Magical Energy Armor Does Jackshit Against Ooze Boy
Hideous Pile of Slime Given Inexplicable Pathos
Hideous Pile of Slime Given Inexplicable Pathos
Last week, Rita was visited by her long-lost father, Master
Vile. Rita's daddy dearest threw a bunch of shade at Zedd for not having a
face, and enacted an evil plan to reclaim the mystical Zeo Crystal. In order to
gain this ancient artifact, Master Vile created a monster named Globbor who stole Ninjor's powers to force the Ranger's hands in helping him. The Ranger
Teens elected to send Tommy and Katherine to Zedd's Moon Palace to retrieve the
Zeo Crystal, while they stayed behind on Earth to slaughter the Globbor. Once
on the Moon, Tommy went hunting for the Zeo Crystal while Katherine distracted
Rita and Zedd by feigning loyalty to them once more.
Rita digs into Katherine's request to be part of her legion
of doom once again, and Katherine awkwardly asserts that she would love to
commit menial tasks for space devils once more. Tommy vaguely protests this in
the background, because he's an obnoxious tit who can't go three scenes without
reminding us how much he cares about his teammates. Or at least the ones he
wants to fuck.
Lord Zedd doesn't buy into this poorly-acted melodrama.
Which is unfortunate, considering the show he lives in. Zedd demands that
Katherine prove her loyalty by stepping into his Revivifier machine. A device
that will replace Katherine's goodness with pure evil. This is a pretty good
idea in concept. Zedd isn't putting up with any goody two-shoes double-crossing
from Katherine, so he calls her bluff. If she wants to be part of his crew, she
needs to put her money where her mouth is.
The problem I have is with this Revivifier thing. It looks
like total shit.
What 3rd-rate game show did they still
this junk from?
Far worse than how dumb this prop looks is what happens once
Katherine steps into it. As soon as her feet touch the pedestal, she's left
unable to move. She becomes hysterical as she asks what this machine is doing
to her. Somehow forgetting what Zedd and Rita just got done telling her. Then
the evil space wizards reiterate the Revivifier's purpose. Ignoring the fact
that they did the exact same thing no fewer than 20 seconds ago. Was this
supposed to come after a commercial break? How badly is this show trying to buy
time that they're forced to repeat the same exposition twice?
Far worse than how dumb this prop looks is what happens once
Katherine steps into it. As soon as her feet touch the pedestal, she's left
unable to move. She becomes hysterical as she asks if you really thought I was
going to rewrite this paragraph a second time just to make a joke about this
show's abominable repetition.
Tommy contacts Zordon and asks what he should do about
Katherine's impending evil-ization. Zordon offers little consolation, and
suggests that Tommy get off his lazy ass and go nab that Zeo Crystal. Then he
can go save Katelyn or whoever. Sorry about that, Pinky. We've got new toys to
shill, and your potential servitude in the leagues of Space Satan is irrelevant
as long as we can keep pumping out new pieces of overpriced plastic every year.
Lord Zedd's gloating is halted when he senses another Ranger
inside of the Moon Palace. Rita throws a hissy fit when she realizes that the
White Ranger is trying to snatch the Zeo Crystal from under their feet.
Katherine gloats that the villains won't be able to stop Tommy, because if they
get near the forcefield around the Zeo Crystal then they'll be boiled alive.
The villains laugh at her misplaced optimism, as the forcefield will destroy
anyone who's ever been evil. Perhaps someone who might have been an evil Green
Ranger a few seasons ago? Or anyone who has committed various sins; like gluttony, sloth, or sodomy.
I've got to take umbrage with these fuckboi wizards who are
hiding their magical rocks underneath the moon for a second here. Are you
telling me that if I, a perfectly respectable human being of sound mind and
body, was ever hypnotized by some disease-riddled batch of degenerate moon
goblins, then I would no longer be able to be considered "good?" What
kind of bullshit is that? Tommy got zapped by some magic wand and now he's on
Santa's naughty list for the rest of his days? Turns out that getting your teenage mind jumbled into goo by a space witch is a pre-existing condition.
Though there is one line I enjoy in this segment. Rita mocks
Katherine by asking if Zordon ever told her the story of Tommy's evil Green
Ranger days. Kat tries denying Tommy's former evil allegiances, but we in the
audience know that Rita's got her dead to rights. Tommy really was a villain
before he fought alongside the other Rangers, and no amount of hemming or
hawing is going to change that. If nothing else, I at least appreciate the
continuity.
