The Puppet Show
Sunnydale, spring 1997 B1.10 Nightmares
Sunnydale, spring 1997 Buffy book: Night of the Living Rerun
Sunnydale, spring 1997 B1.11 Out of Mind, Out of Sight
Sunnydale, May 1997 B1.12 Prophecy Girl
Sunnydale, summer 1997 Buffy book: Coyote Moon
Sunnydale, & L.A., summer 1997 Buffy anthology book: How I Survived My Summer Vacation

* Because the 1992 motion picture Buffy the Vampire Slayer is not considered to be canon, its date in the chronology reflects its release date. Because The Origin graphic novel adjusts the events of the movie to fit in-line with the series, its place in the chronology reflects those events having occurred approximately one year prior to Welcome to the Hellmouth.

[edit] References

  1. ^ Golden, Christopher, and Nancy Holder. The Watcher's Guide, Vol. 1. New York: Pocket Books, 1998.
  2. ^ Golden, Christopher, and Nancy Holder. The Watcher's Guide, Vol. 1. New York: Pocket Books, 1998.
  3. ^ "Nielsen Ratings for Buffy's First Season." <http://home.insightbb.com/~wahoskem/buffy1.html>