Interview Transcript featuring Joss Whedon

Original interview can be found at www.comicbookresources.com


JOSS WHEDON SAYS GOODBYE TO DOLLHOUSE

by Kiel Phegley, News Editor


Posted: Fri, January 15, 2010

Buffy: Season Eight

Looking back on it, that Joss Whedon and Eliza Dushku's Fox drama 'Dollhouse' made it to two full seasons seems a minor miracle. From its earliest development days, the science fiction series about a woman whose personality can be rewritten to fit any situation and the conspiracy behind the creation of such "dolls" had a tough road ahead of it. Beyond general fan worry that Fox wouldn't support the show and would treat in the same way it had Whedon's scuttled "Firefly" series (Whedon only returned to the network because of the Dushku's own development deal), an early cut of the pilot was rejected before the show debuted in 2008 to on-the-bubble ratings.

Still, "Dollhouse" persevered. Due to fan response to the first season (even though the planned season finale "Epitaph One" was only released on DVD rather than over the air), the network renewed the series for a second year, keeping it in the Friday night "death slot" where it failed to gain enough viewers to continue past this year (although unlike the case with "Firefly" and even "Dollhouse" season one, this season will see its full run aired in order).

All things considered, Whedon told CBR, "The only regrets I have about it are the things I didn't do right. 26 hours of television is a lot of time to tell a story, and everybody involved was great. I just look back and go, 'I wish I had figured some things out a little earlier.' But that's all the time I have for regret. It is what it is."

Buffy: Season Eight

While the final run the show's of episodes have thrown plot twists, from unmasked villains to best friend back stabs to supporting character deaths in a ramp up to a definitive "Dollhouse" ending, the two "Epitaph" episodes which jumped into the bleak future of the series' timeline revealed that Whedon and the writing staff's plans for the show could have gone much longer. With his canonical "Buffy the Vampire Slayer" Season 8" a solid comic shop hit, and other smaller projects making money for a variety of publishers, the immediate question for "Dollhouse" viewers is whether or not this show could also be shifted to the printed page. However, as he said when the first season was in peril, Whedon explained that a comic continuation seems highly unlikely.

"The only time it crosses my mind is when [Dark Horse Comics editor] Scott Allie pesters me as he did the other day, saying "Epitaph One" sounds like a comic! It's post-apocolyptic!' But my answer is 'No.' It's pretty unequivocal. It could change, but I need to do the next thing, and I do spend an enormous amount of my career replatforming things I already did. After a while, it starts to just seem a little morbid."

"Beyond the fact that "Dollhouse" as a series is not soley under his own control, the writer felt that even with its own sci-fi bent the premise of the show wouldn't translate well to comics. "I don't think it's a comic. It's a TV show.. apparently not a Fox show, but it is a TV show. There are themes in it and ideas that could work in a comic, but for me to spend the amount of time it would take keeping the comic true to what's already out there when I'm already doing that with 'Buffy' would be a ridiculous waste of my time. And ultimately that would net me a piece of something that belongs to Fox. It just makes no sense to do a comic with 'Dollhouse.' I don't get it, and I'm not sure I'd read it. And in the amount of time it would take, I intend to do more comics, but I intend to do new comics. I'd like to throw some new ideas. And I'd like to continue 'Buffy' and make sure we don't flip there and we really keep it coming."


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