Showing posts with label Eclipsa. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Eclipsa. Show all posts

Saturday, February 2, 2019

Return to Mewni / Moon the Undaunted (Star vs the Forces of Evil Season 3 Episode 1) - 'Toon Reviews 27


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Today, we’re starting another look at a season featuring everyone’s favorite interdimensional princess heading in a fresh and exciting new direction.

Star vs the Forces of Evil (Season 3)
Basic Premise

Star vs the Forces of Evil is one of those shows that goes both ways.  Sometimes its focus is on the reckless mischief of the title character and her friends.  When that’s the case, episodes are either really enjoyable or directionless and not necessarily worth one’s time.  However, there are also times that suggest that the show has something far bigger and grander in mind.  From there, the lore, characters, and scope of the series become far more interesting and especially creative.  So while light-hearted fluff doesn’t seem really do the show justice, it becomes quite the experience with anything world-building related.  With Season 3, the latter subject is at the forefront and boy does it make the series more exciting than ever.
The reason I’m so enthusiastic about Season 3 has to do with how varying in quality Season 2 is.  Most of the observations of the show’s fluctuating tone attribute to that season.  Light-hearted episodes are very mixed with some solid fun ones and a couple of incredibly weak ones.  However, anything lore-related is consistently strong and interesting, and seamlessly puts the show into a more serious direction while still keeping true to its free spirit.  Those particular lore-related episodes bring a lot of interesting background.  There’s backstory on the Queens of Mewni, after effects of Star’s wand getting cleaved, and insight on how hard monsters have it on Mewni.  Now with Star Butterfly suddenly forced to leave her new Earth life behind for her home kingdom, this new season is all about world-building lore-filled adventures.

As you can see from my excitement, I find that they turn out very well, but how well?  That’s what the oncoming reviews will determine.  One thing’s for sure though; it’s going to get weirder and wilder than ever before.


Now on with the reviews:
Return to Mewni
At the end of Season 2, the news that Star needed to leave Earth was shocking, at least from her perspective.  While we saw plenty of reasons for this, all the devotion to how adjusted Star was to her new life made her needing to leave it behind feel surprising to the audience.  This is the tone that defines the entire episode shown at the start with Marco feeling depressed over Star’s sudden departure among old end of the school year party decorations.  On a side note, it’s interesting that he shows no hint of awkwardness that the last thing she told him was that she has a crush on him even though he’s already in a relationship.  While this sets the episode’s mood, its real focus is on something more interesting. 
Shortly after spending much of that night on relationship drama, Star is thrown into legit drama.  She already knows that Toffee has returned, but at the moment, she and her mother, Queen Moon, have a majorly pressing issue.  They’re traveling to a magic sanctuary to cure the three members of the Magic High Commission who have had their energy drained and have become inflatable.  The frequent magical fritz that’s been around since the previous season makes the travel difficult.  That said, it does bring some creative effects like turning the carriage Star and Moon are using into much weaker forms of transport before vanishing it completely. 
As Star and Moon press on towards the sanctuary, there’s a dynamic clash on how they both approach the matter at hand.  Star mainly acts out of adjustment to her old rebel lifestyle through jumping in to use her wand and fight off enemy rats without hesitation.  While foolish given the seriousness of the events, this being in line with Star’s character is enough to believe that she has some idea of what she’s doing.  As for Moon, she has way more intel on what’s going on and pushes towards safer options.  This includes having legit reasons for Star to not use the wand since it’s linked to Toffee’s magic, and that fighting the rats attracts too much attention.  This is all a part of Moon’s most endearing trait of doing what she does for Star’s well-being and not because she doesn’t accept her for who she is.  It truly proves that she’s one of the best-defined characters on the show.  At the same time, Moon’s good traits are balanced out by her over-protectiveness coming from not knowing her own daughter well. 
With all this said, it’s a pleasing direction that both Star and Moon are just as capable as they are flawed, making for a balanced perspective.  For the moment at least, despite their conflicting approaches, they come to a point of endearment when they reach the sanctuary.  After placing the Magic High Commission in pods for the time being, Star is put off by Moon wanting them both to stay in the sanctuary instead of go out to fight Toffee.  Since she fought him before, Star is understandably tense by this decision and believes that Moon had her drop everything for nothing.  Thankfully, she becomes much more considerate of her mother’s feelings when Moon reveals when she was Star’s age, Toffee and his army killed her mother. The last moment of the episode features both of them becoming closer as Moon proceeds to tell Star the whole truth about her background, paving the way for the next episode. 
This return to Mewni kicks the season off to a great start.  The tone is exciting, there’s a believable shock to the change in the norm, and endearment from a mother and daughter who think differently, yet love each other very much.
A


