Angel is an American
television series, a
spin-off of the television series
Buffy the
Vampire Slayer. The series was created by
Buffy's
creator,
Joss Whedon, in collaboration
with
David Greenwalt, and first
aired on October 5, 1999. Like
Buffy, it was produced by
Whedon's production company,
Mutant Enemy.
The show details the ongoing trials of
Angel, a
vampire whose human soul
was restored to him by gypsies as a punishment for the murder of
one of their own. After more than a century of murder and the
torture of innocents, Angel's restored soul torments him with guilt
and remorse.
During the first four seasons of the show, he
works as a private detective in a
fictionalized version of Los Angeles
, California
, where he and a variety of associates work to "help
the helpless" and to restore the faith and save the souls of those
who have lost their way. Typically, this involves doing
battle with evil demons or demonically allied humans, primarily
related to
Wolfram & Hart, a
law firm. He also has to battle his own demonic nature.
The atmosphere of the show was darker, and at brief periods it
managed to perform better than its parent series, though
Buffy's overall yearly ratings always topped
Angel's.Topping, Keith, ''[[List of Buffyverse
guidebooks#"Hollywood Vampire"|Hollywood Vampire]]'', (3rd edition,
includes Season 4) ''Virgin Books'' (2004), page 360: "During
[November-December 2002], ''Angel'' was getting slightly higher
ratings than ''[[Buffy the Vampire Slayer (TV series)|Buffy]]'',
aided by a new Sunday-slot and the popular series ''[[Charmed]]''
as its lead-in show." Also see Wahoske, Matthew J.,
"[http://home.insightbb.com/~wahoskem/buffy.html Nielsen Ratings
For Buffy The Vampire Slayer, Angel, And Firefly]",
''Insightbb.com'' (2004) ==Production== ===Origins=== Co-producer
Greenwalt points out "there's no denying that ''Angel'' grew out of
''Buffy''". Several years before ''Angel'' debuted, Joss Whedon
developed the concept behind ''Buffy the Vampire Slayer'' to invert
the [[Hollywood]] formula of "the little blonde girl who goes into
a dark alley and gets killed in every [[horror film|horror
movie]]."Billson, Anne, ''[[Buffy the Vampire Slayer (BFI TV
Classics S.)]]''. [[British Film Institute]] (December 5, 2005),
pp24–25. The character [[Angel (Buffy the Vampire Slayer)|Angel]]
was first seen in the [[Welcome to the Hellmouth|first episode]]
and became a regular, appearing in the [[opening credits]] during
Seasons Two and Three. According to the fictional universe first
established by ''Slayer'', the '[[Buffyverse]],'The term
'Buffyverse' is used amongst fans of ''Buffy/Angel'' online to
describe the fictional universe established by ''Buffy/Angel''. It
is also used in published materials such: Walton, Andy,
"[http://www.cnn.com/2003/SHOWBIZ/TV/05/19/buffy.sidebar/ Slang-age
in the Buffyverse]", ''CNN'' (February 18, 2004 ), and the book,
Ouellette, Jennifer,
[http://www.jenniferouellette-writes.com/Buffyverse.html ''Physics
of the Buffyverse''], ''Penguin Books'' (January 2007). Angel was
born in 18th century Ireland. After being turned into a soulless,
immortal vampire, he became legendary for his evil acts, until a
band of wronged Gypsies punished him by [[Ritual of
restoration|restoring his soul]], overwhelming him with guilt.
Angel eventually set out on a path of redemption, hoping that he
could make up for his past through good deeds. In ''Buffy'''s
Season Three finale, he
leaves
Sunnydale for L.A. to continue his
atonement without Buffy. Whedon believed that "Angel was the one
character who was bigger than life in the same way that Buffy was,
a kind of superhero." Whedon has compared the series to its parent,
"It's a little bit more straightforward action show and a little
bit more of a guys' show."
While the central concept behind
Buffy was "High school as
a horror movie" in small-town America, co-creators David Greenwalt
and Whedon were looking to make
Angel into a different
"gritty, urban show." Whedon explains "we wanted a much darker
show, darker in tone. It is set in Los Angeles because there are a
lot of demons in L.A. and a wealth of stories to be told. We also
wanted to take the show a little older and have the characters deal
with demons in a much different way. Buffy is always the underdog
trying to save the world, but Angel is looking for redemption. It's
those two things that creatively make the shows different."
Whedon and Greenwalt prepared a six-minute promotional video pitch,
often called the "Unaired
Angel pilot" for the
WB Network. Some shots from this
short were later used in the opening credits.
Early during the life of the series, some effort was made to
slightly soften the original concept. For example, scenes were cut
from the pilot episode, "City of," in which Angel tasted the blood
of a murder victim. The episode that was originally written to be
the second episode, "
Corrupt" was
abandoned altogether. Writer
David Fury
explains, "The network was shocked. They said 'We can't shoot this.
This is way too dark.' We were able to break a new idea, we had to
turn it over in three days." Instead the tone was lightened, and
the opening episodes established
Angel Investigations as an idealistic
shoestring operation.
A first draft script reveals that
Angel was originally
intended to include the character
Whistler, played by
Max Perlich, who had already featured in
two
Buffy episodes,
"
Becoming, Part One" and
"
Part Two". In an interview,
Perlich said, "I never got called again. If they had called, I
would have probably accepted because it was a great experience and
I think Joss is very original and talented." Instead, the producers
created a Whistler-like character,
Doyle.
Cordelia Chase, also from the original
Sunnydale crew, joined Angel and Doyle.
Format
Much like
Buffy,
Angel is told in a
serialized format, with each
episode involving a self-contained story while contributing to a
larger
storyline. Unlike
Buffy
however, the season-long narratives aren't marked by the rise and
defeat of a powerful
antagonist, commonly
referred to as the "
Big Bad" in the parent
series. Instead, the over-arching story of all five seasons of the
series pitted Angel as the central player in a battle between the
'good'
Powers That Be and
the 'evil' law firm
Wolfram &
Hart and his possible role in a prophesied
apocalypse. It mixes the complex, series-long
storyline along with more stand-alone,
villain-of-the-week episodes. The show
blends different
genres, including
horror,
martial
arts,
romance,
melodrama,
science
fiction,
farce,
detective fiction, and
comedy, where the
protagonists regularly use a mix of physical
combat,
magic, and
detective-style investigation to combat both human and supernatural
evils.
