Showing posts with label pranks. Show all posts
Showing posts with label pranks. Show all posts

Monday, March 5, 2018

'Toon Reviews 13: The Loud House Season 2 Episode 21: No Laughing Matter/No Spoilers


No Laughing Matter

When it comes to Luan, how you feel about her depends on how much you can tolerate her constant need to work in a joke to almost everything she says.  I’m sorry to say that her puns have become so frequent that I can’t tolerate them as much as I used to and wish she’d just talk like a normal person more.  That said, I do admire that Luan comes off as one of the more relatable Louds since, however you feel about her jokes, she’s really passionate about what she loves, and it’s especially shown in cartoons with her as the star.  They feature her never ceasing to pull off elaborate pranks on April Fool’s Day, and also explore how seriously she takes comedy such as Season 1’s “Funny Business.”  This cartoon does fit into the latter type of Luan cartoon, but it’s lacking in the character-developing power.  What happens is that when Luan goes on a huge pranking spree to work up to an upcoming comedy competition, her siblings start getting fed up with her jokes.  She hears them venting and proceeds to give up comedy.  This means, in an interesting change of pace, Luan talks completely normally which is weird to all the siblings who expect her to pull some sort of prank or work in a joke or pun.  One admirable thing about this though is that despite being clearly and understandably annoyed by Luan’s constant joking, the other siblings feel the need to help her out of her funk and get her back into comedy, particularly when they also learn she’s dropping out of the comedy competition.  They understand that no matter how they feel about Luan constantly doing what she does, it’s wrong for her to be stripped of her passion, which is what makes her who she is. They spend the entire cartoon attempting to get Luan back in the comedy game.  In a way, this can be seen as a message to Luan’s detractors, as well as offer a new perspective on anyone who’s passionate about something.  That said, in all the moments of Luan turning herself against jokes and pranks by acting normal, there are a lot of missed opportunities for explorations of her character.  When she throws away everything associated with her comedic passions, we never find out the depths of how she feels about doing this.  Her role in the cartoon would’ve been more powerful if she explained how she got into comedy in the first place.  That reveal also would’ve helped make her siblings’ attempts to get her joking again more engaging.  I guess all we can do is see if a future cartoon will explain this.  Even if we don’t learn much about Luan’s history with comedy though, we do get one significant piece of development at the end when Lincoln unintentionally flubbing jokes at the competition goad her to go on stage, tell them the right way, and become the winner.  While this means she’s back to her jokes, Luan makes it clear that she understands how overbearing she can be with them to her siblings, and vows to hold back on the jokes a little, only ending the cartoon with a bunch of them at everyone’s approval.  Basically, this conclusion is a satisfying one for being considerate of both sides of the issue.  We’re left with a cartoon with a good message on respecting passionate people and Luan getting some handle on her jokes.  It may not be as in-depth as it could be, but it’s still impactful in its own right. 9/10




