Posts Tagged Cartoons
Gargoyles – “Eye of the Beholder/Vows”
Posted by kjohnson1585 in Animation, Childhood Revisited, Television, Writing on October 11, 2013
Fox: “But what about love?”
Xanatos: “I think we love each other. As much as two people such as ourselves are capable of that emotion.”
Gargoyles, I think, is turning the corner. After developing so many ideas and setting so many tables, the show finally begins to push into a forward momentum. Things start to happen. Characters slowly open up, pasts are reveals, stories start to chug along.”Eye of the Beholder” was a much stronger episode than “Vows,” but I think “Vows” was hindered by a time travel conceit that didn’t do the already-complex show any favors (nor did the sub-par animation from Sae Rom). Overall, especially after last week’s promising two episodes, it looks like Gargoyles is becoming the show everyone keeps swearing by.
Remember “The Edge?” I had wrote about how Xanatos spends a lot of time and effort on maintaining control, or more accurately, the illusion of control, to those around him and, in particular, to himself. “Eye of the Beholder” slowly and carefully breaks down Xanatos’ image of self-perseverance, finally opening up the man and giving the character a much needed sense of vulnerability and, dare I say it, helplessness. It’s also the show’s signature Halloween episode, which was quite honestly an awesome coincidence.
Xanatos decides to up and marry Fox. His reasons include compatibility and long-term goal similarities. But when it comes to “love,” well… his wonderfully robotic response is both funny and revealing. To Xanatos, love is simply a function, a function that connects two people along with other simplistic intangibles that can lead to further perfunctory successes. Or, that is what he wants to believe. Fox sees the statement as Xanatos opening up, and in some ways, that’s the truth. She accepts the wedding proposal, and as a gift to his bride to be, Xanatos offers her the Eye of Odin to wear.
Elisa, a month later, tracks a commotion at a nearby grocery, only to find a hairy beast raiding the food stocks. She’s attacked by ostensibly a werewolf – I say “ostensibly” because it’s not a technically a werewolf. The rules are somewhat unclear: all we know is that this beast is drawn out of Fox via the Eye of Odin’s special powers. Xanatos and Owen watch the news footage of the beast’s rampage, only to see Fox returning home after a long night out. Xanatos can put two and two together, and kudos to the show to allow the audience to figure it out without hemming and hawing, or Swat Kats levels of exposition.
Still, I was somewhat surprised, only because of the female-human-to-male-werewolf transformation. Although, in the realm of magic, why should it matter? The answer is that it shouldn’t, and Gargoyles continues its subtle but pointed subversion of gender dynamics. Sexual dynamics is another thing, as this episode continues to play at a Goliath/Elisa romance, which just cheapens their relationship as lost souls in a city of madness, especially after a poignant scene of Elisa growing upset, relating Fox’s transformation to her brother’s. THAT is how the show should handle Elisa’s grief over Derek’s change – moments of panic and pain, not melodramatic haystack weeping.
The real thrust of the episode is the breaking down of the Xanatos Gambit, and, more thematically, Xanatos himself. When Fox returns home, Xanatos mentions that it’s time to start Plan A. This is about control, where Xanatos walks in casually and asks for the Eye of Odin back. He’s testing how much power he has over Fox and/or the Eye, but come to find out, it’s very little, as Fox transforms, wallops the man, and makes its escape. They manage to track the beast, but even though Xanatos plays it like it’s nothing – “Well, spilled milk. Let’s move on to Plan B.” – he turns away from Owen and, for the first time in the show’s history, expresses doubt and… sadness? There’s something wrong here, and for the first time, Xanatos is showing it.
Xanatos in his robot gargoyle suit has become a symbol. It is the cold, metal exoskeleton of man visually desperately exerting his power, used distinctively to mask his vulnerability (this becomes clearer in the “Vows”). If he can’t manipulate control, he’ll use force. But this fails to work as well, as the beast overpowers him and comes quite close to killing him, but the Fox inside recognizes Xanatos and runs. A damaged Xanatos returns to his castle and begins to discuss plans with Owen about Plan C – manipulate Goliath and his clan to “saving” Fox by getting the Eye of Odin, but Goliath is on to his tricks, refusing to even go near the beast. For the first time, Xanatos finds himself with no plan, no saving grace, no final trick up his sleeve.