Executive producers
Joss Whedon is credited as
executive
producer throughout the run of the series. Alongside
Angel, he was also working on a series of other projects
such as
Buffy,
Fray,
Astonishing X-Men, and
Firefly (which would
later also lead to the film
Serenity).
For the first three seasons, David Greenwalt, who co-created the
series with Whedon, was also credited as executive producer. During
this time, Greenwalt took on the role of
show runner. He left to oversee
Miracles, but continued to work on
Angel as a consulting producer. At the start of the fourth
season, David Simkins was made show runner and executive producer,
but after three months, he left the show due to "creative
differences." Established
Angel writer
Jeffrey Bell took over for the balance
of Season Four and became executive producer for Season Five.
Fran Rubel Kuzui and her husband,
Kaz Kuzui, were also credited as executive
producers throughout
Angel, but were not involved in any
writing or production for the show. Jeffrey Bell mentions in his
DVD commentary during the closing credits of the
Angel
series finale "
Not Fade
Away" that two people were credited and paid for
Angel
without needing to ever step on the set.
Angel crew member
Dan Kerns also revealed in an essay, that two executive producers
"received credit and sizeable checks for the duration of
Buffy and
Angel for doing absolutely nothing".
Their credit, rights and royalties for the whole
Buffy
franchise, which includes spin-off
Angel, relate to their
funding, producing and directing of the original movie version of
Buffy.
Writing
Script-writing was done by
Mutant Enemy, a production company
created by Joss Whedon in 1997. The writers with the most writing
credits for the series include: David Greenwalt, Tim Minear, David
Fury,
Mere Smith,
Steven S. DeKnight, and Jeffrey Bell.
Jane Espenson has explained how
scripts came together for Mutant Enemy Productions series;
Buffy,
Angel, and
Firefly. A meeting was
held and an idea was floated, generally by Whedon, and the writers
brainstormed to develop the central theme of the episode and the
character development. Next, the staff meet in the anteroom to
Whedon's office to begin "breaking" the story into acts and scenes.
The only one absent would be the writer working on the previous
week's episode.
Next, the writers developed the scenes onto a marker-filled
whiteboard, featuring a "brief ordered description of each scene."
A writer was then selected to create an outline of the episode's
concept — occasionally with some dialogue and jokes — in one day.
The outline was then given to the show runner, who revised it
within a day. The writer used the revised outline to write the
first draft of the script while the other writers worked on
developing the next. This first draft was usually submitted for
revision within three to fourteen days; afterward, a second and
sometimes third draft was written. After all revisions were made,
the final draft would be produced as the "shooting draft".
Music
Angel features a mix of
original,
indie,
rock and
pop
music.
The opening theme was composed by
Darling Violetta, an alternative rock group
that performed two songs during the third season of
Buffy the
Vampire Slayer. The next year,
Angel invited bands to
submit demos for the theme music to the show. They asked bands to
use "dark superhero ideas" and "Cello-rock". Darling Violetta
watched pivotal Angel-related episodes of
Buffy like
"
Passion" and "
Becoming, Part One" and "
Two" for inspiration. Eventually Joss
Whedon accepted Darling Violetta's interpretation of an
Angel theme as that most suitable to the show. The theme
has a slower tempo than the
Buffy theme. It has heavier
use of acoustic instruments such as
cello.
This is perhaps more appropriate for a show about a vampire from
18th century Ireland on a long journey of redemption. In 2005, the
band composed an extended version of the
Angel theme
called "The Sanctuary Extended Remix", which featured on the
soundtrack of the series
Angel: Live Fast, Die
Never.
The demon karaoke bar,
Caritas,
is frequently used to spotlight pop hits. There has also been a
soundtrack album,
Angel: Live Fast, Die Never. The
soundtrack mostly consists of scores created for the show by
Robert J. Kral along with a remixed theme, and four
other songs from the show.
Douglas
Romayne scored 33 episodes of
Angel in Seasons Four
and Five along with series lead composer, Rob Kral.
Cancellation
On February 14, 2004, the
WB Network
announced that
Angel would not be brought back for a sixth
season. The one-paragraph statement indicated the news, which had
been reported by an
Internet site the
previous day, had been leaked well before the network intended to
make its announcement. Joss Whedon posted a message on a popular
fan site, The Bronze: Beta, in which he expressed his dismay and
surprise, saying he was "heartbroken" and compared it to a "healthy
guy falling dead from a heart attack." Fan reaction was to organize
letter-writing campaigns, online petitions, blood and food drives,
advertisements in trade magazines and via mobile billboards, and
attempts to lobby other networks.
UPN was a
particular target, as it had already picked up
Buffy.
Outrage for the cancellation focused on Jordan Levin, the WB's Head
of Entertainment.
Head Writer, David Fury, "guarantees" that if Joss Whedon hadn't
requested an early renewal
Angel would have been back for
a Season Six:
The only reason that
Angel didn't come back…it's a very
simple thing. Because our ratings were up, because of our critical
attention, Joss specifically asked Jordan Levin, who was the head
of
The WB at the time, to give us an early
pick-up because every year they [would] wait so long to give
Angel a pick-up [and] a lot of us [would] turn down jobs
hoping that
Angel will continue - he [Joss] didn't want
that to happen. So, he was feeling very confident and he [Joss]
just asked Jordan, "Like, make your decision now whether you're
going to pick us up or not," and Jordan, sort of with his hands
tied, with his back up against the wall, called him the next day
and said, "Okay, we're canceling you." Jordan's no longer there and
The WB has since recognized…I believe Garth Ancier at The WB said
that it was a big mistake to cancel Angel. There was a power play
that happened that just didn't fall out the way they wanted it to.
