Tumgik
#some could call xiao se cool.
potahun · 11 months
Text
im watching blood of youth and have made it to ep 6 so far, and it is starting to grow on me after episode 5. however, since i've seen a few comparisons between the two which have led to my watching it, i would not say it has a similar vibe to mysterious lotus casebook, so i would not recommend watching one because you like the other and hope to find something similar.
to clarify, the vibe i get so far from BoY is very similar to a shounen . it has the young teenage protagonists on a grand mission, the companions coming to each other's aid, it has the fighting spirit, the leveling up (even the training sequences with hype music!) Possibly, it is also more of a traditional wuxia (but experts pls weigh in on this) because there is a much greater focus on fighting and overcoming adversities in a martial arts context. i understand there is a great political intrigue coming up at the end, so maybe things will change. for now, i see a lot about martial arts with impressive visuals, youths choosing their paths regardless of the previous generations' choices (a theme i like!) and about growth and breaking out of the shell in general
mysterious lotus casebook leans strongly towards murder-mystery and intrigues. it also deals a lot less with the passion of youth as a theme. the protagonists are older (li lianhua and di feisheng should be in their early thirties, fang duobing is likely around 20, but it's not specified). the mood varies wildly, but it's sometimes a soft ghibli and sometimes an eerie ghost story... it deals with accepting the fragility of human life, haunting/escaping the narrative, closure, death and rebirth, being queer (yeah, i'm saying this), mirror sides of human bonds and their sometimes coincidental, brittle but precious nature... despite impressive fight sequences, leveling up in martial arts really falls to the far background. much of the heart of the story is li xiangyi being given a chance to make his goodbyes to the jiang hu, but also living again as li lianhua.
also, a point that seems minor, but can lead to very different feels: the visuals of both shows are different. mysterious lotus casebook is soft colors and low contrast. it's crisp fights, but barely any magical attacks and few effects. it makes up for the lack of special effects with agile and artistic camera work, and smart use of speed, as well as elegance in the choreography. blood of youth uses more highly saturated colors. the visuals are aimed at impressing. the cgi is very decent, and can lead to a pleasant image on their own, but sharp moves are also used. i think if you come out of BoY and head into MLC expecting the same level of visual shock, you might come out thinking MLC has less impressive fights. or on the contrary, if you are not into cgi at all, you might head into BoY and think it's overkill.
not saying that you can't enjoy both! i adore MLC to death, but i enjoy a good shounen and i am starting to enjoy BoY. so far, i feel like they've told very well what they set out to tell, but i would not pit the two against each other in an objective manner. they feel like apples and pears to me, despite some jokes feeling similar (xiao se being a miser, li lianhua being an iron rooster, wu xin's bad cooking, li lianhua's bad cooking etc) the atmosphere of the two shows have extremely different vibes to me. MLC feels like blossoms falling softly on grass and waterfalls, BoY (so far) feels like setting off firecrackers and a storm on the rise. they are love letters to different aspects of the jiang hu. if you want to tackle both, please don't expect the same thing out of the two
30 notes · View notes
starlitnightdream · 1 month
Text
dashing youth ending thoughts
already screamed about everything in posts lol but a few lines concise for anyone who cares to read lol thank you for being with me for these rants lol
Baili Dongjun: best character throughout the drama sweetheart. was an amazing friend. did what he thought was right and made his own path. 10/10. I need all the deleted scenes though😭apparently some cool scenes of him were deleted (beating up ruojin for one)
Ye Yun: Baili dongjun never gave up on him but he gave up on himself. He was a very nice kind dude who fell in love with a villain basically. 0/10 for his feelings towards wenjun? What's there to like? 10/10 for his brotherhood with baili dongjun
Nangong Chunshui: loved this guy lol quite sad to know he gave up on his immortality lol but he found a girl too who definitely better than wenjun so he definitely got his happy ending. Love a character who is strong and enjoys life lmao.
Xiao ruofeng: nice guy but mistakes were made and all of them were because of his brother. He could have literally stopped that entire ending sigh.
Random thoughts about li hanyi: why was she a hater lmao at the end poor ye dingzhi she so.. Grumpy cold? Rip. Love that the others were not actually trying to kill him.