Except honesty. He admits that the Eye gives the wearer power and insight, and that he just wasn’t expecting transformation. Goliath deduces the beast is a manifestation of Fox’s true character (I don’t buy this. Fox is a villain but she always had her head on straight – the fact that her true nature is a carnal. insatiable monster doesn’t quite work). Either way, a vulnerable Xanatos pleads to Goliath to help save her life – and he and Elisa refuse. Even when reaching out to Goliath, his penchant for manipulation kicks in as he relates losing his love to Goliath losing his. I love this. I never quite thought of Xanatos being so caught up in his lies and deceits that it became habitual, but it works, especially when he tracks Goliath later with a homing device. “Old habits die hard.”
Goliath does eventually come around, not because he’s concerned about Fox but because he’s concerned about the safety of the city. So he and Xanatos team up to take the beast. (The excuse he gives that leaves his clan out of the beast’s pursuit is a narrative necessity at best, cause it doesn’t make logical sense.) Take careful note that Xanatos is still walking around in his robot suit – he, in his desperate and legitimate insecurity. The two manage to finally snag the Eye, changing the creature back into Fox. A deal is struck: Goliath gets the Eye and Elisa returns Fox to Xanatos. It’s a deal he can’t pass up, because Xanatos actually loves her, a startling contrast to that opening quote. Which leads to the best exchange not only in the show’s history, but in perhaps all of TV:
Xanatos: “So now you know my weakness.”
Goliath: “Only you would regard love as a weakness.”
First, a little “dirt of the shoulder” love for Goliath’s badass comeback. Second, the face Xanatos makes after that line is striking, where anger, sadness, depression, frustration, acceptance, deference, and concession come together. He walks off with his bride-to-be. Owen says he looks heroic, but Xanatos crushes that sense of vulnerability: “A momentary lapse, I assure you.” He tells Fox it was all a bad dream, and it’s all over now. He will be damned if he’s shown up like that ever again.
“Vows” start off like a decent episode, but it gets way too caught up in its time travel concept to really be worth something. It moves a bit too fast for anything to land and has a lack of focus, but there are a lot of good ideas in the periphery. Time travel really works when 1) it’s goofy and campy enough to be fun and nothing more, like Doctor Who, or 2) so wildly, well-thought out that it’s more horror than sci-fi, like Primer. “Vows” is neither. It’s cute, it’s somewhat informative, but too packed and messy to really land an impact. To grasp the full meaning of the episode, I have to explain all the events first.
“Vows” is about Xanatos regaining the upper hand. The events of “Eye of the Beholder” leaves the man a (slightly) shattered version of himself, so he goes out of his way to show everyone he truly is in control. He confronts Goliath at the very beginning of the episode to invite the lead gargoyle to his wedding to be his best man, dropping the fact that Demona will be there as well. Goliath wavers on the decision, and while it seems we were all but past any chance of Goliath re-establishing a romantic relationship with Demona, it seems that he was not. He still has visions and dreams of their past love, remembering when they exchanged halves of a charm known as the Phoenix Gate amidst the wedding between Prince Malcolm and Princess Elena. Deep down, he thinks he could rekindle that love.
Xanatos, meanwhile, invites his father to his wedding (and again, note how Xanatos is still wearing the robot suit, still compensating from “Eye.”) Xanatos’ father is AWESOME. He smacks down his son’s luck into money, then, when everyone gets MAGICALLY zapped into the past, he doesn’t give two shits. Xanatos’ father follows along in the immense implausibility of returning to the past, and the slick manner in which Xanatos indirect made his fortune (giving a coin to the Illuminati to give to him in the future to start his fortune and a note telling him to do this), with the indifference of an emo teenager. Even after all the craziness, his father STILL is all, “Whatever, all you care about is money,” which makes me want this guy to have his own show. The Xanatos’ Dad Show, starring Xanatos’ dad, seeing magic and sorcery and giant robots and gargoyles, and simply wanting to know how the fuck to get to Denny’s. Incredible.
I digress. Goliath goes to the wedding, shows Demona his half of the Phoenix Gate, and she combines it with hers and sends everyone into the past. All the above happens, including a strange attempt by Goliath to talk past Demona into keeping her heart pure and loving so that maybe, in the future, she wouldn’t be so angry at humanity and they would once again be in love (it doesn’t work). Honestly, it’s a strange episode, a little more complex then I think the writers intended, but it’s revealing in some major ways: one, Xanatos is part of the Illuminati, which adds some deliciousness to Matt Bluestone’s conspiracies. Two, the Archmage from “Long Way to Morning” actually was a member of castle before his betrayal (I assume its the effort to get the Phoenix Gate, although it’s not made explicit). Three, this Archamge is after the ultimate power, which lies in the possession of the Phoenix Gate, the Grimorum, and the Eye of Odin. How this develops has yet to be seen.