We wanted to get an early pick-up, we didn't. In fact we forced
them [the WB] to make a decision, and with his hand forced he
[Levin] made the decision to cancel us.
I guarantee that, if we waited as we normally did, by the time May
had come around they would have picked up
Angel. I can
guarantee that.
Angel's final episode, "
Not Fade Away," aired on the
WB on May 19, 2004. The ambiguous final moments left some fans
hoping for the continuation of
Angel and the Buffyverse in
the future, hopes that came to fruition in November 2007, with the
publication of the first issue of the
comic
book series
Angel: After
the Fall. The series is
Joss
Whedon's official continuation of the
Angel television
series, and follows in the footsteps of the comic book
Buffy the Vampire Slayer
Season Eight, whose first issue was published in March
2007.
Cast and characters
Main characters
The series focuses around
Angel (
David Boreanaz), a
vampire over two hundred
years old. Angel was known as
Angelus
during his rampages across Europe. He was cursed with a soul, which
gave him a conscience and guilt for centuries of murder and
torture. He left
Buffy the Vampire
Slayer at the end of Season Three to move to Los Angeles
in search of redemption.
He soon finds himself assisted by
Allen Francis Doyle (
Glenn Quinn), an Irish half-human, half-demon.
Although he comes across as a ne'er-do-well hustler, he has a
heroic side. He serves to pass along the cryptic visions from
The Powers That Be to
Angel. They are joined by
Cordelia
Chase (
Charisma Carpenter),
also a previous cast member of
Buffy. Formerly a popular
high school cheerleader, Cordelia starts her tenure on the show as
a vapid and shallow personality, but grows over the course of the
series into a hero. Cordelia acquires Doyle's visions via a shared
kiss prior to Doyle's death. With the death of Doyle in the early
episodes of the show's first season, another character from the
Buffy series makes the jump to its spin-off.
Wesley Wyndam-Pryce (
Alexis Denisof) joins the team under the
brave guise of "rogue demon hunter", acting as comic relief, and is
initially not well accepted. Over time, Wesley grows into a
leader.
In Season Two of the show, they are joined by
Charles Gunn (
J. August
Richards), a young demon hunter who must initially adjust to
working with and for a vampire.
At the end of Season Two, they travel to the
world Pylea, where they save Winifred
"Fred" Burkle (Amy Acker), a young
Texan
physicist whose social
skills have become stunted due to her captivity. She later
grows to become more outspoken. Season Three saw the introduction
of
Connor (
Vincent Kartheiser), the "miracle" human
child of two vampires, Angel and
Darla. Abducted into a Hell
dimension as a baby, he is raised by Angel's enemy
Daniel Holtz, and only a couple weeks after he
left comes back as a teenager. Connor reluctantly comes to accept
his lineage. Although introduced during Season Two,
Lorne (
Andy
Hallett) joins the team during Season Four. An outgoing and
pacifistic demon, Lorne's role is predominantly to support the
team.
Season Five, the show's final season, introduces several new cast
members, chief amongst them
Spike (
James Marsters), an old
vampire ally/foe of
Angel's who also starred in
Buffy. In this series, Spike
reluctantly fights beside Angel as their rivalry continues, now
tinged with Spike existing as another vampire with a soul. One of
the legendary
Old
Ones,
Illyria (
Amy Acker) starts off as an adversary of the team
after taking over the body of Fred, but comes to join the team as
she must learn to cope with the changed world and the new emotions
she feels as a result of her taking over Fred. Finally, there is
Harmony Kendall (
Mercedes McNab), also a
Buffy
alumna, and former friend of Cordelia who was turned into a
vampire. Resembling the old personality of Cordelia, Harmony is
grudgingly accepted by Angel as his secretary when he takes over
the Los Angeles branch of
Wolfram
& Hart.
Recurring characters
Many characters on
Angel made recurring appearances. The
two longest running recurring characters besides Lorne, who was
later added to the main cast, are
Lilah
Morgan (Season One through Four) and
Lindsey McDonald (Season One, Two, and
Five) appearing in 35 and 21 episodes respectively. Lindsey is also
the only character besides Angel to appear in both the first and
last episode of the series. Throughout the series, there were also
guest appearances from
Buffy
characters, including main cast members
Buffy Summers,
Willow Rosenberg, and
Daniel "Oz" Osbourne.
Faith Lehane played an important part in
episodes of Seasons One and Four.
Anne Steele and
Andrew Wells also originated on
Buffy
and appeared in two or more
Angel episodes.
Plot synopsis
Season One
At the start of the series, Angel has just moved to Los Angeles. He
is soon visited by Doyle, a messenger sent to him on behalf of
The Powers That Be. Doyle
receives visions that can guide Angel on his mission as a champion
of humankind. Angel also encounters Cordelia Chase, who is trying
to launch an acting career. The three group together to form
Angel Investigations, a
detective agency that hopes to "help the helpless." When Doyle dies
in the episode "Hero", he passes on his 'visions' to Cordelia with
a kiss. Shortly thereafter, the ex-
Watcher, Wesley
Wyndam-Pryce, joins the group. Meanwhile, the evil law firm
Wolfram & Hart pay increasing
attention to Angel. They tempt him toward darkness when they
resurrect
Darla,
Angel's ex-lover and
sire
— killed by Angel in the first season of
Buffy in the
episode "
Angel".
Season Two
Charles Gunn, who was introduced toward
the end of the first season in the episode "War Zone", is a
street-tough leader of a gang of vampire hunters. He is initially
determined to kill Angel, but slowly comes to accept him and join
his cause. Wolfram & Hart's star lawyer
Lindsey McDonald primes Darla as its weapon
to bring down Angel. However, Darla is brought back as a human, not
a vampire. But as a human, she suffers from a terminal case of
syphilis — which she had contracted in her
original life before being sired. Lindsey brings in
Drusilla, a vampire
originally sired by Angelus, to restore Darla to the cause of evil.
