Quote from: Luciaphil on February 10, 2006, 08:20:58 PMit's reminiscent of Barnabas blaming Angelique for some of the more ancillary events in his life. Could you state some examples of the above? Thanks!
it's reminiscent of Barnabas blaming Angelique for some of the more ancillary events in his life.
I don't want to get too much into it here (we could move it to Current Talk if you want). Both of them do it at various points on the show and it's not uncommon reasoning on any soap. Like his blaming her "curse" for his mother's suicide. His mother is a drunk long before he even meets Angelique. She displays symptoms of depression that have nothing to do with Angelique and has probably been depressed for most of his life. It's tragic and it's horrible, but it's not something Angelique is responsible for.
I disagree. Although the drinking and other problems were pre-existing, I see no evidence of a suicidal tendency in her. But, at this point she's lost her young daughter and her son and then discovers that the son is a vampire. That pushes her over the edge. All of those are directly caused by Angelique.
Naomi is a drunk to the point that she's hidiing the bottles. s despondent before Angelique hits town. She's one very unhappy lady. Yes, Sarah's death affect her, but it's still her choice to kill herself. Nobody forces her to do it. She's not under anyone's control. She makes that choice. People have suffered similiar tragedies in real life (well, not having a son become a vampire, but surviving their children). Not everyone commits suicide.
If Naomi was, as you said "a drunk" then it is easy to understand why seeing the one person left who loves her turned into an animal would push her over the edge
Totally agree. We know from Joshua's own words that his and Naomi's marriage was 'arranged' (remember the ep where he goes on about how men were better off when their marriages were arranged and love was a word best suited for ladies novels?) so there's no love there IMHO, which is why Naomi drank so much. She lived for her children and once they were both gone she had nothing to live for. So why not end her pain? And, as I stated above, there's that pesky curse!
But with Naomi? Who's to say? When we first see her, she's a character with a ton of problems: largely loveless marriage to a fairly cold man, nasty sister-in-law who has usurped her place in the running of the household. All before Angelique walks in the door. Maybe she'd be fine if Angelique never had shown up, maybe not. I don't see a direct chain of causality.
I didn't mean to offend anyone by the use of the word "drunk." It wasn't meant perjoratively. Alcoholism is an illness. I totally understand that. So is depression...
In the context of the show:Cassandra casts a spell on Liz causing her to be obsessed with death. To my way of thinking that's something that can directly be laid (or is it layed?) at Cassandra's door. There's a direct chain of causality.Angelique sticks pin in a poppet of Sarah. Sarah collapses in pain. That's Angelique's fault. Not the fault of Barnabas for not loving her or marrying her, Angeliques. Again, direct chain of causality.
And in terms of the "curse," I've said this before, there are plenty of characters who love Barnabas and manage to survive. Sometimes curses have power because we give them power.
If Barnabas had been eating a sloppy joe
I don't want to get too much into it here (we could move it to Current Talk if you want).
You have to keep in mind, Barnabas apparently had some sort of affair with Angelique, and made some promises to her, and then he just cast her aside for Josette. Worse yet, Angelique had to watch him and Josette together all the time. It's really just a matter of how much time they spend on the various parts of the story. The whole Barnabas/Angelique romance is left out completely, but if they'd spent 20 epsides showing them together in Martinique (or wherever), we would have all had a very negative opinion of good ol' Barney when he just dumped her and expected her to sit by quietly and watch him frolic around with Josette. But since they leave it out completely, we're left with the impression that Barney is a totally innocent victim of the whole thing.
I sort of have a problem with letting Angelique off the hook for the negative things that transpired that she didn't plan or intend. On the other hand, I have a problem with blaming her without acknowledging some of the other characters' own faults, problems, etc. that contributed to some of the disasters. I don't think this has to be an either/or argument. There are a variety of forces, players, flaws, etc. at work.