Overall, though, this episode was intriguing and ambitious, but it didn’t quite work for me. I love what it tried to do, but adding a little bit thought to it kinda makes the whole thing fall apart. And I know time travel is a fool’s “thinking man” game, but the idea that the note Xanatos sends himself in the future, which presumably mentions inviting Goliath to the wedding and assuming everything between him and Demona would work out like that is a huge stretch. What if Goliath didn’t come? Well, the episode implies that it doesn’t matter, since the rules of time travel implied that Goliath would come, that the events happened because they’ve already happened. “Time travel’s funny that way.” This gets into a whole fate/destiny thing, and while Gargoyles plays around with fate and destiny a lot, the broad, universal theoretical approach may not be in the show’s strong suit.
But hey! Xanatos’ dad! More of him, please.
“Eye of the Beholder” A-/”Vows” B
Why is it So Hard to Write Female Teenage Characters?
Posted by kjohnson1585 in Animation, Television, Uncategorized, Writing on October 11, 2013
If you keep your ear to the ground, you might hear a lot of people grumbling about the second season (or Book) of The Legend of Korra. Even the most hardened fans of the series seem to be slightly taken aback by some of the current development threads. Bolin has been redefined as the comic relief, part of a wacky side story to the events that involve an intercontinental war. The “dark spirits” angle that should be important comes across aloof since the struggle against these beings seems to be brought up only when convenient. Until recently, Mako was such a useless character, and Eska and Desna are ill-defined (man, what does Desna even DO?). Oh, and the Tenzin side-story is only mildly interesting, which is a simple way to damn it with faint praise.
The biggest concern is how Korra herself is acting. She’s making bad decisions – terrible ones, in fact, that seem to make her character utterly frustrating and unlikeable. Granted, there’s a lot of adults around her that are both mentoring her and manipulating her, and she’s in an increasingly desperate situation, what with a war looming, her parents in danger, and her role as the Avatar in question. It would be a lot for anyone to handle. Still, while I don’t personally have as much of a problem with her character as most people do, I do see that there are problems here, problems that aren’t necessarily regulated to The Legend of Korra. TV shows often have problems with writing teenage girl characters, but the question is, why?
The grumbling has extended to the third season of Homeland, where teenager Dana Brody has checked out from therapy after an attempted suicide. She is clearly struggling with the news that her father has been outed as a terrorist, news that is affecting her a lot more than the rest of the family. This becomes a significant point in the second episode “Uh… Ooo… Aw…,” but the awkwardness to get there includes a whole lot of longing looks at a cute boy from the same therapy sessions, an ill-advised nude selfie, and one egregiously annoying “running away from home” moment. The actress, Morgan Saylor, does the best she can here with the material given here, but the narrative choices are hard to justify without undue rage at these pubescent girls.
From 24 to Revolution (Charlie isn’t a teenager, but c’mon, she sure as hell acts like one), from American Dad to Kim Possible, teenage girls have always been, and continue to be, the bane of writers’ existence. (Oddly enough, Family Guy gave up on even trying to give Meg, its teenage character, any agency, which is the fucking worst, especially since they kinda did a pretty good job with her early on). Young women, who within their teenage/young adult lives struggle to grow and change, often make stupid mistakes in their way to adulthood – but this goes for everyone. So why do these young girls seem to continue to frustrate writers and audiences alike? One would think that kind of internal turmoil would be easy to mine for narrative gold. Instead, the minerals they do mine tend to incite riots. Why?