Enraged by this, Angel begins to grow darker. He cuts himself off
from his staff and attempts to go after the pair himself. In
despair, Angel sleeps with Darla (cf. "
Reprise"), but the next morning, he
has an epiphany; seeing the error of his ways, he banishes Darla
and reunites with his group. When Cordelia vanishes,
Lorne, the flamboyant demon owner of
Caritas, reluctantly takes Angel and
his crew to his home dimension,
Pylea, to
rescue her. They return with
Winifred
"Fred" Burkle, a former physics student who has been trapped in
the dimension for five long years.
Season Three
To get
over news of the death of his ex-girlfriend, Buffy, Angel spends
three months in a Sri
Lankan
monastery, where he
encounters some demon monks and goes home frustrated. He
returns to Los Angeles, as does Darla — now bearing his child, and
an old enemy (Daniel Holtz) of both Angel and Darla is resurrected
by a demon to take revenge on the vampires that killed his family.
The group is puzzled over what might be the first vampire birth.
Darla sacrifices her life to save the life of her child,
Connor. The gang is eager to care for the
infant, but Wesley soon learns of a (false) frightening prophecy
that suggests that Angel will murder his son. Feeling disconnected
from the group, Wesley does not share this information, and quietly
kidnaps Connor. This backfires as he is attacked and the child is
seized by Holtz, who wants Angel to suffer the loss of a child as
he did. Holtz escapes through a rip in the fabric of space to the
dimension of Quor'Toth, and raises the boy as his own. Angel feels
that his son is lost forever, and tries to murder Wesley. Though he
survives, Wesley is banished from the group. Weeks later, Connor
returns, but because time moves faster in Quor'Toth, he is now a
teenage boy, having been raised by Holtz. Tricking Angel into
believing he needs to be the one to take Connor in, Holtz gives
Angel a letter letting Connor know that he will be leaving and to
trust Angel. Holtz gets Justine to kill him, but ends up making it
look like a vampire attack so Connor will assume the worst. Connor
imprisons his birth father in a casket and drops it to the bottom
of the ocean
Season Four
Despite his exile from his old friends, Wesley locates and frees
Angel. A hellish
Beast
emerges and blocks out the sun over L.A. He then proceeds to kill
the staff at Wolfram & Hart. Although the city survives, the
sunlight seems to be blotted out permanently. The team resorts to
releasing Angel's soul, believing Angelus knows helpful information
about the beast. Although the team take safety precautions, Angelus
is released from his cell by Cordelia, who is at the time under the
influence of the soon to be born Jasmine. Luckily they manage to
restore Angel's soul, thanks to help from
Faith and
Willow. Their efforts, however, do not
prevent the coming of
Jasmine, who
was indirectly responsible for the work of the Beast. Jasmine, it
turns out, was formerly one of the Powers That Be and plans to
solve all the world's problems by giving humanity total happiness
through spiritual enslavement to her. She arrives in our world
through manipulation of Cordelia and Connor, using them as a
conduit into our world, eventually forcing Cordelia to fall into a
coma. Fred is accidentally inoculated against Jasmine's spell by
contact with her blood and frees the rest of the gang though they
remain hopelessly outnumbered by thousands already entranced by
Jasmine. Angel travels through a magic portal into a world
previously visited by Jasmine to find a way of breaking her power
over L.A.'s populace. By revealing her true name, they are able to
break Jasmine's spell over everyone. Jasmine confronts Angel, but
is then killed by Connor, revealing to have never been under
Jasmine's influence and just went along for the sake of having a
semblance of family and happiness. In the season finale, they are
met by
Lilah Morgan, the resurrected
Head of Wolfram & Hart's Special Project Division, who
congratulates them on preventing
world
peace, and says that as a token of their appreciation, Wolfram
& Hart would like to give them the Los Angeles branch. To help
save Cordelia and Connor, who has gone mad with confusion over
losing everything, Angel reluctantly agrees.
Season Five
The gang begins to settle into their new lives at Wolfram &
Hart. Gunn undergoes a special cognitive procedure that transforms
him into a brilliant lawyer. The group receives an amulet that
resurrects a past companion of Angelus, the ensouled vampire
Spike. Cordelia,
who has been in a coma, has
The Powers That Be grant her
one last request, in which she helps Angel get "back on track,"
then dies. Angel is briefly reunited with his son Connor, now in a
new identity thanks to the agreement between Angel and Wolfram
& Hart at the end of Season Four. Connor later reveals that he
remembers his previous life as Angel's son. Fred finally declares
her affections to Wesley, but shortly after is possessed by an
ancient and powerful demon called
Illyria. Wesley is devastated by the loss of
Fred, but agrees to help Illyria adjust to her new form and the
unfamiliar world she's in. Angel, after getting one last vision
from Cordelia before her death, infiltrates the
Circle of the Black Thorn, a
secret society responsible for
engineering the
Apocalypse, and plans to
take them all out in a simultaneous, hard-hitting strike. Because
this is probably a suicide mission, he tells each of his friends to
spend the day as if it were their last. That night, the team
launches its attack on the Circle, dividing up their targets. When
Wesley is fatally stabbed, Illyria, concerned for his safety,
arrives at his side after killing her targets but is unable to save
him. Illyria asks Wesley if he'd like her to assume the form of
Fred, and Wesley agrees, allowing him to say goodbye to the woman
he loved. Lorne leaves and disappears into the night, his innocence
destroyed, after fulfilling Angel's last order to kill Lindsey, the
former Wolfram & Hart lawyer who had turned his back on the
firm. Angel confronts Wolfram & Hart's new liaison Marcus
Hamilton, and defeats him with help from Connor.
Once the Circle has been dismantled, Angel and the surviving
members of his gang rendezvous in the alley behind the Hyperion
Hotel. Illyria arrives with news of Wesley's death and feels the
need to lash out her anger/grief. Gunn emerges, staggering from a
serious stomach wound. The survivors wait as the
Senior Partners' army of warriors, giants,
and a dragon approaches. The series ends with Angel and his crew
preparing for battle, with Angel saying, "Let's go to work."
Setting and themes
Setting

The
Angel intertitle showing
the show's setting, the city of Los Angeles.