No Spoilers
If a cartoon character is dumb, said character is either a completely useless and unentertaining menace to society or highly endearing and innocent who can sometimes provide some good to a situation.  Leni is a dumb character who fits the second category.  With this cartoon, Leni’s appeal really increases with the establishment of a significant talent of hers amidst her lack of intelligence.  A specific part of Leni’s ditzy nature shown here is her inability to keep things as a surprise, especially when it comes to birthday parties.  As a montage shows, whenever the Louds try to throw a surprise party, Leni always finds a way to spoil the surprise to the family member receiving it whether she’s hiding right in front of the guest of honor, sending an invitation to the party’s recipient, or asking the birthday sibling what dress she should wear.  Each of these moments help make the family’s frustration with Leni’s issue understandable, as well as evoke some laughs out of the different creative ways Leni blows the elements of surprise.  Regarding the family, they’re planning a surprise birthday party for Mom and agree that under no circumstances should Leni be informed about what they’re doing.  As a result, much of the cartoon is just Lincoln doing what he can to prevent Leni from seeing anyone’s preparations for Mom’s party while all the other Louds put everything together.  It features some nice displays of Leni’s character in which her interests in fashion Lincoln exposes himself to for surprise’s sake demonstrate one of her rare moments of intelligence, which in a way, foreshadow what’s to come.  Still, her persistent dumb moments are plentiful through her clever interpretations of her siblings’ party preparations that don’t get her to realize what’s really going on which also have their own distinct cuteness.  They also, foreshadow what’s to come when Leni gets ideas for Mom’s party under the guise that everyone wants to keep it low-key.  What I mean by foreshadowing is how all that goes on leads to how much the kids realize they need Leni for what they’re doing.  Without her, their party is a complete mess with unappealing balloons and streamers, overly sugary cake, overly spicy sandwiches, problematic entertainment, and a guest list of people Mom sees but doesn’t necessarily like.  The only way the party comes together as something nice is when Leni gets involved.  She takes the time to consider what Mom likes and puts it all together for the party.  It does beg the question why nobody else considered to include what Mom likes in the original preparations.  Well, technically Lisa’s guests and Luan’s jokes tried but were just misguided, but everything else should’ve attempted to show some consideration for the guest of honor.  Regardless of this, the party Leni plans truly is impressive, and Mom’s reaction to the party feels completely earned.  It really shows that even if people lack intelligence, that doesn’t mean they’re incapable of everything, as Leni had previously shown with her hobbies and party ideas from her siblings hiding their work from her.  To cap off Leni’s newly established talent, she’s named the official Loud family party planner leaving the promise for many great parties to come…just not surprise parties.  Basic as the overall story may be, it’s executed in a charming manner that develops and does justice for Leni and proving that she is one of the best dumb characters in media. 9/10

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. The Loudest Mission: Relative Chaos
  16. Spell it Out
  17. Baby Steps
  18. Shell Shock
  19. Suite and Sour
  20. Back in Black
  21. Future Tense
  22. Patching Things Up
  23. No Spoilers
  24. The Whole Picture
  25. No Laughing Matter
  26. Health Kicked
  27. Garage Banned
  28. Back Out There
  29. The Old and the Restless
  30. Kick the Bucket List
  31. Intern for the Worse
  32. Lynner Takes All
  33. Cheater by the Dozen
  34. Pets Peeved
  35. Making the Grade
  36. Vantastic Voyage
  37. Change of Heart
  38. ARGGH! You for Real?
  39. No Such Luck
  40. Brawl in the Family
Be sure to stay tuned for the review of the next episode where Lincoln and Dad bond over competing in a modern spin on a classic Nickelodeon game show in "Legends," and Lincoln exercises his big brother skills as well as his Rip Hardcore skills in "Mall of Duty."
If you want to stay updated for more reviews, become a follower of this blog, click here to like the official Facebook page, and click here to follow me on Twitter.
If you would like to check out other Loud House reviews on this blog, click here for the guide made especially for them.

Monday, February 26, 2018

'Toon Reviews 13: The Loud House Season 2 Episode 16: Fool's Paradise/Job Insecurity


