"Buffy the Vampire Slayer" Beneath You (TV Episode 2002) Poster

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9/10
For me, it's all about Spike's scene in the church
katierose2955 September 2006
Warning: Spoilers
BTVS has some beautiful, heart breaking monologues over the course of its seven seasons. Angel and Buffy standing in that clearing as they argue about love and redemption in season three's "Amends." Oz and Willow saying good-bye for the last time in season four's, "A New Moon Rising." Spike talking to the newly resurrected Buffy in season six's "After Life." The list goes on and on. But, nothing can beat Spike's monologue in "Beneath You." This is the episode where Buffy learns that Spike has his soul back. Confronting him in an abandoned church, she listens to Spike as he tried to explain what's happened to him. His speech, and her reactions to it, become one of the best scenes that BTVS ever created. I highly recommend that you see "Beneath Me," just to watch Spike steal the show in the last five minutes of the episode.

Technically, "Beneath You" revolves around a big worm demon attacking some random woman, who'll we'll never see again. But really, it's mainly about Spike. The woman is walking her dog, Rocky, and a big worm monster sucks the little pooch right under the ground. The woman runs into Xander and the Scoobies offer to help her investigate. As the plan, Spike shows up. Dressed in a very un-Spike looking blue shirt he claims that he's feeling much better and wants to lend a hand. Xander and Dawn are furious that Buffy didn't tell them that Spike was in town. Buffy is uncertain about Spike's sudden sanity and is still convinced that he's hiding something.

Xander finally realizes that Anya is behind the demon attack. She cursed a man, making him a giant worm thing, and now he's out for revenge against his ex-girlfriend. The Scoobies confront Anya at the Bronze. She dismisses their complaints and says that she had a vengeance quota. Then, Anya looks at Spike and sees his new soul. Spike is horrified and tries to hide the truth from the others. He and Anya get into a fight, scaring the woman the Scoobies were helping. She runs away and Buffy follows her. The demon worm attacks again and Spike shows up to help fight it. Unfortunately, Xander has just convinced Anya to undo the spell. So as Spike stabs the worm with a pipe, it suddenly becomes a regular guy again. Spike freaks out. Buffy gapes at him as he goes back to ranting about people talking to him and screaming at nothing. Then Spike runs off. Buffy corners him in an abandoned church and demand to know what's happened to him. As Spike talks, she realizes that he has his soul back.

There are some great parts to this episode. I love Anya and her scenes with Spike at the Bronze are just brilliant. She sees the soul in him and Spike's scared that she'll tell the Scoobies. Their resulting fight has Anya transforming into her vengeance demon face, while Spike ping-pongs between personas trying to stay in control. Anya and Spike are basically good "people." But, they're afraid that others will see them as weak, so they try to come off as Black Hats. Anya doesn't want to continue with vengeance wishes, but she can't bring herself to admit that she's changed. She brazen out Xander's criticism about her work. Spike is embarrassed and confused by his new soul. He switches back to his season two "evil" Spike voice, attempting to hold his facade in place. Anya and Spike both have conflicted feelings and a desire to cling to their past "demon"-ness. But, tellingly, they're also the only two who really feel badly about Rocky the dog. It's great. Finally, on a shallow note, Spike looks really good both in and out of that blue shirt "disguise."

But, like I said earlier, for me, it's all about Spike's monologue in that church. It wrings every drop of emotion from him, from fear, to anger, to love, to confusion, to sorrow and, finally, to a weary, hopeless acceptance of his new soul. Buffy watches him, tears tracing down her cheeks, as she realizes that he's done all this for her. That he got his soul back, at least in part, because he couldn't forgive himself for trying to rape her back in season six's "Seeing Red." Now, Spike's past victims and the First are haunting him. He's suffering, and helpless, and alone. The phrase "beneath you" will be reference a lot this season in connection to the First. But, the words also go back to season five's "Fool for Love," where both Cicily and Buffy rejected William/Spike by saying that he was "beneath" them. On some level, he's still trying to prove them wrong. When Spike walks down the aisle and drapes himself over the cross, it's as if he's trying to become part of something good, again. To be worthy of something better. The cross is burning his skin and he doesn't even notice. He's begging for love and forgiveness. After this, Spike can pretty much do anything and Buffy will basically shrug it aside. (See, "Sleeper.") In this one scene, he becomes the most tragic, sympathetic character on the show.

On the downside, I think that Buffy should have asked Angel to come and help Spike. Spike and Angel have their problems, but on a deeper, fundamental level, they're family. Angel is the one "person" in the world who could help Spike deal with his new soul and he'd come back to Sunnydale if Spike needed him. Granted, Angel just got saved from the bottom of the sea and has some problems of his own, but Buffy could've at least called him.

