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Lambdadelta

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    1. Thanks, y'all, for the birthday wishes! It's all greatly appreciated! :D
    2. Had a yummy dinner for my birthday. Went to a restaurant and ate mussels with fries, fried clams, and house-made donuts with s'more & meyer lemon fillings. MMMMMMMMMMMMMMMM!!!!
    3. S8 overview ongoing. Hoping to finish it by the end of the week. ^_^

    ^_^:mlp_yeehaa::mlp_yay:

  1. I no longer think that Sunset Shimmer is paricularly important to the appeal of Equestria Girls. I think she is the least entertaining member of the main cast, because half the time she’s just a mellow voice of reason. 

  2. Non-Compete Clause really sucks. No bad episode has aired since.

    1. Lambdadelta

      Lambdadelta

      AJ and RD usually get bad episodes and together they got the worst one. On the bright side, Non-compete Clause is just one of few noticeable bad things i have to say about season 8. Season 8 is great.:squee:

    2. (See 11 other replies to this status update)

  3. The first thing i want to talk about season 9 is...

    Spoiler

     

    ...Sombra, The Shadow dies Twice... 


     

     

  4. Watched Starlight the Hypnotist last night, and I have one big problem with it.

    1. No, it’s not Twilight’s fear of ladybugs.
    2. No, it’s not Starlight hypnotizing Twilight to settle her fear.

    My problem is it uses the “Laugh at an Irrational Fear” trope. Until a few years ago, The Maury Show invited guests who were deathly afraid of objects or animals. When the object of fright was brought out, the guests ran in a huge panic and were often crying…all the while the audience laughed. Phobias aren’t funny. It wasn’t funny on Maury, and it isn’t here. Two thumbs down!

  5. It's been a while since I wrote an FIM analysis. With Dragon Day coming up, Spike would be a great character to write about.

    The episode in particular: Times. Jesus, what a great episode!

  6. Cozy Glow was a glorious manipulator, both during and before School Raze.

    • Marks for Effort: Tricked the CMCs into tutoring her just so she can intentionally fail and frame them to Twilight.

    • FU: Pirated Twilight's older school curriculum and handed it to Flim and Flam so they can expand their scam, along with passing FU fliers to both the teachers and students to accentuate the friction and build trust between her and Twi.

    • WLB: Exploited the Young 6's weakness through nativism to cause friction between them, but did it in such a sweet way that makes her look far more innocent than she is.

  7. FIM's a frickin' TV show for kids. Hating people for beginning to like non-M8 characters is just plain dumb.

  8. Apparently some people are really invested in the idea of Celestia as this kind, benevolent, wise monarch, to the point that they don't like her being fallible or showing relatively intense emotion. I never noticed this. 

  9. Spoiler

    Seriously, FS, you fell for Flim & Flam's easy scheme? At least with Rarity, she got really sucked into the teachings and was absorbed into her disguise.

     

  10. One of FIM's biggest improvements after Faust left was the evolution of the CMCs from static, irritating child characters in S1 to individual, more complex individuals in S2 onward, starting with Sisterhooves Social.

  11. I like Spike episodes. 

  12. Every time I see someone making up theories about where Applejack's parents went, I feel sad, like they're missing out on one of this show's most poetic and moving stories because they refuse to see what's right in front of them. If they turned out to be alive, "The Perfect Pear" would lose most of what makes it such a great episode. 

  13. Sludge is pure scum. :glimmer:

  14. FIM's run for almost the whole second half was outstanding, but this five-episode run from Road to Friendship to Sounds is the best of the series. All five are nothing short of excellent and among the best of the series.

  15. Sunset Shimmer's finest moment. 119763403_madsunset.thumb.png.d3eb47aca24e8180477adf62ca072e48.png

  16. Just finished having homemade chicken casserole left over from yesterday. Two hearty chicken thighs baked on top of a bed of sweet potatoes, mushrooms, parsnips, and sweet yellow onions. As quinoa sits on the side, a sweet and sour pan sauce with a hint of salty and homemade spicy relish are drizzled on top. Yummy! :D

  17. "Predictability" was a criticism I dished out then for FIM, and over time, I came to realize that more often than not, the "predictability" criticism makes no sense. Most of their episode endings are pretty much out there for the audience to see, and you can figure them out usually by the ending of the open or the synopsis. The predictable resolution's by design. What creates the interest is the journey; we as an audience are usually interested in seeing what the characters do to reach Point B, and DHX takes advantage.

    MDW's one of the only episodes to accurately call its predictability a flaw. The episode uses the Rule of Thirds in every action scene or event, resulting in a repetitive story that instead behaves like a checklist.

