Every Stephen King Character In Castle Rock Seasons 1 & 2

castle rock cast season 1 episode 2

castle rock cast season 1 episode 2 - win

Every Character Ranked

So here is my ranking of every character in the show. I'm ranking by season, and then I put my all-season favorites down at the bottom. I'm not only ranking the characters here, but also their complete story and arc. If there's a character I love that just kind of didn't get a good ending, they will be low down. If a character appears in multiple seasons, like Lou or Wrench, I ranked them based on their time in that season. Also, this is really only main and supporting characters, so none of the hotel guests from East / West are gonna be here or any other character like that.

SEASON ONE- My opinion on the season one characters is that it had a handful of fantastic characters but the ensemble around them wasn't as memorable. Besides the main five, every other character was either a jerk or an idiot, and that was really it. There still were no bad characters, but I think 90% of this season's charm comes from Molly, Lester and Malvo.
  1. Lorne Malvo- Who else was it gonna be? Billy Bob Thornton delivers one of the greatest tv villains of the decade with this guy, and he makes him such a great character that you are rooting both for and against him at the same time. Fargo's biggest flaw is that they may never top this guy (but I think they did, which I'll explain a bit later down).
  2. Lester Nygaard- Lester's arc is one of the greatest falls of any tv character. In the first episode, he seems like a loser who got in WAY over his head who you just might still be able to root for, but as the show continues he slowly turns into a deeply disgusting individual. In the time jump, we even get to see him become a happy, successful insurance salesman, but the second Malvo re-enters his life he becomes the same, sad, smarmy villain that he was from the beginning. Probably the best of the show's guy-who-makes-a-big-mistake characters.
  3. Molly Solverson- The moral center of season one, Molly feels a little underdeveloped in the beginning of the show (for a while her only character trait was "let me do stuff, chief!!") but as the show progressed she became one of the coolest heroes of the show, as well as continuing Fargo's long tradition of powerful women that started with the movie and lives on today. My ONLY complaint is that she should have killed Malvo. She deserved it.
  4. Mr. Wrench & Mr. Numbers- While Wrench grew into his own character in later seasons, here they are one entity. Succeeding as the two coolest hitmen to ever be in a tv show, Wrench & Numbers have it all: the jokes, the style, the sign language, and that 11/10 drum solo / theme song that jumps up my heart rate every time it kicks in.
  5. Chief Bill Oswalt- I know that the Chief gets a lot of flack for being an annoying character, but I think he's actually one of the most real characters in Fargo. He's not the chief from season 3 who's actively trying to stop investigating for no reason. He's just a simple, nice guy who got in way over his head. His ending when he resigns is one of the saddest scenes in the whole show.
  6. Lou Solverson- Old Lou was good until he whipped out a shotgun and was ready to straight-up murder Malvo to protect Greta. Then he became awesome.
  7. Gus Grimly- Gus was alright. He had a nice story and he was just a sweet guy, but I feel like he never really had enough personality to match his fellow season one leads. I do like that he got to be a mailman, though. That was sweet.
  8. Greta Grimly- Greta was very obviously much cooler than her dad, but then she didn't get to anything for the whole show. PUT GRETA IN THE GAME, NOAH. I hope that season 5 will focus on an older her and continue the Solverson legacy.
  9. Stavros Milos- I liked Stavros. He was one of the only side characters that fell into both the jerk and the idiot templates. Unfortunately, his story went nowhere, and he had one of the most depressing endings for a character for no reason whatsoever. He wasn't that bad of a guy! He didn't deserve to think God was punishing him by killing his son!
  10. Don Chumph- Okay, look. Don was a funny idiot, but he felt like he came out of a COMPLETELY DIFFERENT TV SHOW. He seemed liked he was from some weird, oddball comedy show about bank robbers until the show gave him Fargo's most disturbing ending for absolutely no reason. The Stavros storyline is my least favorite in Fargo, because not only do none of its characters get reasonable endings, but it also doesn't connect to the main storyline at all. If you took out the entire Stavros story, the season would've made just as much sense. It's only purpose was to give Malvo something to do in episodes 2-6.

