"Buffy the Vampire Slayer" Never Leave Me (TV Episode 2002) Poster

User Reviews

Review this title
7 Reviews
Sort by:
Filter by Rating:
9/10
Andrew becomes a "guest-age" in the Summers' house
katierose2955 September 2006
Warning: Spoilers
This is actually a very important episode to the story arc this season. It sets up Andrew's turn to the good side, it establishes Buffy's faith in Spike, it wipes out the Watcher's Council and it's where the Scoobies realize that the First is after them. If you're going to watch season seven, you need to see "Don't Ever Leave Me." A lot happens and it's one of the last chances to enjoy the show before the Potentials arrive.

This episode revolves around the aftermath of Spike's murder spree. He continues to be baffled by what happened and scared that he might hurt someone else. Buffy ties him up in the bedroom and tries to help him recover from the effects of drinking human blood for weeks. She sends Willow out to get some animal blood from the butcher to help Spike through withdrawal. Meanwhile, Andrew is trying to deal with the "ghosts" of Warren and Jonathan. They tell him that he needs to open the Hellmouth seal and he'll need more blood to do it. Andrew refuses to kill anyone else, and after a failed attempt at pig slaughtering, he heads for the butcher, too. Andrew and Willow meet up and are stunned to see each other. She takes him hostage and drags him back to the Summers' house. Principal Wood finds Jonathan's body in the school basement and buries him in the desert.

Xander and Anya question Andrew, convinced that he knows more than he's letting on. After beating him up for awhile and threatening his cool new leather coat, he begins telling them about the plans to open the seal. In the next room Buffy is talking with Spike. She takes a quick break to check on Andrew and when she comes back, Spike is acting very differently. He's been singing and talking to himself, suddenly he bursts out of the chair, breaking the ropes and shoves Buffy aside. He drags Andrew right through the wall and bites him. Buffy has to pull Spike off Andrew. She knocks Spike out and chains him to the basement wall. Meanwhile, Buffy searches for Giles. She calls the Watchers' Council who are preparing for war. They don't tell her anything, but they plan on a trip to Sunnydale to help her fight. Then, their headquarters blows up, killing all Watchers.

Xander has come up with a theory on Spike's behavior. He think's that Spike's been brainwashed and that the song Buffy keeps hearing him sing is really a trigger. Buffy goes to talk to Spike, telling him that they think he's under some evil mind-control. Spike tells Buffy to kill him. He claims that she's never seen the "real" him and if her gets loose he could kill all of them. Buffy refuses to stake him. She tells Spike that she knows how much he's changed and that she believes in his goodness. Spike is touched. Then the Bringers attack. They work for the First and after trying to kill Andrew and the Scoobies, they kidnap Spike. Buffy realizes that the First is behind this. And back at the Hellmouth, the Bringer's are using Spike's blood to open the Hellmouth and release an UberVamp.

There are some great parts to this episode. I love Xander, Anya and Andrew's scenes together. Anya and Xander use a "good cop/bad cop" routine that's just hilarious. I especially like the hurt look on Xander's face when Anya gets too involved in the plan and smacks him. And Buffy and Spike's scene in the basement is really beautiful. She tells him that he can be a better man if he just believes in himself, the way that she believes in him. I think that it's a turning point in their relationship. Willow cornering Andrew in the Butcher's shop is also great. "I am Willow. I am Death... Okay?" I'm so glad she brings Andrew home because he adds some much needed comic relief to the show.

On the down side, I still don't get the First's plan. It wants to get rid of Andrew and Spike, I guess. So they won't tell Buffy anything or help her. But, sending a few Bringers to raid the Summers' house seems sort of dumb. Why not attack full force and kill all the Scoobies while they sleep? Or bomb the house like it did with the Watchers' Council building? Also, I feel so sorry for Jonathan. He was a nice kid underneath all his "supervilliany" tough guy talk. He deserved better than a shallow grave and no one to mourn him.