It was in the character of Candice from Phineas & Ferb that I begun to devise a theory. Candice embodies the typical traits given to so many young, female characters: brash, self-centered, whiny, materialistic. She’s embarrassed to talk to the cute guy, then she gets the cute guy, then she obsesses over the cute guy. Candice, for a while anyway, frustrated me as much as any other bevy of teenage girls out there. But what creators Dan Povenmire and Jeff “Swampy” Marsh do to win her over to the audience is important. They exaggerate her flaws so that we laugh at them. The audience knows that these flaws and petty concerns are silly. Candice, herself, knows they’re silly. She can’t help herself though! That glint of self-awareness, coupled with the gradual attempts to work through her issues, makes Candice come off much more likeable. In addition, her obsession with busting her brothers (also played to comic extremes) is couched in a genuine love for her brothers. She doesn’t hate Phineas and Ferb. She simply hates that they somehow get away with so much stuff. That’s a really important distinction.
We can compare Candice to Kim, the titular character from Kim Possible, who is a stark contrast to Candice. While my review of the show will come much, much later (update: here’s the review), what I noticed was how “insular” Kim feels. Kim is a Mary Sue, a perfect, ass-kicking character who nonetheless has female teenager problems. But the contrast between Kim’s ability to save the world multiple times and her issues with, let’s say, babysitting her twin brothers is a contrast that does not (and, arguably, can not) jive. Even if played for laughs, even couched in a certain degree of self-awareness, it’s a hard pill to swallow. It doesn’t help that Kim’s annoyance at her “tweebs” (twin dweeb brothers, which, ugh) is wildly unfounded. They rarely bother her, content to cause chaos in their own little world. But there she is, sighing and rolling her eyes at their antics, despite them never truly interfering with her life. Her frustrations are distinctively petty, but the show works to make them seem important, and they’re simply not. (The show makes no qualms about focusing a majority of the episodes on Ron Stoppable, Kim’s sidekick).
That may be the issue stemming in this season of The Legend of Korra. The sheer scope of the issues that plague this world are bigger than I believe the writers want it to be. So when Korra spends an uncomfortable amount of time worried about what Mako thinks, it’s frustrating. When she justifies various forms of rebellion – against Tenzin, against her father – they seems petty up against the arrival of monstrous dark spirits and a burgeoning civil war. Also, she’s the Avatar, embodying a great deal of power and strength. Not that the Avatar shouldn’t have personal and/or emotional struggles, but those struggles should really tie directly with the real world consequences. Bryan Konietzko makes a good effort, but watching Korra shed tears after she breaks up with Mako is a narrative stumble for the character we knew, compared to the the situation she finds herself in. Maybe, just maybe, balancing these minor concerns with the major ones are impossible – or, if not impossible, an extremely difficult balance that just isn’t worth going into.
That’s the core issue with young teenage girls as power figures. Really, it’s the core issue with most young people as power figures. The scenarios they come up against are so potent, so world-changing, so incredible, that young people retreating back into their world of high school strife is wildly jarring. Harry Potter went through the same issues. At the very least they justified it by 1) noting that Hogwarts was rightly the safest place he could be (until it wasn’t), and 2) attempting to normalize Harry Potter’s life as much as possible. Still, by Order of the Phoenix, watching Harry be frustrated by another difficult class is laughable. And the less said about his love-life foibles, the better. Kudos for the last book for getting Harry out of the school surroundings.
Young teenage girls seem to get the worst of it because writers seem mandated to keep these girls’ concerns to the forefront no matter what situation they find themselves in. Candice, rightfully, always has the bigger picture in mind – busting the brothers while simultaneously protecting them – while Kim and Korra seem focused on emotional responses in relation to the fate of the world. (To be fair to The Legend of Korra, the show seems to emphasize that her approach IS wrong, but considering this was established in the first season, it’s hard to thematically justify it again and maintain a strong amount of interest.) When even exaggerated comedy can’t work, we may have to acknowledge that this juxtaposition between global warrior and emotional pubescence is simply not going to work.
Even it we step away from the power figures, like with Homeland’s Dana or American Dad’s Hayley or 24’s Kim, another thing becomes clear (especially when viewed through the post-Candice lens): why do the writers approach these young girls in such insular ways? By which I mean, why do these young girls never seem to interact with the people or the world beyond their personal foci? I don’t mean that these girls, character-wise, tend to be primarily focused on their own personal stories. I mean, they seem to narratively interact with people that ONLY are involved in their own personal stories. Dana talks to her mother and the cute boy. Why doesn’t Dana talk to her brother? Or the other people from her therapy group? Who are the other people in Kim Possible’s class? What’s her relationship to them? I am aware that Korra’s and Lin Beifong’s relationship is questionable, but why doesn’t she talk to her? Or Bolin? They had a nice time together in Book 1. (That ties into how poorly they’re developing Bolin).
