In this episode, Takuya and Koji
will do whatever it takes to prevent Lucemon's revival. Unless it's
something that's actually, you know, hard.
For several moments, this felt like a proper final stand. There's another big castle in which to make a strong defense. There are a lot of quiet moments where the group pauses to reflect on how far they've come or the fears they're trying to suppress. Zoe even comes close to throwing in a Yoko/Kamina moment (did I really go 46 episodes before tapping the Zoe/Yoko actress connection?). And after they fail yet again, Lucemon proves to be even nastier than advertised. For as many decent scenes as this episode has, they end up going to waste as everything in between is a mess. The ultimate disappointment is that Takuya and Koji don't lose so much as they decide that they don't really want to stop Lucemon after all and let him take the Digital World.
Ophanimon's castle is one big library
defended by Nefertimon. Despite taking her job way too seriously, she
concedes that she's basically just the librarian. Remember all those
rumors about nobody knowing where the data is, which were apparently
so reliable that it led the team to correctly assume that the market
would be targeted first? The Royal Knights barge in and promptly
observe that Nefertimon carries the area's data, thus making it the
fastest they've been able to find it. After the initial
barrage, Nefertimon asks EmperorGreymon and KendoGarurumon to kill
her and take the data for themselves. This is what we call an ethical
dilemma.
And this is the solution: YOU KILL HER
AND TAKE THE GODDAMN DATA FOR YOURSELVES! After so many Digimon that
refuse to sacrifice themselves to protect the world, we finally have
one willing to die for her country! It would have been morally
difficult to pull the trigger, and they would have deserved immense
credit for doing so, but in refusing, Takuya and Koji lose the war.
Instead, they make their jobs even harder as now they have to protect
Nefertimon on top of beating the Royal Knights (which they still have
never been able to do). In fact, Nefertimon points out the way they
could have prevented Lucemon's rebirth long ago: find the least
populated area you can take without a fight, scan it, give the data
to Zoe and send her on the first train home. No matter what Takuya
and Koji do against the Royal Knights from that point on, it's a
guaranteed stalemate.
There's no sense going over the actual
battle, where EmperorGreymon and MagnaGarurumon draw things out with
hand-to-hand combat and hollow speeches. It ends with what can only
be described as Lucemon yelling “get on with it!” But the prep
work, where the kids split into pairs to search the castle for the
data that they won't know what to do with, is interesting. Under JP's
embarrassing magic act lies a very real fear of losing. His
over-the-top suppression is annoying, but the feeling strikes home.
Koji is aware that Koichi's wrestling with something, but they
realize that despite being brothers by blood, they still haven't
grown truly comfortable with each other. They love the concept of
having a brother more than they fully understand the sort of
relationship that goes with it. The only one Koichi can really talk
to about his problem is Bokomon, who just sort of nods and says
“sucks to be you.” Have I mentioned how terrible Bokomon is
lately?
And then there's Takuya and Zoe. From
the scene, it's fair to conclude that Zoe kinda likes him, even
though it makes Sora's interest in Matt look choreographed and
predictable by comparison. Takuya, however, clearly made an awkward
slip of the tongue. Granted, had he actually stayed awake and she
actually confessed, he probably would have been game (she's pretty
enough and he's been under a lot of stress, so why not?). Don't take
it as a sign that they're destined to end up together. Take it as a
sign that Zoe's destined to have a multitude of terrible
relationships in the future.
My Grade: C-
Loose Data:
- It's remarkable that the Royal Knights put so much blind faith in Lucemon given how he acts. He's practically screaming that he doesn't care about anybody but himself, and his asking Crusadermon if she doubts him is downright sarcastic.
- Although having no physical form in the Digital World can mean all sorts of things, it's clear that Koichi seems to have a pretty good idea of what's going on. It's a shame he can't tell Koji, even after his brother's excitement at being able to reunite in the real world.
- Nefertimon, who at one point claims to know all there is to know, warns the kids that the Royal Knights are approaching. They show up about two seconds later. A bit more of a head's up will be appreciated next time... oh right, she's dead.
- I would be more put off by the random light show that disrupts the battle, but since it promptly put an end to the battle I actually kinda welcomed it.
"After so many Digimon that refuse to sacrifice themselves to protect the world, we finally have one willing to die for her country!"
ReplyDeleteLast episode had seven Digimon throw themselves into battle against the Royal Knights. And doesn't Gotsumon count from the episode before then?
I'm really disgusted by your reviews of Frontier, literally all of your reviews have been extremely overcritically and almost all of them are mockery and you always criticized each member of the group, OTOH you were way more lenient for 02 (aka worst and weakest digimon season) and you even gave B for the final episode of 02 and said it was decent end WTF?
ReplyDeleteCalm down dear. I really wouldn't take reviews like this seriously. I certainly don't.
DeleteBesides it's hard to call 02 (or even this) the weakest season when you have the likes of Young Hunters out there...