My favorite part of the episode: Andrew. From walking around looking cool in his Spike-like leather coat (and he REALLY has Spike's prowling walk down), to his attempted pig slaughtering (I had to pause the DVD I was laughing so hard the first time I heard him bellow, "That'll do pig!"), to his apology to "Jonathan," ("I'm not good at stabbing things"), he just steals the whole episode.
28 out of 34 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
8/10
Season 7 kicks into high gear
Joxerlives12 May 2012
Warning: Spoilers
The Good; Nice humour from Dawn and Andrew, a good fight and our first hints that Principal Wood is more than he seems

The Bad; When Spike attacks Buffy we see a glimpse of his arm reflected in the mirror as she blocks his blow

Best line; Dawn (on Buffy's illness keeping her off work) "Her exact words were 'I've got stuff coming out of both ends"

Jeez!; Spike feeding from the blood filled bag is horrible as is his little girl story. The Turok-Han is one genuinely scary beastie!

Kinky dinky; Spike (of falling in love with Buffy) "I've had to redefine the words pain and suffering since I feel in love with you". Maybe he could just hire some dominatrix or something? Or maybe Buffy played that role for him? Spike elaborates on his little girl in the coal cellar story implying that she was Dawn's age and that he did more than just kill her and her family, keeping her alive so she cried when he...because it would be no fun if she didn't cry (anyone else glad he didn't finish that story?) Spike implies that Buffy likes men who hurt her, he may be right given her track record. He also postulates that she needs that pain to do her job which is also what the First Slayer stated in Intervention and we will find out more about the Slayer's darkside in 'Get it done'. (Hell hath no fury...?)

Captain Subtext; Warren asks Andrew to feel him. Andrew like's Patrick Swayze in Ghost. Willow declares "Tool talk not my thing". Xander declares that he'll be 'pumping' Andrew in no time.

Guantanamo Bay; Xander and Anya torture Andrew without remorse.

Scoobies in bondage: Andrew is but he isn't a Scooby yet. Spike is.

Scoobies knocked out: Spike by Buffy, Willow and Anya by The Bringers

Kills: presuming that the Bringers are humans score 2 for Buffy. Presumably Xander killed the Bringer attacking Dawn? Buffy: 117 vamps, 60 demons, 6 monsters, 5 humans, 1 werewolf, 1 spirit warrior & a robot Giles: 8 vamps, 2 demon, 1 human/1 god. Will: 6 vamps + 3 demons +1 fawn+1 human. Oz: 3 vamps, 1 zombie Faith: 16 vamps, 5 demons, 3 humans Xander: 6 vamps, 2 zombies, 1 a demon, 1 human Anya: 1 vamp and 1 a demon Riley; 18 vamps + 7 demons Spike; 9 vamps and 6 demons Buffybot; 2 vamps Tara; 1 demon Dawn; 1 vamp + 1 demon

Recurring characters killed: 13 goodbye Quentin Travers, well intentioned but out of touch (which could well be the Watcher motto?) Jesse, Flutie, Jenny, Kendra, Larry, Snyder, Professor Walsh, Forrest, McNamara, Joyce, Katrina, Tara, Quentin Travers.

Dawn in peril; 14 yes although she's pretty capable of taking care of herself nowadays

Dawn the bashful virgin; 9

Buffy and Dawn more than sisters; Note when Buffy and Dawn are fighting the Bringers they use EXACTLY the same fighting move at the same time, again more than sisters?

Questions and observations; Anya still pretty bitter at having been stabbed by Buffy in Selfless. When Buffy says that Spike needs blood Willow suggests killing Anya. I guess Triangle didn't resolve everything. Xander comes through as knowledge guy. The Spike/Buffy scene is pivotal, she keeps him around not just because they've fought side by side and she needs him to do her job but because she's seen what he's been through in order to redeem himself. He never hated himself before he had a soul because he didn't understand the value of self-worth. Many think that the central figure of the Buffyverse is Dawn, that at heart it's all about protecting her as the innocent. But in some ways Spike also has that claim, he lost his innocence and now strives to reclaim it which is perhaps the harder path? The Watcher's Council talk of losing their files, taken by Giles or Rutherford Sirk who later turns up working for Wolfram and Hart on Angel? Note even the First Evil can't be bothered to recall Andrew's name!

