Graduation Day, Part Two
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| “Graduation Day, Part Two” | |||||||
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| Buffy the Vampire Slayer episode | |||||||
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| Episode no. | Season 3 Episode 22 |
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| Written by | Joss Whedon | ||||||
| Directed by | Joss Whedon | ||||||
| Production no. | 3ABB22 | ||||||
| Original airdate | July 13, 1999 | ||||||
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| List of Buffy the Vampire Slayer episodes | |||||||
"Graduation Day, Part Two" is the 22nd episode of season 3 of the television show Buffy the Vampire Slayer.
Contents |
Buffy and the students of Sunnydale High battle the Mayor during their senior graduation.
After stabbing Faith, Buffy stands stunned for a few minutes, then drops the knife and escapes from the rooftop just before the Mayor enters Faith's empty apartment with a group of vampires. The Mayor, devastated by the thought of losing Faith, orders the vamps to find her.
At the library that night, Xander and Giles search for information on the demon Olvikan, while at the mansion, Willow watches over Angel; delirious, he mistakes her for Buffy and confesses how much he needs her. When Buffy finally returns, she sends Willow away, then demands Angel drink her blood so that he will be cured. He refuses, weakly, but she strikes him to bring out his vampiric nature, then pulls his head to her throat. He drinks deeply, pulling away when Buffy loses consciousness from blood loss. Angel rushes Buffy to hospital, explaining that she's lost a lot of blood. In another room, a doctor tells the Mayor that Faith's head trauma coupled with massive blood loss means she is unlikely to regain consciousness. The Mayor notices Buffy in bed, and tries to smother her until Angel tears him away. The Mayor leaves with a message not to miss the second act of the show.
Dreaming, Buffy visits Faith, who is packing up her apartment. Faith says human weakness never fades, "Not even his." Faith tells Buffy that it's time to go and then Buffy wakes up in the hospital bed. She walks over to Faith and kisses her forehead, then strides into the waiting room, telling her friends to get ready for war.
At school, Buffy outlines a plan which relies heavily upon Xander's mystical military training and exploits the Mayor's human weakness - Faith. Meanwhile, the Mayor explains to his group of vampires that when the eclipse takes place, he wants the vampires to keep the people from running, as he must feed within the first few minutes to sustain the change. Angel and Xander get to work creating a bomb, which Giles is assigned to detonate. While putting away books, Cordelia and Wesley finally kiss, and discover they have no sexual chemistry. Willow and Oz decide to finally have sex, since they may die later that day. In the library, Angel tells Buffy he'll simply disappear when the battle is over, because to say goodbye would be too painful.
At graduation, the Mayor starts his speech, but is interrupted by the eclipse, which triggers his transformation into the 60-foot snake demon Olvikan. The parents scatter, and the students gather together in one large group. At Buffy's call, everyone rips off their robes, revealing weapons and crosses. Students attack the demon and vampires with fire launchers and flaming crossbows. Principal Snyder is eaten by the snake-demon in mid-lecture. Cordelia stakes her first vampire, but other students - including Larry and Harmony - are killed. Buffy taunts the snake with Faith's dagger; enraged, he chases Buffy through the school. Reaching the library, Buffy dives through a window. The snake smashes through the doors to find the room laced with explosives: "Well, gosh." Giles hits the plunger, exploding the Mayor as well as Sunnydale High.
As Wesley is taken away in an ambulance, Giles congratulates Buffy on a job well done, presenting her diploma which he pulled from the rubble. After he leaves, Buffy sees Angel at a distance. The two stand there, near tears, until Angel turns and walks away. Buffy meets up with her friends and they head for home, marveling that they survived. "Not the battle," Oz clarifies, "high school."