Luo qingyang: pathetic lmao he wasted his life on yi wenjun and even in blood of youth best scene was xiao se shouting at him lmao still remember that scene was pathetic the way he called baili dongjun when baili dongjun just said the truth about wenjun
Lei Mengsha: nice funny guy but felt bad for hun at his home why his wife out there abusing him and his kid happily watching (li hanyi messed up character tbh) did not like her in dashing youth lol
Ending scenes: honestly why were they all blaming ye dingzhi for what happened like uh blame yi wenjun and xiao ruojin too? But everyone out there for poor ye dingzhi's life only.
These are just a few characters and thoughts lmao it's too much if I write all lol
9 notes · View notes
onemuseleft · 4 years
Note
Okay, okay, but. BUT. can we also get Zhao Yunlan/Shen Wei Blind Date AU?
Okay but: (this got way out of control, sorry)
So Shen Wei doesn’t exactly socialize with his coworkers, per se, but he does attend department meetings and he’s on a couple of committees and there are events meant to foster teamwork and comaraderie. Shen Wei attends exactly as many as he needs to in order to maintain his cover as an awkward but harmless introvert who has few interests outside his research. It’s more than he’d like. 
Anyway, there’s Professor Jiang Yue in the History Department. She’s brilliant, well-respected, and knows more about the history of Dragon City than anyone else in Haixing. She’s one of the few people who doesn’t think his research is entirely hypothetical and often likes to pop by and discuss something she’d recently translated that supports his theories that there may have been “mutants” in history. She’s also terrifyingly outgoing, finds Shen Wei’s deliberate stubborness and not-so-deliberate awkwardness endearing, and has decided he needs a wife. 
Or a husband. She’s open-minded.
Jiang Yue tries to hook him up with two grad students from her department (he declines for ethical reasons, even though they don’t work for him, which he suspects was a test), a young professor from the Literature department, her sister-in-law and a young woman she met at the market. 
This all occurs over a period of about ten days.
In semi-desperation Shen Wei tells her he’s not interested in women, which she takes to mean he is interested in men, but which Shen Wei had meant to mean he wasn’t interested in anyone.
Look, he’s never been good at this sort of conversation, all right? No one’s ever tried to fix him up before. 
Once she’s narrowed down the list of applicants to available young men, Jiang Yue appears to get a little more discerning. At the very least she spaces them out a little further.
(”Men are harder to come by,” she tells him much, much later. “You have to be more discerning. Also I had a bitch of a time pinning down your type.”)
She did, in fact, pin down his type, he just didn’t know it at the time.
Jiang Yue’s new husband is a police officer.
“I met someone at a fundraiser last night,” she says. “He’s very handsome, but the downside is that he knows it. Cleans up quite nice, but he mentioned he had a motorcycle so clearly he’s not afraid of a little excitement. And he had lips that I would have attached myself to were I not a happily married woman.” 
Shen Wei had ducked his head and smiled and agreed that sounded very nice, but he wasn’t interested.
Kunlun’s face had lingered in his mind’s eye; dark, knowing eyes and pink, plump lips that would press against Shen Wei’s own until he could lose himself in their kiss. He’d made up an excuse to leave early and spent the rest of the night unable to ground himself in the present. He’d given up, eventually, let himself fall into the memories in a way he usually won’t allow. He closes his eyes and remembers the way Kunlun would run his tongue over his lower lip when he was thinking about something, the way his lips would be pink and swollen from Shen Wei’s kisses, the way his mouth moved when he called Shen Wei baobei and Xiao Wei. (The way those lips looked wrapped around Shen Wei’s cock, eyes gazing up at him with a wicked glint in them as he made Shen Wei shudder and come apart beneath him). The way they felt in the dry mountain air, soft and just a little chapped as Kunlun brushed them over Shen Wei’s temple - the last kiss before the Hallows separated them for a hundred lifetimes.
He’s a little more brusque than he really needs to be the next time she mentions a potential date but he can’t bring himself to regret it.
There is a brief cooling-off period in which Shen Wei thinks he has communicated his lack of romantic interests quite clearly and she has decided to respect that and back off. 
He hasn’t communicated shit, it turns out she just thinks he’s not quite over an ex and is giving him some room to breathe. She’s right, of course.
