It might not necessarily appear on a list of the top Buffyverse episodes alongside such familiar and popular choices as “Hush,” “The Body,” “I Will Remember You,” and “Smile Time.” But “You’re Welcome” – the twelfth episode of “Angel”’s fifth and final season and the show’s 100th episode – is one of my favorites. Why? Because it’s a love letter to the character of Cordelia Chase.
Unlike Buffy, Cordelia is not someone the audience meets as a self-sacrificing heroine. And unlike Angel, she’s not someone seeking to atone for their past. What’s different about Cordelia is she’s someone who – across two shows and seven seasons of television – becomes a better person without losing the lack of tact and sense of self that made her fun in the first place. It’s one of the best examples of the kind of character evolution that you can only get from serialized television.
But towards the end of the third season of “Angel,” things starts going horribly wrong for Cordy. She becomes half-demon, resulting in a set of ill-defined superpowers like…glowing really bright. In the season finale, she ascends into the sky, allegedly to fulfill her destiny as a higher being. She returns in season four with amnesia and horrifies the audience by sleeping with Angel’s sulky son Connor. Eventually, it’s revealed that an entity hijacked Cordelia’s body and mind for evilness, leaving her comatose after giving birth to itself (oh, that Jasmine!). Plus, bad hair.
So it’s super gratifying that “You’re Welcome” sees Cordelia spring from her coma – seemingly awoken by a fresh vision from The Powers That Be – with a bounce in her step and biting retorts on her tongue and, as Wesley exclaims with awe, looking really hot. She’s remorseful about what Jasmine did during her possession, but she’s also Cordy in all her glory and she’s revved up to get her vampire guy back on track.
And Angel certainly needs Cordelia. Halfway through the fifth season, Angel is still struggling with being the CEO of the Los Angeles branch of Wolfram & Hart, trying to leverage the law firm’s resources to do good, but often forced to make compromises for his evil clients. And due to the machinations of longtime nemesis Lindsay McDonald and his lady love Eve, he believes that Spike is The Powers That Be’s new champion and the true subject of the Shansu Prophecy that promises humanity for the vampire with a soul.
Cordelia’s vision of tattoos – and after comparing notes with Spike – leads our heroes to Lindsay, whose master plan was to unleash the Senior Partners’ fail-safe weapon against Angel. One soaring sword fight and a magic spell later, Lindsay has been defeated and sucked into a dimensional portal, Eve is thrown out on her keister, and the gang is ready to grab drinks. It’s not the show’s strongest plot and the MacGuffin is lame, but “You’re Welcome” makes up for that in the character moments, in Angel and Cordelia getting their groove back.
Given it’s also the 100th episode of “Angel,” there’s a lot of fun callbacks. Her vision leads Cordelia and Wesley to hit the research books like they used to, which Wes (in a moment of dorkitude infrequent in the later seasons given the darker turn the character took) deems “kicking it old school.” Doyle gets a rare and much-deserved mention as Angel catches Cordelia watching the Angel Investigations commercial (“Our rats are low…rates…it says rats!”) he filmed back in the show’s ninth episode. I liked how angry Angel and particularly Cordelia got when they learned some evildoer was masquerading under his name. And smartly, Spike, Wesley, etc. are peeled away from the action so the three characters that appeared in the pilot – Angel, Cordelia, and Lindsay – are alone together for the climactic fight scene.
There’s also a good amount of humor. A red-skinned demon wanders up to confirm a racquetball date with Angel right when Cordy is berating him for making a deal with the devil. Cordelia is stunned silent by Gunn having hair. Another snarkfest with Spike results in the immortal Angel line, “Did you call me a tit?” But my absolute favorite comes about halfway through. With time running out, Cordelia super casually advises Angel to “have at it” and torture Eve. He responds to this request with amusing befuddlement, but the day is saved by Harmony, who reminds everyone that she’s technically evil and doesn’t mind torturing Eve for the team, which Angel signs off on with a hilarious shrug. The line readings and facial expressions by David Boreanaz, Charisma Carpenter, and Mercedes McNab in this sequence are a scream.