Much of
Angel was shot on location in Los Angeles, California
. The show is set in the city of Los Angeles
. "Los Angeles" are the first words spoken in
the premiere episode, and the cityscape is the first image seen in
the opening credits. Joss Whedon said, "It is set in Los Angeles
because there are a lot of demons in L.A. and a wealth of stories
to be told." Producer
Marti Noxon has
expanded on this explanation: "Los Angeles was the place that Joss
Whedon picked for very specific reasons. There's a lot of
preconceptions about what the place is, but there are a lot of
truths. It's a pretty competitive, intense town, where a lot of
lonely, isolated, and desperate people end up. It's a good place
for monsters." Many episodes feature references to the city, and
the opening episode of the second season features Lorne offering
this observation of the city:
In the essay, "Los Angeles: The City of Angel" (from the essay
collection,
Reading Angel: The TV
Spin-off With a Soul), Benjamin Jacob explores why Los
Angeles in particular should be important to the series. Jacob
suggests several explanations: first, the name connection ('City of
Angels'); second, the double-sided nature, the "other side of the
stereotypical sunshine city, Beach Boys and Walt Disney", "the
place of pain, anonymity, alienation and broken dreams".; third,
American noir was originally a "Los Angelian genre".
Angel
was originally conceived as supernatural
noir. Noir had continued investigation of the
"dark city, a place of regression and darkness as a counterpoint to
the city's promise of progress and civilization" that had begun
under
William Blake and
Charles Dickens.
During Season One,
Angel
Investigations is based in Angel's apartment. Actor
Alexis Denisof, who played
Wesley Wyndam-Pryce, said: "Angel had
this dark, foreboding, underground cellar apartment with columns,
with this antique furniture all around, and this pokey little
office upstairs" These offices were blown up at the climax of the
first season, and Angel Investigations found a new base in the
episode "
Are You Now
or Have You Ever Been".
Production designer Stuart Blatt outlined the new base: "An old
hotel, something [the writers] could use to evoke the past of Los
Angeles and some of Angel's history, something kind of creepy and
spooky but not too dark because they didn't want something
depressing, it's called the
Hyperion
Hotel. It's based on many hotels in Los Angeles... Angel lived
in a larger suite in the hotel, like a honeymoon suite, the
producers wanted Angel to have enough room to relax and get away
from it all, do a little pondering, a little brooding, and a little
research. Every once in a while, someone will come up to have a
little conversation." In the final season, the team moves to the
evil law firm,
Wolfram &
Hart.
Format
Angel was initially told in an
anthology format, with each episode creating a
self-contained story that took place around the title character.
Later episodes began to increasingly contribute to a larger
storyline, which was broken down into
complex narratives that unfolded over many episodes. The most
extreme example of this was Season Four, in which almost every
episode contributed to the main storyline, and often picked up
exactly where the previous episode ended. The show blends different
genres, including
horror,
martial arts,
romance,
melodrama,
farce, and
comedy.
The series' narrative revolves around Angel and his colleagues,
collectively making up the detective agency Angel Investigations,
who fight against
supernatural evils
and work to "Help the helpless". A typical episode contains one or
more villains, or supernatural phenomena that is thwarted or
defeated, and one or more people in need of help. Though elements
and relationships are explored and ongoing subplots are included,
the show focuses centrally on Angel and his road to
redemption.
The most prominent monsters in the
Angel
bestiary are
vampires,
which are based on traditional myths, lore, and literary
conventions. Angel and his companions fight a wide variety of
demons, as well as
ghosts,
werewolves,
zombie,
and
ethically unsound humans. They sometimes even save the world
from annihilation by a combination of physical combat,
magic, and detective-style investigation,
and are guided by an extensive collection of ancient and mystical
reference books. Visions from higher powers guide the group, and
are received by Doyle and later Cordelia.
Hand-to-hand combat is chiefly
undertaken by Angel and later
Gunn,
though every member of Angel Investigations is combat ready to some
degree. Lorne is able to read peoples' destinies and intentions.
Fred uses her scientific knowledge
to contribute, whilst Wesley contributes his extensive knowledge of
demonology and supernatural lore.
Themes
While
Buffy the Vampire Slayer was built around the angst
of adolescence,
Angel chronicles the different stages of
adulthood. Cordelia Chase, who had been the most popular and
superficial girl in
Sunnydale High on
Buffy, develops over the course of the series from an
insecure young woman struggling in a daunting real world into an
unexpectedly mature woman. Similarly, Wesley, the once uptight and
bookish
Watcher,
becomes a man of quiet confidence and often ruthless action.
In much the same way as
Buffy had been both an homage and
parody of traditional
horror films,
Angel gave the same treatment to the classical
film noir. Producer Kelly Manners
said "
Angel is a dark show about a man looking for
redemption... We have an alcoholic metaphor with
Angel.
Angel is a guy who is one drink away from going back to his evil
roots" He attempts to find redemption through helping the helpless
of Los Angeles in a fashion similar to that of noir detectives. The
first episode even included a
Philip
Marlowe-style voiceover. Angel filled the role of the
reluctant, streetwise detective who has dealings with a variety of
underworld characters. In this case, the "underworld" is a literal
underworld of demons and supernatural beings. In one instance,
Angel is explicitly compared with fictional noir private-detective
Marlowe. Many traditional
noir stories and characters were
explored in earlier episodes, including the ditzy but attractive
secretary, the cagey but well-informed partner, and clashes with
crooked lawyers and meddlesome, too-good-for-their-own-good cops.
These were usually given a modern or supernatural twist.
The style and focus of the show changed considerably over its run,
and the original noir idea was mostly discarded in favor of more
large scale fantasy-themed conflicts. In later seasons, the
mythology and stories became increasingly complex; in Season Four,
one of the characters on the show itself described the storyline as
"a turgid supernatural
soap opera."
Whereas the show initially dealt with the difficulty of being kind
to people on a personal basis, the show ultimately focused on
Angel's status as an
archetypal Champion for humanity, and explored ideas such as
moral ambiguity, the spiritual cost of violence, and the nature of
free will. The enduring theme throughout
the series was the struggle for
redemption.