My favorite part of the episode: Spike saying that Angel should have told him about the weight of a soul. It's nice that Spike finally sees how hard it's been for poor Angel.
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8/10
One of Marster's Finest Moments
mabbott1025 July 2006
Warning: Spoilers
Definitely an improvement over the previous episode. While a lot of fans have complained at the character Spike's hijacking of the final season, this remains one of his best performances in the series. In it, we get a little insight as to what has been going on in Spike's head since receiving his soul back and it ain't pretty.

There is a basic plot about a jealous guy getting turned into a burrowing worm-like creature and trying to get back at his ex-girlfriend but, the phrase from beneath it devours becomes a central theme now and it ain't the poor worm guy. Anya gets some good scenes with Xander (surprise, Anya can reverse a vengeance wish!)

But Marster's final moments, shirtless (and gorgeous) and weeping as he begs to be understood by the woman he loves are what drives this episode. His speech is bloody wonderful as is the revelation that Spike indeed wanted his soul back so that Buffy would love him but, that in retrieving his soul he has also retrieved all the pain and suffering he has inflicted on others throughout his undead life.

One of the best episodes of the season.
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8/10
Redemption is sometimes not deserved
ossie8523 August 2022
Warning: Spoilers
Buffy is having visions of young girls being chased and killed. A woman named Nancy is walking her dog when it is eaten by a giant worm monster. Buffy, Xander, Dawn and a revamped Spike help this woman solve what happened, especially when she is attacked again.

Why It's So Good - This is an episode where James Marsters perhaps shines more than he ever has (Though Fool For Love, Lies My Parents Told Me, Just Rewards are also great). This is a nice individual episode while keeping the story moving forward and personal issues (Xander/Anya, Willow/Giles) alive. Spike's stuggling to cope with his soul is incredible acting and Anya's guilt is something she never had before when she first became a demon.

Watch Out For - The dog disappearing.

Quote - "Sunnydale -- come for the food, stay for the dismemberment." - Xander.
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10/10
James Marsters (Spike) earns 8 of these.....
fretspyder18 January 2019
Warning: Spoilers
Xander gets .5 in comedic timing...above the usual Xander. Buffy gets .5 for standing there, and reacting, in true and perfect Buffy fashion. See below. But, James Marsters (and I truly "loathe" to use the term) "destroys" the Buffyverse with this one.

30 minutes of filler, 4 minutes that will mean more....in the last 8 minutes. Monster of the week is tied to Anya. Spike wants to help. Xander is there (+.5 ensues), but Anya "sees" Spike (4 minutes or so...), then MotW bites it. Which "sparks" the 8 minutes of "loss-of-jaw-muscles".

I"m a Fred fan from Angel, and a Willow acolyte above THAT...and I'm questioning who has the best performance in a given episode, to spite my preferences. I really think Spike wins "best performance" here, in this episode.

The insanity was sane...when "she" spoke. All Buffy could do was recognize the horror in front of her. No blame. Just results. And every time she spoke, he was perfectly lucid....and then, immediately, MORE insane. She stopped talking until she couldn't help it. And that's when the reality of what she did (to herself, in s6) matched the horror of what he did ("tried to do")...to her.

Angel was the most brooding of characters...and he never did THIS to SHOW it....The torment Spike feels is on full display. There's really no way what he tried to do could be understood...unless you were a literal demon(ish) who sought a soul to atone for it. And THAT isn't even enough in the end. Or is it?

That's not for me to decide. And I don't shy away from judgment.
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9/10
The One With The Thing From Underneath...
taylorkingston3 October 2014
Warning: Spoilers
I love this episode. It's so good.

In this episode, something is coming up from underneath the ground and eating things. Like dogs. We don't know what it is. Spike come backs to help, and he finally re-dyed his hair. Roots coming through, not good. Dawn threatens that if he touches Buffy, she's gonna set him on fire whilst he's sleeping. Scary. Spike tries to apologize to Buffy, but she doesn't really want to hear it. Eventually we find out that thing that ate the dog, was Anya's doing. She turned a girl's boyfriend into a giant worm demon, and that's what was doing all of the damage. At the end of the episode, Buffy finds out that Spike has a soul, which changes everything.

Overall, I give this episode a 9 out of 10.
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7/10
Tremors
Joxerlives8 May 2012
Warning: Spoilers
The Good; All the Spike/Buffy stuff and some nice scenes with Xander and a potential love interest (maybe she wasn't demony enough for him?). Also love Dawn threatening Spike

The Bad; More dead potentials, ugh! Stupid looking worm, I expected something more Tremors. Also it attacks Nancy in her house but then just goes away? The mad Spike and Buffy scene at the end goes on too long.