Tommy ventures deep inside the Moon's Caves of Despair,
which is where the Zeo Crystal has been rumored to reside. Zordon informs Tommy
to keep his minimal wits about him, as nothing is what it appears to be inside
the Caves of Despair. This is proven when Goldar shows up to taunt the White
Ranger, but vanishes after a brief scuffle. Truly, this place is nothing but
condensed madness. Goldar appears apropos of nothing and fails to accomplish anything of substance? MADNESS. ABSOLUTE BATTY MAD CRAZYTOWN FROLICS!
Though the Caves of Deception are even more insidious than
Tommy realized. Not only can they produce Goldar mirages, but they can also make Tommy shit his pants.
Time to rub his nose in it.
As Tommy heads deeper in, the Black, Blue, Yellow, and Red
Rangers encounter him. They somberly announce that Master Vile has defeated
them, and Katherine has been turned completely evil. Billy offers the only
upside, which is that Master Vile has promised to spare the Rangers and their
families if they surrender the Zeo Crystal to him.
Wait a second here. Something doesn't add up. Families? The
Power Rangers don't have families! This must be another trick!!!
The White Ranger doesn't buy this bullshit for a second, and
poses against the illusion of his friends. However, the four mirangers are soon
backed up by an ally.
The Green Ranger.
The Green Ranger VS. the White Ranger? What a foolproof
concept. How could this possibly suck
gorilla
dick?
So as I was digging up those old links for the sake of that
joke, the DVD kept playing as the five Rangers charged at Tommy Prime. Before
any actual fighting could occur, they all disappeared into the ether and no
actual battle took place. Ooh, how mysterious. This is far more interesting
than any actual engaging action sequences. A bunch of things that aren't really
happening, but Tommy repeatedly falls for because he's an absolute dumbfuck.
Maybe if we were following a character who wasn't a
personified dog, this might be an interesting scene. But Tommy? He's too stupid
to go through any potential moral crisis. He's going to keep falling
ass-backwards into some vague peril that he'll HUT-SEET-OOYAH at until it
vanishes. Puke.
An illusion of Rita with an evil-fied Katherine shows up,
and just get to the next scene already. We already know this isn't real. The
last illusion had Aisha using this same lie to try and goad Tommy into a
reaction. None of this garbage even matters! How are we only 6 minutes into
a 20 minute episode and experienced nothing of value?
Thankfully, the episode transitions back to Earth where the
Rangers have boarded the Ninja Megazord. Oops, my mistake. They've actually
boarded the Ninja Megafalconzord because whoever was editing this episode
forgot all their fucks at home.
I love this woman and her curvy body.
Billy announces that the Ninja Megazord will be able to give
Globbor a proper fight. Or a fight of any kind, since the Shogun Megazord has
spent the last two episodes being drained of energy from off-screen. Remember
when I said I enjoyed these episodes? What the hell was I remembering?
Rocky alerts Billy that the Ninja Megazord has also had its
power drained, so it will also experience difficulties against Globbor. Nothing
I love quite as much as told but not shown developments! Whatever, at least we
finally get an honest to goodness battle against Master Vile's monster. From
inside of his Space Skull, Master Vile launches a bevy of attacks into thin
air. Globbor mimics these same attacks against the Ninja Megazord, and leaves
the Rangers reeling.
Meanwhile, Tommy finally reaches the Zeo Crystal inside the
Caves of Despair or Deception or whatever they're supposed to be called. As
soon as he spots the Crystal, Katherine shows up and asks Tommy what's going
on. The White Ranger says he won't fall for this nonsense a twentieth time, but
Katherine promises she doesn't know what he's talking about.
Then Master Vile shows up, prepares to take the Zeo Crystal,
and disappears because he was an illusion too. Whoa! Dodged a bullet there,
Tommy. You almost…um…got fooled by a fake snakeman? What is the goddamned point
of any of this bullshit?
Tommy heads towards the Zeo Crystal, but he's unable to snag
it before Katherine tells him to stop. Oh no! She was also a fake, and she uses
this manipulation of Tommy's trust to do the following.
1) Tell him he was evil, so he's going to be destroyed.
2)
2)
Somebody stop this roller coaster, I want to get off this ride.
