The sisters must stop a warlock from executing his plan to steal specific powers from witches in his attempt to kill every whitelighter in the world. Meanwhile, the girls get a new whiteligh... Read allThe sisters must stop a warlock from executing his plan to steal specific powers from witches in his attempt to kill every whitelighter in the world. Meanwhile, the girls get a new whitelighter named Natalie.The sisters must stop a warlock from executing his plan to steal specific powers from witches in his attempt to kill every whitelighter in the world. Meanwhile, the girls get a new whitelighter named Natalie.
LaShan Anderson
- Witch
- (as Láshan Anderson)
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Watching the series for the first time and this is easily the worst episode so far. I really have a distaste for the Whitelighters and the whole mythology surrounding them. They make no sense and it's clear the writers weren't actually trying to formulate plausible lore; they just want to maximize the relationship drama in every episode and put artificial roadblocks in front of Piper and Leo to test their love.
Early on, Piper was my favorite of the sisters. She was flawed and headstrong in a believable way. Ever since her relationship with Leo has intensified, she's become insufferable. Leo can't even have a work friend without her getting jealous? She is possessive and controlling and it's just supposed to be funny, I guess.
Natalie is a useless character. She's supposedly been a Whitelighter for longer than Leo, but her inflexible obsession with rules make it extremely unlikely that she would have been remotely successful guarding her charges for that period of time. At one point she presents a "plan", written on a single sheet of paper, for defeating the villain of the week; she claims to have covered every possible contingency. In practice, it is revealed that she didn't cover even the most probable contingency and is basically so idiotic there's no way she could function as a Whitelighter for any length of time. The episode is meant to be a thesis on rules vs. Instinct, but the writers present absolutely no case for the "rules" side of the debate and the Halliwells, on the side of instinct, are shown to be infallible. If only the mean ole Elders would stop holding them back with useless rules.
There was a moment in season two when it seemed like the writers were actually interested in giving the sisters room to grow, to assess their mistakes and take accountability for them, to really start thinking in a deep and practical way about the extent of their responsibilities as the Charmed ones. In Season Three we seem to be reverting back to the immature "They're the main characters and therefore everything they do turns out to be correct" philosophy. It would have made a lot more sense for them to learn from Natalie as much as Natalie learns from them, but instead Natalie is just an absurd force of bureaucracy that dictates stupid plans and has absolutely no wisdom to impart.
This is why Buffy is a better show. Buffy is about consequences and responsibility. Charmed is about how everyone else in the world is stupid. (And if they're grown women, they're probably slutty or snotty on top of that.)
Early on, Piper was my favorite of the sisters. She was flawed and headstrong in a believable way. Ever since her relationship with Leo has intensified, she's become insufferable. Leo can't even have a work friend without her getting jealous? She is possessive and controlling and it's just supposed to be funny, I guess.
Natalie is a useless character. She's supposedly been a Whitelighter for longer than Leo, but her inflexible obsession with rules make it extremely unlikely that she would have been remotely successful guarding her charges for that period of time. At one point she presents a "plan", written on a single sheet of paper, for defeating the villain of the week; she claims to have covered every possible contingency. In practice, it is revealed that she didn't cover even the most probable contingency and is basically so idiotic there's no way she could function as a Whitelighter for any length of time. The episode is meant to be a thesis on rules vs. Instinct, but the writers present absolutely no case for the "rules" side of the debate and the Halliwells, on the side of instinct, are shown to be infallible. If only the mean ole Elders would stop holding them back with useless rules.
There was a moment in season two when it seemed like the writers were actually interested in giving the sisters room to grow, to assess their mistakes and take accountability for them, to really start thinking in a deep and practical way about the extent of their responsibilities as the Charmed ones. In Season Three we seem to be reverting back to the immature "They're the main characters and therefore everything they do turns out to be correct" philosophy. It would have made a lot more sense for them to learn from Natalie as much as Natalie learns from them, but instead Natalie is just an absurd force of bureaucracy that dictates stupid plans and has absolutely no wisdom to impart.
This is why Buffy is a better show. Buffy is about consequences and responsibility. Charmed is about how everyone else in the world is stupid. (And if they're grown women, they're probably slutty or snotty on top of that.)
The warlock Earnes absorbs the powers of the good witches that he has been murdering. After killing his last victim, her whitelighter Nathalie is sent by the elders to join Leo to protect the Charmed ones. Nathalie follows the instructions of the elders by the book, while the sisters follow their instinct and intuition. When Phoebe has a premonition, the Halliwell sisters protect the victim, but they realize that he is a darklighter, and then they disclose he real intention of Earnes: to steal the crossbow of the darklighter, and use it to kill the whiterlighters, leaving the witches without protection.
In "Blinded by the Whitelighter", the sisters prove the importance of commonsense, using their instinct and intuition to save the whitelighters. Nathalie is an annoying character with her military behavior but the episode is funny. My vote is seven.
Title (Brazil): "Cegada por um Anjo" ("Blinded by an Angel")
In "Blinded by the Whitelighter", the sisters prove the importance of commonsense, using their instinct and intuition to save the whitelighters. Nathalie is an annoying character with her military behavior but the episode is funny. My vote is seven.
Title (Brazil): "Cegada por um Anjo" ("Blinded by an Angel")
Did you know
- TriviaIt is revealed that whitelighters have their own language.
- GoofsPhoebe is screaming out Leo's name to call him, yet Piper and Prue apparently don't hear her and don't question why she's calling for him.
- SoundtracksIt takes two
(uncredited)
Performed by Rob Base & DJ E-Z Rock
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