  18. I get the impression that people don't like that upcoming Spike episode, but as someone who really likes season 2's "Dragon Quest" and generally likes Spike episodes more than most people, I really am looking forward to it. 

  19. And I have the confidence to give School Raze the grade it deserves.

    1. A Rockhoof and a Hard Place: A+
    2. The Break Up Break Down: A+
    3. The Hearth's Warming Club: A
    4. On the Road to Friendship: A
    5. The Washouts: A
    6. The Mean 6: A
    7. Surf and/or Turf: A
    8. Grannies Gone Wild: A
    9. Sounds of Silence: A-
    10. Horse Play: A-
    11. Molt Down: A-
    12. What Lies Beneath: A-
    13. Friendship University: B+
    14. Marks for Effort: B+
    15. The Parent Map: B+
    16. The End in Friend: B
    17. School Raze: B
    18. School Daze: B-
    19. Yakity-Sax: B-
    20. Father Knows Beast: B-
    21. The Maud Couple: C+
    22. A Matter of Principals: C-
    23. Non-Compete Clause: D-
    24. Fake It 'Til You Make It: F

    For some brief comments why:

    Spoiler

    This is To Where and Back Again done much better, including utilizing secondary characters and the RM7 in ways that make sense and feel earned, and Cozy's plan's much stronger. But the episode underutilized the CMCs and could've provided more polish in Cozy's plan, plot, and dialogue. I still love it, but it's in the middle of the road, as far as finales go.

    And its placement on The Order? #75.

    Other than The Maud Couple, I'm fairly satisfied with what I got.

    So, is it better than 7? Yes. Despite the final two episodes not being as good as the previous five, S8 had an amazing run. While anywhere from three to five episodes per season usually get A's or higher, S8 had eight, and Rockhoof knocked Party of One out of my top-ten after being there since I started becoming an analyst/reviewer in the brony fandom in 2012. Fake It may be the worst, but NCC is my least-favorite of the season. That said, FITYMI and NCC are nowhere close to the rot of Hard to Say Anything, MDW, Rainbow Falls, or F&M, which says a lot about S8's strong consistency. May Season 9 keep forward its momentum. :D

    And so, to conclude this status, here's my order of seasons again:

    1. Season 5
    2. Season 8
    3. Season 7
    4. Season 2
    5. Season 1
    6. Season 4
    7. Season 3
    8. Season 6
  20. Suddenly, my reactions are all Rarity. 

  21. And now that Sounds of Silence aired in English, time for updated grades!

    1. A Rockhoof and a Hard Place: A+
    2. The Break Up Break Down: A+
    3. The Hearth's Warming Club: A
    4. On the Road to Friendship: A
    5. The Washouts: A
    6. The Mean 6: A
    7. Surf and/or Turf: A
    8. Grannies Gone Wild: A
    9. Sounds of Silence: A-
    10. Horse Play: A-
    11. Molt Down: A-
    12. What Lies Beneath: A-
    13. Friendship University: B+
    14. Marks for Effort: B+
    15. The Parent Map: B+
    16. The End in Friend: B
    17. School Daze: B-
    18. Yakity-Sax: B-
    19. The Maud Couple: C+
    20. A Matter of Principals: C-
    21. Non-Compete Clause: D-
    22. Fake It 'Til You Make It: F

    And it takes over #35 on my list. :D

  22. It's really difficult not to underestimate the major undertaking Dubuc (in her FIM debut) and Haber took to writing Shadow Play. It had virtually everything going against it: pacing, a ginormous character cast, a large intertwining of plotlines dating back to the pilot, characterization as a whole, and Hasbro's toyetic plugs/influences in its franchises. But with all the decks stacked, they're somehow able to create an episode so cohesive, creative, balanced, and character-driven that other finales and the movie dreamed of making.

    Twilight's Kingdom: Celestia, Luna, and Cadance were completely incompetent in defending against Tirek, and their reason for letting Twilight borrow their magic's some of the dumbest logic I've seen in the show's history.

    A Canterlot Wedding: retreads some of the same scenes from Lesson Zero, has an incompetent villain, and flabbergasting scripting of nobody suspecting SA was hypnotized despite its blatant visibility.

    The Film: More than twice SP's length, yet really struggles with the pacing, and characterization of the cast minus Twi, Pinkie, Tempest, and Capper.