There’s really no broader social aspect to these young girls. The universal focus is on these girls and their goo-goo eyes at cute boys, mixed in with their poo-poo faces at people who annoy them. What about everyone else? The original Avatar: The Last Airbender used its travelogue format to play around with how the gang of Aang, Sokka, Katara, and Toph gauged the world around them. Some of the best parts in that show are Toph’s annoyed indifference at the wealthy environs she grew up in around Ba Sing Sei, and Katara’s growing frustration with the Northern Water Tribe’s dated sexist views. Avatar mines a lot of variations to the world, tosses the cast at them, and let the characters work. Korra, on the other hand, is trapped in a realm of mentor-searching and bad judgements. This isn’t necessarily Korra’s fault, but the writers don’t do her any favors. Dana, again, bounces between the cute boyfriend and the frustrated mother, when there’s a lot more she could be, and should be, interacting with. Entire seasons of American Dad go by that fail to star Hayley in anyway, despite the fact that American Dad’s universe is clearly ripe for situations for her to get involved in. There’s an interesting and comically rich idea of Kim Possible’s Kim getting a job, meeting various co-working and grasping the corporate environment. Instead, she gets a job because she wants to buy a jacket (“Bueno Nacho”). Kim could learn about the work of janitors and janitorial services, perhaps humbling her and giving her an insight into blue collar work. Nope – the janitor is a spy, which seemed to be the only way the janitor could earn Kim’s respect (“Job Unfair”). I wish there was a Dana that dealt with the fallout of her father’s betrayal on her own terms instead of via a desperate rush to the arms of a character we don’t even know about.
Why are all these young girls so restricted? What if, to be speculative, Dana retreated into a realm of a video game, an MMO? We don’t see too many young women with nerdier pursuits, and I’m sure even teenage girls with a passion for computers would also be emotionally torn asunder if her father was revealed to be a terrorist. Can a violinist also be given superpowers? How would a young girl handle phenomenal abilities while being uncomfortably privy to the uncomfortable reality of growing up in a lower-class family? Or how about a young black girl dealing with larger than life situations while handling the burdens that come with not only her gender but also her race? The myriad of choices and ideas available to writers break down in the realm of the teenage character, often leaving her to bounce between boy-toys and parents that just don’t understand. The best writers and the best actors can’t creatively do anything if limited between These Two Things.
Also… where is the humor in these characters? They certainly don’t need to be laugh-riots, especially since Dana certainly isn’t in a position to elicit a lot of comedy, but all these characters come with an air of angst and frustration, an overall unwillingness to “laugh” at themselves. They seem trapped, stifled, and their avenues for answers lie in parental figures and boyfriends. (If they’re lucky, they might have a best friend who’s usually less than helpful). Failing to give these young women any chances to explore their situation outside of these the parental/significant other dynamic inevitably creates a charismatic blackhole, which leaves the audience frustrated with them more than anyone would like them to be. Their agency is limited.
To think that I would suggest to people that Candice from Phineas and Ferb is the example professional writers ought look at for a clear idea of a quality teenage female character only suggests how problematic the state of young female characters in TV is. But with the the general malaise given to characters like Dana and Korra this year, and Hayley and Charlie in years prior, writers should really work to open up these characters and their relationships beyond family units and potential loverboys. Let these young female characters breathe. Stop stifling them in unrequited angst.
Gargoyles – “The Mirror/The Silver Falcon”
Posted by kjohnson1585 in Animation, Television, Writing on October 7, 2013
With Gargoyles building up its mythology so much yet failing to do anything significant with it, the show seems caught in a bevy of rising action decisions, constantly climbing the ladder of tension but uncomfortable with making it mean anything. According to Greg Weisman’s tweets, it seems to be his writing style – to always build towards something. At times, though, you have to show us that “something,” or audiences feel like they’re stuck in a holding pattern, that the writers are ostensibly stalling for time and paychecks.
“The Mirror” and “The Silver Falcon” doesn’t give us the kind of relief that one would expect after all the narrative build up – in fact, it even adds more to the possibilities of future conflicts. But what these episodes do is ease up on their overall connection to the broad mythology, using two MacGuffins to essentially create two one-offs that work well enough on their own. They use past enemies – Demona and Dracon – but given they have clear, direct motivations and not nebulous, nefarious ones, these episodes are given the breathing room to tell a full story, with a clear beginning, middle, and end. It also adds a much needed sense of humor to the show, a slightly goofy sensibility that even Shakespeare utilized, making “The Mirror” and “The Silver Falcon” two of the best episodes of second season so far.