But sadly, the fun can’t last forever. Watching it again, the clues to her fate are obvious throughout the episode – Cordelia hurriedly pulling the curtain around her “roommate” at the hospital, her new appreciation of Doyle’s sacrifice, her final remark to Wesley, etc. But that doesn’t mean I still didn’t get a little lump in my throat when a tearful Cordy told Angel, “I’m just on a different road…and this is my off-ramp.” Or when she spun on her heels for a “why the heck not” smooch (I never 100% bought Angel/Cordelia as a couple, but this was a great kiss). Or when Angel finally took his phone call and learned that Cordelia was dead, having never woke up from her coma after all.
She may have had to bow out (though she does reappear as a spirit guide in the comic book continuation – and has a dragon named after her!), but as befits her, she went out in style. So thank you, David Fury. Thank you, David Greenwalt. Thank you, Joss Whedon. Thank you, Charisma Carpenter. And thank you, Cordelia Chase.
So that’s my share for Throwback Thursday. What did you think of “You’re Welcome?” What’s your favorite episode of “Angel?” Do some sharing of your own in the comments section.
Cordelia was one of the best characters throughout the series for me. I really wanted her to end up with Angel in the end. But at least she got to fight together with him one last time.
ReplyDeleteBehind the scenes drama sucks. The way that the show ended up treating Cordelia and Carpenter was appalling. We deserved more for Cordelia after watching her grow for so many years across two shows.
ReplyDeleteThank you for this. I truly feel Cordelia's presence in the Buffy verse is underrated and this episode will always be a standout. I think that angel and cordy grew to love each other in a mature adult kind of way. i loved Cordy and looked forward to watching each episode just as much for her. (Was not a big Fred Fan)
ReplyDeleteWhile season five had it's highpoints and wasn't bad, I still missed her.
I liked how, when Angel tried to stop her from going with him and Spike, Cordelia shut that nonsense down with a quickness and grabbed a sword off the wall. Attagirl!
ReplyDeleteI don't really remember the rumors. I do recall Charisma Carpenter missed a bunch of episodes during season three and then her real-life pregnancy led to story changes during season four.
ReplyDeleteIt was definitely a shame to lose Cordelia/Chriasma.
Thanks for reading and sharing the Cordy love!
ReplyDeleteThanks for this as like the others here, really appreciated the character of Cordelia in the Buffyverse and feel that she and perhaps Wesley were the 2 characters who had the most growth from their beginnings to their ends... Everytime I watch this ep, I can't help loving every minute from her reawakening to getting a bit misty when Angel gets that final phone call... sure, I would've loved the crisis to be a bit more dramatic and sfx filled, but the flash was never what the ep was about... And as much as I liked Buffy/Angel, I loved Cordy/Angel as I felt that B/A was more like your first big teenage love, C/A was a more substantial and adult love as they discovered who they were with each other. I really loved her character despite the odd choices to take her character, and liked how she was represented in some of the follow on Angel comics.
ReplyDeleteI've binged watched both Buffy and Angel many times over the years and will never understand why so many loved Cordelia Chase. Don't get me wrong, she did grow on me. I hated her on Buffy but grew to appreciate her on Angel and then the Cordy/Connor/Jasmine thing happened and I was soooo over her character (even knowing it wasn't really her after the fact). All that said, I was glad that she returned for a final episode and got her guy back on track. "You're Welcome", while not even in my top ten Angel episodes, was damn good. My favorite scene was when she and Spike came into contact the first time and he tried to bite her thinking she was evil.
ReplyDeleteCordelia:
I thought he had a soul.
Spike:
I thought she didn't.
Cordelia:
I do!
Spike:
So do I!
Cordelia:
Well, clearly, mine's better.
My top five Angel episodes are Time Bomb, A Hole in the World, Smile Time, Waiting in the Wings, and I Will Remember You. For me, Angel didn't get really great until Fred showed up and her arc is my favorite on that series.