Fool’s Paradise







With this cartoon, it seems to suggest that every season is going to include a cartoon about April Fool’s Day considering that Season 1 gave us “April Fool’s Rules.”  That raises a lot of questions about the timeline of this show.  Will the kids continually age with every new April Fool’s Day cartoon?  Won’t Lori have to go to college during one in the following seasons?  Do these cartoons even have a way to logically fit in the timeline?  Questions aside, the appeal of this cartoon is that it takes all the interpretations of April Fool’s Day to the apocalypse from last season and further expands on them creating an unforgettable atmospheric experience filled with hilariously imagined pranks with the perfect Loud for the day, Luan, as the mastermind.  The rest of the family believes they’re finally able to catch a break from the annual prank onslaught this year when they find a magazine ad for a clown camp they send Luan to.  However, just when they think they’re safe, those thoughts are dashed when their car breaks down and they have to spend the night at a crummy motel.  Once at the motel, a series of antics lead them to evidence that Luan set up pranks all over the facility, and it’s only a matter of time before one gets set off for each of the siblings.  The whole family is forced to make a run for it without any knowledge of when the next prank will strike and their fright is creatively staged as running from a strange monstrous force.  It also helps that what they get up to is set against a dark and threatening setting like an old motel at night.  When the pranks do get set off, they really up the creativity in execution from the last time.  There’s collapsing balconies into a big gelatin mold, trap doors that launch people up to a fly paper-laden sign, fake rooms filled with nasty obstacles like a skunk and rhubarb pies (which Lana’s allergic to), Lily getting replaced with a monkey that attacks Lynn, and a ton of bleach covering a certain sister who loves darkness.  Through it all, there’s a huge revealing twist to this prank barrage that Lincoln is quick to discover.  It turns out that Dad was in on Luan’s plans the whole time to get out of her April Fool’s Day pranks for a decade, and the explanations for how everything from the pranks to the clown camp ad that started it all are highly clever.  The best part about this reveal is that Dad feels genuine regret for helping Luan with her prankish tortures on his family, right down to questioning what kind of father he is.  Fortunately, he gets a big moment of redemption when he and Lincoln form a special prank to get back at Luan, and it’s a huge success as Luan gets flung into the air, stuck on that fly paper sign, lands in dirty laundry, and gets stuck in the sky.  This is sure to satisfy anyone who felt that her simply getting a pie in the face last April Fool’s Day wasn’t enough for her.  However, in fitting with the horror genre of the cartoon, the ending isn’t completely happy as the whole family is left running scared of the prospect of next April Fool’s Day which Luan promises to be even worse.  What she does then actually turns out to be a pretty nasty set of pranks, but that will be discussed in my eventual reviews of Season 3.  For this April Fool’s Day cartoon though, it’s easily one of the show’s most creatively structured cartoons aided by the genuine suspense, fun and insightful character moments, imaginative pranks, and some sense of victory from the victims. 10/10


Job Insecurity








If all the Loud siblings working as a team more often than in the first season wasn’t enough to prove how mature they’re becoming, perhaps this cartoon where they’re led to question how their actions impact their dad’s life can help.  With so many cartoons where the kids frequently run wild for their own amusement without much concern for others, it’s great that they turn out so thoughtful here.  They find out that Dad no longer works at his old IT job and has instead taken a dishwasher position, a job he doesn’t like, at a local fusion restaurant.  It’s here where the kids become more considerate of their actions to others, getting the idea that they got him fired from his IT job, namely for their hyperactive antics at the latest Take Your Kids to Work Day (nice to know that his old job at least became more inclusive since Season 1).  Anyway, they take a generous route of finding Dad a new job and making sure he gets it.  There’s plenty of heart in how seriously the kids take finding a new job for sure, but there’s also some humorous bits like imagination spots of Dad doing random jobs and, after they find a new IT job and get someone to pose as Dad to make sure he gets it, teaching Mr. Grouse, someone with an old world mindset, what certain computer terms mean.  Speaking of Mr. Grouse, he’s fast becoming one of the best supporting characters.  He’s still a grump and typically does things for Dad’s famous lasagna, but this is where it starts feeling like he’s putting in some effort in a bargain through actively trying to understand computer terms and getting better as time goes on, and showing happiness for the kids when he gets the job in Dad’s place.  With the job secured, the kids let Dad know what they got for him, and it’s at this point that even if the kids meant well, there’s no shaking off that this is another misunderstanding plot.  They didn’t know that Dad lost his old job for three weeks and he never told them, then when they found him washing dishes, they went with the idea that it was their fault.  However, Dad tells them that he actively quit his IT job and became a dishwasher to train to be a chef at the same restaurant which is his dream job, tying into his frequently seen talent for cooking.  Anyway, since Dad shows no hesitation in telling the kids this despite having a reason not to tell them, that means nothing was stopping the kids from just asking him why he has the new job. Granted, their beliefs seemed believable from what they saw, at the time it looked like Dad didn’t want to talk about it, and we weren’t given a scene of the truth the kids didn’t know, so the plot could’ve been executed worse.  Plus, what the kids learn leads to a very impactful ending when they push for Dad to get his restaurant job back, regretting their actions again, Dad kindly makes them feel better, and circumstances lead to him not just being allowed to work at the restaurant again, but also become a chef right then and there.  It’s all one of the most pleasing and satisfying conclusions the show has turned out.  Overall, this cartoon stands as one of this season’s strongest.  It’s not just humorous in parts, but it’s also got legitimate heart through the character bonds, opening new chapters for characters’ lives, and especially presenting the Loud siblings at their most thoughtful and mature.  9.5/10