Moon the Undaunted
When a show has a creative premise and world, it’s best to go all out with everything, including its history.  This is what makes this episode on a character’s history noteworthy. 
Queen Moon is quite multi-layered through her personality functioning out of love as opposed to standards.  She’s even gone beyond being regal by facing Toffee long ago.  This episode expands upon that going off of the very end of the previous one where Moon agreed to tell Star about her past. 
The entire episode is a flashback of that very event.  With her mother killed by Toffee, she had to take on the responsibility of ruling as a Queen of Mewni at such a young age.  The feel is especially apparent with young Moon designed very similarly to Star.  Despite how torn up she was by her loss, Moon had no time to deal with her feelings.  Being queen brought all sorts of issues.  Some were as major as the armies and Magic High Commission disagreeing on how to handle Toffee and his armies.  At the same time, smaller issues like deciding which boy she liked best were also taxing.  Out of her relationship matters was at least a nice moment where she was touched by a young River’s suggestion to decide what to do on her own.  It goes to show how he has her best interests in the present. 
As for the royal staff’s conflict of whether to handle Toffee with a peace treaty or a war, Moon’s understandable unease brought out another side of her.  She went against customs to solve problems by looking into the royal spell book’s dark chapter of Eclipsa.  It was mentioned in previous episodes that Eclipsa is notorious for abandoning the throne to marry a monster which everyone sees as treason.  She was so bad, she was imprisoned in crystals by Magic High Commission member, Rhombulus.  Her dark chapter and Moon’s uncertainties of how to deal with Toffee led Moon to face Eclipsa. 
Behind everyone’s backs, she had Rhombulus temporarily let Eclipsa’s crystals down.  Adding credibility is this being the first onscreen appearance of Eclipsa as opposed to exposition and portraits.  She’s charming and likable for such a criminal.  Rather than malice, her only desires were little things like a chocolate bar.  Her sympathy for Moon losing her mother and the pressures of ruling Mewni also feel very genuine.  It’s honestly hard to believe she’s as bad as past events claim.  Since the claims are in full force, her morality behind granting Moon the spell to destroy Toffee in exchange for freedom feels appropriately ambiguous. 
As for facing Toffee, the moment is creatively staged.  Moon goes alone, and nonchalantly sets up a picnic in the middle his camp.  When Moon performs Eclipsa’s spell, she doesn’t even sound pumped for battle.  She calmly states it, yet it produces a beam that blows off parts of the lizards that usually grow back.  Even though Moon only blew off Toffee’s finger, it not growing back due to the spell was enough to make the army retreat.  So Eclipsa’s spell was the very thing to beat Toffee and started the custom of all holders of the wand using it to face all monsters without any armies. 
That said, the disapproving looks of the Magic High Commission, and Moon getting dark veins like Eclipsa continues to make the audience wonder if all is well.  The answer comes in time, but as for this episode, it’s one of the absolute best world-building episodes.  It makes Moon an even more endearing character than she already is, stands as its own emotional story, and leaves many more interesting elements to look into.  As for the latter point, those elements go on to practically become series highlights…
A+


The Ranking
  1. Moon the Undaunted
  2. Return to Mewni
Be sure to stay tuned for the review of the next episode where Ludo has a hard time writing in the spell book, and River needs help from Marco to run Mewni while Moon is gone.
If you would like to check out other Star vs the Forces of Evil reviews on this blog, click here for the guide made especially for them.

Friday, August 24, 2018

'Toon Reviews 20: Star vs the Forces of Evil Season 2 Episode 12: Into the Wand/Pizza Thing


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:
Into the Wand

This episode starts out as another escapade of Star learning to better handle her wand.  It turns into one of the show’s most creative experiences adding to the background of this show’s world. 
Continuing with the confusing state of Star’s wand, this is an episode where it being cleaved is a problem with Star’s spells not coming out right.  She asks Glossaryck for help, and he tells her to fix it by going inside the wand and remove what doesn’t belong.  His instructions are as vague as usual, so it make sense that Star gets separated from him. 
It’s a very mind-boggling experience to navigate the inside of her own wand, which by the way bears little resemblance to how it looked in the previous episode.  I, for one, don't consider that a bad thing as the wand's interior in this episode is much more interesting as it changes by the minute.  First it looks like she’s in her room, but it’s a vision of it.  Then she loses focus of Glossaryck’s voice and ends up in a completely different location.  From there, even more strange occurrences appear.  Her school showing up wherever she turns.  She finds her mom’s pig-goat creature named Chauncey who was supposed to be killed in battle in a random burger factory.  The principal’s chair becoming her father’s throne.  The royal castle appearing on the football field.  The freakiest thing of all is that the longer Star stays in her wand, clones of herself appear existing as their own beings.  They threaten to replace the Star that’s been around the longest.  This unsettling feeling follows Star through the rest of her mission with not just a big job to do, but her existence on the line. 