“We’re having a little dinner party,” Jiang Yue says one day while they’re allegedly meeting for the efficiency committe, but really everyone is just gossiping about some rumors that the Chancellor is going to make them start submitting online lesson plans. Shen Wei wants to be outraged but he doesn’t even know how that would work. He makes a mental note to ask Li Qian. “We just bought our new house and we’re having some friends over. You should come!”
He’s flattered for half a second and then remembers who he’s dealing with. “Who are you trying to fix me up with?”
It’s the same cop. Apparently he’s friends with her husband even though they don’t work in the same department anymore. “He got promoted a couple years ago, but they still talk and hang out sometimes. He was at the wedding, apparently, but I was so nervous I don’t remember anything but staring into my husband’s eyes.” She smiled a little dreamily, then added, “That and my mother-in-law getting drunk and passing out in the photographer’s lap.”
He does not go to dinner.
She mentions a young man from the bookstore, and spends a few days dropping hints about Professor Chan in the archaeology department (he has a boyfriend, Shen Wei’s met him) before the cop comes up again.
She’s never been this persistent, usually taking his refusals as a challenge to do better next time. Shen Wei is wavering. If he says yes and it’s awful then maybe she’ll stop.
And it will be awful. Shen Wei feels faithless even contemplating it.
“He’s a department chief,” Jiang Yue says in a tempting voice one afternoon toward the end of the semester. “Apparently the youngest ever. He took down a bunch of Triad bosses a few years ago and saved a bunch of people’s lives and now he’s, like, the second most powerful person in the DCPD.”
That jiggles something at the back of Shen Wei’s mind. “What’s his name?” he asks. It’s been several years since he worked with the SID, and he never had any close associates with the main DCPD but something about what she’s saying rings a distant bell.
“His name is Zhao Yunlan,” she says, excited that he’s shown some sort of interest. “I told him about you and he said I could give you his number if you were interested-”
“Absolutely not,” Shen Wei says in a dull roar.
He spends five minutes apologizing and then pretends to have a headache that he can blame his rudeness on.
Jiang Yue lets the whole thing drop after that, not just her attempts to fix him up with Zhao Yunlan, but the match-making in general. 
He feels bad about not feeling bad about it.
Everything goes back to normal though, aside from the matchmaking, so he’s reasonable certain she isn’t upset with him.
And then a few months go by and she mentions her husband is coming to pick her up for dinner. It’s getting late and it’s fairly dark out, even with the streetlights, so he offers to walk with her. Jiang Li is waiting for them on the sidewalk and he gives his wife a quick kiss, and holds his hand out to Shen Wei. “Professor! It’s been a long time. How are you?”
Shen Wei’s not great at chit-chat, but he taks Jiang Li’s hand and says something.
He’ll never remember what, because at that moment he happened to look over Jiang Li’s shoulder, and saw Kunlun.
Kunlun.
He can’t move, he can’t think, he can barely breathe. His eyes are locked onto the man leaning against the Jiangs’ car and he can’t tear them away. He’s positive if he looks away, Kunlun will vanish like a soap bubble, or turn into another person entirely
It has to be someone else. A trick of the light, his mind playing games with him. A similarity, a distant descendant whose blood ran true, a coincidence.
He stares until his eyes burn, but Kunlun remains.
He’s as beautiful as Shen Wei remembers.
Kunlun is dressed in modern clothes: heavy black leather boots, tight fitting denim pants that do nothing to disguise his lean calves and muscular thighs. He’s wearing a grey shirt beneath a black leather motorcycle jacket. His hair is short, in the modern fashion, brushed forward so it almost falls over his eyes, and his beard is little more than scruff, a carefully groomed five o’clock shadow.
He’s sucking on a candy, the same kind he gave Shen Wei that first night. The same candy that belonged to the scrap of paper Shen Wei carried in the pendant over his heart.
He’s too far away for Shen Wei to see his eyes. 
And then Kunlun looks up at him.
And smiles politely, with no sign of recognition.
And looks back down at his phone.
The Jiangs leave but not before Jiang Yue leans in and whispers “I told you he was gorgeous, didn’t I?” and laughs in a friendly way at his stunned expression.
After they leave, Shen Wei stands there, watching the car vanish from sight, Kunlun, his Kunlun, vanishing with it, gone as soon as he was found again.
