|
Post by Clare on Sept 26, 2008 11:34:04 GMT -5
7.06 Him - Episode #128 Dawn falls head-over-heels for football jock RJ but soon enough, Buffy, Anya and even Willow are lusting after him. It falls to Spike and Xander to figure out the cause - and cure - of their infatuation.
Review (also post a score out of 10) and discuss this episode.
|
|
|
Post by partcynic on Oct 4, 2008 7:35:08 GMT -5
Rating = 3
I think I must be going soft in my old age – I actually liked this one a tad more upon re-watching it (though not enough to change my rating). As a whole, this episode was comprised of a ratio of 65/35 terrible/good, with the pleasant stuff being highly enjoyable but the useless material preceding it tainting the overall experience. On several levels, it felt like a light-hearted attempt at recapturing the innocent bounce of S1 – and I certainly appreciated the effort, if little about the execution.
What I Liked about “Him”:
- In general, the last fifteen-or-so minutes (once Dawn, Buffy, Willow and Anya are all under the spell). There was lots of movement, lots of action, and it was entertaining to watch the women's attempts at proving their love for RJ (and in addition, what each of their plans said about them as people). I loved the glee they took in their schemes; Anya’s “damn” when the others took her suggestion; Willow saying she can ‘work around’ the gender issue; the brilliant scene with Buffy, Spike and the bazooka; Xander and Spike’s great plot simply being to swipe the jacket, and the seventies cop-show split screen (and Anya turning the radio off at the end as they announced the news of the bank robbery). It was all pretty silly, but silly worked perfectly in this case.
- Dawn’s sexy dance at the Bronze, and Willow and Xander’s lusting after her (and then their embarrassment when they realised who it was). Pretty much the only good thing about the first half.
- Buffy seducing RJ in the Catholic schoolgirl outfit. Once again, sexy; and Xander’s “get off the boy” line worked too.
- The observational humour of RJ’s high-school-stud brother being a boring loser as an adult. Funny because it's true.
What I Disliked about “Him”:
- The repeat plot – it was done so much better in “Bewitched, Bothered and Bewildered”. Besides being a facsimile of something they’d done before (though they at least acknowledged this), the mechanics of the jacket make very little sense - RJ has had it for quite a while, and yet it's only just starting to work. Not only that, it attracts all women regardless of sexuality, and while it produces an intense but controllable crush in some, it causes homicidal rage in others. Why weren’t all the girls in school trying to kill for him? And if his brother previously had the jacket and was at Sunnydale High during Buffy et al’s time there, wouldn’t we have seen similar goings on back in S1/2?
- The big reveal of Spike's soul coming to nothing. It seems it wasn’t much of a dramatic deal after all – as everyone suddenly knows. In addition, why would Xander, who hates Spike more than any other character, allow him to reside in his apartment, and put up minimal resistance when Buffy pressed the issue?
- The first twenty-five minutes were abysmal – some of the worst tosh ever put out under the “Buffy” brand. Much of this was due to it focusing on Dawn, who’d gotten better in prior episodes, but completely regressed to the obnoxious irritant she was back in S5/6. So much of the ep spent time showing Dawn whining, complaining, shreiking and generally being annoying – whom exactly finds that entertaining? Little of what happened held any meaning for her character development, and between the poor acting (and/or poor direction), there was zero emotional depth to be found.
- Dawn's pratfalls. Beyond the character’s initial aggravating behaviour, many of her actions were inconsistent. If she can take out root monsters (“Grave”) and has been training how to fight (“Lessons”), she shouldn't have just fallen over at her cheerleading tryout. Then there was her catfight with the (terribly acted) teen in the alley. She should have demolished her: I guess vamps are weaker than sixty-pound waifs.
- Beyond Dawn, there were some further characterisation problems. Anya is given no further growth post-“Selfless” (thus making that episode – and all of the eps that led up to it - a big waste of time). Why does D'Hoffryn now want her dead? What happened to “going for the hurt” instead? And Buffy just happens to show up at Anya’s apartment in time for the demon attack – so contrived.
- More Anya stupidity. The bulk of this episode sees her working happily together with Buffy, Xander and Willow. That must be... comfortable. Did this week's writer see “Selfless” or “Hell's Bells”?
- RJ didn’t suck, but he was a rather bland and uninteresting character.
