PHENOMENALITY: *marvelous*
MYTHICITY: *fair*
FRYEAN MYTHOS: *adventure*
CAMPBELLIAN FUNCTION: *metaphysical, psychological, sociological*
HEARTTHROB (F)-- Some time transpires between Angel learning of Buffy's death at the end of BTVS Season 5, and the beginning of HEARTTHROB. Angel has left the agency for some time to grieve, but his retreat is interrupted by a demon-attack. When he returns, he learns that the agency's guest Fred, whom the heroes rescued from Pylea at the end of Season 2, has stayed confined to her room because of her anxieties about contact with others-- except for Angel, whom she worships. Angel returns just in time to be guided, along with Gunn and Wesley, to save some teenagers from a vampire gang. The good guys kill the vamps, but a female, Elizabeth, was the romantic partner of a male vamp, James. The bereaved bloodsuscker undergoes an operation to make him more powerful than Angel, an operation involving his heart-- which also relates to the story's romantic metaphor, as Angel deals with surviving the broken heart he carries due to Buffy's passing. The episode ends with the revelation that Darla has somehow conceived a child from her last interaction with Angel.
THAT VISION-THING (F)-- Cordelia's visions start to carry dangerous consequences, and the detectives suspect that someone is interfering with the messages sent by the Powers That Be. Lilah has messed with Cordy's visions in order to extort Angel into performing a task, and he reluctantly agrees. He travels to another dimension, where he must defeat a powerful demon in order to liberate a prisoner. Angel surmises that this prisoner, later revealed to be a human named Billy Lane, will serve some fiendish purpose for W&H, but he exchanges Billy for the termination of the curse, and then follows up the deal by killing the curse-sender.
THAT OLD GANG OF MINE (P)-- Since Gunn started working for AI, his former vampire-slaying gang is taken over by a new guy named Gio. Suddenly someone starts killing off harmless demons, so one guess as to the culprit. The gangbangers invade Lorne's club, which doesn't have wards against human violence, and the Angel group has to curb the gangstas' enthusiasm for demon-killing. There's a cute scene in which Cordy finds out about the implicitly sexual transaction between Angel and the female Furies, which is one of various early signals the writers put forth as to a possible romance between Angel and Cordelia.
CARPE NOCTEM (F)-- This is a lighter episode despite some dangerous moments. An old man named Marcus has been using his ability to switch bodies to live it up in other people's bodies before returning to his own body and leaving the original owners to perish. As the detectives investigate these anomalies, Marcus switches bodies with Angel, who's then confined to an old-age home. Marcus then provides much humor as he tries to figure out how things work in Angel's domain, and when he learns he's immortal he plans to keep the vampire body for good. After all returns to normal, Angel gets the news that Buffy has been restored to life. A meeting between the two of them is indicated but was never filmed.

FREDLESS (G)-- Up to this point it's not been clear exactly why the ANGEL writers introduced Fred to the ensemble, except for the possibility that since Wesley provided the pedantic "Giles" of the group, Fred might've been brought in to be the wacky but incisive "Willow." Still, Fred is more a walking-wounded type than any BUFFY character, and the default attitude of the Angel group toward her has been bemused protectiveness. The episode FREDLESS offers the possibility that Fred may find better care from her parents, who arrive in LA seeking their missing-for-five-years daughter. There's a thankfully brief subplot as to whether the cornfed parents might be something sinister, but the main plot concerns the inexplicable attack of a giant bug-demon. Fred initially does not want to see her parents because seeing them makes her whole Pylean experience too real, though she finally resolves to return home with her family. However, Fred realizes that she can't return to being the innocent she was before, and her Pylean experiences, however negative, have made her uniquely situated to help the noble mission of Angel Investigations.
