In this episode, JP is vindicated,
becomes the clutch hero and receives his long-awaited prize... all
while continuing to make an ass of himself.
One of the go-to storylines in the show
features the heroes rallying a tribe of victimized Digimon into
battle against their local oppressors. The details and settings,
whether feudal Japan or a milkshake distillery, change, but the
episodes usually feature the same elements and are rarely significant
to the plot. This one certainly isn't, serving as the stock “JP
finds his spirit” episode with nothing interesting to add to the
picture. At the same time, it doesn't realize how close it came to
going in a really interesting direction that could have played a
major role in shaping a fascinating group dynamic.
The enslaved species du jour is
Kokuwamon, the tyrants are Goblimon and you can work out the rest.
The Goblimon have some great receptionists in a trio of Minomon, who
make for unlikely but effective supporting villains. When the
digidestined show up looking for handouts, the Minomon give them a
tour of the facility, putting a pretty face on the terrible working
conditions. Normally this is the part where one of the kids stumbles
upon the factory's dark secret, but JP misses the obvious clue right
under his nose and they all leave without suspecting a thing. It
isn't until they find the neighboring Kokuwamon village that they get
the whole story.
Takuya promises to rally the forces and
lead a worker's rebellion. JP wants no part in it and things get a
little heated. This is the part where Zoe tries to undermine Takuya's
leadership and chides him for trying to order the team around, right?
Well, it should have been. Instead, Zoe and Tommy are totally on
board with this, which is a big moment in solidifying Takuya's
position as leader. That's not a good thing, as the in-fighting is
one of the most enjoyable parts of these early episodes. The
surprising consensus isolates JP, of course.
There are millions of reasons why JP
should think helping out is a bad idea. The kids are still
acclimating to their Digimon and shouldn't assume they're
all-powerful. By now, the digidestined should have pieced together
that they've been tapped to do big things in the Digital World. Do
they really want to risk their necks in a relatively minor skirmish?
Not to mention that using their special abilities to involve
themselves in local affairs like this is a total violation of the
Prime Directive.
Furthermore, Takuya's plan is terrible!
It involves Kazemon drawing the bulk of the troops out, putting their
most vulnerable teammate in incredible danger. Once that's done,
Agunimon, Kumamon and the Kokuwamon are just supposed to wing it
until the factory's destroyed. The plan banks on the shaky assumption
that without a factory, the Goblimon will shrug it off and leave the
Kokuwamon alone, as opposed to making them rebuild the place under
harsher conditions. There's also no telling how strong the Goblimon
force is, including what kind of nasty monster the operating manager
is. It could have been Orochimon for all they knew! They were lucky
that it was merely a Snimon, and Agunimon still struggled with it.
Does JP point any of this out? No, he
just whines about not wanting to help, which just makes him look
petulant. He's right that Takuya shouldn't boss him around
autonomously, but he has to give better reasons why, and that
involves proving Takuya wrong. Takuya is not as tactically strong as
Tai and hasn't demonstrated the same knack for dumb luck Davis had.
Until he has better footing as the leader, he needs legitimate
dissent beyond Zoe's sass and JP's whining. For JP not to provide it
here makes him almost as culpable as Takuya if anything bad had
happened. He has the obligatory change of heart and rushes in to bail
them out the hard way, but the fact that it came to that means there
are serious problems in the group that nobody within it will be able
to recognize.
My Grade: C
Loose Data:
- These characters don't exactly have complicated first names, but JP still shortens Zoe to “Z” and now Takuya to “Takky.” Somehow I don't think that last one's catching on.
- Why does a Digital World factory have restroom facilities clearly designed for humans? Judging by the little man on the door, they're even divided by sex.
- When explaining this terrible plan of his, Takuya asks Zoe if she can handle it, she gets all cocky when replying. She ends up surrounded by the bulk of the Goblimon and had the battle inside gone on any longer, bad things would have surely happened.
- Beetlemon's dancing at the end ruined any chance of JP getting any sort of props for his rescue. C'mon man, act like you've been there before.
A giant preying mantis running a factory is just surreal, even for this franchise.
ReplyDeleteOh God yeah, Snimon was weird all right. Voice like Myotismon, apparently living in luxury, has a short temper, strong enough to give Agunimon a tough fight, and... is a corrupt corporate executive. Wonder how that board meeting went.
DeleteWeird as it sounds, I suddenly want this Snimon for a main villain. They did have a Gotsumon as an antagonist in the next season, and an Elvis-impersonating monkey in the first one. The humour you could get out of having a monstrous-looking Digimon running a corrupt business...
It's so funny how Minomona are helping the villians
ReplyDelete(it would have added feels if they kept Ken's Minomon's voice)
Between Wizardmon and Minomon, I keep getting kicked in the feels this season already (and we haven't gotten to the good stuff yet). Minomon here are villain helpers but at the same time, they're so cute! (But, in 02, Wormmon helped the villain for a while too, so it's not exactly *new*.) I agree with you, though. It would have been funnier/more painful if they kept Ken's Minomon's voice.
DeleteZoe mishap of the week:
ReplyDelete-Agreeing to fight a whole army of goblins even when she KNOWS she doesn't stand a chance.