Bewitched, Bothered and Bewildered (Buffy episode)
Encyclopedia
"Bewitched, Bothered and Bewildered" is episode 16 of season two of Buffy the Vampire Slayer. In this episode, Cordelia breaks up with Xander after her friends mock her. Xander retaliates by attempting a love spell to "put her through the same hell", and he gets a little more than he had bargained for.

Plot synopsis

On her night patrol through a cemetery, Xander
Xander Harris
Alexander LaVelle "Xander" Harris is a fictional character in the television series Buffy the Vampire Slayer, as well as in numerous items in the series Expanded Universe, such as comic books, tie-in novels and video games...

 shows Buffy
Buffy Summers
Buffy Summers is a fictional character from Joss Whedon's Buffy the Vampire Slayer franchise. She first appeared in the 1992 film Buffy the Vampire Slayer before going on to appear in the television series and subsequent comic book of the same name...

 the silver necklace he intends to give Cordelia
Cordelia Chase
Cordelia Chase is a fictional character created by Joss Whedon for the television series Buffy the Vampire Slayer; she also appeared on Buffy's spin-off series Angel...

 for Valentine's Day. Buffy teases him for his girl while reassuring him of the gift. Xander is under no illusions as he is convinced that dating Cordelia is more perilous than slaying.

On Valentine's Day, Harmony and her followers insult Cordelia for going out with Xander, revealing to Cordelia for the first time that her relationship with Xander is not as secret as she thought. In class, Xander notices that Amy Madison
Amy Madison
Amy Madison is a fictional character, a witch played by Elizabeth Anne Allen in the television series Buffy the Vampire Slayer and by Shay Astar in the Season 8 motion comics. She made appearances in every season of Buffy except Seasons Five .Amy is a witch...

 avoided homework by hypnotizing the teacher. He offers to speak to her as Buffy and Willow remember Amy's "amateur psycho" mother
Witch (Buffy the Vampire Slayer episode)
"Witch" is the third episode of the first season of the television series Buffy the Vampire Slayer . It serves as the show's first regular episode after the Pilot and originally aired in the United States on March 17, 1997, on The WB Television Network...

. Giles
Rupert Giles
Rupert Giles is a fictional character created by Joss Whedon for the television series Buffy the Vampire Slayer. The character is portrayed by Anthony Stewart Head. He serves as Buffy Summers' mentor and surrogate father figure...

 appears and asks to speak with Buffy when Jenny Calendar
Jenny Calendar
Jenny Calendar is a fictional character in the fantasy television series Buffy the Vampire Slayer . Played by Robia LaMorte, Jenny is the computer teacher at Sunnydale High School...

 sees him and tries to make up. Giles decides that Buffy is more important; they leave for the library.

There, he warns Buffy of Angelus' vicious history around St. Valentine's Day. Giles decides Buffy does not need to know the details and offers to patrol on her behalf. At the same time, Spike shows Drusilla a necklace that is immediately topped by Angelus' gift: a fresh heart that he found in a "quaint little shop girl".

Whiling that night away alongside her mom, Buffy receives a gift and an ominous note from Angelus. Meanwhile, Willow
Willow Rosenberg
Willow Rosenberg is a fictional character created for the fantasy television series Buffy the Vampire Slayer . She was developed by Joss Whedon and portrayed throughout the TV series by Alyson Hannigan...

 confesses to being a groupie of Oz and his band
Dingoes Ate My Baby
Dingoes Ate My Baby is a fictional rock band on the television series Buffy the Vampire Slayer. The name was derived from the widespread news coverage of the disappearance of 9 week old Azaria Chamberlain in Australia in 1980...

. Cordelia is again ignored by her clique at the Bronze
The Bronze
The Bronze is a fictional nightclub in Sunnydale, the fictional setting for the television series Buffy the Vampire Slayer. Of 144 episodes of the series, 66 have at least one scene at the Bronze, not including its appearance in the unaired pilot....

, and she decides that her popularity is more important than her relationship. After sadly praising an increasingly smitten Xander, first for his clothes, then for the necklace, she breaks up with him. Xander is outraged at her timing.

Xander is humiliated the next morning when everyone at Sunnydale High is laughing at the way he was dumped and Buffy is too focused on Angelus to offer him any support. He spots Amy and blackmails her into casting a love spell so he can break up with a lovelorn Cordelia and "put her through the same hell." Amy agrees to do the spell, but needs a personal item of Cordelia's for it. In the library, Buffy convinces Giles to tell her of Angelus' atrocities.

Xander goes up to Cordelia demanding the necklace back, and she pretends to get it out of the locker, claiming she doesn't like it anyway, but doesn't let him know that she is still wearing it under her buttoned-up shirt. That night, Xander and Amy perform the spell.

The next morning, Xander talks to Cordelia, attempting to find out the effect of the spell but finds her unaffected. Xander enters the library as Giles is still giving Buffy information on Angelus. Xander is despondent and this time Buffy consoles him on what happened with Cordelia, and suggests that they get together to "comfort each other". Xander literally cannot believe his luck, especially when Buffy hints she might even give him a lap dance. The two then nearly kiss when interrupted by Amy, who wants to discuss the 'failure' of the spell. Xander tries to tell her that he's no longer interested, but Amy tells him they can just hang out... and Xander realizes that Amy and Buffy are both acting the same way towards him. Then a Harmony groupie wants to "study" with him at night. He runs home, only to find Willow hiding under his sheets wearing only a long shirt. She offers him her virginity and he flees.

