Wicca is a modern pagan, witchcraft religion

Wicca is a diverse religion with no central authority or figure defining it.

Wicca often involves the ritual practice of magic, though it is not always necessary

Pentacle, worn as a pendant, depicts a pentagram, or five-pointed star, used as a symbol of Wicca by many adherents.

Beliefs in Wicca range from hard polytheism to even monotheism.

Wicca is typically duotheistic, worshipping a god and goddess traditionally viewed as a mother goddess and horned god.

The term Wicca first achieved widespread acceptance when referring to the religion in the 1960s and 70s

Application of the word Wicca has given rise to "a great deal of disagreement and infighting".

The Goddess and the God may be regarded as the Divine Feminine and the Divine Masculine

The God and Goddess are generally seen as lovers and equals, the Divine Couple who together co-create the cosmos.

Traditionally the God is viewed as a Horned God, associated with nature, wilderness, sexuality, hunting and the life cycle

The Horned God is given various names according to the tradition, and these include Cernunnos, Pan, Atho and Karnayna.

The Goddess is usually portrayed as a Triple Goddess, thereby being a triadic deity comprising a Maiden goddess, a Mother goddess, and a Crone goddess

Some Wiccans, particularly from the 1970s onwards, have viewed the Goddess as the more important of the two deities, who is pre-eminent in that she contains and conceives all. In this respect, the God is viewed as the spark of life and inspiration within her, simultaneously her lover and her child.

Showing posts with label buffy the vampire slayer. Show all posts
Showing posts with label buffy the vampire slayer. Show all posts

Wednesday, August 3, 2011

Buffy The Vampire Slayer 3 1 And 3 2 Anne And Dead Man Party

Buffy The Vampire Slayer 3 1 And 3 2 Anne And Dead Man Party
BUFFY: This'll probably go faster if we split up. LILY: Can I come with you? BUFFY: Okay, where did I lose you on the whole splitting up thing?There's a confidence that coats a television show in its third season, now the writers are certain they have an established audience of sufficient numbers to keep a network happy. You can't ever rest on your laurels in this biz, but it's only natural that a show will start taking risks in a third year... you just hope they pay off. "Buffy the Vampire Slayer"'s season 3 premiere "ANNE" felt like a brave change of direction, with a heartbroken Buffy (Sarah Michelle Gellar) now living under an assumed name in a bad Los Angeles neighbourhood, employed as a diner waitress pestered by morons, although Joss Whedon knew he couldn't keep this going forever. In 1998, genre TV was less experimental than it is today, because the notion of Buffy separated from her friends would have formed a four or five episode arc in 2012!Back in Sunnydale, life goes on-although without The Slayer it's understandably difficult for Willow (Alyson Hannigan), Xander (Nicholas Brendon), Giles (Anthony Head), Cordelia (Charisma Carpenter) and Oz (Seth Green) to keep the town's vampire population in check. Cue lots of amusing scenes with the Scooby Gang trying to stake vamps minus the super-strength, agility and clever puns that Buffy brings to the party. Plus there was more of Cordelia and Xander's self-destructive relationship, as they both still don't fully believe they're good together and could be happy if they accepted this.But the real story was with runaway Buffy, who learned that you can change your name and move somewhere nobody knows you, but your past will always catch up with you. Here it came in the form of Lily (Julia Lee), the vampire cult member from season 2's "Lie to Me", who recognised Buffy working at the diner while eating with her boyfriend Rickie (Chad Todhunter). Unsurprisingly, Lily soon came looking for Buffy's help when Rickie went missing and, wouldn't you just know it, helped uncover yet another demonic cult in the process. This one being a literal underbelly of the city, accessible via an oily portal controlled by pastor Ken (Carlos Jacott), whom it's revealed is a scarred demon who kidnaps people from the streets above and forces them into hellish slave labour... until they grow old and useless, only to be returned to the real world as half-crazed "homeless" people muttering to themselves.I really liked the themes of this episode and the partial supernatural explanation for a city's hobo community. It was also a great wake-up call for despondent Buffy to be presented with a problem of this nature, which only she can possibly help with, and an adventure that plausibly saw her start valuing herself once again. I was surprised, because the first quarter-hour felt dicey (Buffy dreaming of Angel on a beach felt ripped from a saccharine Mills what with the return of a fairly minor character in Lily, who here had the most screen time after Gellar! I guess Whedon just liked the actress? (I note from IMdB she'll appear in some "Angel" episodes, but will investigate no further.)Overall, "Anne" was a decent start to the third season and something very different to what I was expecting. Modern taste has me wishing we'd explored Buffy's separation from her friends and family for a little longer, because she's back on her mother's (Kristine Sutherland) doorstep by the time the credits roll, but in some ways I'm glad the show will just get back to business now. By the by, great to see the opening titles updated with slicker footage and (to my ear) a slightly punchier version of the theme tune, while the scale of the demonic underworld felt indicative of "BtVS" being awarded a bigger budget by The WB. They've even found enough extras to make Sunnydale High feel like a thriving school, and Giles's library has students inside actually loaning books! "GILES: Unbelievable! "Do you like my mask? Isn't it pretty? It raises the dead!" Americans!"I was glad "DEAD MAN'S PARTY" didn't gloss over the repercussions of Buffy's three-month disappearance, but it was nevertheless a pretty basic episode considering the potential of "BtVS" tackling zombies for the first time. Buffy made her return to Sunnydale and quickly realised her friends were hurt and frustrated she ran away-particularly Willow, who missed having a best friend to discuss her relationship with Oz and sudden interest in witchcraft. So this was mainly an episode of reconciliation between the Scooby Gang, and on that level it worked well to get us back to where we left of.The supernatural angle was of less importance, although it provided some fun. Joyce had brought a creepy Nigerian mask home with her and attached it to Buffy's wall, where it proceeded to reanimate a dead cat they found in the garage (a nod to "Pet Semetary"?) before starting on some of the town's fresh corpses. This all coincided with a party at the Summers household, gate-crashed by Oz's band and Sunnydale students (so Buffy is popular now?), leading to the titular melee with the undead drawn towards the mask-which belongs to zombie demon Ovu Mobani (aka Evil Eye).Season 3's quite angst-ridden at the moment because it's tackling the fallout to last season, and I personally find it a little difficult to feel the emotions of Buffy's predicament. She seems to grumble an inordinate amount of time, and I never really understood why she'd leave her friends and family after being forced to kill boyfriend Angel last year. Aren't they exactly the people who would understand and be a great support through this situation? The quicker the show lays all that to rest and just cracks on with this season's mytharc, the better.Overall, "Dead Man's Party" accomplished what it needed to and the climactic attack on Buffy's house, with Joyce's book club friend Pat (Nancy Lenehan) becoming possessed by Ovu Mobani, was certainly an entertaining spectacle. It's just that the supernatural hooey of this episode seemed to get in the way of the character-based stuff that was being communicated, and dragged things down somewhat.WRITTEN BY JOSS WHEDON (3.1) & MARTI NOXON (3.2) / DIRECTED BY JOSS WHEDON (3.1) & JAMES WHITMORE JR (3.2) / 29 SEPTEMBER & 6 OCTOBER 1998