Wednesday, October 30, 2019

The Emperor Scorpion Strikes Back (Xiaolin Showdown Season 2 Episode 14) - 'Toon Reviews 35

If you like this review and want to stay updated for what else I have in store, become a follower of this blog, click here to like the official Facebook page, and click here to follow me on Twitter. Now on with today's review:
The Emperor Scorpion Strikes Back

 
There’s a lot riding on this episode to make it one of the show’s grandest experiences.  We got the return of one of its most creative forces of destruction, the reveal of a powerful Shen Gong Wu to stop it, and another threat of the end of the world.  For the most part, the episode lives up to the greatness, but doesn’t feel like more than a standard episode to teach the Xiaolin Warriors about teamwork. 
There’s a planetary alignment that attracts all of the Shen Gong Wu, although somehow the vehicle Shen Gong Wu and those belonging to Jack get a free pass.  This phenomena is an omen of the formation of Mala Mala Jong, who as you may remember is a demon warrior comprised of Shen Gong Wu.  This is a bigger deal than his first appearance because way more Shen Gong Wu have been revealed in this time and will therefore make him more powerful.  In addition, his threat will increase if able to become a four-person group known as the Fearsome Four and there’s only one Shen Gong Wu that will make that happen. 
Jack’s moments in the episode mostly feature him goofing around with the duplicating Shen Gong Wu, the Ring of the Nine Dragons.  It’s funny to see all the random variations of Jack at his disposal, but how are they all competent?  Isn’t the Ring supposed to divide the user’s maturity to infantile degrees?  Anyway, their competence and Omi insisting he doesn’t need help lead to Mala Mala Jong’s new formation, the fight with Jack turning out to be a distraction.  Mala Mala Jong later takes the ring and is instantly the Fearsome Four, apparently a big sign of the end of the world.  Honestly though you’d never guess the end is near without everyone saying it is. 
There is hope to stop the Fearsome Four with the reveal of the Emperor Scorpion, which can control all Shen Gong Wu.  As interesting as this sounds, its power is a guarantee we won’t see much of it after this episode given that it’s too much of an easy win for the users.  The Warriors go after the Emperor Scorpion in the center of the Earth, but their lack of teamwork through each Warrior going after one Mala Mala Jong is their downfall.  Not only do they not beat the Fearsome Four, but Jack nabs the Emperor Scorpion and controls them all.  Once again, this isn’t exactly the best way to foreshadow the end of the world given how Jack approaches being evil. 
One thing I will say is that it is nice that no one blames anyone for their lack of teamwork.  They lament on it together and even bring up logical points when Omi blames himself for Mala Mala Jong forming in the first place.  They soon realize working together also involves doing what they do best to contribute to a bigger situation, and they do so by using their natural elements when necessary.  This puts up a strong fight against Mala Mala Jong, especially when they enter a Xiaolin Showdown for the Emperor Scorpion.  It’s a uniquely staged one where it’s mostly dark as the Warriors and the Fearsome Four hang from ropes.  Through hiding all beacons shining at them, giving directions, and finding a way to light things up, this may be the Warriors’ best use of teamwork to date.  They win the Showdown and become more enlightened as a result, but not without having some fun by making the Fearsome Four use Jack as a basketball. 
Despite a few contradictions and the staging not matching descriptions, this is a great episode to give the Xiaolin Warriors’ dynamic welcome development.
A

The Ranking

1.      Citadel of Doom

2.      The Evil Within

3.      Enter the Dragon

4.      The Deep Freeze

5.      Days Past

6.      PandaTown

7.      The Emperor Scorpion Strikes Back

8.      The Sands of Time

9.      Master Monk Guan

10.  Crystal Glasses

11.  Dreamscape

12.  The Shard of Lightning

13.  Hear Some Evil, See Some Evil

14.  Sizing Up Omi

 
 
Be sure to stay tuned for the review of the next episode where Clay meets up with his disturbingly jealous younger sister.

If you would like to check out other Xiaolin Showdown reviews on this blog, click here for the guide made especially for them.