Angel explored trust motifs as an increasingly central
focus of the show. In the first two seasons, there were sprinklings
of deceit and treachery, but in the last three seasons duplicity
began to pervade the thematic structure, culminating in Season Five
when almost every episode included some kind of double-cross,
trickery, or illusion. An idea presented in Season Three was that
even
prophecy can betray, as they are often
deceiving if not plain lies. In Season Five, it is repeatedly
emphasized that the characters can trust no one in their new
situation. The series is also notable for harsh betrayals within
the cast of main characters; such events often having lethal
consequences.
Angel depicted the feelings of loneliness, danger, and
callousness often attributed to the urban Los Angeles megalopolis.
The divisions between the ordered world of the day and the chaotic
world of the night have been trademark themes of
noir and
by depicting a protagonist who literally has no daytime life, the
series was able to explore these same themes in more dramatic,
metaphorical ways. As the series progressed, the creators were able
to explore darker aspects of the characters, particularly Angel,
who commits a number of morally questionable actions, and
periodically reverts to his evil persona
Angelus.
Reception
Critical reviews
During the course of the series,
Angel has been subject to
both criticism and praise. These criticisms are often put into the
context of it being a spin-off to popular show
Buffy the
Vampire Slayer, and will at times refer to it being "better
than" or "lesser than" its parent show.
- ""Angel" may improve with age. Heaven knows, it has a
built-in "Buffy" fan base. For now, however, there's not
enough to sink your teeth into."
- :—Phil Rosenthal, Chicago Sun-Times, October 5,
1999
- "Some weeks, the series works beautifully, moving along like
the otherworldly detective show it's meant to be. The Oct. 26
edition, in which a baddie could detach various body parts and send
them off to do naughty things (an eyeball is sent to spy on a girl
he likes, for instance), was full of crackerjack wit, as was the
Nov. 16 show, in which Doyle's brains are nearly eaten by his
ex-wife's new in-laws (Whedon and company excel at gruesome
variations on the hellishness of family life).
- But other times Angel can tip too far into jokiness --
or, worse, come off like a supernatural version of hollow USA
Network shows such as Silk
Stalkings. Angel's weaknesses were highlighted in the Nov.
23 Buffy/Angel crossover, in which Angel briefly
regained his mortality and, in the words of Cordelia, got
groiny with Buffy, alternating kitchen-table-clearing make-out
scenes with dueling-demon tableaux; it was like Abbott and Costello
Meet Frankenstein for a Last Tango in Paris, yet fully satisfying
across a whole range of emotions. Angel's uneven writing
and production values need that kind of oomph every week."
- :—Ken Tucker, Entertainment
Weekly, posted December 3, 1999
- "The care with which Joss Whedon created his fantastic universe
of vampires, demons, and heroes is evident when watching the first
22 episodes of Angel, his Buffy the Vampire
Slayer spin-off."
- :—Marc Benardin, Entertainment Weekly, posted
February 11, 2003
- "If, perchance, the WB doesn't bring Angel back for a
fifth season, it will drive a stake through my heart. And there
aren't a lot of shows I can say that about these days.
- This show has, in its fourth season, surpassed the show from
which it was spun off. Which is not to say that Buffy the
Vampire Slayer isn't good in this, it's seventh and final
season -- it's very good. But Angel is better."
- :—Scott D. Pierce, Deseret Morning News (Salt Lake City
), March 18, 2003
- "But Whedon and his team have done it. Tonight's season
premiere (8 p.m., Ch. 30), written and directed by Whedon, and next
week's second episode are great -- action-packed, exciting,
extremely funny and fully accessible to anyone who pays attention
for a minute."
- :—Scott D. Pierce, Deseret Morning News (Salt Lake City
), October 1, 2003
- "But it's an uphill climb, and those ambitious newcomers who
might hope to come in cold and make sense of all (or any) of what's
going on are bound to be frustrated. That's why it's a cult show,
no matter how well it's made and how universal its overriding theme
of dealing with the hard choices one has made in life."
- :—Phil Rosenthal, Chicago Sun-Times, February 4,
2004
- "Angel is wildly uneven: Sometimes it's an absolute
blast (James Marsters' gleeful guffaw as Spike, 'You're a wee
little puppet man!' was priceless); sometimes it's a dead-end
street (the whole Connor, grown-son-of-Angel subplot was where I
exited the series for a spell). For a show with such superb acting
-- all honor to Boreanaz, who's got macho vulnerability down to a
smooth essence not achieved since James
Garner in his Rockford
Files days, and to Amy Acker, who has gone from victim to
sexpot to villain without ever hitting a false note -- Angel is
surprisingly rife with leaden lines like 'Rules can be broken; all
you have to do is push hard enough.'"
- :—Ken Tucker, Entertainment
Weekly, posted April 23, 2004
- "The LA-set spin-off to Buffy was initially dismissed as the
original's poor cousin but gradually developed into a darkly
entertaining show in its own right."
- :—Sarah Hughes, The
Independent, May 15, 2009
U.S. ratings
| Season |
Timeslot |
Season premiere |
Season finale |
TV season |
Viewers
(in millions)
|
| 1st |
Tuesday 9:00 pm |
October 5, 1999 |
May 23, 2000 |
1999–2000 |
4.8 |
| 2nd |
September 26, 2000 |
May 22, 2001 |
2000–2001 |
4.1 |
| 3rd |
Monday 9:00 pm |
September 24, 2001 |
May 20, 2002 |
2001–2002 |
4.4 |
| 4th |
Sunday 9:00 pm
Wednesday 9:00 pm |
October 6, 2002 |
May 7, 2003 |
2002–2003 |
3.7 |
| 5th |
Wednesday 9:00 pm |
October 1, 2003 |
May 19, 2004 |
2003–2004 |
4.0 |
| 1st-5th |
Monday 9:00 pm
Tuesday 9:00 pm
Sunday 9:00 pm
Wednesday 9:00 pm |
October 5, 1999 |
May 19, 2004 |
1999–2004 |
4.2 |
Spin-offs
Angel, itself a
spin-off
of
Buffy, has in turn inspired a whole "industry" of
books, comics, and merchandise.
