Friday, March 9, 2018

'Toon Reviews 13: The Loud House Season 2 Episode 22: Legends/Mall of Duty


Legends







There are many cartoons in this series that show the relationship between two or more of the Loud siblings, but very few show one of the kids’ relationship with their parents.  That’s the value of this cartoon which focuses on the relationship between Lincoln and Dad.  It also helps that this cartoon has the added benefit of paying homage to the classic Nickelodeon game show, Legends of the Hidden Temple.  My experience with that show was watching reruns of it back when the channel, Nickelodeon GaS, was a thing.  It was a nicely constructed physical challenge and knowledge-based show with an interesting premise of teams of kids taking on challenges related to a certain legend which would lead up to the always exciting temple runs where the teams would attempt to navigate through different rooms to find a treasure while avoiding the temple guards.  It’s a game show concept so appealing that it even worked well in movie form as a live-action TV movie from 2016 proved.  As for this Loud House cartoon, it’s utilized well here as something Lincoln and his dad, both trying hard to find something to bond over, get on the actual game show since the show itself is something they both enjoy.  The game show’s environment is filled with references to the source material like the names of the teams, the Orange Iguanas and Silver Snakes, the host, Kirk Fogg, voiced by the real actor, the usage of the talking stone head Olmec, and the temple challenges feeling like they’re lifted straight from the original game show.  It’s a fun environment that not only will surely appease to nostalgic Nickelodeon fans, but also help invest anyone in Lincoln and Dad’s bonding.  Their shared love for the show is easy to feel when they start out the show with great enthusiasm in the first few challenges, even if they don’t always win.  However, their rivals in the game, Stand and Steak Stanko, don’t make what we see as enjoyable as everything else sets it up to be.  They’re one-dimensional antagonists who delight in mocking their opponents for no good reason at all and only care about the fame of winning.  The worst part about it is when they challenge the Orange Iguanas to a bet at the end of the game, Lincoln and Dad buy into their petty torments and fail to cooperate as well as before.  Such a grating father and son team shouldn’t be worth Lincoln and Dad's concerns, and the fact that they get on each other’s nerves during the following temple challenges is frustrating considering how much their bonding was working before.  Fortunately, just when Lincoln and Dad’s tensions get really bad, they come to their senses and decide that being on the show together is more important than beating the Stankos.  As a result, their temple run to retrieve the assigned treasure is a solid high point for their bonding, and is a fun, fast-paced sequence filled with respect for its source material to boot.  The Stankos end up winning with the fastest time anyway, but this outcome leads to an even stronger moment in the cartoon.  Lincoln and Dad have to go through the airport in their underwear as part of the bet, but despite how embarrassing this is, everyone at the airport who saw them on TV claps for their great bond, showing that even to random bystanders, good relationships are more important than winning a game.  Too bad the security guards don’t as the moment is followed by Lincoln and Dad getting arrested.  Overall, despite that ending sting and the one-dimensional antagonists, this cartoon wins for its nice father-son bonding moments, and the interesting backdrop they’re set against. 9/10


Mall of Duty








Looking after younger siblings can be a big challenge, especially if you’re Lincoln’s age.  However, out of a story set against this challenge can come something really entertaining, and that’s what we get here.  Lincoln is assigned to watch his younger sisters while his parents and older sisters are out.  However he develops responsibility issues when he wants to get an autograph from another favorite TV figure of his, Rip Hardcore and goes to the mall where it’s happening, taking his little sisters with him.  Lincoln, the man in charge, makes the younger sisters wait around in an endless line, and they all constantly complain about being bored, forcing Lincoln to try and entertain them.  While his attempts do ease the fact that he forced the young ones into doing something they didn’t want to do which does lead to humorous antics and comeback lines, Lincoln’s responsibility issues grow even more when he puts them all on a kiddie train, expecting them to stay put which can be neglectful.  Considering that Lincoln has been a good, loving big brother before, it’s really hard to imagine him as neglectful.  Well, Lincoln ultimately gets his Rip Hardcore autograph, but then the cartoon really starts picking up with the challenging part of caretaking afterwards when the kiddie train goes off the rails due to Lincoln jacking up the quarter power, and lands the younger sisters in various places of the mall.  Lincoln then proves that he truly can be a good brother after all as he sets all his priorities into finding them.  In the process, he puts everything we saw of Rip Hardcore at the beginning to good use giving him more value than just being part of one of Lincoln’s favorite shows.  Because of Rip’s methods, Lincoln tracks his sisters down to stores that fits their interests.  He follows a trail of chemicals to find Lisa at an appliance store, tracks Lucy based on a disturbance of the severed head of a clothes mannequin, finds Lola in her natural habitat, a princess-themed toy store, and deduces a chewed bone at a toy store as a clue to Lana in a pet store.  Not only are these scenes of Lincoln’s methods of finding his sisters successful in making Lincoln’s interests credible to the story, but they also lead to some entertaining, and even cute, bits from the younger sisters, particularly one that further enhances Lana’s endearment when she hatches baby ducklings who follow her around.  Then Lincoln has to retrieve Lily from the kiddie train still speeding through the mall which is a challenge since her infant mindset made her the only one to actually enjoy the train.  There’s a lot of great action as Lincoln uses his yo-yo to get to the engine and holds Lily tight as it crashes through various obstacles, and also heart when he gives up his autograph, his reason for coming to the mall, away for her sake.  The heart even continues through to the end when the younger sisters show sympathy for Lincoln losing his autograph and even keep what he did a secret from Mom and Dad.  It’s a cute way of showing that even if they get on each other’s nerves that will never stop the love between them.  This, along with its use of little things leading to something big, and everything taking place in an interesting environment of the mall make this cartoon a fun and heartfelt adventure in looking after younger siblings. 9.5/10

The Ranking
  1. 11 Louds a Leapin’
  2. L is for Love
  3. Pulp Friction
  4. Frog Wild
  5. Yes-Man
  6. Party Down
  7. Friend or Faux
  8. Room with a Feud
  9. Lock n Loud
  10. Fool’s Paradise
  11. Fed Up
  12. Out of the Picture
  13. Job Insecurity
  14. Potty Mouth
  15. Mall of Duty
  16. The Loudest Mission: Relative Chaos
  17. Spell it Out
  18. Baby Steps
  19. Shell Shock
  20. Suite and Sour
  21. Back in Black
  22. Legends
  23. Future Tense
  24. Patching Things Up
  25. No Spoilers
  26. The Whole Picture
  27. No Laughing Matter
  28. Health Kicked
  29. Garage Banned
  30. Back Out There
  31. The Old and the Restless
  32. Kick the Bucket List
  33. Intern for the Worse
  34. Lynner Takes All
  35. Cheater by the Dozen
  36. Pets Peeved
  37. Making the Grade
  38. Vantastic Voyage
  39. Change of Heart
  40. ARGGH! You for Real?
  41. No Such Luck
  42. Brawl in the Family
Be sure to stay tuned for the review of the next episode with more development for Lola's character, even if it does break continuity a bit, in "Read Aloud," and Lincoln's crazy birth story in "Not a Loud."
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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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