Best line; Spike; "When did your little sister become unbelievably scary?"

Women good/men bad; Anya still tempting the scorned

Jeez!; Spike punching Anya isn't nice

Kinky dinky; Xander lists unwanted pregnancy as one thing Buffy will have to help the high school pupils with. Spike refers to 'Getting it hard and servicing the girl'. Anya exclaims "Oh penis!"

Captain Subtext; The little look Spike and Xander give each other when Nancy wonders if any Scoobies haven't slept with one another. Once again virginal Dawn is threatened by a huge phallic symbol. Anya calls her latest dupe 'Honey'.

Guantanamo Bay; Buffy knows that a bastinado is a hardwood club used to torture prisoners in Turkey. Giles would be proud.

Apocalypses; 7,

Scoobies in bondage: Buffy: 8 Giles: 4 Cordy: 5 Will: 4 Jenny: 1 Angel: 4 Oz: 1 Faith: 3 Joyce: 1 Wes: 1 Xander; 2 Dawn; 4

Scoobies knocked out: Buffy: 19 Giles: 12 Cordy: 6 Xander: 14 Will: 8 Jenny: 2 Angel: 6 Oz: 3 Faith: 1 Joyce: 3 Wes: 1 Anya;5 Dawn; 4 Tara; 1

Kills: Buffy: 108 vamps, 58 demons, 6 monsters, 3 humans, 1 werewolf, 1 spirit warrior & a robot Giles: 8 vamps, 2 demon, 1 human, 1 god. Cordy: 3 vamps, a demon Will: 6 vamps + 3 demons +1 fawn+1 human. Angel: 3 vamps, 1 demon, 1 human Oz: 3 vamps, 1 zombie Faith: 16 vamps, 5 demons, 3 humans Xander: 6 vamps, 2 zombies, 1 a demon, Anya: 1 vamp and 1 a demon Riley; 18 vamps + 7 demons Spike; 8 vamps and 6 demons Buffybot; 2 vamps Tara; 1 demon Dawn; 1 vamp + 1 demon

Scoobies go evil: Giles: 1 Cordy: 1 Will: 3 Jenny: 1 Angel: 1 Oz: 1 Joyce: 1 Xander: 4 Anya; 1 Dawn; 1 Buffy; 1

Alternate scoobies: Buffy: 8 Giles: 4 Cordy: 1 Will: 5 Jenny: 2 Angel: 3 Oz: 2 Joyce: 2 Xander: 4 Tara; 1 Dawn;1 Spike; 1 Anya; 2

Recurring characters killed: 12 Jesse, Flutie, Jenny, Kendra, Larry, Snyder, Professor Walsh, Forrest, McNamara, Joyce, Katrina, Tara

Sunnydale deaths; 94

Total number of scoobies: the Dawnster is finally part of the Scoobies, about time too. Great line when Dawn says assemble the gang and Xander points out that the 3 of them ARE the gang. Xander, Buffy, Dawn

Xander demon magnet: 5(6?) Preying Mantis Lady, Inca Mummy Girl, Drusilla, VampWillow, Anya (arguably Buffy & Faith with their demon essences?), Dracula?

Scoobies shot: Giles: 2 Angel: 3 Oz: 4 Riley; 1 Buffy; 1 Tara; 1

Notches on Scooby bedpost: Giles: 2; Joyce & Olivia, possibly Jenny and 3xDraccy babes? Cordy: 1? Buffy: 4 confirmed; Angel, Parker, Riley, Spike. 1 possible, Dracula(?) Angel: 1;Buffy Joyce: 1;Giles, 2 possible, Ted and Dracula(?) Oz: 3; Groupie, Willow & Verucca Faith:2 ;Xander, Riley Xander: 2; Faith, Anya Willow: 2;Oz and Tara Riley; 3; Buffy, Sandy and unnamed vampwhore Spike; 2 Buffy and Anya Anya; 2 Spike and Xander

Dawn in peril; 11

Dawn the bashful virgin; 9

Questions and observations; Lovely moment with Xander and Buffy in the car when he tells her the SDH kids are lucky to have her. The worm rather reminds me of an old horror film call 'Blood Beach'. Spike has his old hair back, he gradually resembles himself more and more over the season. Love Buffy's Daisy Duke line "Where I go to get my scorn on!" Always thought Nancy was the same girl who was a White-hat in The Wish but she wasn't. Nice pun on 'Beneath You', remember 'Fool for Love'. Spike assumes the same Christ-like pose he showed us in Restless.