The next day, all of the girls at Sunnydale High are pleased to see Xander in the hallways; the boys, less so. Cordelia also remains unaffected, the use of her necklace having protected her from the spell, rather than making her the target. Xander confesses to Giles, who is appalled at his foolishness, saying that victims of love spells lose all reason and become obsessed, even murderous. Jenny enters the library intent on conversing with Giles, but soon finds herself distracted by Xander's presence. When the Watcher looks for Amy to reverse the spell, he has to drag a moaning Ms. Calendar away. Xander blockades the door, only to find Buffy, wearing only a trench-coat (theoretically), willing to give him more than a heart attack. When he refuses to undress her because she is under the influence, she becomes enraged, thinking he is toying with her. Amy walks in seeking Xander too, and both girls argue, thinking Xander is two-timing them both. Buffy punches her hard in the face. Amy turns Buffy into a rat, sending her scurrying behind bookcases. Buffy-rat hurries out of the library when a confused Oz punches Xander for making Willow cry on the phone all night. Giles angrily sends Xander home, and sends Oz to find Buffy-rat.

On his way out, Xander sees Harmony and other girls viciously attacking Cordelia, for what she had done to Xander two nights earlier. He rescues her and takes her outside, only to find an axe-wielding Willow leading other Sunnydale females. Xander and Cordelia flee to Buffy's house, only to find Joyce
Joyce Summers
Joyce Summers is a fictional character in the fantasy television series Buffy the Vampire Slayer . Played by Kristine Sutherland, Joyce is the mother of the main character, Buffy Summers . Joyce appears regularly from the first episode until the character's death in the fifth season episode "The...

 pawing over him. They run up to Buffy's room but Angelus appears in Buffy's window and drags Xander out. Drusilla saves Xander from becoming Angelus' substitute present for Buffy and offers him immortality. She is distracted by Willow and her gang, and Cordelia pulls Xander back in the house. The mob breaks into the house with knives and sticks (except for Drusilla, who cannot enter, lacking an invitation). Cornered in the basement, Xander reveals to Cordelia that he meant the spell for her (leaving out that he meant it for revenge). She is touched.

Meanwhile, Giles had convinced Amy to reverse her spells. The Buffy-rat is switched back to human form just before eating the cheese on a mousetrap in the school basement, leaving Buffy stricken with a "slight case of nudity." Then, just as they are about to kill the young couple, the spell is lifted from the obsessed women in the Summers' basement. Thinking quickly, Cordy commends their scavenger hunt
Scavenger hunt
A scavenger hunt is a game in which the organizers prepare a list defining specific items, using which the participants — individuals or teams — seek to gather all items on the list — usually without purchasing them — or perform tasks or take photographs of the items, as specified...

.

The next morning, all has returned to normal. The girls all retain their memory of the events, and while most appear to be dismissive (or choose to repress the memories), Willow's emotional history with Xander has left her furious, and she refuses to talk to him. Buffy comments that she was impressed by Xander's reaction to her seduction. Later, Harmony insults Xander again, and Cordelia finally faces up to her friends, professes her desire to date Xander, and walks away arm-in-arm with him.

Continuity

The much-used phrase "Big Bad
Big Bad
Big Bad is a term originally used by the Buffy the Vampire Slayer television series to describe a major recurring adversary, usually the chief villain or antagonist in a particular broadcast season...

" is introduced, when Buffy refers to Angelus as the "big bad thing in the dark." The term "Big Bad" has since been used to describe the principal villain of each season of Buffy and Angel
Angel (TV series)
Angel is an American television series, a spin-off of the television series Buffy the Vampire Slayer. The series was created by Buffys creator, Joss Whedon, in collaboration with David Greenwalt, and first aired on October 5, 1999...

.

Arc significance

  • In this episode, Amy has begun practicing magic like her mother did. Among the spells Amy casts is the one which turns Buffy into a rat; Amy would repeat this spell (on herself) in Gingerbread.
  • This episode marked the first of Xander's three break-ups throughout the series, each of which would be followed by a botched attempt at vengeance: in this episode, Xander's awry love spell; in The Wish, Cordelia's ill-fated plea to vengeance demon Anyanka
    Anya Jenkins
    Anya is a fictional character created by Joss Whedon for the television series Buffy the Vampire Slayer. She also appears in the comic book series based on the television show. Portrayed by Emma Caulfield, the character appears as a guest star in the third and fourth seasons of the show before...

    ; and in Entropy, Anya's unsuccessful attempts to enact her own vengeance.
  • Xander dreamily reminisces about the events of this episode in the seventh season's Him, which was also about a love spell — apparently having forgotten (or repressed) that the experience almost got him killed. That episode features a brief flashback of him and Cordelia being attacked in the basement.
  • When Spike suggests that Angelus rip Buffy's lungs out as a Valentine's Day "gift", Angelus replies that such an act lacks poetry. Spike immediately responds that it doesn't have to and whimsically asks what rhymes with "lungs". This may be an early reference to Spike's human background; in the Season Five episode "Fool for Love", it is revealed that William Pratt (Spike's human name) was a poet in 1880 London. His work was generally considered by his peers in the town to be worthy of nothing but ridicule, with one man commenting that he would rather have a railroad spike driven through his head than listen to another line of that "bloody awful poetry". Of particular note in "Fool for Love" is William's poem, recited at a society gathering, in which he has fudged a rhyme for the word effulgent (like lungs, not a word easy to rhyme with in romantic poetry).

External links

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