- Buffy's snotty “Dawn, Mom would be ashamed of your behaviour” lines. Because we all know that having sex with someone you hate up against a fast-food dumpster is the epitome of elegance and class.
- Xander coming over to Dawn as soon as she ran out of the school. Shouldn't he be off working instead of loitering?
- Willow's sex change spell. I don't seem to recall her having a problem with Oz’s man-parts. And although she's supposed to be madly in love thanks to the spell, she’s fine with dropping what she's doing just because Xander tells her so?
- The scenes at the train tracks were just badly filmed. The timing of Buffy’s Dawn-rescue is way off.
Do I like this episode more or less than the last time I watched it?
I dislike the bad stuff more – but like the good material more, too. That prevents me from changing my previous grade – but hack fifteen minutes off the opening segment and I’d give it another point or two.
|
|
|
Post by Twisted Slayer on Jun 28, 2010 18:16:43 GMT -5
Rating = 3 I think I must be going soft in my old age – I actually liked this one a tad more upon re-watching it (though not enough to change my rating). As a whole, this episode was comprised of a ratio of 65/35 terrible/good, with the pleasant stuff being highly enjoyable but the useless material preceding it tainting the overall experience. On several levels, it felt like a light-hearted attempt at recapturing the innocent bounce of S1 – and I certainly appreciated the effort, if little about the execution. What I Liked about “Him”:- In general, the last fifteen-or-so minutes (once Dawn, Buffy, Willow and Anya are all under the spell). There was lots of movement, lots of action, and it was entertaining to watch the women's attempts at proving their love for RJ (and in addition, what each of their plans said about them as people). I loved the glee they took in their schemes; Anya’s “damn” when the others took her suggestion; Willow saying she can ‘work around’ the gender issue; the brilliant scene with Buffy, Spike and the bazooka; Xander and Spike’s great plot simply being to swipe the jacket, and the seventies cop-show split screen (and Anya turning the radio off at the end as they announced the news of the bank robbery). It was all pretty silly, but silly worked perfectly in this case. - Dawn’s sexy dance at the Bronze, and Willow and Xander’s lusting after her (and then their embarrassment when they realised who it was). Pretty much the only good thing about the first half. - Buffy seducing RJ in the Catholic schoolgirl outfit. Once again, sexy; and Xander’s “get off the boy” line worked too. - The observational humour of RJ’s high-school-stud brother being a boring loser as an adult. Funny because it's true. What I Disliked about “Him”:- The repeat plot – it was done so much better in “Bewitched, Bothered and Bewildered”. Besides being a facsimile of something they’d done before (though they at least acknowledged this), the mechanics of the jacket make very little sense - RJ has had it for quite a while, and yet it's only just starting to work. Not only that, it attracts all women regardless of sexuality, and while it produces an intense but controllable crush in some, it causes homicidal rage in others. Why weren’t all the girls in school trying to kill for him? And if his brother previously had the jacket and was at Sunnydale High during Buffy et al’s time there, wouldn’t we have seen similar goings on back in S1/2? - The big reveal of Spike's soul coming to nothing. It seems it wasn’t much of a dramatic deal after all – as everyone suddenly knows. In addition, why would Xander, who hates Spike more than any other character, allow him to reside in his apartment, and put up minimal resistance when Buffy pressed the issue? - The first twenty-five minutes were abysmal – some of the worst tosh ever put out under the “Buffy” brand. Much of this was due to it focusing on Dawn, who’d gotten better in prior episodes, but completely regressed to the obnoxious irritant she was back in S5/6. So much of the ep spent time showing Dawn whining, complaining, shreiking and generally being annoying – whom exactly finds that entertaining? Little of what happened held any meaning for her character development, and between the poor acting (and/or poor direction), there was zero emotional depth to be found. - Dawn's pratfalls. Beyond the character’s initial aggravating behaviour, many of her actions were inconsistent. If she can take out root monsters (“Grave”) and has been training how to fight (“Lessons”), she shouldn't have just fallen over at her cheerleading tryout. Then there was her catfight with the (terribly acted) teen in the alley. She should have demolished her: I guess vamps are weaker than sixty-pound waifs. - Beyond Dawn, there were some further