During the time of its airing, the episode caused a great deal of controversy in the media. The Columbine High School shootings which occurred in April 1999, caused huge tension between the public and the Entertainment Industry. Buffy at the time was viewed as a very violent show that took place in a high school setting, and was considered inappropriate, especially after the Columbine shootings. The WB Network had already pulled the plug on an earlier episode "Earshot". [1] When the media saw several clips from "Graduation Day, Part Two" they feared that several scenes would provoke high school students to do the same thing, especially those depicting the entire graduating class handling weapons against the mayor. On May 25, 1999, "Graduation Day, Part Two" was all set to air. However, only a couple of hours before the network was going to air the season finale, they suddenly decided to pull the plug due to all the pressure they were receiving. Instead, a re-run from earlier in the season was aired without any kind of notice.[2]
The sudden move by the WB received huge attention in the media and thousands of letters were sent to the network demanding them to air the season finale. Sarah Michelle Gellar publicly spoke out against the decision the network had made, although Seth Green agreed that the episode would seem "callous and inappropriate" after the Columbine shootings.[3] The WB would not air the episode until July 13, 1999, almost two months after it was originally supposed to air. At that point, the network felt that all real life graduations had already passed, so it was safe to air the episode. The episode attracted 6.5 million viewers, which is atypically high for the WB during the summertime. Even though the show aired in mid-summer, the ratings for the episode were on par with what the other episodes of the season had received. This episode was aired in Canada at the time it was supposed to have aired in the U.S., however, therefore many bootleg digital downloads were available for American viewers. [4] The creator of the show, Joss Whedon, stated, "Bootleg the puppy."[5]
Buffy novel The Evil That Men Do was also delayed due to the Columbine incident; it was published one year later than planned.
- Sarah Michelle Gellar as Buffy Summers
- Nicholas Brendon as Xander Harris
- Alyson Hannigan as Willow Rosenberg
- Charisma Carpenter as Cordelia Chase
- David Boreanaz as Angel
- Seth Green as Oz
- and Anthony Stewart Head as Rupert Giles
- Harry Groener as Mayor Wilkins
- Alexis Denisof as Wesley Wyndam-Pryce
- Danny Strong as Jonathan
- Larry Bagby as Larry ( as Larry Bagby, III )
- Mercedes McNab as Harmony Kendall
- Ethan Erickson as Percy West
- Eliza Dushku as Faith
- and Armin Shimerman as Principal Snyder
- Paulo Andrés as Dr. Powell
- Susan Chuang as Nurse
- Tom Bellin as Dr. Gold
- Samuel Bliss Cooper as Vamp-Lackey
- Christophe Beck - "Aftermath"
- Christophe Beck - "Drink Me"
- Christophe Beck - "Little Miss Muffet"
- Christophe Beck - "One Last Look"
- Christophe Beck - "War"
- Edward Elgar - "Pomp and Circumstance March No. 1"
- The yearbook seen in this episode was released as a tie-in product, Sunnydale High Yearbook
- Doug Petrie wrote a Buffy comic that takes place immediately after this episode; Double Cross concerns events after Angel left Buffy.
- The Mutant Enemy zombie that always appears at the end of each episode is wearing a black graduation cap.
- The cat in Buffy's dream briefly turns into Faith, in her comatose state, and then back.
- This marks the end of David Boreanaz and Charisma Carpenter as series regulars. Leaving for L.A., he would start a new TV show, Angel. The same also applies to Cordelia, who leaves for L.A., unable to afford college. However, unlike Cordelia, Angel does reappear on Buffy.
- Angel is the second vampire to bite Buffy. She was bitten by the Master in Season 1 and will be by Dracula in Season 5.
- This episode sees the destruction of Sunnydale High, the scene of a great deal of paranormal activities thus far in the series. As the Mayor said, "Nothing will ever be the same. Nothing."
- Xander shows again his military prowess, acquired in episode "Halloween", engineering with Giles the mining of Sunnydale High.
- In the Buffy/Faith dream, we encounter the first foreshadowing of Buffy's death at the end of Season 5. Faith's comment, "Little Miss Muffet counting down from 7-3-0", comes (roughly) 2 years (730 days) before Buffy dies. The term "Little Miss Muffet" is a reference to Dawn's arrival. A crazy man also refers to "curds and whey" when he accosts Dawn in "Real Me". Glory also makes references to "sitting on a tuffet" when she goes looking for the key during Season 5. Also exactly one year from this episode ("restless") during Buffy's dream she sees a clock in her room which reads 7:30, which Tara tells her is completely wrong, as one whole year has passed.
- Cordelia and Wesley discover through two bad kisses that their dalliance will lead nowhere.