The Ranking
  1. 11 Louds a Leapin’
  2. L is for Love
  3. Pulp Friction
  4. Frog Wild
  5. Party Down
  6. Room with a Feud
  7. Lock n Loud
  8. Fool’s Paradise
  9. Fed Up
  10. Out of the Picture
  11. Job Insecurity
  12. Potty Mouth
  13. The Loudest Mission: Relative Chaos
  14. Spell it Out
  15. Baby Steps
  16. Shell Shock
  17. Suite and Sour
  18. Back in Black
  19. Patching Things Up
  20. The Whole Picture
  21. Back Out There
  22. The Old and the Restless
  23. Kick the Bucket List
  24. Intern for the Worse
  25. Cheater by the Dozen
  26. Pets Peeved
  27. Making the Grade
  28. Vantastic Voyage
  29. No Such Luck
  30. Brawl in the Family
Be sure to stay tuned for the review of the next episode with "ARRGH! You For Real?" misunderstanding the appeal of fictional media, and Lori discovering what having your own place is really like in "Garage Banned."
If you want to stay updated for more reviews, become a follower of this blog, click here to like the official Facebook page, and click here to follow me on Twitter.
If you would like to check out other Loud House reviews on this blog, click here for the guide made especially for them.

Monday, August 7, 2017

'Toon Reviews 4: The Loud House Season 1 Episode 18

April Fools Rules


 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
One of the most charming elements of the show introduced to us in this season is Luan and the many ways she brings comedy into just about any situation.  You can easily tell how passionate she is about making others laugh (or at least try to).  She always knows how to work in a pun or joke to what’s going on and it never feels out of place.  True, some of her jokes don’t always work with some of them coming off as statements with certain words replaced with others that rhyme that anyone can make, but most of the time, they’re clever enough.  Now, because Luan has already shown to almost constantly be making jokes and puns in all the cartoons she’s been in so far, it shouldn’t be a surprise that she wastes no seconds when pulling pranks on the biggest day of all for them, April Fool’s Day.  On this day, she’s shown to pull off some extreme pranks all over the Loud House some of which tend to be very inconveniencing and painful, way beyond the boundaries of her typical puns.  They’re so extreme that the Loud family, parents included, treat the whole house like a war zone that they have to take shelter from that day which is another example of this show’s charming quality of offering a unique perspective of simple situations of life.  While Luan’s pranks really go too far since they cause real legitimate pain and fear in everyone, what keeps them from becoming mean-spirited is how hilarious each of the pranks turn out in execution.  Each prank suits the animation medium for how big and over-the-top they are as well as how they can really take you by surprise whether its raccoons hiding somewhere, exploding sinks and flower sacks, and very springy sofa cushions, and the puns Luan says in response to the pranks being set off only add to the hilarity.  There’s also some heart to the pranks when you consider that Lincoln purposely sets them off while his family stays safe in the name of protecting Ronnie Anne from being pranked whom he hears is coming to visit which also helps make the pranks we see work.  I have to admit that it’s nice that they managed to work in showing how much Lincoln and Ronnie Anne have grown as friends amidst this huge laugh fest with Lincoln risking everything to protect her from Luan’s pranks and Ronnie Anne rewarding Lincoln’s efforts with kindness and a pie to Luan’s face.  They really make a charming couple.  Not to mention, this cartoon really makes you appreciate how Lincoln is wise to his sisters’ antics since he can easily sense a prank to set off while the rest of the family end up walking right into certain pranks without thinking at the end of the cartoon.  For anyone who’s a fan of Luan’s love of comedy, this is a must-watch especially since it has certain factors to make everything work. 9/10