BILLY (G)-- Though both BUFFY and ANGEL executed a number of stories, good and bad, about how women often get the short end of the stick throughout history, BILLY may be the best meditation on how the XX sex were short-changed by biology. Billy Lane, rescued by Angel from a hell-dimension in THAT VISION-THING, was liberated because W&H owed a favor to Billy's rich uncle. However, Billy hates women and possesses the psychic talent to exacerbate the negative feelings of men towards women. Billy gratuitously gives Lilah a demonstration of his ability by causing her legal rival Gavin to become incensed against her, battering her severely before the spell wears off. Cordy's vision-powers clue the heroes into what Billy's doing. Lilah, somewhat less than charitable toward Billy, informs Cordelia that Billy can activate a "primordial misogyny" in men. Billy uses his power to make Wesley attempt to assault Fred, a sequence made more harrowing by the fact that Wesley secretly likes the super-genius. The climax kills Billy dead in an inventive manner, and in a minor subplot, Angel begins teaching Cordy hand-to-hand combat, which gives her a little more resemblance to a certain vampire slayer.
OFFSPRING (F)-- A few previous episodes hinted at earlier conflicts Angelus and Darla had with Holtz, a 16th-century vampire killer. OFFSPRING opens with Holtz's first big scene, at a time in the 1700s when Holtz has captured Angelus but loses him to a rescue by Darla. In modern times, the Angel Team investigates an apocalyptic prophecy, but a more pressing problem raise its head when pregnant Darla shows up at the hotel. The writers don't immediately address how Angel was able to impregnate a fellow vampire, but Cordy almost immediately blames Angel for the little stranger. However, Darla hasn't changed much, repaying Cordelia's kindness by trying to suck her blood. Darla flees and almost preys on a small boy, but Angel overtakes and fights her. Still, Angel spares Darla because she bears his child. Meanwhile, a demon named Sajihan brings a still living Holtz to the 21st century.
QUICKENING (F)-- In line with prophecies that suggest Darla's baby will be a "miracle child," both W&H and several demon cultists dog the Angel Team's tracks, hoping to remove the baby from Darla's womb and use it for assorted mystical purposes. Most of the episode consists of fighting and fleeing, and concludes with Holtz confronting Angel, whom he believes to still be Angelus.

LULLABY (G)-- I was never impressed by the Darla character, though actress Julie Benz portrayed her well. However, Darla's last hurrah is also her best outing. Though unlike Angel she has no soul, her child is human and she feels the effects of his spirit, which makes her regret all of the terrible things she did as a vampire. Angel, taken prisoner by Holtz and his demon-servants at the hotel, manages to break free. The demons later attack the Angel Team while they're caring for Darla, whose pregnancy is coming to term. The heroes speculate that the Powers That Be made the conception possible but that the Powers may fear that the miracle child may bring about an apocalypse. Holtz continues to attack and at the climax Darla, who's grown to love the child, realizes that if she gives birth, she'll lose her soulful quality and may even destroy her own offspring. Thus she stakes herself so that her body dissolves and the infant alone survives. An interesting DVD extra asserts that Darla has always had a loose mother-son vibe toward Angel, who's both her true lover and the only vamp she ever sired. But all of her past actions flowed from self-interest, while Darla finally transcends her evil in an act of self-sacrifice. Holtz sees Angel with the newborn and decides to take a new tack for vengeance.
DAD (F)-- The writers, having set up a situation where Angel Investigations could be besieged all season by baby-hunting demons, have to do some fancy stepping to restore the status quo. Angel becomes hyper-protective of his child, now named Connor. Another wave of baby-hunters strikes the hotel, but Angel devises a set-up to annihilate the attackers. He then crashes into the office of current W&H big shot Linwood and makes clear that if the baby even gets a cough, Linwood will soon be coughing up blood. Meanwhile, Holtz dispenses with his demon servitors because he wants loyal soldiers in his crusade, and makes his first convert in a young woman named Justine. Also, Lorne starts hanging out with AI since his club has been closed again.
