In this episode, we finally realize
what this season's been missing. That's right, another lively round
of “they're not just data” speeches!
It's easy to be derisive about Ewan
Amano. As the only significant plot twist until Apollomon, we have to
hope he brings something massive to the table. Read the character
synopsis on Wikipedia and it's anything but. We've seen the “boy
goes bad” angle before. We've seen people refuse to acknowledge
that Digimon are anything but zeros and ones. We've seen siblings
forced to fight each other. Ewan appears to be little more than Ken
Ichijouji with an infusion of Koichi and Tai (yes, Tai, we'll get to
that in a second). While that makes it difficult to call it all that
original, and the episode properly introducing him makes several
sloppy missteps, there's just enough going on to make him an
interesting and worthy addition to the season.
Like Ken and Koichi before him, Ewan is
very clearly being manipulated. However, the simplicity behind his
corruption actually makes it more heartbreaking. Cherubimon used
Koichi as an unwilling pawn; Koichi himself had absolutely no say in
the matter. Trying to break down the who and why over Ken's situation
just gives people a headache. AxeKnightmon didn't need to rely on
dark spores or spirits to bring Ewan over to his side. He just
convinces Ewan that the world is a game where nobody gets hurt and
where winning or losing has no consequences. Ewan has complete
freedom over his choices, and he chooses to work with AxeKnightmon.
That's our little wrinkle, and one that
makes Ewan's behavior all the more haunting. It's true that, like
Ken, he's been led to believe that this world is his playground. And
clearly neither is himself. But Ewan's transformation is due to the
prospect of a pain-free world, an idea that consumes him from the
very moment he hears it. This is a kid who's so paranoid about how
fragile life is, afraid to harm anyone physically or emotionally. The
Digital World becomes such an inviting release that he becomes a
monster naturally.
This is where Tai comes in, namely that
time Tai got the impression that death wasn't a thing in the Digital
World and lost all concern for himself or his teammates. It was
pretty extreme, and this is Tai we're talking about! Let an
emotionally fragile boy like Ewan think that and it's no wonder he
goes off like this. That's another difference between him and Ken:
Ken may not value life in the Digital World, but he takes his
conquest seriously. Ewan is all about unleashing his pent-up
competitive spirit. He wants to win, but even more he wants to be
tested. He plays hardcore, digifusing every chance he gets in an
effort to show off his l33t skills against what he hopes is worthy
opposition. AxeKnightmon and Tuwarmon feed into this perfectly by
playing the parts of the game's advisers- telling Ewan what to do
while leaving him with the impression that he's calling the shots.
Now unlike Ken, Ewan's older sibling is
alive and present (too soon?). Nene's naturally stunned by all this,
paralyzed until Mervamon and the guys step in. This is where things
get a bit uneven. First off, Doumon's first illusion seems to serve
as nothing more than dramatic ambiance to rattle Nene. If Ewan was
really convinced this was a game, wouldn't he assume Nene was in on
it and be less inclined to toy with her the way he does? He should be
all business, especially since he later accuses Nene of trying to
deceive him, taking AxeKnightmon's word over his big sister's.
Despite a better use of the illusion
trickery against Shoutmon X5B and MetalGreymon and a satisfyingly
unorthodox digifuse to take out Doumon, there wasn't much point to
the fight. And after AxeKnightmon told Ewan they needed more pylons
and organized a retreat, Nene was somehow emboldened by the whole
thing, in spite of the trauma she just experienced. You'd think she'd
be more defeated considering her brother attacked her and her friends
just to get in a bit of grinding.
My Grade: B
Loose Data:
- Between the season's first episode the annoyed way Shoutmon explains what they're doing to Starmon, we're looking at a renaissance of in-story plot recaps.
- So is Doumon another victim of badly mangled dub spelling or are the Crunchyroll subtitles good enough authority to give the dub a pass? Maybe they just wanted to distance him from Taomon to avoid all the Rika/Nene voice actress jokes.
- Speaking of dub edits, Laylamon's new form was the season's second most predictable Photoshop job after Mervamon. It was again entirely necessary and would again be less of a distraction if the whole point of Laylamon this season wasn't to be one big distraction. Still, this approximation of a sensible outfit raises some troubling questions about where the Vilemon are now hiding.
- Doumon casts this illusion on the surrounding area, despite them not knowing whether any of the Fusion Fighters are actually in the surrounding area, including Nene, whom the illusion was specifically designed for.
- So here's one spot where sticking with the term “deletion” instead of outright referring to death totally works. Ewan talking about deleting Nene shows just how mistaken he is about this place. And while they shied away from outright saying the butterfly died (aren't butterflies a protected species in this franchise?), the visuals got the point across.
"This is where things get a bit uneven. First off, Doumon's first illusion seems to serve as nothing more than dramatic ambiance to rattle Nene. If Ewan was really convinced this was a game, wouldn't he assume Nene was in on it and be less inclined to toy with her the way he does? He should be all business, especially since he later accuses Nene of trying to deceive him, taking AxeKnightmon's word over his big sister's."
ReplyDeleteI agree. The conceit of Ewan being this sensitive kid who's given a chance to let rip is cool, but that part doesn't fit into it. I haven't seen the later episodes yet, so the conclusion I got was that AxeKnightmon really did do something dark-spore-like to Ewan.
"So is Doumon another victim of badly mangled dub spelling or are the Crunchyroll subtitles good enough authority to give the dub a pass?"
No, Doumon is a recoloured version of Taomon that's officially recognized as its own species. It's like the difference between WarGreymon and BlackWarGreymon.
Also, so many shiny eyes this episode! I almost burst out laughing at how much they tried to "cute-ify" Nene and younger Ewan in this. Was it an art shift?
Oy, did I fall for another recolor? That's like the third time that's happened. What makes it even more confusing is the Digimon Data Collection for the episode was actually for-reals Taomon.
DeleteAnd yes, that was an odd episode art-wise. So shoujo...