Demona is a much better villain than Xanatos. She has a specific grudge against Goliath and all of humanity. She’s desperate that borders on crazy, but crafty enough to 1) survive for so long and 2) hatch devious plans herself. There is still a long, painful backstory hidden in Demona’s past, intriguingly touched upon when we get a glimpse of what appears to be her house, which raises all sorts of questions, of the good kind. I’m confident in time we’ll learn all about it. Right now, we’re focused on another one of her magic-based plan, and boy, it’s a doozy.
“The Mirror” starts of kinda sketchy. Demona sneaks into a museum to steal a mirror, but randomly, Elisa and Goliath are there waiting. The episode doesn’t explain why they’re there, nor does it explain why Elisa is wearing glasses and has her hair up. It seems like they were lying in wait, in disguise, but why? It’s not like they had intel on the robbery. Luckily this is a minor flaw, as there’s a pretty awesome chase sequence before Demona flies away. The significant thing is in the ensuing chaos, two robbers sneak in and actually steal the mirror, delivering it later to a mysterious house. Demona, apparently, has been doling out cash in secret to acquire certain services while hiding in her rather lavish home. How’d she get this? I love that this mystery is set up here.
The mirror is magic, and Demona uses it to summon a dark elf named Puck. There are some nifty ideas here – Demona pre-chained the mirror, so upon Puck’s arrival, he’d be immediately trapped. Demona is many things, but she’s no fool. What she is, however, is desperate, and she approaches Puck, an elven personification of the Monkey’s Paw, with a wish to rid Goliath of his human compatriot, Elisa. Well, you know how mischievous beings treat wishes, being all “ironic” with them. Puck turns Elisa into a gargoyle! BOOM! Human Elisa is no more!
What I like about “The Mirror” is that from this point on, the episode has fun with its surreal premise. Puck, as an instrument of chaos, allows the writers to play around with designs and set ups, where future wishes end up turning all of Manhattan’s populous into gargoyles and Goliath’s gang into humans. It’s a real treat, and the combined efforts of Jade and Nakamura Animation Studios adds a visual panache to the whole thing, making the changes both amusing and organic. Everything looks polished, and the variations of the gargoyle designs and colors add to the makeshift world. Even the little gargoyle-kid in the screencap above is perfect.
There are a few minor things that didn’t work. One was the odd attempt to build at a tentative love story between Goliath and gargoyle-Elisa. This fell flat. Even in gargoyle form, Elisa and Goliath are always and forever platonic, and implying that in a different form there could be a “spark” reeks of early 90s fanfiction. I did like the mental games the episode played, where when people transformed, they literally thought they were normal and everyone ELSE had changed. It was a fun bit of disorientation although I don’t think it went anywhere. Also, there’s a fight in what looks like Rockefeller Center where human-Goliath crashes into a shop window where – surprise surprise! – there’s battle armaments. Swords, maces, shields, and axes. It’s all there mostly so Puck can fuck with them and turn the weapons against people. It’s a heck of a sequences despite it making little sense.
But there’s a lot of fun to be had. The gargoyles running from the humans is a great subversion, which is even subverted further when a couple of “brave” gargoyles chase after the humanized-gargoyles for attacking Demona, only to be chased off when the humanized-gargoyles act all tough. Puck has a lot of surreal fun, even changing Bronx into a blue dog, although to his admission, “It should have been a chihuahua.” I like Puck’s trolling and his general devil-may-care attitude, giving a levity to the show that Gargoyles definitely needs. The episode even references its Shakespeare origins here! A wee bit of old-school, classic Comedy does Gargoyles some good, even if catching Puck in a trash can is kinda lame.
The episode ends when Puck agrees to transform everyone back to normal in exchange for his freedom. I was quite surprised when Puck escaped, he took the captured Demona with him – but that was for more trolling (with a side of revenge). When Demona insults him, he gives the female gargoyle a blessing and a curse: she won’t be stone in the daylight; instead, she shall be human. Knowing how much Demona detests the human race, becoming her enemy might quite possibly be a fate worse than death. “The Mirror” is such a fun, exciting episode: things seem to be moving in the show’s favor.
