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85
Hey Angel fans: 'Keep on fighting'
Photo:
Actor David Boreanaz grabs James Marsters during a
scene for the final episode of the vampire drama Angel. (AP /Nick Ut)
LOS ANGELES (AP) - Just because the wry vampire drama Angel is over doesn't mean it's the end of the world ... even if the final episode does include an apocalypse. Angel creator Joss Whedon - whose efforts to remake the show this year boosted ratings and garnered continued critical acclaim, but were not enough to keep it on the air - says the theme of the closing instalment is "keep on fighting." That goes for the title hero himself, a 250-year-old vampire played by David Boreanaz, who is trying to redeem past decades of undead wickedness by helping the hopeless amid the supernatural evildoers of Los Angeles. "Redemption is something you have to fight for in a very personal down, dirty way," Whedon says. "Some of our characters lose that, some stray from that, and some regain it." "Keep on fighting" also applies, Whedon added, to the thousands of fervent fans who, in a desperate bid to keep Angel around for one more season, protested, petitioned, wrote letters and even mailed out chocolate bars to anyone remotely associated with the fate of the program. They want more, more, more and are bitterly angry at the WB for dropping the show, which lagged in repeats.


The WB, which in the meantime is exploring a different vampire drama
with a remake of the supernatural soap opera Dark Shadows, has responded to
Angel fan lobbying by proposing a return to the show with occasional TV movies
or a miniseries. Nothing is on the slate yet, according to Whedon. It's up to
fans to maintain the pressure. "Part of me is still thinking about TV movies,"
he said. "The WB did propose the idea of doing something ... but it was kind
of offhand. There was interest in that, but I haven't heard anybody really
pursuing it." One of the people the fans will have to persuade is Boreanaz.
"As far as returning to the show for a reunion, I could probably put that to
bed now: I have no interest in doing that," he said, adding that he would,
however, be open to a theatrical movie. "It would have to be a bigger
challenge rather than going back to something." After the cancellation, there
were some hurt feelings among the cast and crew that manifested itself in the
finale. "We put a lot of that heartbreak into the script, into the show, so it
would hurt as much to watch as it did to have it taken away from us," Whedon
said. "I would not have been as brutal about the ending had we had another
season." The last episode of Angel, titled Not Fade Away, is considerably less
upbeat than the conclusion to its sister show, Buffy the Vampire Slayer, which
ended last year
with the heroine and her friends successfully closing a major
gateway to Hell. Angel finishes with a less victorious tone, and the show's
admirers may be surprised by its brutality. At least one major character meets
a grisly death. Another decides fighting the good fight is no longer worth it.
Continues on the following pages.