Tuesday, October 29, 2019

The Deep Freeze (Xiaolin Showdown Season 2 Episode 13) - 'Toon Reviews 35

If you like this review and want to stay updated for what else I have in store, become a follower of this blog, click here to like the official Facebook page, and click here to follow me on Twitter. Now on with today's review:
The Deep Freeze


A major specialty to this season is the abundance of creative story ideas.  We’ve had quite a few already with things like a panda-themed mob boss, Dojo turning into a monstrous threat, and an earwig living in a Shen Gong Wu who can possess people.  This trend continues with the world put into a new ice age from an evil snowman. 
During a pursuit for a Shen Gong Wu called the Lunar Locket, Jack unveils a robot he made human with the Heart of Jong.  While fighting for the Lunar Locket, it’s very impressive and funny how he puts up a strong fight against the Xiaolin Warriors while still acting friendly.  However, all the fighting gets the robot depressed, and deciding he doesn’t want to be human anymore, he throws the Heart of Jong down a cliff.  Given this Shen Gong Wu’s ability to make life out of pretty much anything, this simple action turns out to be highly destructive to the world. 
Just from interacting with the snow at the bottom of the cliff, the Heart of Jong creates a sentient snowman who can easily go from cute and innocent to a big yodeling monster.  No one stands a chance against this being’s frosty terror.  It even gets to the point where Jack has to legitimately beg the Xiaolin Warriors to let him stay with them while Wuya dares to team up with the snowman.  True, Jack does end up double-crossing the Warriors by stealing some of their Shen Gong Wu, he’s barely a threat when the snowman suddenly shows up.  He’s incredibly powerful with his use of ice and snow, easily freezing the Warriors mid-fight, and even when he’s melted, he can go back to snow quickly with the Heart of Jong.  It’s a legitimately difficult enemy to take down. 
Now, I’m not exactly all for cold, so what the snowman goes on to do feels especially fiendish to me.  When he catches up with Jack and snags his Lunar Locket, he uses it to block out the sun completely, making for intense freezing ice everywhere, his idea of global dominance.  Seeing our heroes shivering intensely sells the severity of this state of the world.  However, it’s through this sorry state when a new idea for defeat develops.  They have the Shen Gong Wu to melt the snow, and that one spot of green they create is enough to attract the snowman to come try and stop them.  Once he’s right where they want him, it’s an all-out battle to take out the Heart of Jong powering him. 
At first, the snowman is dominating like he’s been with nothing seeming to melt him.  Then comes a Xiaolin Showdown where the face-off with this all-powerful evil snowman is a simple game of ice hockey.  Omi is the Warrior to take on the snowman where a really small monk ends up going against the snowman as a huge wintery cyborg.  The thing is, even when the snowman easily manipulates water with the moon using the Lunar Locket, water is Omi’s main element.  When things get dire, he has all the water moves to force the water thrown at him back and finally beat that snowman.  Then after the moon is put back in its proper place, ending the ice age, there are enough repercussions to this affair since it means evil is much stronger now.  For that, the Warriors get new armor to wear when fighting in a Xiaolin Showdown from here on, and they certainly do look nice. 
Still, it’s the main story that matters most, and with its grand creative concept and legitimately high-stake execution, it makes what we get really great.
A+

The Ranking

1.      Citadel of Doom

2.      The Evil Within

3.      Enter the Dragon

4.      The Deep Freeze

5.      Days Past

6.      PandaTown

7.      The Sands of Time

8.      Master Monk Guan

9.      Crystal Glasses

10.  Dreamscape

11.  The Shard of Lightning

12.  Hear Some Evil, See Some Evil

13.  Sizing Up Omi

 
 
Be sure to stay tuned for the review of the next episode where the Warriors must work as a team to get a Shen Gong Wu to control them all called the Emperor Scorpion.

If you would like to check out other Xiaolin Showdown reviews on this blog, click here for the guide made especially for them.

Monday, October 28, 2019

Ed Edd n Eddy's Boo Haw Haw - 'Toon Reviews Shorty

If you like this review and want to stay updated for what else I have in store, become a follower of this blog, click here to like the official Facebook page, and click here to follow me on Twitter. Now on with today's review:
I may be pretty far behind with my looks at Ed Edd n Eddy, but I still feel like now is a great time to look into some of its later material.  Before the final season started airing, three holiday specials were produced and introduced audiences to major differences from how the majority of the show was presented.  Instead of the summer, they would take place in the fall or winter, and there would be major glimpses into what school would be like for the cast.  They would be further explored in the final season, but for now, it’s one of those holiday specials that will take the forefront.  Unlike regular episodes, they’re standalone works not meant to be seen as part of any of the seasons.  As we’re in the month of October at this point in time, now is a perfect time to look into the series’ Halloween special for a special MC Toon Reviews Shorty:

Ed Edd n Eddy’s Boo Haw Haw

(October 28, 2005)

As far as special works go for the series, the expected trademarks are very in place.  The art style is still very unique and visually appealing. The visual gags are highly inventive and hilarious.  The emphasis on favorite childhood pastimes is given a fresh perspective.  Basically, you can easily get a feel of this as a real work of Ed Edd n Eddy.  However, working in the traditions of a holiday allow for something more unique than average.  From the visual aesthetic alone, you can tell the special goes all out with the spirit of the holiday.  The opening credits feature monstrous scenes and a music score that just have Halloween figuratively written all over it, easily investing the audience for a holiday experience.  Then there’s the actual story that further gives the series as we know it a fitting Halloween enhancement.