Expanded Universe
Outside of the TV series,
Angel has been officially
expanded and elaborated on by authors and artists in the so-called
"
Buffyverse Expanded Universe". The creators of these
works may or may not keep to established continuity. Similarly,
writers for the TV series were under no obligation to use
information which had been established by the
Expanded Universe, and sometimes
contradicted such continuity.
Many of these works are set at particular times within the
Buffyverse. For example, Joss Whedon has written an
Angel
mini-series of comics,
Long Night's
Journey, which was specifically set in early Angel Season
Two.
Angel comics were
originally published by
Dark Horse
Comics, which published them from 2000 until 2002.
IDW Publishing obtained rights to publish
Angel comics in 2005 and has been releasing them since.
Most recent releases include
Spike
vs. Dracula,
Asylum, and
Auld Lang Syne. Spinning
off of the
Angel comics comes an entire series of
Spike comics, using the
Angel logo's typeface in
its depiction of the name "Spike", among these are the comics
Spike vs. Dracula,
Spike: Asylum and
Spike: Shadow
Puppets. As of November 2007, the story is being continued
in a canonical Season Six originally planned to be a 12-issue comic
mini-series, titled
Angel:
After the Fall. The series is written by
Brian Lynch (
Spike: Asylum) and is
plotted by both Lynch and Joss Whedon.
Following their success with a series of
Buffy novels,
Pocket Books purchased the license to produce
novels for
Angel. Twenty-four
Angel novels were published.
Jeff Mariotte became the most successful Angel
novelist, publishing eleven
Angel novels. They also
published seven
Buffy/Angel crossover
books that featured settings and characters from both
series.
Undeveloped spin-offs
In March 2006, Joss Whedon still talked of the possibility of a
TV movie involving Spike to be
written and directed by Tim Minear.
Merchandise
Angel has inspired magazines and companion books, as well
as countless websites, online discussion forums, and works of
fan fiction.
Eden Studios have published an
Angel role-playing
game.
Series information
Season One of
Angel was introduced in 1999. Each season
consisted of 22 episodes. Discounting the
Angel pitch tape, the five seasons
make up
a total of 110
episodes, aired between 1999 and 2004.
DVD releases
Angel DVDs' were produced by 20th Century Fox and released from
2001-2005.
| DVD |
Original release date |
| US |
UK |
| The Complete First
Season |
February 11, 2003 |
December 10, 2001 |
| The Complete Second
Season |
September 2, 2003 |
April 15, 2002 |
| The Complete Third
Season |
February 10, 2004 |
March 3, 2003 |
| The Complete Fourth
Season |
September 7, 2004 |
March 1, 2004 |
| The Complete Fifth
Season |
February 15, 2005 |
February 21, 2005 |
| Special Collectors
Set |
October 30, 2007 |
October 30, 2006 |
In 2009 the DVDs were repackaged into slimmer cases, which resemble
regular DVD packaging.
Awards and nominations
Angel has gathered a number of awards and nominations. It
won Best Television from
International Horror Guild in
2001. It has received many important awards and nominations from
the
Saturn Awards which are presented
annually by the Academy of Science Fiction, Fantasy & Horror
Films: it won Best Network TV Series and Best TV Actor in 2004.
Specific episodes, "
Waiting in the Wings",
"
Smile Time," and "
Not Fade Away," have been
nominated for
Hugo Awards for Best
Dramatic Presentation, Short Form in 2003 and 2005.
International broadcasting
- In
Argentina
, the show was broadcast on Fox
LA
- In Australia, the show was originally
broadcast on Seven Network and
Fox8, and is currently screening on the
Sci Fi Channel and also
on TEN HD
- In
Belgium
, the show is broadcast on Kanaal 2 and Plug
TV
- In
Brazil
, the show was broadcast on Fox (in prime time) and Rede Globo (by Dawn)
- In
Canada
, starting in 2002, it was broadcast on The Space Channel and Ztélé
- In
Croatia
, seasons 1-4 were broadcast on Nova TV
- In
the Czech
Republic
, the show is
broadcast on Prima Cool
- In
Denmark
, the show was broadcast on TV 2 and TV 2
Zulu
- In
Estonia
, the show was broadcast on TV3
- In
Finland
, the show was broadcast on Subtv
- In
France
, the show
was broadcast on TF1
and TF6
- In
Germany
, the first three seasons were broadcast on Pro7; the fourth season is currently shown on Kabel1 which will also broadcast the fifth
season
- In
Greece
, the show is
broadcast on ANT1
- In
Hungary
, season 1-4 was broadcast on Viasat3, the fifth season has yet to air
- In
India
, the show was broadcast on Star World
- In
Indonesia
, the show was broadcast on TPI
- In
Ireland
, Seasons One and Two were broadcast on TV3
- In
Israel
, the show
was broadcast on Arotz 3
- In
Italy
, the show's first four seasons are currently
rerunning on Rai 4
- In
Jordan
, the show is
broadcast on MBC4 and MBC
Action
- In
Lithuania
, Seasons One and Two were broadcast on TV3
- In
Malaysia
, the show was on TV2
- In
Mexico
, the show
was broadcast on Fox LA
- In the Middle East, the show is
broadcast on MBC Action and Showtime Arabia's TV Land
- In
the Netherlands
, the show was broadcast on V8, NET 5
and Veronica
- In
New
Zealand
, the show was broadcast on TV3 & Sky 1
- In
Nigeria
, the show is currently showing on Silverbird Television
- In
Norway
, the show
was broadcast on TV2
- In
the Philippines
, the show was broadcast on Studio 23
- In
Poland
, the show
was broadcast on TV4
- In
Portugal
, the show was broadcast on Fox
- In
Russia
, the show
was broadcast on TV3 Russia
- In
Slovenia
, the show was broadcasted on Kanal A.
- In South Africa, the show was
broadcasted on M-Net.