- Harmony Kendall dies in this episode, but returns from the dead as a vampire. She will continue to appear as a vampire through this series, as well as appearances in Angel, where she will eventually become a regular in the cast.
- Although Larry Blaisdell dies in this episode, his death is not confirmed until the Season Six episode "Smashed".
- Italian title: "La sfida - II parte" ("The challenge - Part 2")
- German title: "Tag der Vergeltung" ("Day of retaliation")
- French title: "La cérémonie, deuxième partie" ("The Ceremony, Part Two")
- Japanese title: "卒業の日 パート2" ("Sotsugyō no Hi Pāto 2" - Graduation Day, Part 2")
- Spanish title: "El día de graduación, segunda parte" ("The graduation day, second part")
- Stories that take place around the same time in the Buffyverse:
| Location, time (if known) |
Buffyverse chronology: January 1999 - Spring 1999 (non-canon = italic) |
|---|---|
| Sunnydale, 1999 | Buffy graphic novel: Uninvited Guests |
| Sunnydale, 1999 | Buffy comic: The Final Cut |
| Sunnydale, 1999 | Buffy graphic novel: Bad Blood |
| Sunnydale, 1999 | B3.11 Gingerbread |
| Sunnydale, 1999 | Buffy comic: Bad Dog (by Doug Petrie) |
| Sunnydale, 1999 | Buffy graphic novel: Crash Test Demons |
| Sunnydale, 1999 | Buffy graphic novel: Pale Reflections |
| Sunnydale, 1999 | B3.12 Helpless |
| Sunnydale, 1999 | B3.13 The Zeppo |
| Sunnydale, 1999 | Buffy book: The Deathless |
| Sunnydale, 1999 | B3.14 Bad Girls |
| Sunnydale, 1999 | B3.15 Consequences |
| Sunnydale, 1999 | B3.16 Doppelgangland |
| Sunnydale, 1999 | Buffy book: Doomsday Deck |
| Sunnydale, 1999 | Buffy book: Immortal |
| Sunnydale, 1999 | B3.17 Enemies |
| Sunnydale, 1999 | Buffy graphic novel: Angel: The Hollower |
| Sunnydale, spring, 1999 | Buffy book: Prime Evil |
| Sunnydale, spring, 1999 | Buffy book: Revenant |
| Sunnydale, spring, 1999 | B3.18 Earshot |
| Sunnydale, spring, 1999 | B3.19 Choices |
| Sunnydale, spring, 1999 | Buffy book: Power of Persuasion |
| Sunnydale, spring, 1999 | B3.20 The Prom |
| Sunnydale, spring, 1999 | Buffy book: Resurrecting Ravana |
| Sunnydale, spring, 1999 | Buffy books: The Gatekeeper [Trilogy] |
| Sunnydale, spring, 1999 | Buffy book: Return to Chaos |
| Sunnydale, spring, 1999 | Buffy book: Visitors |
| Sunnydale, spring, 1999 | Buffy book: Unnatural Selection |
| Sunnydale, spring, 1999 | Buffy book: Obsidian Fate |
| Sunnydale, spring, 1999 | Buffy book: Deep Water |
| Sunnydale, spring, 1999 | Buffy book: Here Be Monsters |
| Sunnydale, spring, 1999 | Buffy book: The Book of Fours |
| Sunnydale, spring, 1999 | B3.21 Graduation Day, Part One |
| Sunnydale, spring, 1999 | B3.22 Graduation Day, Part Two |
| Sunnydale, spring, 1999 | Sunnydale High Yearbook |
| Sunnydale, spring, 1999 | Buffy comic: Double Cross |
- ^ Millman, Joyce. ""Finale thoughts"", Salon.com, June 1, 1999. Retrieved on 2007-09-12.
- ^ Taylor, Charles. "The WB's Big Daddy condescension", Salon.com, May 26, 1999. Retrieved on 2007-09-12.
- ^ Bonin, Liane. "School Daze", Entertainment Weekly, May 25, 1999. Retrieved on 2007-09-11.
- ^ Wen, Howard. "'Buffy' fans distribute postponed finale online", Salon.com, May 28, 1999. Retrieved on 2007-09-12.
- ^ "Network Outage", Entertainment Weekly, Jun 18, 1999. Retrieved on 2007-09-11.
