Buffy the Vampire Slayer is remembered today as an iconic piece of ’90s TV, but the original pilot was flawed enough that WB passed on it entirely. The show is recognized as one of the first instances of a female character as a cutthroat heroine, and has truly earned cult-classic status. Its popularity is so enduring that a Buffy the Vampire Slayer reboot starring Sarah Michelle Gellar is expected to premiere on Hulu sometime in 2026.
The series came to be after the 1992 Buffy film, when creator Joss Whedon was asked to revisit the character for television. However, the project was under severe budget limitations, a shortened runtime, and tensions running high among the crew.
According to SlashFilm, the final result was a 25-minute “presentation” that looked like a prototype of the series’ actual pilot, “Welcome to the Hellmouth,” but it was flawed enough for Whedon to be unsatisfied and The WB executives to pass on the show entirely.
The unaired pilot can be found on YouTube, and for the most part, it follows the same basic plot and structure as the aired pilot, but there are some key differences. Thankfully, this wasn’t the end of Buffy, but it very nearly put a stake through the show’s heart.
The Budget & Casting Decisions Hurt Buffy The Vampire Slayer’s Original Pilot
With only 25 minutes of screen time and a low budget, there’s only so much you can do to launch a reimagined universe of the popular character. Whedon was forced to significantly compress his original script, which meant key character dynamics and world-building moments were cut. The result was a plot similar to “Welcome to the Hellmouth” without as much depth, which left Whedon and The WB unimpressed.
The original casting choices also affected the initial pilot, and many characters were recast before the series actually made it to air. Willow Rosenberg was originally played by Riff Regan, but creatives ultimately went with Alyson Hannigan for the later project. Principal Flutie was played by Stephen Tobolowsky instead of Ken Lerner, and early scenes of David Boreanaz as Angel were reportedly filmed but ultimately cut.
Some Buffy the Vampire Slayer characters were also missing from the “presentation” pilot altogether. There was nothing of Buffy’s mom nor The Master, who’d later become Season 1’s villain. The episode also notably didn’t end in the crypt and instead opted to end in the high school, straying from the plot of the aired pilot.
Combined with a crew that Whedon claimed didn’t seem to like him, the pilot suffered from a rough production that was obvious to The WB. They ultimately passed on the show and chose to pick up 7th Heaven instead.
How Buffy The Vampire Slayer Got A Second Chance After The Failed Pilot
Just as Buffy came back from the dead, the show got a second chance at life. Months after axing the pilot, The WB executives needed a mid-season replacement after their soap opera Savannah was canceled, and then-president of the network, Susanne Daniels, still had Whedon in mind.
The WB called for some major changes before Buffy the Vampire Slayer made it to air, including recasting Willow and reshooting the pilot, which finally premiered as “Welcome to the Hellmouth.” Whedon finally got to introduce Buffy Summers the way he’d always envisioned, and it not only saved the show, but it turned it into one of television’s most iconic series.
Source: SlashFilm
- Release Date
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1997 – 2003
- Network
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The WB