Tommy ignores this nonsense and reaches towards the Zeo
Crystal. The magical barrier surrounding it zaps Tommy as he's reminded of the
horrendous crimes he committed in the past under Rita's tutelage. The violence
he perpetrated. The smokestack he demolished. The lives he ruined. The friends he hurt.
But then, Tommy remembers all the good deeds he's done. Like
the time he beat up some Putties. And also one time when Kimberly was having Christmas #2 and he chased the mailman away. Truly he's been a hero this entire time. The Zeo Crystal's
forcefield relents, and Tommy claims the ancient artifact. He quickly teleports
out of the boring cave full of filler illusions that offer no dramatic
resolution.
Rita and Zedd continue to cackle at Katherine as she turns
back into a giant cat monster or something. The White Ranger appears, promptly
using the Zeo Crystal to drain the evil being pumped into Kat's veins. Wow!
That Crystal can do anything, huh? Can't wait til' we dump it in the trash so
we can use cars to fight space gangsters.
Tommy grabs hold of the Falconzord's cage and teleports out
of the palace with Katherine and the Zeo Crystal in tow. Zedd and Rita
respond to this complete loss of all their advantages by throwing a giant hissy
fit. They don't even try to stop Tommy from escaping. They piss and moan while
Tommy and Kat mock them, and stand completely still. At least Squatt and Baboo tried to recapture Ninjor last week. You
two jokers are putting in less effort than your comic relief, sex offender
slaves.
Back on Earth, the Ninja Megazord is getting clobbered by
Globbor. The monster pukes a load of blue gunk onto the Megazord, and the
Rangers consider abandoning the Ninjazords as well. Yeah, we can call our old
buddy Ninjor for help. Oh shucks, I forgot. We actually left him for dead in
Master Vile's clutches because we were getting our shit pushed in by half a
dozen birds. Guess we're screwed.
But the fight isn't over yet. Globbor looks to the sky as he
hears a loud screeching. The Falconzord is back! Tommy and Katherine have
stored the Zeo Crystal inside its engine room, and now they're ready to finish
off Vile's monster. The Falconzord blasts Globbor with its wingtip rockets, and
promptly combines with the Ninja Megazord. The Ninja Megafalconzord swoops in
with its double power punch move and rams into the monster, explodinating him.
Oh how I've missed this attack…
Now that the monster has been defeated and the Zeo Crystal
has been claimed, the Rangers can call it a day. Or at least they could if this
wasn't a trilogy. Master Vile cackles at the notion that the Power Rangers have
harmed his monster, and commands the Globbor to rise from the flames. Ninjor
balks at the very notion, but the Globbor follows his master's orders and rises
from the ashes of his own death.
Okay. Now I think I remember what I liked about these
episodes.
Having survived the Ranger's most powerful attack*, Globbor
gurgly bellows that he's not finished yet. As his body stands amongst the
flames, blue energy courses through his body as it starts to metamorphose.
Shame his lips still look like Ivan Ooze's asshole.
Master Vile informs the captive Ninjor that Globbor's power
absorption wasn't just for show. His freakish, egg-son is now in control of all
the ancient ninja master's abilities. The Ninja Megafalconzord takes a
defensive stance against the new and improved Ninjor-Globbor, but it's quickly
beaten down by Vile's protégé. Vile mimes another series of attacks, which
Globbor repeats on the Megazord. The
strengthened Globbor even manages to replicate Ninjor's fireball attack,
critically injuring the Ninja Megafalconzord.
The enchained Ninjor cries out in terror that his so-called
friends are beating demolished with his own power. The buck-toothed ninjini
demands that Master Vile release him from captivity, but Vile laughs off the
plea. Realizing that his time is nigh, Ninjor quietly smiles. No matter how bad
things may look for him now, he knows that his dearest friends, the Power
Rangers, will never let harm come to him.
Back inside the Ninja Megafalconzord, Adam asks if Globbor's
new form looks familiar to anybody else. Aisha mentions that it sort of looks
like someone they used to hang out with, but she can't quite figure it out.
Billy slams his hand on the console as he comes to the morbid conclusion of
Globbor's actions. That son of a bitch pile of ooze absorbed our old pal, Bookala!
While the Ninja Megafalconzord gets thrashed, Billy has good
news. The Shogun Megazord's energy has refueled, and the Falconzord remote can
control it now. Why? Don't ask questions. We've got two Megazords in the
footage and I'll be fucked if we're going to try cutting around one of them.