The Eds are setting off to find a special Halloween neighborhood known as Spook-E-Ville which Eddy knows all about from his secretive brother as the best place to trick-or-treat.  All the way there are very imaginative costumes to all three Eds expressing individuality amongst the group.  Eddy is dressing as Elvis to showcase his push for a cool reputation.  Double D, mixing his nerdy intellect with a desire to fit in, dresses as a bacteria that could be to any disease, but he refers to it specifically as the Bubonic Plague.  Ed, with his knowledge of monster movies and fighters goes as such a figure, a Viking known as Lothar. 
In addition, it’s Ed who really drives the special’s conflict.  One of his defining traits has always been his love for horror movies and randomly referencing them whenever he gets the chance.  In this special, this trait is taken to the ultimate extreme when it turns out he’s been majorly binge-watching all sorts of horror movies for Halloween.  As Double D warns, this much exposure can lead to losing touch with reality, and with someone like Ed, this happens fairly quickly and creatively.  When going out for Halloween, he sees things that aren’t there that represent the movies he saw.


What happens is that certain kids from the cul-de-sac are minding their own business.


However, in Ed’s mind, they take on the form of Halloween monsters causing him to react with fright or provocation.  It starts when he comes across the Kanker sisters actually conversing civilly while toasting marshmallows.  In Ed’s mind, they’re witches inflicting a nasty Halloween curse by casting a spell on Ed and the others by sending all sorts of monsters after them.  The hallucinations that drive his action are also fittingly staged for the holiday.  There’s a grainy filter over the scenes with the film jittering from exposure and deteriorating through age.  The monsters themselves also have an identity to them with more details in their designs than the usual brand of animation for the show allows.  Still, the music, Ed’s oddball mindset, and extreme reactions to what he sees keep what’s shown in the usual Ed Edd n Eddy spirit.

This in turn sets into motion what happens for the rest of the special.  Ed sees a cul-de-sac kid in a creative Halloween costume or doing a favorite Halloween activity, perceives them as an actual monster, and attacks them hard.  The variety to every element makes the experience creative and the Halloween atmosphere felt.


Jimmy for instance is seen in a childish alien costume, innocently trick-or-treating as most young kids would on this very night.


Though the costume is simply made, Ed is convinced that Jimmy is a real alien, and doesn’t hesitate to attack.


The thing is, through attacking Jimmy, Ed gets far more brutal than average.  Though his hallucinations don’t get him to realize it, Jimmy ends up beaten down into the pavement, and it’s not taken the least bit likely when Sarah finds out.


As Ed has also stolen Jimmy’s candy when beating him, Sarah approaches him and his friends to demand it back.  Unlike most of her aggressive moments, this is an instance where it’s completely warranted.  For that, it’s simply bad timing that Ed has his hallucinations and sees his sister as a violent vampire.  Her beating does have a humorous touch to it though as Ed says a steak will defeat her, and he uses the meat steak instead of an actual stake.


As a touch of bizarreness, the steak somehow places her in a plant pod Double D has to water her out of.


The next victim is Nazz, sporting a relatively nice Medusa costume.  Being one of the friendlier kids of the cul-de-sac, she actually treats the Eds well at first, even inviting them to trick-or-treat with her, well Double D at least.


Since she’s dressed as Medusa, it’ not surprising that Ed sees her as the real thing, and at one point acts as if she’s really turned him to stone.


It’s therefore a total random yet interesting outcome that Ed beats her by encasing her in a cement block.  In turn, it’s a fine example of a good way Nazz is moved from friendly to aggressive towards the Eds.  It all happens when their antics legitimately become too much or too harmful to provoke her.



Among the kids who actually make sense to be a target of Ed’s hallucinations is Kevin who spends Halloween egging anyone passing by.


As a touch of class, he’s seen as the Headless Horseman.


Still, the tone of the series makes the reference stand as something all its own when the Headless Horseman is seen holding an authentic Kevin head.