characterisation problems. Anya is given no further growth post-“Selfless” (thus making that episode – and all of the eps that led up to it - a big waste of time). Why does D'Hoffryn now want her dead? What happened to “going for the hurt” instead? And Buffy just happens to show up at Anya’s apartment in time for the demon attack – so contrived. - More Anya stupidity. The bulk of this episode sees her working happily together with Buffy, Xander and Willow. That must be... comfortable. Did this week's writer see “Selfless” or “Hell's Bells”? - RJ didn’t suck, but he was a rather bland and uninteresting character. - Buffy's snotty “Dawn, Mom would be ashamed of your behaviour” lines. Because we all know that having sex with someone you hate up against a fast-food dumpster is the epitome of elegance and class. - Xander coming over to Dawn as soon as she ran out of the school. Shouldn't he be off working instead of loitering? - Willow's sex change spell. I don't seem to recall her having a problem with Oz’s man-parts. And although she's supposed to be madly in love thanks to the spell, she’s fine with dropping what she's doing just because Xander tells her so? - The scenes at the train tracks were just badly filmed. The timing of Buffy’s Dawn-rescue is way off. Do I like this episode more or less than the last time I watched it?I dislike the bad stuff more – but like the good material more, too. That prevents me from changing my previous grade – but hack fifteen minutes off the opening segment and I’d give it another point or two. If I may point out, partycynic, Willow didn't have a problem with Oz's man parts because she wasn't gay then. However, she is gay now. And when Dawn fell during the tryouts, that has nothing to do with training to fight demons. Just because Buffy was training her, doesn't mean she's learned how to cartwheel, and flip. I have to say that I don't observe any Buffy episodes carefully to see anything bad about them, mostly because I'm just so in love with the show....
|
|
|
Post by partcynic on Jun 29, 2010 9:43:37 GMT -5
Partcynic. Only one 'y' there. That's true - and if Willow were a real person, I would unquestioningly concur with whichever term she used to identify herself. However, she's fictional, and that gives us some room to challenge preconceived notions of sexual orientation. During her time on the show, Willow has had fulfilling, loving relationships with both a man and a woman, and that gave the writers the opportunity to portray a bisexual character as opposed to falling into the tired, essentialist trap of 'a single same-sex experience or relationship makes you forever gay'. I think it would have been progressive (and a real first) to have a non-stereotyped bi character (or even someone who ignored labels completely). If Willow now identifies as lesbian, that should be respected, but at the same time, the writers have dismissed her first three and a half years of development (where - like it or not - she was written as 100% hetero) - and that's unfortunate. I disagree. Being able to effectively fight requires extensive skills and a real sense of your own body's capacities/abilities, including your centre of gravity at any given moment. It's really not out of the question that if Dawn can expertly roll a vampire away from her (or flip about and take on multiple Bringers, as she does in "Never Leave Me") that she should be able to do a basic cartwheel. Now, if she'd failed at doing a gymnastic move that was genuinely complex, it would be a different matter, but this was just an inconsistency. That's fine - though it means we probably won't agree on a huge amount. One thing I would suggest remembering when reading my thoughts/reviews if that I've now been in the Buffy fandom for a good 13/14 years - so I've long since gone past the 'I love everything' stage. I do think the show is (usually) brilliant and love watching/chatting about it, but I'm also more than willing to call it out when it's not so good. It doesn't mean that I excessively nitpick or hate stuff - it's just an acknowledgement that as the product of human beings, it's never going to be flawless, and in instances where there's genuinely problematic stuff, it's good to be 1) able to notice it and 2) understand why it's problematic.
|
|
|
Post by Twisted Slayer on Jun 29, 2010 13:09:16 GMT -5
Dawn's falling probably had nothing to do with whether she was able to do it at all -- she had a major crush on RJ, so she was probably nervous and therefore, could not complete the move.
|
|
|
Post by partcynic on Jan 12, 2011 17:48:53 GMT -5
As there are comments on my old review, I've left it up, and will post the new one here instead. There's some significant overlap, though. Just bear in mind that what's written here overwrites the old review.