The two Megazords put Globbor on the defensive and start
pounding into him. Megafalconzord spin kicks the pile of ooze, and the Shogun
Megazord uses its fire saber to slash the creature. After their attacks land,
the Rangers notice a chained-up Ninjor reacting in pain on the rooftops. Oh, the Rangers actually noticed him? First time for everything, I guess.
Actually, I'm curious about something. How did Ninjor get there when he was last seen in Vile's Space Skull? Well that's a perfectly valid question.
Actually, I'm curious about something. How did Ninjor get there when he was last seen in Vile's Space Skull? Well that's a perfectly valid question.
So anyway, the Rangers see Ninjor getting beat to shit every
time they strike Globbor. These genius teenagers are unable to solve this complicated
scenario until Master Vile appears on the roof and spells it out for them.
Every attack on his monster will bring Ninjor one step closer to death's door.
Tommy pouts that there's still Sentai footage of Ninjor they
have to burn off, so he's not allowed to murder the Rangers' mentor in cold
blood yet. He instructs his team to lay off their assault on Globbor, and the
monster immediately regains control of the fight. Globbor uses Ninjor's sword
to blast electricity at the Zord fleet, sending the Rangers careening out of
their Zords.
Our heroes land in an alleyway, while Globbor violently
shocks their Zords with energy. Master Vile takes this opportunity to send the
Zords to a distant galaxy, where they'll never bother him again. Instead of
destroying them, so they'll absolutely and unquestionably never be able to do
anything forever.
But what do I know? I'm not in control of the M51 Galaxy.
Once the Zords are banished, Vile commands his child to suck
out the energy from the Power Rangers as well. Globbor promptly shrinks to
human-size, where he appears to have lost that Ninjor visor he was sporting
while giant.
At least he still has his noodle fingers.
Globbor uses his goo-claws to siphon energy from all six of
the Rangers, and our heroes realize they need extra protection. The same thing
my father said about 27 years ago. Joke's on you dad, I'm still here! Just like Power Rangers, I'm still here despite no one caring or being particularly interested.
So whatever, the Rangers pull out their Metallic Armor, which
should hypothetically protect them from the monster's absorption technique.
But it doesn't at all.
Tommy gives some throwaway line about the Metallic Armor not
protecting them "much longer," but it's done nothing to stop Globbor.
They're still getting knocked around and having Ranger-colored energy sucked
out of their suits. I'm not entirely
certain what purpose the Metallic Armor even has right now. They were getting
their energy drained, then they put on their glitter rub, and continued to get
their energy drained.
How is a show that exists solely to sell new products so bad
at promoting new products?
Master Vile soon appears in the alleyway as well and thanks
the White Ranger for doing all the legwork in obtaining that Zeo Crystal for
him. Now he has Ninjor in captivity, a nigh-invincible monster with the energy
of Ninjor and the Rangers, all of the Rangers' Zords out in the galactic
boonies, and possession of the Zeo Crystal. Congratulations, Power Rangers. You
literally have nothing.
Alright, let's ignore the first half of this episode with
all the Zeo Crystal collecting nonsense. This episode is doing things for me in
a big bad way. Part 1 laid the groundwork and Part 2 is collecting dividends on
it. This is exactly what I want from a new villain. An absolute curbstomping of
the Power Rangers and everything they hold dear.
Master Vile promises to use the Zeo Crystal's powers to
destroy the entire Earth. Though first he decides to throw the best damn
apocalypse party this galaxy has ever seen. Nope, not being facetious in the
slightest. Rita Sr. will only blow up the planet once he's forced everyone to
attend a fancy shindig to celebrate their impending deaths. As stupid as I want
to think this is, it's kind of great. In case people weren't already cheesed
off at you, now you're going to rub their noses in the fact that they're all
going to be pushing up daisies. What a superb dick move.
Content in his creature's inevitable success, Master Vile
leaves Globbor to finish sucking out the Rangers' powers. The weakened Rangers
realize how boned they are, so they think of one last scheme to escape the
Globbor. They pool their remaining Metallic Armor energy together into one
combined blast to dissolve Globbor's claw gauntlets. With the monster
momentarily deterred, the Rangers teleport back into the Command Center where
Zordon can give them an appropriate ass-chewing about all of his shit they lost
today.