We have here the end of the Watcher's Council in it's familiar form although individual Watchers such as Giles, Robson, Wes' dad etc survive to help Buffy and co in season 8. Note it's the London headquarters that are destroyed, according to Wes in Spin the Bottle the training school is in Hampshire so we should have a new generation ready to take to the field?

Marks out of 10; 8/10, season 7 kicks into high gear
4 out of 6 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
7/10
The First mobilises
ossie855 September 2022
Warning: Spoilers
Spike is still being haunted by 'The First' and the gang work out that a certain trigger sets Spike off on a killing spree. Warren/Jonathan/The First tries to convince Andrew to kill again, but he refuses. The Watcher's Council prepares for an assault against the First.

Why It's So Good - Things are heating up with a few spinning plates in this episode. The First is a formidable opponent with an interesting power, but it does have its limitations. The Watcher's Council finally trying to be useful, and immediately blowing up, I found humorous.

Watch Out For - Good Cop Xander, Bad Cop Anya.

Quote - " That's the worst attempted pig slaughtering I've ever seen." - Warren/The First.
1 out of 1 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
10/10
The One With Andrew Is A Hostage...
taylorkingston28 March 2015
Warning: Spoilers
I love this episode. It's so good and interesting. I love Andrew. He's definitely one of my all- time favorite characters. To be honest with you, I wrote a review for this episode, and then just before submitting it, I realized that I was talking about a completely different episode. Almost-fail.

In this episode, Spike is being held in Buffy's basement, voluntarily, since he's gone a bit crazy with the eating people thing, even though it's not his fault. They're trying to get him to tell them what's really going on. Willow goes to the butcher to get some animal blood for him, and she runs into Andrew. She forcefully brings Andrew home with her, and they keep him there as a hostage/prisoner. Whilst being tied up and enjoying his animal blood, Buffy leaves the room and he starts talking to himself. Then he goes nuts and tries to kill Andrew, who was being interrogated in the next room. Anya is actually the one who's interrogating Andrew, along with Xander's help. It's actually really funny.

Overall, I give this episode a 10 out of 10.
3 out of 6 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
7/10
Good plot with a few flaws
exuberantloquacity6 November 2021
The good cop/bad cop routine was the best scene. The story arc is moving along nicely and is interesting.

A few obvious flaws in the show's writing: vampires coming out of the grave the day after they're sired, as if people are always buried the day they die. The show avoids answering if God is real or not, with Buffy saying it's not certain, yet there are demons and this episode seemed to reference Satan, if only obliquely. You'd think if Satan and demons were real, God would be. The writers should've thought this all through before making the series. In vampiry mythology, you'd think if holy water and crucifixes hurt vampires, then Christianity would be true. This almost never seems to be the case in the genre. A bit weird. This reviewer isn't religious at all. It's just that the whole thing is inconsistent.
1 out of 1 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
7/10
Lots of stuff going on in this one
skay_baltimore9 August 2010
Warning: Spoilers
Funny reference to the infamous "permanent record", while principal Robin Wood delivers an ultimatum to 2 kids in his office (which they reject). As soon as I heard the words "permanent record" leave his lips I started to balk. But to his credit, he then proceeded to expose the myth about the permanent record once and for all: NOBODY GIVES A HOOT ABOUT IT! LOL. As he says (after they reject his ultimatum to repaint the walls they defaced, or have the incident go on their permanent record): "OK...I was bluffing...I hadn't really thought that one through. Listen...this whole permanent record thing is such a myth anyway. Colleges never ask for anything past your SAT scores. And it's not like employers are gonna be calling up to check to see how many days you missed in high school." Finally -- the permanent record myth DEBUNKED! Now that's progress!!

