"Villains" | |||
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Buffy the Vampire Slayer episode | |||
Willow absorbs the dark magics from the books, consuming her in darkness |
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Episode no. | Season 6 Episode 20 |
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Directed by | David Solomon | ||
Written by | Marti Noxon | ||
Production code | 6ABB20 | ||
Original air date | May 14, 2002 | ||
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Episode chronology | |||
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List of Buffy the Vampire Slayer episodes |
"Villains" is the 20th episode of season 6 of the television series Buffy the Vampire Slayer.
Contents |
An ambulance arrives at the Summers' house to treat the wounded Buffy. Upstairs, the distraught Willow calls upon Osiris to bring the murdered Tara back to life, but the god cannot, because the death did not involve magic. She leaves, learning from Xander that Warren Mears had shot Buffy, but does not tell him that Warren had also killed Tara.
As Warren celebrates at Willie's bar, he brags of killing the Slayer. The demon bartender tells him that TV news reports Buffy is still alive. Warren visits black magician Rack, seeking protection; he pays for Rack's help, but Rack warns him that the enraged Willow will likely overwhelm his defenses.
Willow goes to the magic shop. Despite Anya's attempt to stop her, she absorbs great power and transforms herself into a dark magician. She appears at the hospital, magically healing Buffy to help her capture Warren. Dawn returns home and finds Tara's body.
Xander and Buffy accompany Willow in her pursuit; Buffy tries to dissuade Willow from using magic, but Willow argues that Buffy's life was preserved only through her sorcery. They catch up to a bus on which Warren is apparently fleeing; Willow attempts to kill him, but finds "he" is only a robotic duplicate. She finally reveals Tara's death to Buffy and Xander. When they refuse to cooperate in Warren's execution, warning that the magic might corrupt her beyond redemption, she lashes out at them and vanishes.
Buffy and Xander return to the house, finding Dawn with Tara's body. After the body is removed, they debate Warren's fate, with only Buffy unconvinced that he should be killed; but all agree Willow's intended vengeance will end up destroying her as well. Buffy seeks Spike's aid, but learns he has left Sunnydale without explanation.
In Africa, Spike approaches a cave-living demon, seeking to undergo an ordeal to win his greatest desire: the power to best Buffy, which he feels he has lost since his chip was inserted. The demon agrees, although he considers it pathetic that feelings concerning the Slayer have led Spike to this.
Buffy and Xander ask Anya for help, and learn she has once again become a vengeance demon. Willow uses magic to locate Warren. She pursues him through a forest; when he ambushes her and plunges an axe through her torso. She recovers immediately, negates his magical defenses, and immobilizes him. As he taunts her, she realizes Warren has killed a woman before, and becomes more determined to execute him. She magically inflicts the pain of Tara's death on him. While Buffy and her companions approach, Warren begs for mercy. Willow silences him, then, as Buffy arrives, she kills Warren by flaying him and incinerating him. She disappears, proclaiming her intent to kill Warren's jailed partners.
In Televised Morality, Gregory Stevenson uses this episode to support his claim that Buffy surrenders to authority, provided it does not conflict with her moral responsibility as the Slayer. Warren is human, and killed Tara with a human weapon; therefore from Buffy's perspective he should be punished by the human legal system. When Xander argues that the legal system is inefficient and flawed, Buffy says, "We can't control the universe."[1] Despite Buffy's morality speech, Xander, Dawn, and Anya maintain that Warren should be killed for his crimes, and they later quietly support Willow for her choice to kill Warren.
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