While being followed by several other Stars, the real Star ends up in a special room of all the queens of Mewni.  It’s here where the show’s world gets more interesting than before as we uncover pieces of its backstory.  Each queen portrait has a plaque with a passage about them, but two queen portraits are of major significance.  One is of Eclipsa, a queen specializing in dark magic who ran from her husband to elope with a monster.  This is huge because while all the other queens have fought monsters, Eclipsa was in a relationship with one.   This begs lots of questions if the morality of Star, and her lineage, towards monsters has ever been justified.  Also, a queen who disappeared from the throne existing in her royal bloodline leaves Star with something big to deal with. 
As for the other big portrait, it’s of Star’s mother, Moon, defeating Toffee, who’s revealed to be immortal.  This reveal leaves more shocking truths for Star to take in knowing her elegant mother fought a dangerous monster, as well as something to safeguard.  It’s Toffee’s single finger, the only thing remaining from when Moon shot him.  Deducing the finger as the thing that doesn’t belong, there’s one last intense moment in the wand. Glossaryck rushes in to get Star through his eye just as she’s about to get beaten by her many clones. 
After dumping the finger into her closet, the episode ends with an actual wholesome scene between Star and Glossaryck as they take in the craziness of their adventures.  It’s a genuinely nice calm down after such a huge adventure.  Standing out for big reveals in the show’s lore and history with a creative aesthetic shining all the way through, this is one of the show’s best ways of leaving a strong impression.
A+


Pizza Thing

Not only is this just another episode of Star hanging out and doing an activity with Marco, it’s also one that involves Pony Head.  Just like with her appearance earlier this season, she’s too much with her arrogant attitude, and this episode encourages the trend. 
She and Star exchange gifts with each other for Friendship Thursday. While Star appreciates her gift, Pony Head shows little gratitude for what Star gets her since she can’t party in it.  She also doesn't accept that the planned entertainment is watching TV.  It’s moments like this that make you question why Star is even friends with her.  This impression on Pony Head is made more concerning.  She ditches Star and follows Marco who’s out getting pizza just to check out the “Earthian nightlife.” 
It gets worse when Pony Head whines her way into letting Marco invite her along, and she doesn’t even keep her promise to not force in distractions.  To be fair, there are some enjoyable moments from Pony Head’s distractions.  There's an impromptu rave with everyone involved wearing skinny jeans, and she drives a car with her magic after mistaking it for a taxi and scaring its driver away.  Since these moments are enjoyable enough and even exciting in parts, Pony Head doesn’t seem all bad and instead seems like someone who just wants to have fun.  However, her general rude behavior and weak reasons for her actions don’t make her very good either.  That's why it's concerning when Pony Head crashes the car into a junk yard, and it gets crushed and compacted, and this is a big deal because she stole it.  She does make up for it by using her magic to make a new car though, even though it drives off by itself.  That way, it can be argued that the episode does start working out in her favor. 
When she and Marco finally do get to the pizza place, he has her sit in the corner while he gets the pizza. Just as he’s about to buy it, for some reason, Marco points out that there aren’t as much mushrooms on the pizza, and the chef throws it away.  The fact that Marco later says it doesn’t matter begs the question why he even brought it up in the first place.  This just doesn’t seem to be a very good payoff to the hard time he had. It gets even worse when the chef proceeds to chastise him for criticizing about the mushrooms and unreasonably quits. 
The plot tries to make it seem like Marco was wrong to shut Pony Head out, and they could’ve gotten the pizza if she was involved.  However, for all the trouble she caused, Marco had very good reasons to not trust her, so the end result of her bad behavior being rewarded isn’t a good one.  At least the ending is fairly cute when a random little kid talking about why he likes pizza gets Marco and Pony Head to make up and cook their own.  It’s debatable if the pizza truly comes out good, but them coming together is still nice. 
However, Pony Head still brings the episode down quite a bit for her overbearing unruliness and the story making it seem like her attitude was necessary doesn't help.  There are some good funny moments and the payoff with her and Marco is very satisfying though. Nevertheless, an episode mostly consisting of what’s wrong with her character is not worthy of being called great.
D-

The Ranking
  1. Ludo in the Wild
  2. Into the Wand
  3. Hungry Larry
  4. Game of Flags
  5. On the Job
  6. Sleepover
  7. Is Mystery
  8. Mr. Candle Cares
  9. Wand to Wand
  10. Starstruck
  11. Girls’ Day Out
  12. By the Book
  13. Friendenemies
  14. Gift of the Card
  15. Starsitting
  16. Star on Wheels
  17. Camping Trip
  18. My New Wand
  19. Red Belt
  20. Spider with a Top Hat
  21. Star vs Echo Creek
  22. Fetch
  23. Goblin Dogs
  24. Pizza Thing
The next Star vs the Forces of Evil review features Glossaryck deal with nonsense on his way to a meeting, and a growth on his neck threatens Marco's chances of asking out Jackie.
Next time on MC Toon Reviews, we meet "Katnappe" from Xiaolin Showdown.
If you would like to check out other Star vs the Forces of Evil reviews on this blog, click here for the guide made especially for them.