***
7x06 “Him”
Episode Rating = 4
The strongest offering from otherwise poor writer Drew Z. Greenberg, “Him” is a pleasantly surprising episode that manages to make the most of a questionable situation. While the two Dawn-centred eps last season were both total failures, this one manages to make her work by focusing on humour and actually trying to develop her character. That’s not to say that she doesn’t still have plenty of problems, but I like seeing some forward momentum, and the last fifteen-or-so minutes here (once all of the characters are under the spell) are endearing in their puppy-dog silliness. Akin to eps such as “Beer Bad” and “Bad Eggs”, “Him” is something that needs to be watched without analysis, and if you gloss over some of its big issues, you’re left with an amiable and inoffensive standalone – probably the kind of thing S6/7 should have done more of. Granted, I would have like it even more if the ep wasn’t shot through with problems, but simply being entertaining is enough at this juncture.
What I Liked about “Him”:
- I was pleased to see Dawn point out the arbitrariness of souls when she was chatting with Buffy on the bleachers. It was cool to get an acknowledgement that having a soul doesn’t really make someone a better person – it just makes people slightly more accountable for their actions.
- Buffy and Xander work nicely together. I liked their couple-y vibe when they were trying to console Dawn, and Xander’s quip about the cheerleader outfit (it must be said, a great continuity touch) was a funny reminder of seasons gone by.
- Dawn’s dancing at the Bronze was sexy, and Willow and Xander’s horror when they realised who it was they were lusting after was amusing (as was Buffy’s reaction).
- Buffy’s flirting with RJ was humorous (“I’m really the same age as you – just with the sexual experience and stuff”), and I liked the Catholic schoolgirl outfit she donned a little later. Xander’s “Buffy, get off the boy – we’re going home” line was great, and helped to mitigate some of the scene’s creepiness.
- Most of acts three and four (with Dawn, Buffy, Willow and Anya all under the spell) were entertaining. There was lots of movement, lots of action, and it was fun to watch the women's attempts at proving that their love for RJ was the greatest of all (and in addition, what each of their plans said about them as people). I loved the glee they took in their schemes; Anya’s “damn” when the others took her suggestion; Willow stating that she could ‘work around’ the gender issue; the brilliant scene with Buffy, Spike and the bazooka; Xander and Spike’s masterplan being to simply swipe the jacket; the seventies cop-show split screen; and Anya turning the radio off at the end as they announced the news of the bank robbery. It was all shallow and mindless, but agreeably so, and the zaniness worked to the episode’s benefit.
- The observational humour of RJ’s high-school-stud brother being an underachiever as an adult (“I’m in the management program”) was funny and true to life. I almost felt bad for him in his attempts to get Xander and Spike to stay with offers of raisins and a trip to his ‘rumpus room’.
- It was neat for Dawn to get a tiny bit of progression in realising how ridiculous her behaviour had been (though its usefulness is questionable, since it was the result of a spell and not strictly her personal choices) – I imagine that it was intended to serve the groundwork for the abandoned arc that would have seen her getting a steady boyfriend.
What I Disliked about “Him”:
- I hated that the reveal with Spike's soul came to nothing. This should have been a major dramatic deal, but apparently got handled offscreen. With this precedent, perhaps the next show could start with Buffy and Xander discussing how Willow died between episodes. To add insult to injury, why would Xander, who hates Spike more than any other character, allow him to reside in his apartment, and put up minimal resistance when Buffy pressed the issue?
- Like “Help”, the plot is a facsimile of something the show had done far better in the past. While I like that the duplication was actively acknowledged (Xander’s flashback to “Bewitched, Bothered and Bewildered”), it doesn’t remove the problems caused by the lack of originality. In addition, the mechanics of the love spell make no sense – RJ’s apparently had the jacket for a while, yet it's only just starting to work. Not only that, it attracts all women regardless of sexuality, and while it produces an intense but controllable crush in some, it causes homicidal rage in others. Why weren’t all the girls in school/women in town trying to kill for him? If his brother previously had the jacket and was at Sunnydale High during Buffy et al’s time there, wouldn’t we have seen similar goings on back in S1/2? And why aren’t Buffy and Willow enraptured as soon as they see RJ in the jacket at the Bronze, instead of it happening later?
- RJ didn’t suck, but he was a bland and uninteresting character with no identifiable personality. I didn’t think much of his acting, either (in fact, all of the teen characters were badly portrayed, especially the brunette cheerleader).
- Too much attention was paid to Dawn at the start, and she did little worth seeing. The embarrassment humour was overplayed to the point that it became uncomfortable to watch, and her subsequent shrieking and complaining took me right back to the dark days of “Older and Far Away”. I still don’t understand how the writers think having her behave like this is a good thing – it’s not believable, engaging or insightful, and eats up too much time. It also doesn’t help that Michelle Trachtenberg can’t really act.