After the Rangers teleport, there's a moment that's always
stuck with me ever since I first watched this episode. Globbor notices that his
prey have vanished, and immediately flies into a panic about it. You'd expect a
braindead goop monster to spout out some meaningless platitudes about how he's
going to finish them next time, but he doesn't.
Globbor genuinely seems upset that he wasn't able to finish
off the Power Rangers, and becomes really worried that Master Vile is going to
be mad at him for it. He grabs the chain-link fence in the alleyway and pounds
on it in desperation. I don't know how to explain it, but it actually makes me
feel kind of bad for the big gooball. He's just doing his job, and those
dumbass kids in dinosaur pajamas had to botch it for him. Poor kid. Two days
out of the egg and he's already dealing with career issues. Typical millennial.
Zedd's crew join Master Vile in his Space Skull to properly
celebrate the defeat of the Power Rangers. Shoot! I forgot to show you good
folks what the Space Skull looks like, which would be an inexcusable crime.
Modesty, thy name is Vile.
Zedd pouts that the Rangers have been defeated by his new
step-father, and he's been given the shaft yet again. While everyone else is
having a great time dancing and having fun, Zedd sits in Master Vile's chair
and refuses to utter a word. Now he's going to have to watch Rita divorce him
so she can marry that stone-cold fox Master Vile instead. Lord Zedd is then forced to sit on his throne every day, living the tragic life of a man who was space cuckolded by a galactic snake monster.
Bulk and Skull rush to Ernie's café where they try to
explain what happened to them out in the woods. Ernie doesn't much care for all
this talk of horse, unless he's canning them and selling their delicious meat
in jumbo cans. This scene becomes significantly less meaningless when Master
Vile and the Tengas show up to make a reservation for an End of the World
party. Bulk asks what happened to the Power Rangers, and Master Vile said
they're not on the guest list.
Not because they're good guys, but because he knew they
would bring Tommy and he'd bark at all the guests he didn't know.
The weakened Power Rangers retreat to the Command Center
and attempt to shake off the effects of Globbor's energy drain. Zordon tells
them it will take a bit of time for their energies and the Metallic Armor to
fully recharge. Then the Rangers awkwardly shuffle around when they realize
that there's only another 20 seconds left of the episode, and Tommy offers up a
Serious Acting Voice™ reading of "Did Master Vile really win?" Then a
dramatic music stinger plays and we're thrown headfirst into the credits, where
footage of Bulk and Skull dancing the conga with Tengas plays.
Go ahead, watch the episode. See if I'm lying. I fucking
dare you.
*The Ninja Ultrazord
is dead to me.
Your Weekly 90's Nostalgia: Caves Filled With Pointless Mirages To Extend the Length of Your Episode
Personal Thoughts
I'm not even going to drag down my positivity by discussing all that garbage in the Cave of Despair or whatever. What else can I possibly say? It was an ill-conceived plot contrivance utilized to pad out the episode's runtime. It could have offered some perspective on Tommy as a character, as ridiculous as that sounds, but it did nothing of the sort. It was the most cookie-cutter sub-plot I've ever seen.
But again, that doesn't detract from how good the 2nd half of this one was.
Power Rangers would truly benefit from being able to have a "2 and a Half Part" episode. Every time we get a trilogy in this series, you can feel the desperation emanate from the screen as the writers violently jam in more filler until the episode hypothetically resembles a finished product.
Still, a good episode. I just feel bad how cluttered it is with things that don't serve any purpose.
I've got two final thoughts for this episode, and the first involves the ending credits bloopers I never talk about. If you aren't watching Season 3 alongside me, then you probably have no idea what I'm talking about. During the credits for every episode of Season 3, there's a brief blooper reel that plays. Sometimes it's nothing but extended footage of Rita and Zedd's crew dancing around like idiots, but typically it involves the Ranger actors botching their lines or goofing off on set.
I haven't mentioned these yet because...I don't know? I'm lazy? I couldn't think of a good way to integrate them into the actual posts? Usually I would shut off the DVD when the credits hit, because I didn't really feel the need to watch the actors goofing around. Which is obviously a bad idea. How else am I going to see them act like human beings?
The reason I'm mentioning the bloopers now is because of a genuinely funny line Jason David Frank pulls off during them. The very last blooper consists of JDF delivering the episode's final line.
