Buffy vs. Tarzan

“A tiger? In Africa?”

“Well… It might have escaped from a zoo”.

No way Tarzan needed five minutes to take 12 ordinary guys.

Buffy vs Tarzan would be the most lopsided fight since Indy with a gun vs crazy sword guy. Now late Angel era Wesley vs Tarzan, that might be an interesting fight.

…because Wesley would shoot Tarzan? :slight_smile:

(btw, which of the two did you think the fight would be lopsided in favor of, Buffy?)

Angel would certainly shoot Tarzan. The virtue of hanging out with the world’s most dangerous vampire, Los Angeles’ most badass normal, and two different Vampire Slayers is to free you of illusions about fair play.

Speaking of fair play, I absolutely love Faith for her ability to be remorseless. One of my favorite parts of Buffy season 3 and onward is watching how (at least in my interpretation) we go from BuffyCo being good and Faith deviating between neutral and straight-out evil to Buffy and her friends being ignorant at best and deluded at worst, while Faith actually ends up being the better slayer.

Dawn still gets the award for earning the most pragmatism points as the series went on, though.

Spike: “Yea, whatever. By the way, when did your sister get unbelievably scary?”

I should have written “Wesley would certainly shoot Tarzan,” of course.

I don’t know, I don’t think Angel would have any problem shooting Tarzan if he thought it was the best choice, it’s just that he really seems to be a traditionalist, and he has a pretty big ego: if he knows it won’t make a difference, then it WILL be a sword.

Actually though, now that you got me thinking about Angel, I think Connor, fresh out of Quor-Toth, would be a fair match vs. Tarzan. The symmetry is appealing. ^^

Angelus, certainly, though I think his basic ego and might prompt him to try hand to hand first.

Other than threatening to shoot Fred :mad: with the gun she shot him and Jasmine with, I can’t recall Angel ever using a gun.

Now I’m trying to remember. I believe he was the assigned shooter in the episode where Illyria went crazy and had to get shot with the Doc Brown Cannon lest she destabilize time itself.

I think he had a gun in the episode where he and Spike pretended to be SS officers during WWII and infiltrated a German submarine as well, didn’t he?

Nope. That was Wesley. Since Wesley had lied about the devices’ intended purpose (it would depower rather than kill her, though she deserved death and worse for murdering Fred), he obviously didn’t let anyone else use it.

Only Spike was pretending to be an SS officer. Angel presented himself as an agent of the US government (which he was, albeit unwilling), and took command from the American crew who had commandeered the boat.

Angel “infiltrated.” Spike was already on board.

Infiltrated implies deceit. Angel dove down, presented himself to the officer in charge, and took over.

It’s the term Omi used. That’s why I put it in quotes. Blame her!

Him, but thanks for the clarifications-now I’m starting to remember. :slight_smile: The “Why are you working with a nazi?” “He’s not a nazi, he just thinks their uniforms are cool” episode. :slight_smile:

Like a slayer, Connor is superhumanly strong, agile, etc, no way Tarzan beats him. He even grew up in a more hostile environment than Tarzy.

lol, I wasn’t thinking of Wes using guns, more his hidden weapons up his sleeves and stuff like that.

(and yeah, totally Buffy)

Tarzan has an almost insurmountable handicap when facing someone like Buffy. The handicap is his penis. Tarzan simply cannot stand up to the girl power might of Buffy.

Lioness. The ape got to live.

They both defeated adversaries way beyond what could be expected of normal human limits, so whether Tarzan’s might was described as super-human or not doesn’t make a difference in any practical sense. What matters most is what their power represents. Tarzan was the embodiment of male power and British superiority, while Buffy represents girl power and the modern American way of life. Who would win would depend solely upon the philosophy being promoted by the writers.

That’s blindly obvious, of course, but still true. I mean, just look at how Dracula was treated as insignificant as an enemy for Buffy. It’s clear that there’s more involved than just a comparison of known abilities.

I still hate that episode. SPOILER: She dusted him at the end, and he reformed. She dusted him again and as he was reforming, she told him she can to this all day or something, and he gave up. Does not make any since with the rest of the show.