Other funny stuff:

The butcher, to Andrew (who's wearing a long black leather coat) after he requests toothpaste along with the rest of his order: "This is a butcher shop, NEO. We don't sell toothpaste". Very funny!!

Funnier than two (former) nerds, Willow and Andrew, interfacing angrily in the alley outside the butcher shop? I don't know...maybe.

Good cop/bad cop (or, as Xander says...'easy way/hard way thing') interrogation of Andrew by Anya and Xander -- also funny.

Anya, after Xander figures out that the song that keeps recurring is acting as a "trigger" to set Spike off: "The horse?"

Now...the not so funny stuff:

Buffy to Spike: "You feeling sorry for yourself, Spike?" Spike to Buffy: "I'm feelin honest with myself...You used me". Buffy to Spike: "Yes." Spike to Buffy: "You told me that, of course. I never understood it, though. Not until now. You hated yourself, and you took it out on me".

Later on, he goes further, after he implores Buffy to kill him:

"You wanna know what I've done to girls Dawn's age?" But she refuses to believe that he's dangerous.

"Have you ever really asked yourself why you can't do it -- off me? After everything I've done to you...to people around you. It's not love. We both know that"...(Buffy says it's because Spike has fought by her side and saved lives.) "Don't do that. Don't rationalize this into some noble act. Because we both know the truth of it. You like men who hurt you" (Buffy says "No".)..."You need the pain we cause you. You need the hate. You need it to do your job. To be The Slayer." And despite her immediate denial, all Buffy demonstrates is what she always demonstrates -- that she lacks even the most basic insight into herself and her own motivations. And while she might see more in Spike than he sees in himself, he clearly sees more about her than she sees about herself.

Definitely NOT funny stuff. This is the crux of the whole Spike-Buffy relationship -- something that seems to be both misunderstood and highly debated among the BtVS fan base.

He also describes what it is to be human and have a soul. Basically he says that having a soul opens up the gates to self-loathing. He contrasts what he felt when he was William The Bloody with what he feels now. And he says that he never felt his current level of self-loathing when he was William The Bloody.

Then enter...the Harbingers...scary dudes who are minions of The Firest (Evil), intent on pummeling the Scoobies and kidnapping/torturing Spike to use his blood to unlock the Hellmouth Seal and release the Uber-Vamp (quite an uncomfortable scene, BTW).

"Never Leave Me" also sheds light on the fact that Robin Wood might not be what he appears to be. After he finds Jonathan's body lying on the Hellmouth seal, he drives the body out to some deserted location and buries it.

And just when it looked as if The Watcher's Council would spring into action -- they all get blown up.

Worth noting: At the very end of the previous episode we see one of the Harbingers swinging a weapon at Giles' head, and then the episode ends. To my way of thinking, this episode should have started off where that one ended, to continue the tension/story arc, etc. Instead, it started with the Scoobies cleaning Buffy's house.
2 out of 10 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
5/10
The First Makes Itself Known
Samuel-Shovel27 December 2018
Warning: Spoilers
In "Never Leave Me", the gang tried to learn more about what exactly they're dealing with. Giles runs into issues back in England. The gang grabs Andrew after his sacrifice of Jonathan. Spike bites Jonathan, attempting to kill him. Buffy tries to figure out what Spike's trigger is. The group of hodded figures show up and kidnap Spike and almost kill Andrew. The First drains Spike's blood for a ritual resurrecting a powerful vampire. The high school principal buries Jonathan's body. The headquarters of the Watchers Council blows up with everyone inside.

The plot to this season still feels a bit scattered but at least this episode had some good action. Andrew's presence in the gang is interesting and it feels like he'll be a mainstay going forward. I have no idea what's going on with Spike and Buffy anymore. Their relationship is so muddled I can't get a good read on it. This episode isn't good but it's not exactly terrible either.
3 out of 8 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink

See also

Awards | FAQ | User Ratings | External Reviews | Metacritic Reviews


Recently Viewed