"Did Master Vile really win?"
"Did Master Vile really win?"
The room falls silent for a beat. After a few seconds go by, Jason David Frank points his finger at the camera and says to the audience.
"You decide!"
I don't know why, but the timing on this line actually made me laugh. I've given Frank an unlimited amount of shit on this blog, but I can't deny he can have some great timing.
How weird is that? That completely pointless gag that was inserted into the ending credits did more to showcase his acting capabilities to me than 140 episodes of the series he's supposedly headlining. I don't know if that says more about Jason David Frank or me.
The final thought I'd like to leave you folks with is this: Which set of Zords are supposed to be stronger? The Shogunzords or the Ninjazords?
I don't really have an answer, and I'm not sure if the show does either. I know the Shogunzords were revealed later, so by Saban's Principle of Economics they must be stronger. But I'm still not convinced.
During the fight with Globbor, Billy tells the Rangers to dip out of the Shogun Megazord and into the Ninja Megazord. While I know this is because the Shogunzords had their powers drained, Billy still has a line about the Rangers being able to give Globbor a proper fight with the Ninjazords. Not to mention the Ninja Megafalconzord was able to defeat Globbor after he had sapped the Shogun Megazord of all its strength. There will be another piece of evidence of the Ninjazords being superior in the next episode, but we'll discuss that in more detail next week.
Though my reasons are pretty biased, I'm in Camp Ninjazord. Probably just because I prefer them over the big bulky bricks we've come to know as the Shogunzords. I'm curious where you good people land on this though. I'd really like to hear someone else's reasoning on which Zord fleet is supposed to be tougher. Or maybe none of this matters and I'm doing nothing but rambling. That's okay too.
That is a good one, although my favorite Jason Frank ad-lib is still the one from "A Zeo Beginning, Part II."
ReplyDeleteIs that the one where he said the word "Mess," as "Miss?"
Delete"we didn't protect our power coins... we lost them!l
DeleteThis was the episode that temporarily broke my spirit for this show when it aired, basically. As an adult with a better sense of humor and a knowledge of the future, I can enjoy it in hindsight. But as a younger viewer who was too invested in this karate show, for a while I was watching this show more out of some sense of continuing what I had started and not because I enjoyed it.
ReplyDeleteBy this point Zedd was a frequent joke. "Ed" was constant, and in Stop The Hate Master he actually dropped to a crawl and pounded his fists and feet on the floor like a toddler (somehow you managed to recap that episode without a note of this, which I guess makes the point of how big a joke he was.) But everything from the ACME brand podium that makes people bad, to his just standing there and grousing while the bad guys got away with it...
I think I spent way too many episodes enjoying just how Zedd did business with such style, whether he was able to make virtually anything happen by waving his hands around, or if he was simply making sassy wisecracks. Watching the happy couple reduced to *this* while Tommy is pardoned for his crimes by a space rock (enjoy getting brainwashed again next season!) was a big pile of suck.
I haven't gotten to how little anyone not named Katherine or Tommy gets in this episode, or Katherine already becoming Pink In Peril which is a trend that would follow her character around a lot more than Kim. I can deal now with the villains throwing a party at the Juice Bar to celebrate taking over the world, but it's kind of bizarre even by Power Rangers standards. Compare this three parter to "Doomsday", it's closest parallel at the time. If they could have made two episodes out of what they had, they'd have an all-time great. As it is it's a very rough draft for a Countdown to Destruction "evil wins, rangers fight back" episode.
On the upshot, the production is gearing up for a more serious tone: the zord battles were accompanied with very different music than simply Wasserman wailing out a killer guitar solo, and that does a lot to improve the dramatic tension. The theme song is only used to bait the kids into thinking the battle will end early, which I appreciate. As much as I do love the family-friendly power rock from this era (it makes any season better), playing some foreboding music through the zord battle as multiple finishers are hit and everything explodes makes this fight and the one in the next episode much more memorable.
The "Pink in Peril" bit just made me have flashbacks to Agony in Pink.
DeleteProbably a good thing that's not getting reviewed here.
Shogun are stronger ninja are more nimble globber had ninja traits and agility so I guess ninja zords were better for him.
ReplyDeleteWell that's a perfectly valid question.
ReplyDeleteWhat, not "There's a simple explanation for that"?