BIRTHDAY (F)-- The gang celebrates Cordy's birthday, not knowing that she's been suffering migraines due to the increasing pain of her visions. A vision strikes her and her body falls comatose, while Cordy's spirit floats free, unable to touch anything or communicate with anyone. She's visited by a spirit guide from the Powers That Be, and he informs her that the half-demon Doyle should never have given her his precognitive powers. Because she's fully human, the visions will eventually kill her. The Powers That Be offer to rewrite Cordelia's history so that she becomes a major TV actress. She refuses until her guide lets her hear part of a conversation where Angel petitions the Powers to release Cordy because she's "weak." Cordy angrily lets the Powers change her history, and so she gets to be the Big Star she always wanted to be. Yet in jig time her normal personality and sense of responsibility re-assert themselves, not least when she sees that in her alternate reality Angel receives the visions and goes half-crazy in reaction. Cordelia returns to her regular status with an infusion of demon-energy, ensuring that she can endure the visions painlessly.
PROVIDER (G)-- Ironically, while in the first season Cordelia repeatedly nagged Angel about getting more well-paying cases, this time Angel is desperate to rack up lots of money to help raise Connor. This causes the team to divide its efforts into too many directions. Angel undertakes a mission to clean out a nest of vampires, Gunn and Wesley protect a woman from her undead husband, and Cordy has to rescue Fred and Lorne from demons who want to separate Fred's ultra-smart brain from her body. Though many of the ANGEL comedies are a little too baggy-pants for me, PROVIDER has a better conceptual focus and delivers good payoff on all the plots. Also, both Wesley and Gunn become interested in Fred.
WAITING IN THE WINGS (P)-- Angel's extreme protectiveness toward Connor fades a bit as he and the others go out for a night at the opera (albeit leaving a resentful Lorne home minding the baby). However, after the first performance, Angel claims that he saw the identical prima ballerina in 1990, utterly unchanged. Angel and Cordelia, neither of whom has become conscious of the sparks between them, get trapped in a time-loop by a spell that makes them re-enact the romance of earlier lovers, one of whom is the ballerina. Nor surprisingly, Angel references his previous experience with this plotline in the BUFFY episode I ONLY HAVE EYES FOR YOU. Gunn, Welsey and Fred come to the rescue and all the heroes fight harlequin-masked demons while seeking to solve the mystery of the cursed dancer. In other developments, Wesley loses the contest for Fred's heart before he even has a chance to fire a shot. Also, just as Angel begins considering that he might have feelings for Cordy, up jumps Groo, her old lover from Pylea.
COUPLET (P)-- Cordelia wants to have sex with Groo in the worst way, but she's afraid, for no clear reason, that said activity might interfere with her ability to transmit visions, especially since she went through a lot of trouble to make them painless. Angel is as jealous as hell but will move heaven and earth not to reveal it, and even to help his potential new love get it on with her old flame. The actors seemed to be having a good time with the simple material, but there's still not much meat on the bones, and this time the team has to deal with two make-work menaces. However, the subplot about a cryptic prophecy reaches a culmination when it seems to foretell that Angel will kill Baby Connor.
LOYALTY/ SLEEP TIGHT/ FORGIVING (F)-- Sajihan, Holtz and W&H all mount various attacks upon the Angel Team. W&H still wants to harvest Connor for some recondite mystical purposes, Sajihan wants Connot dead, and Holtz has decided that he can best make Angel suffer by spiriting the infant off to parts unknown. Wesley becomes so triggered by the prophecy's claim that Angel will kill Connor that the crusader steals the infant to protect him. However, Holtz's pawn Justine cuts Wesley's throat and steals the child from him. A frantic Angel swears vengeance on Wesley, and he and his aides show up in a four-way face-off against Sajihan, Holtz, and a W&H team led by Lilah. Holtz absconds with Connot by fleeing into a dimension-gate opened by Sajihan. Later, the Angel Team finds that they cannot open the same dimensional gate. They use dark magic to summon Sajihan, but they end up imbuing him with superior physical powers. Not only does he defeat the Angel Team, he also reveals that he faked the prophecy that deceived Wesley. Oddly, Justine, acting to save her own life, manages to bottle up the demon. The heroes learn that the injured Wesley was found and taken to a hospital. However, though Angel seems willing to forgive his ally his trespasses, the vampire goes berserk and almost smothers Wesley to death.