His Kunlun, who is, apparently, Zhao Yunlan, the son of a monster. Somehow. Reincarnation, or - the lollipops, the gun, baobei. Shen Wei has long entertained the idea that Kunlun had been familiar with the modern day, possibly a time traveler - the Hallows were near-infinite in their power, when used properly and combined. Perhaps Kunlan had always been Zhao Yunlan. Perhaps he looked at Shen Wei with eyes devoid of recognition because… Because this was the man who would become Kunlun, but wasn’t yet the man Shen Wei loved.
“Fuck,” Shen Wei said, softly but with great feeling, and went to send Jiang Yue an email asking her for that date after all.
114 notes · View notes
isangstyfluffathing · 6 years
Text
Character Analysis: Lü Meng
Tumblr media
Koei seems to be making an effort to make him a little less bland. I commend them for that.
Okay, so I know Lü Meng has always been boring in the games.  I know.  But I love historical Lü Meng so much I couldn’t help but want to play his story.
Appearance:
The perfect mix of strategist and warrior, with armored and robe pieces.  Whoever made the decision to let his hair down in 6 is my hero.  There’s nothing to say, except I would sell my soul for Lü Meng. He’s beautiful.
Tumblr media
Weapon:
Lü Meng is one of those lucky guys with a consistent weapon since pretty much the beginning.  It’s a simple, but effective weapon.  Lü Meng isn’t one for sparkles and flair, it’s much easier to stab someone and move on, he’s got better things to do.  But he also has a really cool spin/juggling move in 9 that he shares with Huang Yueying. 
It’s nothing special or fancy, but it doesn’t have to be.  A guy in armor rushing at you with a large sharp blade is scary enough.
Also he killed Guan Yu (In the Wu route, Xiahou Dun kills Guan Yu in the Wei route) and that was cool looking.  Even if you like Guan Yu, you have to admit Lü Meng was cool.
Personality:
I had some trouble discerning his personality, in actuality.  I genuinely enjoyed every bit of Lü Meng in his story, and yet, by the end of it, I couldn’t pick out any defining traits.  Is this a bad thing?  Well, let’s look at some examples.
Huang Zhong has a very defining, singular trait of old.  It’s not well written and it’s really boring.  On the other hand, Dian Wei has the defining traits of loyalty, strength, and bravery.  He’s a simple, but good character.
Defining traits aren’t necessary for characters, but every single person has some sort of personality of some sort, and I had trouble identifying Lü Meng.  But I shall try.
Lü Meng is definitely a bit of a stickler for rules/orders.  Not as nuts as Yu Jin about it (But no one is as nuts as Yu Jin about rules) but Lu Meng’s introduction involves him yelling at the Wu recruits for not bowing to Sun Quan when he arrived.  He doesn’t threaten to execute them though, so that’s a good step.
He doesn’t hesitate to follow through with plans and expects his subordinates to follow his instructions, but is also open for criticism.  He’s not very good at dealing with chaos, such as when Qiao Xiao decides to follow Zhou Yu onto the battlefield and Lü Meng has to chase after her, or most of Ling Tong and Gan Ning’s bickering. 
Still,  Lü Meng is a level-headed, intelligent man with good intentions and methods. He works to keep peace between his own fellow warriors (see: Gan Ning and Ling Tong) and is working to build peace in the land with the help of Lu Su and Lu Xun.  I wouldn’t call Lü Meng entertaining or particularly interesting, but he doesn’t have to be.  He’s still a solid, likable character.
Also Koei has been putting him in leadership positions that give him spotlight (Especially at Fan Castle and the like, of course), and I am quite happy. 
Interactions with other characters:
Lü Meng has a wide variety of interactions, which pleases me.  The majority of his dialogue falls to Gan Ning, Ling Tong, Lu Su, Lu Xun, and Sun Quan.
Gan Ning and Ling Tong are pretty much never seen without each other, because for some reason their character arcs revolve solely around each other (And Lü Meng I guess).  As a result, when Lü Meng talks to one, he’s talking to the other.  He spends most of his time with them as a neutral party, trying to keep peace between their constant hostility to each other and being pleased when they can work together. They also have a habit of calling him “old man”. Lü Meng is not pleased by this.  Because he is not old.  It brings a bit of amusement in his interactions, if that’s what you’re looking for. And despite their teasing and badgering of each other and Lü Meng, it’s kind of sweet to see how they get so concerned when Lü Meng is giving them a final speech as he’s dying.  They’ve gotten attached to him- And I could see it as an amusing father-sons dynamic.
