Time of Your Life (Buffy the Vampire Slayer, Season 8, Vol. 4)
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Average customer review:Product Description
Willow and Buffy head to New York City to unlock the secrets of Buffy's mysterious scythe, when something goes terribly awry. Buffy is propelled into a dystopian future where there's only one Slayer - Fray, the title character of Joss Whedon's 2001 series, the first comic he ever wrote. Their uneasy alliance falls apart, leading to the death of a major character from the TV series, while back in the twenty-first century, the Scotland base falls prey to a mystical bomb courtesy of the Biggest Bad - Twilight!
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #2198 in Books
- Published on: 2009-12-02
- Original language: English
- Number of items: 1
- Binding: Paperback
- 136 pages
Features
- ISBN13: 9781595823106
- Condition: NEW
- Notes: Brand New from Publisher. No Remainder Mark.
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Customer Reviews
not the time of my life
I'm a Buffy fan, and have been enjoying season 8 for the most part. I have to say though that "Time of your Life" wasn't one of the better entries. If you haven't read Fray, then the plot and very language of half of this entry will be bewildering to you. After going online to research it I understood it somewhat better; but there are still a lot of things that don't add up.
Basically, it's a very plot heavy entry, but the plot is a contrived time traveling story. As to the person responsible for sending Buffy into the future to meet Fray, their reasons are never really explained objectively. There isn't much logic or scope to it. I think Joss just wanted his two Slayers to meet up and took any excuse he could to do that.
The subplot involving Xander and Dawn surviving an attack on their headquarters is also rather contrived. Dawn is totally useless as a character except to whine, and the only virtue of the entry is that Xander briefly admits as much. If however the writers develop a possible romantic angle between Dawn and Xander, as was hinted, I am going to throw up.
The one bright point is the story "After These Messages." Buffy, for yet another unexplained reason, dreams she is back in her youth (during Season 1). It was good to see Buffy reliving her high school days. However, there is no hint as to what prompted this.
All in all, this is the weakest entry in season 8. It sill has some of the trademark snappy humor and sharp characterization, but not enough to save it from the total mess that is the plot.
Um....what just happened?
I was loving this series and the last trade (Vol. 3) was my favorite. So, my expectations for this were high. Sadly, they were dashed quickly. This tale of time travel and forest creatures fell so short is was depressing. The future slayer story line was hard to follow (so much so that I wondered if I was missing pages), the dialogue was confusing, and the art was atrocious. The reveal of who Buffy met in NYC was lost on me because the art wasn't clear as to who it was. So disappointing. This entire story seems pointless and Dawn being a Centaur is beyond annoying. Big step down. :(
Good not great...
I'm a huge BtVS fan and own the whole TV series on DVD. I've really like most of the Season 8 comics to date. Volume 4, if you are collecting the graphic novel format versus the individual issues, is the weakest of collection so far. While I did enjoy seeing the Fray characters again, it felt like more of a stunt that a real plot point. The Willow portion also felt unsatisfying as well, sorry its hard to explain while trying to be vague to avoid major spoilers.
The side plot of Dawn, was, in reality, kind of stupid. I appreciate that they wanted to add some more fantastical elements that cover ground they could do in a TV show with a moderate budget, but this was beyond the spirit of the series. The "there are consequences to relationships" is very Joss, but the results here feel like fodder for a few quips and jokes rather than a solid allegory.
So while I'll tune into for another volume, my passion for this version of BtVS is waning and will be gone without a solid set of issues and some new meaty hooks to build my desire and suspense for a volume 6.




