In this episode, a series of
flashbacks reveal that the conflict between humans and Digimon is
complex and multi-faceted. Just kidding, it's all Kurata's fault.
All this time, we've come to accept
that all this hostility is more complicated than normal. Neither side
is really the good guy, neither side is really the bad guy, yet it's
too much to ask for cooler heads to prevail. Keenan does his best,
stopping the fight between Marcus and Merukimon and making sure they
spend at least this episode talking things over. Several things come
out of this conversation. We learn that Frigimon, as well as
Frigimon's death, forced Merukimon's hand when it came to raising
Keenan. We learn that Marcus's father is unbelievably awesome. We
also learn that this entire war is pretty much all because of Kurata,
thrusting him immediately into the primary villain role and making
all of this just a little too tidy.
Usually we're fooling ourselves when we
try to condense the cause of a war into one sentence. We got a
delightfully complicated scenario in Frontier. This felt like one of
those wars, where tensions and distrust led to some boundaries being
crossed and escalating into something uncontrollable. Thinking of the
war like this adds such realism to the series and forces us to think
about how two well-meaning sides can come to blows. That's all gone
now, as the war now can be described in one sentence: “Kurata felt
threatened by Digimon and tried to kill them all.” Furthermore, all
of the other players making things worse are out of the picture.
Gotsumon's dead, SaberLeomon's really
dead, and even Spencer (who worked so hard reassuring Merukimon that
humans weren't going to invade) is MIA. With them gone, there's only
one place to point the finger, and it feels like something's lost as
a result.
At the
same time, auditing each character's actions remains worthwhile.
Kurata continues his rapid decline, covering an season's worth of
character progression in three episodes. He goes from pandering snake
to cowering weasel to smug asshole in a hurry... and he hasn't even
reached his final form! There's a bit of whiplash here, but at least
he's consistent in the flashback. Kurata is one of those types that
hates anything he's intimidated by, and he doesn't react well to
things he hates. With the technological know-how to overcome the
strength advantage of large Digimon, he's not afraid of them anymore,
but boy he still hates them.
The
flashbacks also fill in the blanks regarding Merukimon and Keenan.
It's hard to see Merukimon playing things any differently. Taking
Keenan from Frigimon would have been harsh and hard to justify.
Befriending Spencer and taking him at his word felt right, and
certainly Spencer meant everything he said. And what else was
Merukimon going to tell a child that's going to hate those who killed
his mother? He can't tell Keenan the truth, but he can enlist him as
a warrior to guard against future attacks. The inability to figure
out where Merukimon went wrong makes his death all the more tragic.
Then
there's Spencer. If anyone thought Marcus was ridiculous, this isn't
going to help. Spencer's interest in Digimon and curiosity about the
world are great. His willingness to stay behind in order to ensure
the party's escape is admirable. His ability to match fists with
Merukimon, to the point where Merukimon accepts him as a friend...
that's stretching it a bit. It's a shortcut to an understanding
between the two. While it's essential to the plot and certainly
consistent with the dogma of the series, it's a little too extreme to
take seriously. He can even take credit for inventing the digivice
and the formation of the Data Squad. I mean who the hell does he
think he is, Hiroaki Ishida?
My
Grade: B
Loose
Data:
- The fact that Marcus (and Thomas and Yoshi, for that matter) believe Merukimon over Kurata is a good indicator of just how much respect they have for their “enemy” and how dubious they find their “ally.” They probably don't even register it, but they don't seem to doubt Merukimon's claim that Gotsumon acted alone.
- Funny how Keenan's the first one to point out that his partnership with Falcomon is proof that Digimon and humans can co-exist peacefully. The entire Data Squad and most of DATS have partners and none of them thought to bring it up.
- Goddamn those Gomamon were adorable. And given how Agumon and Biyomon evolved differently than their Adventure counterparts, it was actually kinda cool to see them evolve into Ikkakumon proper.
- Remember back when Gotsumon found a random gate in the middle of the forest? Who wants to bet that's the same one Kurata opened up when escaping Merukimon following his napalm operation?
- To be fair, Kurata does bring up an excellent point about the Data Squad's treatment of Digimon that emerge in the real world... until he gets to the part about letting the eggs go home to regenerate.
I'm a bit disappointed, to be honest. I was expecting this episode to get an A- at least, considering how much it was a turning point both dramatically and in terms of character roles, not leastways with regards to Kurata, Merukimon, Spencer Damon, and Keenan.
ReplyDelete" Thinking of the war like this adds such realism to the series and forces us to think about how two well-meaning sides can come to blows. That's all gone now, as the war now can be described in one sentence: “Kurata felt threatened by Digimon and tried to kill them all.” "
I don't think it does. Paranoid, narcissistic, and genocidal war-mongerers were the main causes for the gigantic atrocities committed in the 20th century, not to mention they most likely played roles in horrors even further back in history. It's not like Kurata's "final solution" has never happened in real life.
Except it is more complicated than that. It takes a nation feeling screwed over, desperate and eager to listen to anything remotely inspirational that allows a paranoid, narcissistic, genocidal war-mongerer to gain power. And it takes a lot of people willing to look the other way when That Guy wants to commit genocide on his designated scapegoats. The conflict feels a little less epic when you learn that Kurata somehow managed to start it entirely on his own, just as That Guy is all the more frightening when there's an entire nation supporting him.
DeleteOBS: The text here is totally PORTUGUESE-BRAZIL!
ReplyDeleteEu sinto falta do Merukimon! Odeio esse Ku-rata!