I also want to add that the "bad hair" comment made me giggle because it was really bad. Not as bad as that haircut she had in earlier in the series but bad nonetheless.
Yikes, that's some bad hair!
ReplyDeleteBut I believe that's season 2 bad hair. Note Wesley still wearing his "I have a stick up my bum!" glasses.
I was referring to Cordy's Tinkerbell phase.
[flash]http://www.google.com/url?sa=i&rct=j&q=&esrc=s&source=images&cd=&cad=rja&uact=8&ved=0CAcQjRw&url=http%3A%2F%2Fangel.fcpages.com%2Fangel322.html&ei=QOeuVLGpJ4G2ogSepoGQBw&psig=AFQjCNG5xYQDAWm8pBF__-n0FSJ1ZyJkuQ&ust=1420834998933291[/flash]
I know you were referring to that horrifically colored pixie cut. I posted this in response to that bad hair comment as it being "not as bad as that haircut she had in earlier in the series". It was horrible and that isn't the worst image I've seen when she had that very brief look but I liked the context. :-)
ReplyDeleteGreat Throwback Thursday, by the way! Here's a pic of that pixie cut you were talking about.
There it is, thanks Mel! Just...not good. And it looked even goofier when Cordy was floating up into the sky in the season three finale.
ReplyDeleteGlad you liked the Throwback Thursday, it was a fun one to write!
Definitely agree about Wesley also going through a big evolution across both shows. "I'll take away your bucket," anyone?
ReplyDeleteThanks for reading!
Awwww, I loved this episode. I felt so bad for Angel once he realized the truth.
ReplyDeletethis episode was so heartwrenching i still can't believe they killed her off and Angel and Cordelia's romance was more interesting than Buffy, granted i shipped Kate and Angel before she left but after that i was full-on on Cordelia and Angel's romance, it still makes me sick the way they made Cordelia sleep with someone who was basically her son, i just want to know what was going through Whedon's head when he did this when Angel and Connor finally got to a place where Connor finally acknowledged AND called Angel "Dad", and when Angel and Cordelia kissed was amazing and that dreaded phone call was the worst thing they could to us, i also loved how pissed Angel and Cordy when they found out that someone was using Doyle's name and them reminiscing about him because it made it more poignant that the three of them started all of this this episode was just the show punching the fans on the stomach and laughing while doing it
ReplyDeleteDidn't care for Buffy, but loved the show Angel. I've rewatched the seasons many a time, and Cordelia is definitely my favorite character :-) She's hilarious. And although I loved all seasons, I missed her terribly in the end. The show changed when she left.
ReplyDeleteI thought David Boreanaz was great in that final scene. The reaction to the phone call and the almost whisper of a way he said "Thank you" was spot-on.
ReplyDeleteThanks for reading Shannon!
The gang definitely felt very fractured after Cordy and then Fred died.
ReplyDeleteI'm curious, what made you give "Angel" a shot if you weren't into "Buffy the Vampire Slayer"?
Agreed. But you know what bugs me the most til this very f**king day?!?!?! Every kiss they EVER had, was NEVER real!!!!! Even that last kiss, wassss notttttt realllllll. It bugs me til this day. The only kiss that was actually the two of them (not a dream, or some AU, or some spirit) was after Doyle died, and Cordy was trying to get rid of the visions, so she walks in the office and kisses Angel and he pushes her away. That's it. smdh.
ReplyDeleteInteresting, thanks for sharing!
ReplyDeleteWell i did! every time they had the oppurtunity it was always fake, even the last one in You're welcome. I thought FINALLY!, But nope, wasn't real. Nice kiss, but that ruined that for me. TPTB totally spat in our faces. I'll never get over that. It's the same thing with B&B, how they got together, finally, but it was OFF SCREEN...smmfh. Unnnnnbelievable.
ReplyDeleteWith the parting gifts....that usually happens with me. lol i'm not surprised. I rarely think of things as coincidence. haha esp ftw.