- Buffy's snotty “Dawn, Mom would be ashamed of your behaviour” lines at the Bronze left a lot to be desired. I’m hoping she’s aware of the hypocrisy of her behaviour – after all, we all know that having sex with someone you hate up against a fast-food dumpster is the epitome of respectability.
- If Dawn is capable of swordfighting root monsters (“Grave”) and has been learning how to effectively engage in one-on-one combat (“Lessons”), she shouldn't have just fallen over at her cheerleading tryout. There was also a problem with her fight with the girl in the alley – if Dawn can take on vamps and win, she should have been able demolish a teen girl waif without batting an eyelid.
- How was Xander able to come right over to Dawn the instant she ran out of the school? Isn’t he supposed to be working on the construction site as opposed to checking out the girls? - Buffy showing up at Anya’s just in time to save her from a demon attack was contrived, and Anya’s subsequent behaviour gutted “Selfless” by rendering it moot (what happened to D’Hoffryn “go[ing] for the pain”?) It’s very problematic that the entire jilting/vengeance demon arc has come to nothing, and the character development is all over the place. The Scoobs are acting like the best of friends despite the fact that Buffy and Anya were fighting to the death last week; and there should also be some significant post-“Hell’s Bells” discomfort between Xander and Anya.
- Willow's sex change spell was a bit weird – I don't seem to recall her having a problem with Oz’s penis (it’s fine if Willow now identifies as gay, but the show shouldn’t be acting as though bisexuality doesn’t exist). And although she's supposed to be madly in love with RJ thanks to the spell, she’s fine with dropping what she's doing just because Xander tells her so?
- The scenes at the train tracks were badly filmed. The timing of Buffy’s Dawn-rescue is way off.
Do I like this episode more or less than the last time I watched it?
I still think that this episode is unintelligent and has some major problems, but I deliberately switched off during the first half, and was able to enjoy it all the more for doing so. To give credit where it’s due, the second half is good fun, and I’ll take sitcom silliness (that’s at least entertaining) over “Dawson’s Creek”-style whining any day of the week. Acknowledging that I’ve found more to like about it on rewatching, I’ve decided to up my rating a point, giving “Him” a respectable four out of ten – weak for the first four seasons, but pretty good by the series’ current standard.
|
|
|
Post by cyclica on Jan 15, 2011 16:21:02 GMT -5
Woo! Two party cynic reviews for the price of one. And I've just realised, I haven't yet transfered over my s7 reviews from the 'old board' section. So I went there and found... a third Him review! Is there a reason you decided to jump into the middle of s7 and rereview an episode you reviewed twice already? - I was pleased to see Dawn point out the arbitrariness of souls when she was chatting with Buffy on the bleachers. It was cool to get an acknowledgement that having a soul doesn’t really make someone a better person – it just makes people slightly more accountable for their actions. Agreed. I liked that scene. - Most of acts three and four (with Dawn, Buffy, Willow and Anya all under the spell) were entertaining. There was lots of movement, lots of action, and it was fun to watch the women's attempts at proving that their love for RJ was the greatest of all (and in addition, what each of their plans said about them as people). I loved the glee they took in their schemes; Anya’s “damn” when the others took her suggestion; Willow stating that she could ‘work around’ the gender issue; the brilliant scene with Buffy, Spike and the bazooka; Xander and Spike’s masterplan being to simply swipe the jacket; the seventies cop-show split screen; and Anya turning the radio off at the end as they announced the news of the bank robbery. It was all shallow and mindless, but agreeably so, and the zaniness worked to the episode’s benefit. Yep, their schemes were the highlight for me too. Well, except the stupid re-use of the rocket launcher, which they used to blow gaping holes in previous episodes, when a rocket launcher would have been very useful. I imagine that it was intended to serve the groundwork for the abandoned arc that would have seen her getting a steady boyfriend. Wha? What abandoned arc was this? It's news to me. Would this storyline have involved that teenage girl and boy from 'lessons'? Would he have become the boyfriend? - I hated that the reveal with Spike's soul came to nothing. This should have been a major dramatic deal, but apparently got handled offscreen. Good! There was too much discussion of souls going on already, especially if you watch angel as well. To add insult to injury, why would Xander, who hates Spike more than any other character, allow him to reside in his apartment, and put up minimal resistance