Ed responds by taking out the horse.


However, the horse turns out to be Kevin’s bike. Given how much he cherishes it, he’s enraged beyond belief no matter how repairable it usually is.  Plus, let’s not forget that he’s far more deserving of a beating than any other neighborhood kid.


As it turns out, Ed doesn’t see all the monsters as evil.  He later sees a spider creature he claims is simply misunderstood.  He ‘appeases’ him by offering the candy he stole from the Jimmy alien much to Eddy’s dismay.


Keeping in touch with reality, this monster is actually Jonny climbing trees and waiting for his pal Plank to return.



The usual Halloween customs get more interesting when the group comes across Rolf following an unusual tradition by using the night to look for mushrooms and offer them to others.  If you think this is a real oddball tradition, just wait until you see how he celebrates Christmas.


 
Even with this strange but friendly ritual, Rolf still can’t escape Ed’s hallucinations as to him, he’s an evil troll, bringing to mind a cyclops.  After much erratic behavior to avoid Rolf, Ed responds by taking out his eye, resulting in Rolf writhing in pain requiring a bandage.  All throughout, it’s hard not to feel sorry for this resident foreigner.



Plank can’t even escape Ed’s hallucinations as he’s seen as a huge Frankenstein monster.  Although the beatings he gets are harmless whacks from a stick, they’re enough for Jonny to get enraged over later on.  That’s a major example of this simple hunk of wood being more aware of things than he seems.

As aggressively violent and genuinely inconveniencing to others as Ed is, what he’s put through is still pretty fun to watch.  The idea of him getting his visions from too many horror movies is creatively staged, the staging is comparable to such films, and there is some solid comedy to them.  It also doesn’t overpower the other subplot of the special of the Eds looking for Spook-E-Ville as his friends offer interesting perspectives on all the hallucinations Ed gets along the way.  Double D, as the only sane one in the group, is vocally concerned about the harm Ed is causing while Eddy only cares about Spook-E-Ville and opts not to think much of Ed.  When looking for the place though, a lot of things seem to be off.  Some landmarks like a dented stop sign only appear after Ed dents one when beating one of the kids and he places it in front of his friends.  Others appear a little too easily in a sequence, like the Eds were expected to go in this direction.  Then Spook-E-Ville turns out to be a scam made just for the Eds as after close observations, Eddy finds that they’re back in the cul-de-sac.  It should be noted that this coming from his brother is a major contrast to the noble older sibling figure Eddy constantly builds him up as.  Where this leads to in the series is huge, but that’s another work of this show for another time.

As creative and humorously staged as Ed’s hallucinations are, as they were completely unwarranted and unprovoked, he should get some consequences for it.  The way they’re presented though is not very satisfying and brings down the fun.


They start out fine though as the kids proceed to mob the Eds for ruining their Halloween with violence and in Ed’s mind, they’re seen as all creatures coming together.  This time though, instead of facing them, he has him and his friends hide in a pit.  Hiding from monsters is certainly not in the nature of the Viking warrior Ed has portrayed himself as all through the night, and it also doesn’t help at all.  The kids eventually find the Eds, and the one time Double D and Eddy could benefit from Ed’s violent rampages, Ed doesn’t go through with them.


He just claims himself to be done with Halloween for the night and relaxes on a convenient armchair.


There is one last hallucination though, but it’s of Double D and Eddy frolicking in flowers, contrasting them actually getting beating mercilessly.  That right there makes the ending totally unsatisfying.  Ed was the one who’s really to blame for all the kids getting beaten up, yet his friends are the only ones who face any sort of consequence.  As looks at other seasons show, all Eds get punished even if one is to blame very frequently, but this takes it too far.  This time, the true instigator isn’t involved in the consequences at all, and instead only the ones who followed him but didn’t support what he was doing get beaten.  How is this fair?  The fact that this is also a case for other works of the show is telling of how big an issue for the series it is.

The ending of the special does diminish the fun quite a bit and also doesn’t make sense.  While this does keep the whole thing from standing as a grand achievement, it does successfully capture the feel for Halloween.  The premise is creative, there’s fitting atmosphere from the costumes, the nighttime setting, and Ed’s hallucinations, and it’s fun to see how many characters celebrate it.  Things may not all come together tonal wise, but it’s a sold fright fest on the whole.


Recommended

 

 

That’s it for this ‘Toon Reviews shorty.  Next time, we’ll return to our currently scheduled reviews.  Until then:

 

Stay Animated Folks, And Happy Halloween!