Lu Su, Lu Xun, and Lü Meng share a common goal: Bringing peace to the land by serving Sun Quan.  Their talks are mostly serious (Though to be fair, they are serious people), and there’s no fun per se in them, but there’s a nice teacher-student dynamic.  Lu Su has Lü Meng as an underling,  Lü Meng has Lu Xun as an underling.  Just like Lu Su before him,  Lü Meng doesn’t want his student telling anyone he’s sick.  Lu Su and Lü Meng are quite alike.  I really like the whole parallel thing between the three of them.
To my surprise,  Lü Meng’s final cutscene didn’t feature Gan Ning and Ling Tong like I expected, but Sun Quan.  Now, Sun Quan And Lu Meng do talk, quite a bit, but it’s a simple leader-subordinate relationship.  I never really thought of them to be friends, but I was just an oblivious nut.  Lü Meng is pushing himself too hard to help Sun Quan succeed, to unite the land and bring peace.  Sun Quan just wants Lu Meng to succeed, but to not overdo it and be careful.  I get the feeling that Sun Quan would like to be closer friends with Lü Meng but is unable because they’re both so busy.  Despite this, Sun Quan seems to genuinely care for Lü Meng and it’s clear that in his ending, Lü Meng doesn’t want to die, he wants to help Sun Quan achieve his dreams.  
How this character could be improved:
Actually, I’m kind of at a loss here.
Lü Meng is not a perfect character.  I can’t just say “nope, he’s cool” like I did for Zhang Chunhua and Liu Shan.  But I don’t have a laundry list of improvements like for Bao Sanniang and Cai Yan.  
Lü Meng is just... average.  He’s good, but not great.  The thing is, I can’t quite place why.  Maybe it’s the fact that his friendships are harder to see?  Maybe it’s his more subdued personality with less defining traits?  His design is awesome, his weapon is great, but there’s just something... missing.
I guess it’s because we don’t know much about him in the game. What are his dreams, besides bringing peace?  Who does he care for or love?  Why did he choose to serve Sun Quan?  He’s a badass and I love that, but who is he?
Hmmm. 
Oh yeah, and his whole “I decided to pick up studying while fighting and become a double badass” thing is mentioned like, once.
22 notes · View notes
furederiko · 7 years
Photo
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
Countdown Counter: 11. Kyuranger 38 is a martial art fan-service fest! And a story of a Commander and his hesitation regarding his chain of command...
- The downside of having a large team is that every now and then, several members would be eclipsed by the others. Such is the case for Commander Xiao who unfortunately happens to be NOT Red, thus his leadership is being overshadowed by both Reds. Tsurugi is calling the shots to the operation, and Lucky gets to lead one Away Team. Xiao (and his rigged Kyulette) is definitely ignored! - There are some neat little things in the opening scene. Though it's disappointing that all of them are seemingly male, we get to see the 4 Barrier-breaking Sages in Tsurugi's story. I don't know about you, but I would love to see more of the 88 Warriors of the past, like these guys and also Kuervo whom we'll see more in the episode. And then there's that bit with Lucky taking off his new white royalty coat, and exchanges it with the usual Rebellion jacket. He might be a King he says, but when he heads out for mission, he's a regular Kyuranger like everyone else. No special treatment. Nice excus... I mean attention to details! - The team is split in two as they head towards different directions. Tsurugi, Garu, Naga, Hammy, Raptor, and a slumped Xiao head to the Yin-Yang landscape of Planet Atchaalk in the Cepheus System, while Lucky and the others depart to play video game Planet Ghem in the Perseus System. The latter team immediately runs into a newly upgraded Mecha-Madako. She's now the Menaster of the system and is exclusively tasked to stop their mission. Hmmm... first Akyanba, now Madako, Toku designers sure are obsessed with mechanical boobs, huh? - Team Tsurugi arrives at the Kyulin Temple. In the past, Tsurugi and Kuervo had to overcome the Nine Trials of Cepheus before they could gain the trust and assistance of its warrior. This time around, the Kyurangers need to defeat Menaster Deathgong, if they ever want to move ahead to locate the Constellation's power. Let the trials begin!!! Fun fact: Setting for Kyulin Temple is a commonly used Chinese-themed location in Tokusatsu. In Super Sentai alone, it has