    Shadow Play has none of these issues. Dialogue's some of the tightest of the show, an improvement that continues today. Comedy really well done, including the snark. Worldbuilding and lore remains maybe the best of the series. Characterization's incredibly balanced. A great deal of effort was put into the story as a whole, including its usage of Ponehenge (a reference to Stonehenge). I don't know if they looked this up, but Stonehenge is believed to be an ancient burial ground, so its makes sense for the Pillars to disappear with Stygian, as though it's their final resting place. But specific areas earn their serious due, too.

    1. The villain's backstory remains the best of the series. Previously, each villain has some flaw that holds it back. Starlight's plausible yet abbreviated, yet has some of the best characterization. NMM's great, but she's a stock villain. The Pony of Shadows and Stygian's backstory starts out with great detail, but Haber and Dubuc wouldn't stop there. With each passing scene, the PoS's backstory becomes richer and richer.
    2. The Cutie Map's involvement is still the show's best plot twist, but it also makes so much sense. Coming into that moment, the Pillar Six and Bearers pieced so much lore related to the map and castle — started out as a seed infused with each of their biggest virtues, each of them grew into the Elements of Harmony today. Harmony gives that Tree omniscience, an ability to see things no one else could, all started by the Pillars eons ago. When it looked like the story was going to go one direction, it swerved; the Map's involvement led to this next point.
    3. Starlight's inclusion is earned. Unlike S6, she belongs in both the show and the ReManing cast, all thanks to really improved writing and editing of her. Everything she did throughout S7, big and small, culminated to this very moment. The map's involvement added an extra layer into the conflict, and Starlight was a piece of it. While everyone justifiably looked for a quick fix before the PoS regained power, she looked for a real fix: the cause of their friendship, divide, and his villainy.

      Neither Haber nor Dubuc mirrored her backstory with Stygian's by accident; despite not meeting him, she saw herself in him. As an ex-villain, she understands the villainy mind better than anyone else. Star Swirl's brisk bitterness towards him cuts deeply into her, because much Star Swirl's historic teachings modeled Twilight's life and her empathy for Stygian.
    4. This two-parter was never a stock good/evil affair. Some wondered why everyone took the stakes so seriously when we saw little of his power and criticized the episode for it. That's the point. Shadow Play was never about how to defeat an ultimate evil at his highest, but properly infuse the Magic of Friendship to reunite the Pillars with Stygian before history repeats itself. The PoS bid his time, but our heroes caught breaks as he couldn't find any hideout to regenerate. This gave them, and us as an audience, time to gauge the conflict and look at every lens without cramming the story.

      This tactic allowed both Haber and Dubuc to co-write a story with a trope used for most of 7B: "both sides have a point," this the ultimate use. Stygian, the Pillars/RM7/Sunburst, and Starlight all had separate views, and the episode spent a great deal of time validating them. Even more impressively, SP sympathized Stygian/PoS with barely any screentime until the climax.
    5. It brings up an important point about the Elements of Harmony. Until this episode, FIM normally used harmonious magic to defeat, hurt, or banish evil. Starlight, not an Element, rightfully took it personally, because they weren't using the Elements to create harmony, but force it. She believed they could be used for a better purpose other than banishing a personal foe, one they were previously in great terms with.

      Just as Twilight was ready to push him back to Limbo, she saw Stygian struggle to break free from him (and the bitterness in his heart), and she stopped her own spell to confront him and treat him as an equal. When Stygian explained his wish to work with the Pillars in battle, everything SP built up was put together. The Pillars were wrong, but so was Stygian, yet no one looked dumb because of it.

      Why did Star Swirl not understand friendship so well and not take it so seriously? Because he and the others lived in a very tumultuous era of Equestria and the Realm as a whole. As the Pillars' magic grew in their absence, so did the light of the Realm; it took a life of its own to maintain peace. This episode was a lesson to him, as well as the other Pillars, about how powerful the Magic of Friendship truly is.

    Shadow Play still holds up beautifully, yet is a little bit better than before. Not only is it still the best two-parter of the show, but also one of the five best overall, as well.

  23. A spoiler comment for Father Knows Beast:

    Spoiler

    So far, two weaknesses I came across for FKB is some of the dialogue is a bit repetitive and the pacing's a little uneven. All the characters matter, but Sludge's outing feels a little sudden, despite well-done buildup, because Spike's doubt only appeared halfway into Act 3.

    This is preliminary, but I'm currently giving it a B+/A-. That may change, depending on Sludge's characterization in the English version.

     

  24. MAJOR Father Knows Beast spoilers!! Don't click if you wanna be spoiled!!

    Spoiler

    Sludge — the dragon who lied about being Spike's dad — is one of the most detestable characters of the series, and for the right reasons. IMO, Svengallop looks like a saint compared to this scumbag.

     

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