Home Artists Posts Import Register
Patreon importer is back online! Tell your friends ✅

Downloads

Content

Mystery at the Lighthouse

THIS IS NOT A PAID POST

Shudo's strengths and weaknesses on full display here. Clumsy writing but the sense of wonder is just unmatched. Plus Krabby!

Files

Comments

Verdant Range

One thing that drove me nuts about this episode is the show brought up a new feature for the Pokédex, but then never use it ever. They have a whole bit about how Ash could use the Pokédex to swap his Pokémon, but they proceed to never use it, instead just calling Professor Oak to transfer them. I get that by calling Oak, it makes it more like th games at the time, but that just raises the question of why introduce it at all. Ash has Pokémon Box Link, but never used it!

Death of Ink

Ah, this is one of those episodes that stuck with me nostalgically for so long!

DisgruntledFilament

Episodes such as these are a fascinating example of Shudo's unique approach to the show's; relative to the highly-efficient mechanics that his successors would often comprise (well, Tomioka at least), Shudo strikes me as a kind of mad scientist stylistically, frequently prioritizing the collision of high-concept ideas against existing cinematic genres (particularly their tonal qualities) with such fervent energy that you sense his simultaneous weakness of chasing that sweet alchemical synthesis (Dragonite's core concept and design suggest elusive serenity more than the more classically-imposing Charizard, hence an ominous (yet not horrific or macabre) fantasy mystery/thriller set in a remote location overlooking and clarifying enigmas (ie: a lighthouse) is a feasible narrative texture in which to focalize it) at the expense of narrative cohesion and pacing. Nonetheless, Shudo's episodes (even following his demotion in Johto) often feel uniquely textured and cinematic relative to the show's later sagas: they're not foremostly components in a serialized chain of events designed to progress given arcs in a satisfactory way (not to say that they contain "no" continuity though, given the exceptionality of 'Go West, Young Meowth'), they're designed as "experiences" intending to draw the viewer into a series of arresting images and (however clunkily-conceived) thematic arguments.

Anonymous

Mew is actually a Mythical and the best one