DOUBLE OR NOTHING (F)-- This episode isn't anything special, but it furnishes some much-needed relief from all the heavy sturm-and-drang of the Connor Abduction plotline. Cordy and Groo return from their vacation, only to have their good spirits quashed by the doom and gloom in the hotel. Once all these ducks are in a row, it's time to reveal that many years ago, Gunn sold his soul for a mess of pottage, or something along those lines, and now a demon-gambler wants to collect. Prior to this conflict's resolution, Gunn and Fred enjoy some nice romantic moments, even if he does try to blow her off so she won't be harmed by his enemies. The actors are good even though the resolution is lame.
THE PRICE (P)-- The team belatedly realizes that when they tried to re-open a gateway to the dimension to which Connor was taken, the gate is still letting bad things through to Earth. The make-work threat this time is at least suitably grotty: a small army of phosphorescent slugs that can possess people in their ceaseless quest for liquid refreshments of any kind. One visitor to the hotel dies from being infected, so Angel and the others attempt to seal up the place so that they can exterminate the brutes. Gunn soon realizes this won't work, and when Fred gets possessed, he seeks out Wesley. Wesley renders some useful advice but makes clear that he's not cool with having almost been snuffed by his old boss. The slugs are ultimately disposed of by a very contrived measure, after which one more visitor shows on AI's doorstep: Connor, grown to adolescence in his few days abroad.
A NEW WORLD (F)-- As soon as Connor appears, he tries to kill his dad with a stake-gun. He fails but escapes after knocking Gunn and Groo around. Connor wanders into the projects and saves a young female heroin addict from a dealer and his gang. The two of them find their way to a crib and they make out a bit, but the girl shoots up and kills herself. The dealer and his buddies track down Connor, but so does Angel. The thugs get routed, and Angel tries to reason with Connor, not knowing that (somehow) an aged Holtz has also crossed over. Holtz meets Connor at the end. It's clear that Connor considers the man who raised him to be his real father, but Holtz has deeper plans. In other news, a friend of Lorne seals the gateway, and Lilah, having found about Wesley's rift with AI, seeks to enlist him to W&H.
BENEDICTION (F)-- Holtz has evidently told Connor of his heritage, but he wants Connor to explore his feelings about his vampiric daddy. Just as Connor returns to the hotel, Cordelia has a vision: a gang of vampires are about to attack a woman at a night club. Angel, knowing that Connor is a warrior at heart, invites his son along for the fighting. As it happens, the woman who's going to be attacked is Justine, who's been preying on vampires since Holtz departed with Connor. Lilah invites Wesley to see the show, and though he repudiates her he nonetheless stays to watch, not least because Justine almost killed him. Angel and Connor arrive and help Justine fight the vampires. Though Connor comes close to killing Angel too, the youth experiences a bond with his true sire. Angel locates Holtz and seeks him out for a confrontation, but Connor finds out and fears that one father will kill the other. Holtz however tells Angel that he's had his pound of flesh but now wants Angel to protect Connor, since Holtz cannot. However, Holtz then proceeds to have Justine-- who thinks of Holtz as the father she never had-- to kill him in such a way that it looks like Angel bit his throat to death. A minor subplot shows Groo becoming aware that there's a romantic vibe between Cordy and Angel that neither is fully aware of.
TOMORROW (F)-- Connor and Justine plot revenge for Holtz. Lorne takes his leave for the time being, and Groo will soon follow, realizing that despite his having hot sex with Cordy, she really cares most deeply about Angel. Lilah continues to tempt Wesley and goes the extra mile by sleeping with him. Connor returns to the hotel and feigns being reconciled to being Angel's son. Because of Groo's revelations, Cordelia begins to think seriously about the matter, as does Angel. However, the Powers That Be want their own pound of flesh. For having endowed her with demon-powers, the Powers suddenly want her on another plane of being. The season ends on a cliffhanger as Justine and Connor plot to end Angel's career for good.