And is Rita right here? Did no one seriously tell Katherine that her new pet-slash-boyfriend did a stint as the space witch's karate-sex-slave? Like, she's just been going along, desperately trying to live down the shame of having been mind-raped into a horrific cat-monster for the amusement of the poorly-dubbed Mexican-Japanese daughter of a slime-barfing space skull, haunted by the sense of insecurity and failure that comes from comparing herself to those spandexed poindexters who spend their days maintaining a 4.0 GPA and solving world hunger, plus also Rocky, and no one ever told her that the only character which the narrative gravity of her universe really cares about once went through basically the same thing she did only he was way the fuck more effective at it?
Assholes.
Actually, he did tell Kat about his past with Rita after eavesdropping on her confessing to Kimberly about how she was under Rita's spell and was responsible for her being injured and in the hospital in the first place.
DeleteI disliked most of the end credit bloopers but going from Tommy's dramatic end line to Kat commenting on Bulk and Skull being forced to dance a conga line was great.
ReplyDeleteI do think the Ninjazords were stronger. You have to remember that the Shogunzords were not directly tied to the power coins. They were a fleet of ancient zords that anyone could pilot. The Ninjazords on the other hand were pretty much molded by the same power that gave the Rangers their power. They were made specifically for each Ranger and had uniqe abilities like the Rangers themselves. The Falconzord on its own could do more damage to a monster than the Shogun Megazord could (which we will also see at the end of the season).
ReplyDeleteI'll always have the Shogun as the "better" one in my head, and I already posted the why: my memories of that silly fighting game that introduced it to the English-speaking world. It could pick up the other Megazords (including Mega Tigerzord, which always looked massive on TV) with one hand and punch them with the other!
DeleteI feel like there was a definite tension in the show where the very nature of it wanted desperately for the shogunzords to be "better" because of the Sorting Algorithm of Evil, but the storyline they were presenting distinctly wanted to present the rangers as being at a disadvantage because they'd lost the Ninjazords and were forced to use these "fallback" zords.
DeleteI'm pretty happy with synthesizing this as "The shogunzords have superior brute strength, but the Ninjazords are more advanced and agile", with special emphasis on the Falconzord as being the lynchpin of the system, to the point that the Shogun Megafalconzord is superior to the Ninja Megafalconzord
"While everyone else is having a great time dancing and having fun, Zedd sits in Master Vile's chair and refuses to utter a word. Now he's going to have to watch Rita divorce him so she can marry that stone-cold fox Master Vile instead. Lord Zedd is then forced to sit on his throne every day, living the tragic life of a man who was space cuckolded by a galactic snake monster."
ReplyDeleteWell, since nobody else has said it yet. *ahem*
You weirdo, that's her DAD!
I too noticed that, and was wondering if anyone else was going to call it out. But then again, they are EEEE-VIL, so incest is just a drop in the bucket of their vile crimes against humanity. (And really, can we judge noon people by earth morals?)
DeleteMoon*
DeleteI think it is probably reasonable to guess that Rita's adopted.
DeleteNot that this makes it right.
The ninja zords couldn't operate if one was out of commission. It was a silly idea, but that's why they needed the falconzord remote (Which I admit came the fuck out of nowhere.)
ReplyDeleteI think Ninjor was included in that condition as well. Maybe they were all running off Command Center energy while he was bottled up.
DeleteRIP this blog, I guess.
ReplyDeleteRelax, he takes time off periodically. He's been writing these for a few years now.
ReplyDeleteYay, I finally caught up!
ReplyDeleteMaster Vile is the greatest villain in power rangers. My friends and I actually had a good theory about him. In "In Space," Dark Spectre says that the key to being evil is to lose all caring, because caring=goodness. But then I realized, a lot of the villains who don't succeed are highly invested, or they "care," about winning.
Master Vile just shows up because he's a bored old guy, slaps the rangers around, and when he loses, he doesn't vow revenge, he just goes home . And even in Zeo, he's very laid back in the short moment we got to see him.
Guy is super chill in his villainy, which makes him the most evil being of all.
I always took Kat’s “That’s not true!!” line to mean she didn’t believe that the force field would destroy someone who was once evil.
ReplyDeleteet ce moment, le film https://coflix.onl/comedie-dramatique/ n'a probablement pas donné de réponse exacte tout de suite, et puis, après avoir regardé, vous saurez tout
ReplyDelete