been used plenty of times, most notably in the wushu-themed "Engine Sentai Go-onger vs Juuken Sentai Gekiranger". Then again, I think pretty much every scenes involving Gekiranger's Rin JuuKen practitioners were filmed here! As for the 'Trials', it's obviously just another playful use of the number 9, and doesn't have anything to do with mythology. In the Greek stories, it's Herakles who had to undergo 12 Labors, and none of those was even related to King Cepheus. Sure, the demi-God hero DO know of a King by the same name, but he's a completely different person unrelated to this Constellation. - 1st Trial - 'Hellish Chamber'. The team needs to defeat 99 Indavers in just one minute. Phoenix Soldier takes care of this in a zippy, by Phoenix End-ing more than 1/3 of the army. Gotta love Garu's reaction to being outmatched by Hammy. LOL. Draco Commander's back gets in the way, so he only gets 5 Indavers. Ouch! Tsurugi tells Xiao to don't mind that, because Kuervo also scored the same number back then. Team encounters the first crossroads, so they pair up and split into three groups to take on challenges in separate paths. - 2nd Trial - 'Muscle Building Chamber'. Basically, they need to perform 9999 sit-ups. Tsurugi gets to deliver another sweaty shirtless fan-service scene, while Raptor... cheers. Yep, lately the extra member seems to be in charge of shirtless fan-service spree, and Tsurugi firmly joins Zyuohger's Misao and ToQger's Akira in this category. To be honest, what he's doing is a little cheating, because a proper sit-up requires to lean a liiiitle bit lower. This is more in the line of abs-crunching. But I guess there's no definite rule for this trial, and it's still a demanding task nonetheless. Hold on... I wonder why Raptor doesn't take this challenge instead? She's an android, so doing repetitions like this shouldn't be 'exhausting' for her, right? - 3rd Trial - 'Kitchen Chamber'. Hammy and Garu are tasked for a cook-off and impress the Indaver-judges. This one is another cheat, because they immediately contact Spada for clue despite being star systems away. Hammy whips up the Pisces Kyu Globe, and the two serves... fresh SUSHI to win the trial. For the record, making Sushi isn't as 'easy' as this episode suggests. But it's reasonably quick, and can be done by people with limited cooking skill and utensil knowledge. So uhm... you get the point. LOL. - 4th Trial - 'Game Chamber'. Red Light, Green Light. I'm personally not familiar with this game (we don't actually play it in my country... but I'm an introvert, so who am I to say XD), but once again, the team has an upper hand in Naga's ability. Xiao and his weak back might not be up for this posing game, but that's not a problem for Naga's freeze glare. - 5th Trial - 'Dance Chamber'. The title says it all, as the team unites for a quick rock n' roll... I mean Kyulette the Chance 'Just Dance' session. Daang, I wish this scene is muuuch longer. Seriously producers, we need a Kyuranger Musical!!! - 6th Trial - 'Resilience Chamber'. Hammy partners up with Raptor for... a nice hot spring bathhouse challenge! Yep, we finally get the ladies moment, and it's totally fan-service. Aaaawwww.... *v*. But really, I wish this scene plays out muuuuuch longer too. Not because I'm pervy or anything, but because we rarely see the female members in this show hug... I mean hang around casually like this. I could be mistaken or anything, but we haven't had that annual girl-power trope episode so far, have we? By the way, I'm surprised that Raptor can endure this challenge without getting... rusty. Oh well, carry on! - 7th Trial - 'Funny Face Chamber'. Garu and Naga engage in a staring fight against the Indavers, a challenge that even yours truly would lose pretty instantly. It's a nice callback to the fact that neither of them knew the Indavers are wearing masks! Naga is hilarious, and it's even moreso because he doesn't realize it. LOL. - 8th Trial - 'Shooting Chamber'. Tsurugi steals Xiao's thunder all over again, by blasting all the targets away... with his SHIELD-BLADE. I did NOT know his armaments can do that. Even Deathgong sees Tsurugi as the only major threat of this group, a premature assumption that would backfire very harshly. - Before they head to the last one, Xiao and Tsurugi have a sweet heart to heart moment that pretty much serves as the highlight of this episode (at least for me). Ignoring how or where Tsurugi can even obtain those canned coffee, it's a surprisingly