when Buffy pressed the issue? I know! The whole pairing of xander and spike was the worst part of the episode for me. It made no sense. - Like “Help”, the plot is a facsimile of something the show had done far better in the past. While I like that the duplication was actively acknowledged (Xander’s flashback to “Bewitched, Bothered and Bewildered”), it doesn’t remove the problems caused by the lack of originality. In addition, the mechanics of the love spell make no sense – RJ’s apparently had the jacket for a while, yet it's only just starting to work. Not only that, it attracts all women regardless of sexuality, and while it produces an intense but controllable crush in some, it causes homicidal rage in others. Why weren’t all the girls in school/women in town trying to kill for him? If his brother previously had the jacket and was at Sunnydale High during Buffy et al’s time there, wouldn’t we have seen similar goings on back in S1/2? And why aren’t Buffy and Willow enraptured as soon as they see RJ in the jacket at the Bronze, instead of it happening later? Perhaps one of the properties of the magic jacket is that the spell intensifies or lessens depending on how high or low the sleeves are put? There was also a problem with her fight with the girl in the alley – if Dawn can take on vamps and win, she should have been able demolish a teen girl waif without batting an eyelid. Why, didn't you know? All vampires and demons are as strong as puppies! That cheerleader was most likely the strongest opponent dawn has ever faced. - Buffy showing up at Anya’s just in time to save her from a demon attack was contrived, and Anya’s subsequent behaviour gutted “Selfless” by rendering it moot (what happened to D’Hoffryn “go[ing] for the pain”?) It’s very problematic that the entire jilting/vengeance demon arc has come to nothing, and the character development is all over the place. The Scoobs are acting like the best of friends despite the fact that Buffy and Anya were fighting to the death last week; and there should also be some significant post-“Hell’s Bells” discomfort between Xander and Anya. I liked how things with anya had got 'back to normal', though it's a shame we didn't get to see the new direction anya could have taken at the end of selfless. - Willow's sex change spell was a bit weird – I don't seem to recall her having a problem with Oz’s penis (it’s fine if Willow now identifies as gay, but the show shouldn’t be acting as though bisexuality doesn’t exist). I don't get either how discovering you like girls means you stop liking boys. That said, willow did say in a s5 episode (tough love?) that she is most definetly a lesbian now, so I don't see her wanting to change Rj as a big problem. Acknowledging that I’ve found more to like about it on rewatching, I’ve decided to up my rating a point, giving “Him” a respectable four out of ten Every time you watch it, you like it more. You now only have to watch it another 3 times, and you'll like it as much as I do.
|
|
|
Post by cyclica on Jan 15, 2011 16:24:35 GMT -5
Dawn's falling probably had nothing to do with whether she was able to do it at all -- she had a major crush on RJ, so she was probably nervous and therefore, could not complete the move. That's my take on it too. Anyway, if you're interested, here's my old review from 4 years ago (wow four years?)- A high school student does a spell so that every girl he meets falls in love with him. Season 7's policy of going back to the beginning is all well and good, but this is just bewitched, bothered and bewildered all over again. Oh well, at least they are open about it.
Dawn was ok in parts of this ep, you know, until she started running up to her room. She had made so much progress this season, those writers had to put her under a spell to make her whiney again, they went out of their way to bring back whiney dawn! Its almost as if they don't want to disappoint any viewers out there who used to love watching dawn cry. Bah. She had some great lines at the start watching the football with buffy, but the episode didn't really get good until later, when all four women became affected by the magic jacket...cue awesome four way split screen!
Buffy and anya are friends again! And anya managed to piss buffy off several times right after buffy saved her life. All is right in the world.
Xander and spike- Now there's a buddy movie I'd never want to see again. There was something so wrong about watching spike tag along behind xander, and I don't just mean impossible vampire reflections in shop windows.
Not a great episode in terms of plot, but as comedy episodes go there were some good lines (anti anti love spell spell spell), and of cource split screen, rocket launcher, and xander and willow accidently getting turned on by dawn. I rate it 7 for entertaining me. .... I stand by my 7. Even though I haven't watched it in a while, it's still pretty clear in my memory, I don't think a rewatch would change my grade.
|
|