Two to Go

"Two to Go" is the 21st episode of season 6 of the television show Buffy the Vampire Slayer.[1] The name of the episode is a reference to the previous one, which ends with Willow saying "One down" after killing Warren. Despite the death of Tara Maclay, she remains in brief scenes that are part of the opening credits.

"Two to Go"
Buffy the Vampire Slayer episode
Episode no.Season 6
Episode 21
Directed byBill L. Norton
Written byDoug Petrie
Production code6ABB21
Original air dateMay 21, 2002
Guest appearance(s)

This episode, and its second part, "Grave", were shown, back-to-back, as a two-hour feature on its original airing in both the United States and UK – consequently, the presentation of this episode on DVD includes credits such as "Grave" Written by...

Joss Whedon wanted to keep Anthony Stewart Head's appearance in this episode a surprise, and thus left him off of the main cast list; Head is listed as a 'special guest' in the closing credits. Whedon also does this in Angel for Julie Benz in "To Shanshu in L.A.", Eliza Dushku in "Judgment", Juliet Landau in "The Trial" and Alyson Hannigan in "There's No Place Like Plrtz Glrb".

Plot

Buffy, Xander, and Anya try to pursue Willow, who has killed Warren to avenge his murder of Tara and now plans to execute his two jailed accomplices. They discover that Willow has damaged Xander's car to prevent them from catching her. Buffy continues her pursuit on foot.

Anya teleports into Jonathan and Andrew's cell shortly before Willow arrives. Anya and Buffy manage to evade Willow's attack and slip away with the two men. As Xander drives them away in a stolen police cruiser, Willow attacks them with a truck she is wielding magically; but her overuse of magic has drained her power, and they escape.

In a cave in Africa, Spike continues to pass stages in his ordeal. He fights a man with burning fists and eventually defeats and kills him - only to learn that it was only the first stage.

Dawn and Clem decide to go to the dark magician Rack's lair, expecting Willow to try to deal with him to recharge her powers. Buffy, Xander and Anya regroup at the Magic Box and debate their course of action. Buffy believes she can convince Willow to relent, but the others disagree; Buffy heads for Rack's, alone. Xander admits to Anya that he might have been able to stop Warren before he fired on Buffy and Tara, but was afraid to intervene, unarmed.

Willow meets with Rack, who attempts to seduce her. She rejects his advances, seizes him, drains his power, and kills him, just as Dawn arrives. Dawn's effort to calm the much more powerful Willow prove futile and serve only to annoy her, but Buffy arrives before she acts against Dawn. Buffy tries to talk with Willow, who replies that nothing in the world matters anymore since Tara's death. Willow teleports the group back to the Magic Shop, where Buffy and Dawn collapse. As Willow attacks, Anya fires up a protection spell to shield Jonathan and Andrew. As Willow intensifies her attack, Buffy tries a physical attack, allowing all but Anya to escape.

Willow subdues Buffy, then disables Anya and negates her protection spells. As she declares her victory, she is struck down by a bolt of energy from the just-arrived Rupert Giles.

Cultural references

  • Andrew: "We've got maybe seconds before Darth Rosenberg grinds everybody into Jawa burgers, and not one of you bunch has the midi-chlorians to stop her." — This line contains three different Star Wars references.
  • Andrew compares Willow to Dark Phoenix, alluding to a storyline in X-Men comics: Jean Grey, a telekinetic mutant, is taken over by a cosmic entity in moments of great emotional stress.
  • In the scene right after the opening credits, Andrew tells Jonathan, "Laugh it up, Fuzzball", another Star Wars quotation.
  • Spike, when confronted with the flaming-fists opponent in Africa, says "Here we are now, entertain us", a line from "Smells Like Teen Spirit".
  • As Xander, Dawn, Jonathan and Andrew are running from Willow, Andrew asks if they are just going to wait for "Sabrina" to show up.

Arc significance

  • Giles returns to Sunnydale (again).
  • Rack, the warlock who was at the helm of Willow's downward spiral into magic addiction, is killed by Willow herself and his hideout is not seen again.

References

  1. Norton, Bill (2002-05-21), Two to Go (Action, Drama, Fantasy, Romance), Sarah Michelle Gellar, Nicholas Brendon, Emma Caulfield Ford, Michelle Trachtenberg, Mutant Enemy, Kuzui Enterprises, Sandollar Television, retrieved 2020-12-27
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