stark metaphor to real life situation. In all honesty, Xiao is like an old man whom his family slowly ignores the more they grow up, while Tsurugi is that hip trendy outsider who just recently becomes a new addition to the pack. This sweet intimate moment gives Xiao a chance to reflect on his limitations, but also allows Tsurugi to prove his kindness and wisdom. "You assembled the brightest stars in the universe into a single team", he praises. To which he also reminds Xiao that the Commander has his own way of handling thing. As in, everyone has their own role and place in the world. That's a strong message right there! - 9th Trial - ''Infighting Chamber'. Expecting a Jark Matter MotW to play fair and square would be a fever dream. Deathgong has captured Garu, Naga, Hammy, and Raptor as soon as they completed their challenges, and now pits them against the Cold-Sleep Duo. This is where the Menaster learns that underestimating Xiao becomes his fatal error. True to his words, Xiao knows each and every Kyuranger thoroughly (most of them at least... am I right, Naga?). It doesn't take long for him to realize that the seemingly-controlled Kyurangers attacking them are nothing but FAKES. This is how he's be superior than Tsurugi, because he has the power of perceptive! Aside from spending more time with the team to know that their reaction feels off, of course. LOL. - Freed from Deathgong's clutches through Xiao's signature sleazy trick, the four Kyurangers get to perform wushu-style attacks against the Indavers! Aquila Pink uses #81 Grus, Chamaeleon Green uses #85 Lynx, Ophiucus Silver uses #65 Hydrus, and Lupus Blue gets to shuffle (to genuine hilarious effect) both #52 Canis Majorand #66 Canis Minor Kyu Globe. Totally neat! Too bad Tsurugi doesn't get a part. He could've used the Bird of Paradise or Peacock constellations, if you ask me *grins*. - Draco Commander closes the curtain with a flashy end though. In a neat wushu-showdown serving as a cool homage to "Gosei Sentai Dairanger", Draco Commander utilizes his 'RyuKenpou' and blasts Deathgong to defeat with a Kameham... er, Dragon Ba... I mean, Energy Ball! - A fun trick is also utilized in the mecha battle. Ryutei-Oh has always been limited as a three-people robot. By borrowing Phoenix Voyager's rocket booster components (that form the hands of Kyutamajin), Draco Commander turns it into a FIVE-people combo. While benching out Phoenix Soldier on the ground as a cheerleader passive spectator. LOL. It's a nice change of pace that probably only toy collectors are aware of. I do hope we'll get to see this form more often, but that likely won't be the case and just a one-off thing. - On the other planet, Mecha-Madako uses a special controller to trigger Champ's malfunction. A not-so-mysterious person handed it to her earlier. Things are only starting to get serious there, but that will be our story for next week. On the bright side, the Kyulin Temple's Head Monk (at least, he looks like one?) is freed. As a token of gratitude, he grants the Constellation System's power to create the #54 Cepheus Kyu Globe. That means TWO down, and two more to go...
Overall: This episode was Goofy Fun! I'm a little disappointed, because I was expecting it to be 'crazier' and MORE comedic. But overall, it had truly fine fan-service heavy moments that once again, would've been even awesome had they played out a little bit longer. Garu and Naga were the MVPs, they stole the scenes and made me LOLed real hard. The warm interchange between Xiao and Tsurugi also worked in favor of elevating this rather hectic episode into a different level. Yep, this was a fantastic focus episode for Xiao, that smartfully harkened back to his early dilemma in the series. Being a hero is what Xiao had always wanted, so it's only natural that he started recognizing his own limitations and doubted if he's even right for the job. I think we can all safely say that this was a nice wrap to Xiao's personal arc. Next week: Fight on R.P.G. Knights, and reclaim your Champ!!!
Episode 38 Score: 7,8 out of 10
Visit THIS LINK to view a continuously updated listing of the Kyutama / Kyu Globes. Last Updated: November 22nd, 2017 - Version 3.06. (WARNING: It might contain spoilers for future episodes)
All images are screencaptured from the series, provided by the FanSubber Over-Time. "Uchu Sentai Kyuranger" is produced by TOEI, and airs every Sunday on TV-Asahi. Credits and copyrights belong to their respective owners.
9 notes · View notes