In this episode, not only is Jeremy
determined to prove his worth and complete his special mission, he
chains three dead weights to his ankles to make it look that much
more impressive.
Multi-front operations have always been
fun. When a leader takes the bold step of splitting the troops up,
several things happen. By nature, neither half is at full strength
while at least one part of the opposition usually is. That requires a
certain grittiness to rise to the occasion. The missions often vary,
where one is an all-out battle while the other requires tactics,
stealth or speed. Flipping between both of those creates a nice pace
in an episode. Best of all, when the leader goes for two operations
at once, it's impossible for him to be at the forefront of both of
them. Somebody else will have to step up.
It was a nice bit of planning that put
Jeremy in the spotlight of the rescue mission. Mikey correctly
decides that his digifuse ability makes him more useful on defense,
but Nene would have been the slam-dunk choice if she didn't possess
the zone's code crown by virtue of all of the prior episode's
character development. The reward for her having the stage last
episode is what keeps her off it this time. That means either Jeremy
has to do it, or Mikey has to send yet another Digimon that could be
better served fending off the main attack.
We've had plenty of cases where a
character perceived as a weak link is forced to step up. They almost
never volunteer for it (even then it usually jumps out at them and
them alone, like Joe realizing he needed go after Matt late in
Adventure). Also, the weak link label is usually more perception than
reality. This is a rare spot where Jeremy leaps at the call, and
is horribly ill-equipped to handle this job. He can't initiate a
digifuse. He can't make a Digimon evolve. He sure as hell can't turn
into one. And to make matters worse, he immediately handicaps himself
by asking three comically hapless Monitamon to accompany him and
Dorulumon.
Jeremy's lack of a digivice and the
difficulty of his mission makes his adventure as daunting and real as
anything we've seen this season. He and the Monitamon struggle with
even simple obstacles like swimming and climbing, stuff that most
Digimon characters, even small children, seem to be capable of with
ease. Yes, he has the very capable Dorulumon, but he doesn't have any
control over him. In fact, Dorulumon begins to take charge, showing
no patience for amateurs that don't know what they're doing. Nobody
on these kinds of missions gets this humiliated, and nobody gets to
redeem themselves in such a personal way.
How impressive is it that he actually
takes his sword and defeats Kotemon by himself? It's not the first
time he's wielded the sword and it's his primary positive
characteristic. But before it had always been as a part of the mass
brawl against the cannon fodder (much like the fight on the other
front). This is a short, intense fight, but it's against a Digimon
specializing in kendo. Managing his fear of heights and standing his
ground against Musyamon are nice, but they don't break new ground.
Taking out a Digimon is Marcus-level stuff from a decidedly
non-Marcus-level character.
Unfortunately, once again Mikey is
mandated to deliver the finishing blow. This time it's especially
annoying as they have to work really, really hard to put Musyamon on
a plate for Shoutmon X5. This despite Nene getting to play the big
damn hero for once, snapped into action my Jeremy's heroics. Despite
Nene getting a shiny new Fusion Loader and the renewed digifuse
powers that go with it. Despite the episode (the whole zone really)
being about the supplementary members of the Fusion Fighters. And
yes, despite the fact that with absolutely no fanfare or
acknowledgment, Dorulumon took down a freaking Deva with one shot.
My Grade: B
Loose Data:
- There's some nice comedy potential in Musyamon's attacking army recognizing the “made you laugh” gimmick of the zone. Despite them looking like no-nonsense toughs, they proceed to make the alleged code crown holder laugh. On that note, Mikey should have put Nene into hiding for that battle.
- Come to think of it, rather than Nene giving Mikey the code crown in an awkward, “not sure if we should be shipping this” moment, it would have been much more fun if Mikey had made her laugh and accidentally won it off her. Then you can cue the “it's all right, keep it” moment.
- When Dorulumon surveys the entrances, he decides against using any of the main gates because they're guarded. One of them is Kotemon and while it's impressive that Jeremy took him out, Dorulumon could have done so easily and efficiently.
- Jeremy makes reference to needing to adjust a Monitamon's vertical hold. This season had been doing such a good job making jokes incorporating modern technology and then this. As if Jeremy has ever had to fiddle with the vertical hold on a TV.
- Is it me, or is Nene's Fusion Loader transformation sequence a little off? It's not quite fanservice-y and not quite shoujo, but it seems to touch both bases just a little.
- Kinda like the Lucemon business in Sky Zone, anyone who's seen Tamers knew the punchline on Princess Babamon an episode early. It was a chore waiting for the “reveal.”
Finally Jeremy gets his badassery in.Now its time for Mikey's mediocretey and Angie serving little to no purpose yayy.
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ReplyDeleteWith Jeremy's earlier reference to dial up and now a comment about vertical hold, I can't help but form theories that he's a time traveler.
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