In this episode, a Digimon is so big
on teaching kendo he can turn Tagiru's frantic button-mashing
approach to all-city quality in less than a week.
Everybody has their Xros Loaders,
Damemon's back to Yuu, we've been properly introduced to the trio of
terror... time to settle down to a long run of filler that makes up
the bulk of Hunters. Tangible story elements will be few and far
between, little progress will be made on the DigiQuartz mystery, and
most of the kids spotlighted will be either one-time appearances from
old friends (if we're lucky) or forgettable nobodies getting caught
up in the madness (if we're not). Are you sitting comfortably? Then
we'll begin.
The only way to derive any sort of
enjoyment out of such a terribly plotted series is to take a long
look at the story each episode attempts to bring us. In this case, a
kid starts training under a Digimon kendo master, but lets his
pursuit of domination get the better of him. Most of the time, if the
three prior incidents similar to this are any guide, it's the
Digimon's fault and therefore huntin' time. Instead, this is a unique
case where the Digimon isn't doing any corrupting. It makes you
wonder why this was dropped now instead of later on when we need a
break from all the identical corruption cases. Plus this is now the
third consecutive episode where we see Ren being a total asshole. We
get the point.
That's not to say that Kotemon isn't
entirely a saint here. He's a wise old master (bit of a departure
from previous Kotemon appearances where he's either a naive kid or
losing to Zenjirou) that just enjoys helping students improve their
craft. But how fair is that, really? He must be an impossibly good
teacher if he can turn a fool like Musashi and a Tagiru like Tagiru
into city champions in a week. Doesn't that throw off the cosmos of
this tournament and all the proud kids who studied for years to get
to that point?
The biggest flaw of the episode might
be the way it perpetuates Tagiru as somehow being talented. At first,
this kid is terrible at kendo, to the point where you wonder why
Taiki and Yuu wanted him on board (Taiki at least is implied to be a
ringer helping the real team members) in the first place. After
Musashi is shown beating up older kids on the street (apparently the
addition of bamboo swords makes it something more legal than going
around picking fights), Tagiru's reckless button mash jutsu is
somehow a bigger challenge that requires additional cheating. Even as
Musashi is determined to fight Taiki, Taiki puts Tagiru at the helm
of the team for unclear reasons. Perhaps Taiki wants to be able to
watch the illegal assistance Musashi's receiving, but it's not like
the two teams don't have to go through several rounds of fighting to
meet each other. There's plenty of scouting to be had in the early
tournament montage.
Still, there's just enough sentiment in
Kotemon to feel for his character and push the episode into something
close to tolerable. While Taiki and Tagiru jump to the conclusion
that he's responsible for the attacks, he's actually more of a
victim. Musashi takes advantage of his training to seek irresponsible
glory. Kotemon is calm in his admonishment, but he has to be
disappointed and it has to be part of what leads him to train Tagiru.
Partially because he wants to give Musashi a challenge. Partially
because he's looking for someone that won't abuse his power.
The villain here, of course, is Ren. In
case anyone was afraid Airu had seized the Akihiro Kurata Memorial
Award for Worst Person Ever, worry not. Ren used Musashi's greed to
fuel Dracmon into an evolution used to hunt the Digimon that enabled
Musashi's power trip in the first place. Kotemon submits himself to
Tagiru's Xros Loader (which itself should have ended the fight
anyway) to provide the digixros that fends him off. Ren shrugs and
makes a retreat. At some point, someone's going to realize these
three are bad guys, right?
My Grade: C
Loose Data:
- Kotemon's intentions may be sincere, but there has to be a better way of gaining a pupil than sucking him into Digiquartz.
- Musashi is named after legendary swordsman Mushashi Miyamoto. Anyone who knew this was waiting for a kid named Kojirou, his most famous rival, to appear. The two names are often seen together in anime, probably most famously as the Japanese names of the Team Rocket duo.
- Even the newly evolved Yashamon doesn't understand Ren's intentions. The power grab, while sinister, made enough sense, but hunting Kotemon must have felt like just being a jerk.
- Given that Musashi was corrupted by greed and could very easily have only gotten to the final round by cheating, is it really fitting that he advance just because he learned his lesson? Yes- because it's still better than Tagiru winning.
- So we have a whole episode about kendo fighting culminating in an all-city tournament, and there's no sign or mention of Zenjirou whatsoever? The way Musashi challenged Taiki was definitely an allusion, but Taiki doesn't even run with that!
I'm actually kind of surprised the series has gotten this far with only one D grade. Admittedly, I haven't seen the show, and what little I know is based on other people's responses, but the general consensus was that this one was godawful. Now I'm a little more interested, especially after you described the episode highlighting Ewan's/Yuu's background. There should have been more of that in the Death Generals arc, I think: he didn't get as much screen-time there as I felt his character needed.
ReplyDeleteAlso, when are you going to update the http://digimon.firstagent.net/p/fusion.html page to include the Death Generals arc? It'd be fascinating to see how the Death Generals arc compares with Tamers and Data Squad, and I'd like to see what the overall score for Fusion would be without Hunters dragging it down.
It is pretty godawful. Not because everything's a D, but because it will be a long time before anything even sniffs B territory (forget about anything A) again. And I have been meaning to update the Fusion page; I've got a honeymoon coming up so I have to get a few episodes ahead. Much to my surprise, Death Generals on its own was dead on par with Tamers (likely because Tamers had a few mediocre episodes in the first half and Death Generals was solid the whole way). Fusion as a whole *barely* edged out Data Squad. Hunters will drag the whole thing down into Zero Two territory.
DeleteCongratulations on your honeymoon! I wish you all the best.
DeleteAh well, I guess I shouldn't have gotten optimistic over a few starter episodes. I mean, dragging down a Tamers and Data Squad rival to Zero Two territory? Ouch.
Also, thanks for the info about the ratings.
Data Squad was average at best to begin with.
DeleteNice Kurata joke, but I'd liken Ryouma, Ren and Airu to the Bio Hybrid trio more than I would Kurata himself: they're just assholes (OK, Ivan wasn't really) who cause trouble for everyone, but they aren't genocidal megalomaniacs.
ReplyDeleteYou know, this show actually could have USED a Kurata. Ryouma's a pawn, and both Airu and Ren don't plan on actually DOING anything with the Digimon they enslave, it's just a collection for the sake of having a collection with no widespread consequences. Having a character partake in the Hunt of their own volition in order to use the captive Digimon to take over the world or commit crimes or whatever would have really made things interesting and raised some much-needed questions about this whole thing.
DeleteAs I said on another entry, Ryouma really had the potential to be, while not a Kurata, another Digimon Emperor, moreso than even Yuu was, but that was sadly not the case.
DeleteIts not hard to be a better villain then Kurata...
DeleteAnd frankly I found thd Death Generals arc tedious.