Friday, February 9, 2018

'Toon Reviews 13: The Loud House Season 2 Episode 4: Suite and Sour/Back in Black


Suite and Sour







It’s been established a lot that the Louds are chaotic by nature, meaning that it’s not uncommon to see them get up to mischief outside their house.  However, this cartoon is also strong proof that their hearts really are in the right place.  One point of interest is that this is the first cartoon to feature the parents in the spotlight, which is fitting since the show is now allowing their faces to be shown.  Mom and Dad are excited because they finally raised enough money to book a weekend at a luxury spa hotel, and thanks to their newly revealed features, it’s easier than ever to feel their satisfaction.  As for the kids, their role here starts another welcome trend for the series.  In most cartoons prior, the girls appeared to all have a common mindset while Lincoln led his own life separate from them, leaving little sense of a team, let alone a family.  At times, they were shown as one whole team, but what we mostly got was Lincoln against the girls or a sister against the rest of the family as opposed to one whole unit.  Here, all 11 kids are on the same page through wanting to go to the hotel too, and show the start of a consistent sense of teamwork.  It’s shown when they put on a play to convince Mom and Dad to take them which is big on humor and entertaining moments from every kid.  The unity continues when we get to the hotel.  Usually, it would be just the sisters going nuts, becoming the true detriment to everything else.  Here, all the kids, including Lincoln, equally take advantage of the fun and excitement of the hotel through moments like Lynn and Lana racing in the elevators and breaking them, Leni being mistaken for a concierge and going along with the misunderstanding, and Lincoln and Lucy going ghost-hunting.  As fun as the kids’ antics are, you’re still able to feel sympathy for Mom and Dad as what their children do gets in the way of the relaxation they wanted.  However, the kids aren’t just oblivious thrill seekers.  When their parents find them out and ground them for disrupting their relaxing time, they feel bad and strive to do better.  This is further shown when another set of hilarious antics occurs in their hotel room which they try to prevent.  Even when the whole Loud family ends up kicked out of the hotel, the kids still strive to appease the parents whose fun times they interfered with.  They set up their own hotel at home with their own custom-made amenities just for Mom and Dad, including the entire space of the house.  The parents’ satisfaction with their kids’ thoughtfulness is highly rewarding after what they’ve been through as well as a solid display of heart amidst the kids’ desire for fun.  There’s even a scene to balance this out when we end with a reveal that amidst following the rules, Mom and Dad have a mind for fun like the kids since they got them kicked out of the hotel for something…suggestive to say the least.  It could turn some people of that the kids don’t find out about this, but the strong levels of heart from the story and characters make this cartoon a pleasing entry for the season. 9.5/10


Back in Black








Each of the Louds have their interesting personality traits which make them such dynamic characters to spend a series with.  One sister who really stands out regarding personality is Lucy for how much of a different approach to life she has.  While the other Louds are highly energetic and sociable, Lucy is more prone to silence and, through her love of darkness, tends to scare people away.  As this cartoon shows, even with estranged personalities, these characters are still only human as they simply try to get by in life.  It has Lucy go through the common occurrence of coming across a cute person and crushing on him/her.  Her crush in this case is a small boy named Rocky, the little brother of one of Lincoln’s friends Rusty, who’s brought over when Rusty has to complete a solar system project with Lincoln.  Even as Lucy watches Rocky go about his business in her usual way of spying on him in the darkness and popping out of nowhere when trying to talk to him, she still gets some strong sympathy as Rocky either doesn’t notice her or runs away.  Lucy expresses genuine sadness of not getting Rocky’s attention and as she delivers her sadness, it’s done in a unique way through working in her dark and foreboding nature.  Speaking of that, Lucy feels that the only way to get acquainted with Rocky is to change herself internally and externally.  The other sisters (and I do mean all of them) give her a complete makeover, leading to a lot of interesting new looks for someone like Lucy, and coach her on how to act.  When they test Lucy’s final result on a little date with Rocky at a mini golf course, while it’s humorous to watch Lucy attempt to act like an average girlfriend, it goes wrong and Rocky doesn’t seem impressed by her new appearance and mannerisms.  Although out of this failed date, we get a nice moment of the sisters letting Lucy know that in spite of what happened, she’s great the way she is without blaming her for the failure.  Also, the drama Lucy went through reaches an appropriately nice end point when she finally befriends Rocky and the two of them are on good terms.  This is certainly a great starring role for Lucy for showing how endearing she is despite her unusual ways.  It’s not perfect though since it has all the sisters act as the same judgmental and opinionated character.  It’s hard to picture messy sisters like Lana and Lynn to be up for makeovers or passionate and expressive sisters like Luna and Luan to drive how one should act when winning over a crush.  It would’ve been better if sisters who do have a mind for romance and makeovers, the first ones in on the main conflict Lori, Leni, and Lola, were the only ones helping.  Not to mention they stick to unfortunate stereotypes of not letting Lincoln help because he’s a boy which is a poor excuse to not include him, especially since he ultimately brings Lucy and Rocky together.  Speaking of Lincoln, the subplot of him and Rusty constantly needing to rebuild their solar system is a mixed bag.  Sometimes it getting destroyed is funny, sometimes it’s watchable when it’s their own fault it breaks, and other times it’s hard to watch like when the sisters deliberately break it to get Rocky back for Lucy and when it breaks at the very end.  I might not like that ending for Lincoln, but I can tolerate it since the more important plot ends well.  Even with these weak points, this is still a nice cartoon that does justice for a dark, spooky character like Lucy, proving that “you can take the girl out of the coffin, but you can’t take the coffin out of the girl.” 9.5/10

The Ranking
  1. 11 Louds a Leapin’
  2. Baby Steps
  3. Suite and Sour
  4. Back in Black
  5. The Old and the Restless
  6. Intern for the Worse
  7. Brawl in the Family
Be sure to stay tuned for the review of the next episode where Lisa attempts to fit in with Lincoln's gang in "Making the Grade" and the family tries to break up Dad and a new family car by trying to get back their old broken down car in a "Vantastic Voyage."
If you would like to check out other Loud House reviews on this blog, click here for the guide made especially for them.

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