Marks out of 10; 7/10
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5/10
Worm Holes & Souls
Samuel-Shovel2 October 2018
Warning: Spoilers
In "Beneath You", a giant worm starts stalking a woman all across Sunnydale. After a bit of investigating, the gang realizes that Anya and her vengeance demon ways are behind it. Buffy finds out that Spike has regained his soul and it is tormenting him to no end. Giles sends Willow back to Sunnyvale. She worries her friends will no longer accept her with open arms.

This one was a bit of a snooze. There's not too much going on here. Buffy starts her new gig, she finds out about Spike's newfound soul, but besides this... it's a kind of a drag. We spend a lot of time running around with Nancy who, for a minute, seems like she may be a tertiary character moving forward. But she's so put off by the gang and their strange antics that I doubt she returns to the show.

One thing of note though has been the opening to each of the first two episodes: both have been a girl running around some foreign city being captured and killed by cloaked figures. Who are these girls? Are they slayers? Buffy has now died twice so statistically there should be 3 slayers running around (one of them being Faith if she is still out there). That's really been the main intriguing point of the first two episodes. Hopefully it begins to pick up a bit soon.
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5/10
Spike with soul? Sheesh!
Mike138823 August 2010
Warning: Spoilers
When a gorgeous women start being attack by a giant worm, they think its some kind of monster. but well its not its Anya's work. Funny as it is, this episode is totally ruin by Spike's church moment. I see the other review, how they guys praised him (are they guys paid to do this?), and another recent review that hated it. So I don't hate it but its boring. Nothing new nor exciting in this episode, and where is Willow? I miss her here.

Buffy just start working as the guidance counselor and she already explore for Spike in the basement? again Spike! I don't hate Spike, I think Master is a really good actor but his character development is the worst from the sixth season. He is soulless, in love with Buffy so now he get his soul back and Buffy start loving him again? I don't know where the relationship is going, and FRANKLY? I don't care.
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3/10
Beneath Me (But I watched it anyway)
skay_baltimore6 August 2010
Warning: Spoilers
What a surprise...

less than 1 second into her new job Buffy leaves her office and goes into the basement looking for Spike. I don't know if it's her chronically annoying voice, her marginal acting ability, her weird looking nose, her soap box moralizing, her intrusiveness, her selfishness, her ingratitude, her hypocrisy, or just an accumulation of way too much Buffy over the past 6 seasons...but there's just something very unlikeable about that character. Not as unlikeable as Xander. But seriously unlikeable nonetheless.

And in yet another herky-jerky plot shift Willow is now magically healed and ready to return to Sunnydale, where one of her biggest concerns is whether or not her friends will still like her.

The more this series winds its way toward its merciful conclusion the more episodes like "Normal Again" seem like distant, fading memories. That episode was one of the best -- and it just ended up getting swept away like children's sand-bucket sand castles with each ensuing tide.

How many times do viewers have to bear witness to Spike attempting to talk to Buffy or help out, only to be lambasted by Xander Harris -- arguably THE worst character in the history of television? It's beyond deja vu. It's pure Hell.

ANY humor at all? Anya, in a bar, in the middle of drumming up some customers in need of a good vengeance demon... "Guys...I'm WORKING, here!" (Don'tcha just love 'er?)

And Nancy asking: "OK...is there anybody here who HASN'T slept together?", then Xander and Spike giving each other a quick awkward glance.

The final scene...Spike in a church talking to Buffy in almost free association prose...baring his soul to her -- the most soulless creature in the series...maybe the most painful display of Buffyverse yet...ever...Spike...draped over a 6 foot cross...burning...a tear rolls down Buffy's cheek...

Executive Producers

Joss Whedon

Marti Noxon

(Anybody else wonder if Whedon was banging Noxon?)
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5/10
Times have changed
exuberantloquacity5 November 2021
You wouldn't see a TV show made today with a scene involving a rape victim socialising with her rapist, even if it had been an attempted, not successful assault. It's surprising that in 2002, the writers thought that was a good storyline. It's weird to keep Spike around as a main character after what he did.

Anya and Xander are dull to watch. Dawn shouldn't still be in the show. She was the key. She's not the key. She doesn't have a soul, does she? Buffy is a good show that divides people. Most of its detractors don't watch it, which makes sense. A few watch it and write bad reviews. Many gush over it and think this episode was cinematic genius. It was not.

It's a good show, with some questionable writing and acting at times. The questions carry more weight now, after all that's come out about what Whedon is really like. It seems that it's the norm, not the exception, that when a guy goes on and on about how feminist he is, he is anything but. Sad.
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