That goes double for “The Silver Falcon,” an episode where the writers kinda say fuck it and posits the Gargoyles world as a film noir. I didn’t expect it to work, but with the emerging badassery of Broadway and some good ol’ crazy Bluestone, “The Silver Falcon” has some wacky fun and couples its twist-heavy storyline in typical noir fashion. I would be okay with some more Elisa/Broadway team-ups, especially if they emphasize the more seedy underbelly of the Gargoyles vision of New York.
A curious Bluestone walks into Dracon’s midst, an image that begins the episode as it cuts to Elisa’s apartment. There’s some really great visual, subtle work here. Elisa locked her gun in a safe now, and she’s causally reluctant to let Broadway follow her on her search for the now-missing Bluestone, since, you know, he once shot her. It’s a concept that overshadows the episode; kudos to the writers for not throwing it into the viewers faces. Broadway is intrigued by the black-and-white detective shows on TV, and he champs at the bit to reenact it. Elisa, wisely, tells the gargoyle to stand down, but Broadway, unwisely, goes against her wishes and follows her to Bluestones apartment, in trenchcoat and hat. The “serious” Gargoyles would have me question how and where Broadway came across such an attire. The “lighter” Gargoyles allow such choices to go unanswered, allowing the audience to simply sit back, relax, and enjoy the ride.
Broadway does manage to save Elisa from a mysterious assailant inside Bluestone’s apartment, allowing Elisa to give him a bit more leeway. They indeed team up, following a couple a clues to Cleopatra’s Needle, which is slowly becoming an intriguing place in the Gargoyle universe – it was in the previous episode as well. Elisa, and by proxy the audience, learns from an FBI informant named Hacker about Bluestone’s history – he used to work for the FBI but was booted off due to his obsession with the Illuminati, and his disappearance may have to do with yet another crazy Illuminati goose chase. Hacker hands Elisa a letter written by an old gangster named Mace Malone to a a mysterious “DD”. The mysteries continue to pile up, and for a moment, it does seem like the Illuminati ARE involved, when a couple of thugs arrive to take the detective out.
It’s an brief but awesome fight, with Broadway arriving and showcasing once again how awesome he’s gotten in the second season. The animation continues to be impressive, with the expressions being the definite highlights. The note leads them to an office, where they meet am old man named Benton, who then leads them the Silver Falcon Nightclub. Mysteriously, the gangsters already there were ready for them – an explosion traps them under some rubble, and even worse, Broadway turns into stone.
I’m actually disappointed by the intro. By introducing Bluestone’s capture by Dracon early, we already know that the Illuminati isn’t involved. It would be cool if they added a bit of paranoia to the mix. But we know what Elisa and Bluestone learn at the moment – the Illuminati chase was really a bunch of clues leading to some missing diamonds stolen by Mace and “DD”. The safe reveals no diamonds; simply a note written by Mace trolling his former “DD” friend. Elisa does some quick thinking, leading the gangsters away for the day so Broadway can transform, and lookie here! Broadway is reading. He’s a fast learner too, using the discarded note to track Elisa down.
I really like this scene. Elisa, Bluestone, and Broadway do some pretty great, quick-thinking moves to outwit Dracon and his men, and Broadway gets to emulate the film noir scene he watched earlier. I’d like to think he just tracked Dracon down for miles until he saw an opportunity to do it, which kinda makes him even awesomer. The final twist to all this? Benton arrives, upon which Elisa deduces that he was the actual “DD” – Dominic Dracon. More quick thinking traps Dominic with another red herring, since Mace fools his former partner from the grave once again. (Mace, the original troll?) Anyway, the lighting, shading, and wind effects make the visuals on the “real” silver falcon statute a particular highlight of the episode, and with a rich, fun mystery serving as the backbone to the story, “The Silver Falcon,” makes it a hell of an enjoyable ride.
“The Mirror” and “The Silver Falcon” suggests strongly that by loosening up the show and playing around with the genre, Gargoyles may be better served by stepping away from it’s building mythology and tell more unique, one-off stories. I’m still curious about the ultimate stories that the show want to tell, but the wheel spinning and its self-designated overuse of the Xanatos-Gambit make those conflicts more frustrating. These are the kinds of stories that Gargoyles need to tell. Hopefully they’ll be more.
“The Mirror” B+/”The Silver Falcon” B+