In this episode, the only thing
worse than a goddamn hideous beast that represents Takato's loss of
humanity is Beelzemon finding a way to fight it.
Ladies and gentlemen, we hope you've
enjoyed our visits to Serial Experiments Lain and Fruits Basket. Our
next stop on the tour will be Neon Genesis Evangelion. On your left,
you'll see Takato Matsuki reaching a 400% synchronization ratio with
Guilmon. No flash photography please.
Usually people don't start making the
Evangelion connections until D-Reaper and its “agents” start
showing up, but this is the point where the parallels begin to
crystallize. Something terrible happens to the main character's
friend, main character gets pissed off and loses the keys to the car,
then turns around and gets his mojo back, merging completely with the
beast rather than simply controlling it. It's as crazy here as it was
in Eva, which is saying something.
This is one of the more dramatic cases
of breaking down everything to permit further evolution, but it is
not the only one. In fact, with the exception of Davis, it happens to
every single goggle boy. Sometimes it involves the death of a
Digimon, sometimes it involves a trip to the real world... sometimes
it takes one annoying electric fence. Every time, the boy gets off
the mat and comes out swinging.
None of the other goggle boys had to
deal with Megidramon, however. This monstrosity makes Skullgreymon
look like Cubone. Kill Beelzemon? This guy's close to eating
Beelzemon. Not only are all the kids horrified, but so is Hypnos as
Megidramon carries so much energy the world starts to collapse on
itself. Isn't that why Calumon was sent out of the Digital World to
begin with? Some good that did.
So how
can it get worse? Simple- Beelzemon decides to rise to the occasion.
First he kills and absorbs Makuramon, then uses the monkey's attack
to trap Rapidmon and Taomon. The only way out, apparently, is for
Henry and Rika to swipe cards freeing Terriermon and Renamon but
conceding their Ultimates' energy to Beelzemon. Given the
implications of that, you'd think Rika would have protested this
decision a little more. This puts Beelzemon over the top, with a
surplus of power but difficulty controlling it. It's sure enough to
take out Megidramon though!
While
Rika and Henry do that, once again, Kazu and Kenta seem to be the
only ones focused on Jeri's well-being. Takato tries, but Jeri's not
having it, upset at what Takato had done to Guilmon. Devastating as
Leomon's death was, Megidramon has to be equally responsible for her
trauma. This is where that affection Jeri's shown towards Takato hits
home as it's the ultimate “you think you know a guy” situation.
The kind of energy Takato invested into this monster didn't come from
nowhere. It was buried deep down within him just as Jeri's demons
were. And it all comes out at once- this sweet kid becoming so
unrecognizable and so horrible, then ordering his Digimon to do the
same, all right after her own partner's death. It's three bombs
dropping at once.
Takato
realizes his mistake immediately, and approaches Megidramon after his
defeat. He already knows what happened, and frames it correctly: he
lost control of himself. A mistake this bad and this irreversible is
always good for a trippy flashback sequence. Takato realizes that
resetting isn't good enough, as it abandons his prior relationship
and all the mistakes he's learned from. No, all he wants is the
chance to learn from this one too. His lesson is that he's not just
sending Guilmon off to fight his battles; they're in them together.
The way to make it all better? Make that literal.
My
Grade: A-
Loose
Data:
- Wow, out of nowhere, an intense argument between Janyuu and his wife. The rest of the family doesn't get much attention, but between Mayumi's yelling and Rinchei and Jaarin in the classic “kids watching through the doorway as mommy and daddy fight” shot, they made their presence felt.
- At one point, Beelzemon begins to wonder if this was all Chatsuramon's plan. If Chatsuramon actually was able to arrange for all that to happen, he's a bigger mastermind than Myotismon.
- Anybody else totally horrified by Rapidmon and Taomon's wings busting out of Beelzemon's back? Good, because you should be.
- Lost in all this is Rika accepting Suzie as a tamer like nothing. Had Rika even met Suzie before last episode?
I always found Megidramon and Beelzemon's battle so... tame. Just some grappling and a few punches delivered by Beelzemon. Megidramon didn't even get a real hit in.
ReplyDeleteThere could certainly have been more on the actual combat front, but, let's face it, the emotions at play more than made up for it, and that aspect of a fight is way more important than flashy attacks.
DeleteAnd no mention of the scene where Guilmon randomly grows Megidramon's tail to smack away some of Beelzemon's bullets?
ReplyDelete