- In
Spain
, the show is broadcast on Fox
- In
Sweden
, the show
was broadcast on TV4, ZTV, and TV6
- In
Switzerland
, the show was broadcast on SF2 and TSR 2.
- In
Thailand
, the show was broadcast on True Series, Star
World, and Channel 7.
- In
Turkey
, the show
was broadcast on CNBC-e
- In
Ukraine
, the show was broadcast on Novy
TV
- In
the United
Kingdom
, the show was first broadcast on Sky One with its first two seasons then shown on
Channel 4 and its next two on Five and the final series including the last
episode of series 4 on Sky One. It has been repeated on
Five US and FX, but
is currently being shown on Sci Fi Channel.
- In
Venezuela
, the show was broadcast on Televen
Footnotes and references
- All links retrieved and checked as of November 2006 or
after.
- Cordelia: "Angel Investigations, we help the hopeless". Episode
"Darla", Angel second season.
- Havens, Candace, Joss Whedon: The Genius
Behind Buffy Benbella Books (May 1, 2003), p103.
- Bassom, David, "Buffy, Angel and Me," from Buffy
the Vampire Slayer magazine #12 (UK, September 2000), page
6.
- 'Said, SF', " Interview with Joss Whedon by SF Said",
Shebytches.com (2005).
- Havens, Candace, Joss Whedon: The Genius
Behind Buffy Benbella Books (May 1, 2003), p102 (quote
from Greenwalt)
- Havens, Candace, Joss Whedon: The Genius
Behind Buffy Benbella Books (May 1, 2003), p101-102.
- Topping, Keith, Hollywood Vampire, (3rd
edition, includes Season 4) Virgin Books (2004).
- Hart, Maryelizabeth & Holder, Nancy & Mariotte, Jeff,
Casefiles, Pocket
Books (May 2002), page 34.
- Hart, Maryelizabeth & Holder, Nancy & Mariotte, Jeff,
Casefiles, Pocket
Books (May 2002), page 43-44.
- Topping, Keith, Hollywood Vampire, (3rd
edition, includes Season 4) Virgin Books (2004), pages
18-19. Also see: Greenwalt, David & Whedon, Joss, Angel pilot, early draft 20th Century
Fox (1999).
- Dilullo, Tara, "Where are they now? Max Perlich" in
"Buffy the Vampire Slayer Magazine"
#62, Titan Magazines (July 2004 issue), pages 30-31.
- Various authors, " Joss
Whedon", Internet Movie Database (updated 2006).
- Various authors, " David
Greenwalt", Internet Movie Database (updated
2006).
- See O'Hare, Kate, " 'Angel' Drops New Producer", Zap2It
(August 08, 2002) and Various authors, " David
Simkins", Internet Movie Database (updated 2006).
- Various authors, " Fran
Kuzui" and " Kaz Kuzui", Internet Movie Database
(updated 2006).
- Angel Complete Fifth Series DVD
Boxset.
- Kerns, Dan, "Angel by the Numbers", from Yeffeth, Gareth
(editor), Five Seasons of "Angel",
Benbella(October 2004), p25.
- See Kerns, Dan, "Angel by the Numbers", from Yeffeth, Gareth
(editor), Five Seasons of "Angel",
Benbella(October 2004), p25, and Golden, Christopher, and
Holder, Nancy, Watcher's Guide Vol.
1. Simon & Schuster (October 1, 1998),
"Gail Berman and Fran Kuzui came to [Whedon] to ask if he wanted to
do the TV series" (p241). Also see Watcher's Guide Vol. 1,
pp246–249.
- Various authors, " Full Cast and Crew for Angel", Internet
Movie Database (updated 2006).
- Espenson, Jane, " The Writing Process", Fireflyfans.net
(2003).
- AngelHART, " Interview - Jymm Thomas of Darling Violetta -
interviewed by Angelheart", Watchers Web (1999)
- KJB, " Breaking News: Angel to End After 5 Seasons. Whedon talks
about cancellation", IGN.com (February 13, 2004).
- Whedon, Joss, Online post, Bronzebeta.com (February 14,
2004). Archived version.
- Jensen, Jeff The X Factor (May 21, 2004).
- http://www.mikejozic.com/buffyweek6.html
- Various authors, " Sets and Locations", The Ultimate Buffy and
Angel Trivia Guide (updated 2006).
- Episode, "City of", Angel (1999). Angel says: "Los
Angeles. You see it at night and it shines. Like a beacon. People
are drawn to it. People and other things. They come for all sorts
of reasons."
- Topping, Keith, Hollywood Vampire, (3rd
edition, includes Season 4) Virgin Books (2004), page
1.
- Jacob, Benjamin, "Los Angelus: The City of Angel", from Abbot,
Stacey (editor), Reading
Angel, I. B. Tauris (September 22, 2005), page
77
- Jacob, Benjamin, "Los Angelus: The City of Angel", from Abbot,
Stacey (editor), Reading Angel, I. B. Tauris
(September 22, 2005), page 80.
- Jacob, Benjamin, "Los Angelus: The City of Angel", from Abbot,
Stacey (editor), Reading Angel, I. B. Tauris
(September 22, 2005), page 83.
- ""Inside the Agency" featurette Angel Season
2 DVD set, disc 3 (2002).
- "Season 1 featurette" Angel Season 1 DVD
set, disc 3 (2001)
- Episode "Dear
Boy", Angel (2000). Wesley says of Angel, "Oh he's
eccentric, all the great ones are. Sherlock Holmes, Philip
Marlowe."
- "Players ", 20th Century Fox
(2003).
- Quotenmeter.de - US-Jahrescharts 1999/2000
- USATODAY.com - How did your favorite show
rate?
- Neilson Ratings for Angel: Fourth Season
- Neilson Ratings for Angel: Fifth Season
- IDWEEK: Brian Lynch talks Spike and Angel @
Newsarama.com.
- IDWEEK: Joss Whedon talks Angel, After The Fall @
Newsarama.com
- Various authors, "Awards for Angel", Internet Movie
Database (updated 2005).
External links
Official sites
Encyclopedias