Cereal Offender



 
 
 
 
 
 
As this cartoon proves, you can take the Louds out of the house, but their spirit and chaotic nature will follow them wherever they go.  This can make for something highly entertaining, but in Lincoln’s case, it’s very frustrating and challenging since all he wants to do in this cartoon is complete the grocery shopping and make sure there’s enough left over for a cereal he wants called Zombie Bran as part of a deal he makes with Mom.  While his sisters make Lincoln’s mission more challenging than it already is, they still really succeed in livening up the cartoon.  Everything they do in the supermarket may not be socially appropriate, but it’s fitting for their characters and it’s easy to see that no one has any malicious intent.  Scenes like Lynn rushing around the aisles in a shopping cart, Luan using the produce to make jokes to entertain the customers, and Leni’s naiveté leading her to free lobsters and chickens (who are already cooked) demonstrate how much mileage for entertainment the show can get out of simple story ideas.  That’s one of this its biggest strengths.  Plus, despite his sisters’ antics, Lincoln does manage to fight through them all and get his cereal, and even has a bratty kid who does have malicious intents get what he deserves.  It’s not until near the end of the cartoon when the sisters do start acting jerky when they allow the younger sisters to get the gimmies the moment they find out Lincoln’s trying to get himself a treat despite the fact that the deal with Mom only concerns Lincoln.  There, they honestly do come off as selfish and irrational, and their actions end up getting the Loud family banned from the supermarket and Lincoln getting chastised.  If you were to watch this cartoon for the first time and this scene comes on, you might get the impression that it ruins everything by making what could’ve been a fine and good cartoon a bad one.  Instead, it goes in a much more acceptable direction by having the sisters realize they did wrong, feel bad about it, and make things up to Lincoln by buying him Zombie Bran themselves further showing that despite their antics, the Loud siblings really do care for each other.  It doesn’t excuse their behavior before, but the fact that they regret what they did and that Lincoln got what he deserved has a sense of accomplishment and shows that what we saw from this cartoon was worth it.  This is good because on the whole, this cartoon shows just how entertaining and caring when the moment calls for it the Loud siblings are. 8/10
 
The Ranking
1.      For Bros About to Rock
2.      Undie Pressure
3.      Project Loud House
4.      Space Invader
5.      Driving Miss Hazy
6.      Left in the Dark
7.      Toads and Tiaras
8.      Picture Perfect
9.      House Music
10.  Save the Date
11.  Sleuth or Consequences
12.  Hand-Me-Downer
13.  No Guts No Glori
14.  Attention Deficit
15.  Changing the Baby
16.  Along Came A Sister
17.  April Fools Rules
18.  A Novel Idea
19.  Sound of Silence
20.  Butterfly Effect
21.  A Tale of Two Tables
22.  Cereal Offender
23.  Cover Girls
24.  It’s A Loud, Loud, Loud, Loud House
25.  Overnight Success
26.  In Tents Debate
27.  Out on a Limo
28.  Linc or Swim
29.  The Sweet Spot
30.  Heavy Meddle
31.  Get the Message
32.  Ties that Bind
33.  Making the Case
34.  Chore and Peace
35.  Two Boys and a Baby
36.  The Green House
 
Be sure to stay tuned for the review of the next episode which honestly includes two problematic cartoons with the stupidity-fueled "Lincoln Loud: Girl Guru," and the constantly competitive and twerking "Come Sale Away."