SEASON TWO- Season two is my favorite season of Fargo, and I think part of what makes it so great is that not only are the characters incredible, but their endings are some of the best in the series. There aren't really any characters in here on the level of Malvo and Lester in terms of originality, but season 2 certainly delivers one of the strongest ensemble casts of a tv show I've seen.
  1. Lou Solverson- Lou is my favorite character from Fargo. He was pretty cool in season one, but getting to see him in season two in his prime pushed him over the edge. Usually the standout character from a season of Fargo is the bad guy, but this is one of the rare cases where therein character steals the show. Also, his defense of the police station from the Gerhardts was maybe the coolest scene in the show.
  2. Peggy Blumquist- Peggy, the self-realized lunatic of season two, was the provider of chaos for season two. Season one had Malvo, three had Nikki, four had... pretty much every character, but here Peggy is the one that leaves a trail of craziness (and dead bodies) everywhere that she goes. Her final scenes in the supermarket and Lou's police car are some of the most heartbreaking in the show, giving her one of my favorite character endings in the series.
  3. Mike Milligan- Mike was just cool. I've realized from watching the entirety of the show that Mike really doesn't do much in season two; he kills Otto and the Undertaker, and he very briefly takes over the Gerhardt house, but besides that he has little to no effect on the outcome of the season. And yet... every time he does or says anything, it just FEELS important. He may not do that much plot-wise, but style and feeling-wise, Mike Milligan is season two. And his grim backstory in season four is just the icing on the cake.
  4. Hanzee Dent- Hanzee was a great character from episodes 1-7. Then episodes 8-10 happened and he reached legendary status. Watching Hanzee orchestrate the Sioux Falls massacre and then get away with it is truly quality television, and the sheer buildup of subtle racism that follows him throughout the show makes his breaking point all the more satisfying. But what makes the story of Hanzee so sad is that in the end, he just became that fat mob boss from season one that Lorne kills. He wound up just being another dead body in somebody else's story.
  5. Hank Larsson- "Ted Danson as a cop in the 70s" was basically the pitch for this character, but it works so much better than it should have. The trio of Hank, Lou and Betsy is genuinely the best part of season two.
  6. Floyd Gerhardt- Poor, poor Floyd. From the first episode we see that Floyd is a tactical genius who was made to run the Gerhardt family, but we know that she will never get the same respect as her husband just because she's a woman. Her ending is so perfectly anti-climactic, too. One of the saddest characters from Fargo.
  7. Betsy Solverson- Lou's wife is docked a couple points for never really being allowed to get in on the action (I would have LOVED to see Betsy take down a Gerhardt) but she still provides some much needed warmth to the show and grounds some of the more crazier episodes, like "The Castle" or the finale.
  8. Dodd Gerhardt- Dodd Gerhardt succeeds by being one of the most vile, unredeemable characters in the show's history. While most of the show's villains can be found to be somewhat sympathetic, Dodd is just the guy you're supposed to hate. And he hits the mark every time.
  9. Joe Bulo- Joe Bulo's death was a real heartbreak. He was really funny.
  10. The Kitchen Brothers- Much like Wrench and Numbers, these two mostly-silent hitmen nearly stole the show a couple of times. Unfortunately, Brother #1 dies halfway through the show, and they just don't feel like a complete set without both of them.
  11. Ed Blumquist- Ed was fine, but he falls into the same character as Gus where he just can't compare to his costars. I'd take Gus over Ed though, because Gus was just cooler.
  12. Simone Gerhardt- Eh. She could've done a lot more, and by her death she was the season's only character who felt like a waste.
  13. Constance Heck- Fargo would eventually take another shot at crafting a good lesbian character (it was kind of better), but Constance was pretty much a waste of screen time.
  14. Bear Gerhardt- I don't understand Bear. He's the nice Gerhardt, but also he kills Simone? He cares about the family, and yet he tries to kill literally everybody in the family? He trusts Hanzee, but he also... doesn't? Bear felt way to underdeveloped, and I honestly think season two would have made a lot more sense without him in it.

SEASON THREE- If I had to choose, I think season three has the best bunch of main characters. Gloria, Emmett, Ray, Nikki, Vargas, and Sy are six of the show's best characters. Some of their endings I could give or take, and the supporting characters this season aren't as strong as two, but this is easily my favorite group out of the four seasons.
  1. V.M. Vargas- For awhile, it looked like the show was never going to top Malvo as far as villains. And for some people, I'm sure Fargo still hasn't. But to me, V.M. Vargas is the show's greatest bad guy, and for one very specific reason: he's not another Malvo. The show could've very easily taken the route of putting that same scary-hitman character template into every season, but instead the show gave us a character so entirely different than anything before. Everything about him just makes your skin want to crawl, and the way that he completely destroys the lives of everybody he encounters is so fascinating to me. As for his ending, I would like to believe that Vargas does get jailed away, but I'm not so sure...
  2. Gloria Burgle- My favorite scene in season three is the final one, which is probably due to the fact that it's one of only a handful that my two favorite characters share together. Gloria is one of Fargo's best moral centers, as she is the first one who seriously needs another moral center to make her feel happy. She's one of the show's most human characters, and watching her rise past Chief Moe in the end and land a great job was a perfect little ending for her.
  3. Nikki Swango- Nikki was just cool. She was the Mike Milligan of season three, where she was the cool, smart character who walked the line between villain and antihero for the whole season. In the end, I'd put Nikki closer to the hero side than Mike, as her rebellion against Vargas in the final episodes turned her into the character to root for.
  4. Emmitt Stussy- I love season three because with the exception of Vargas and Nikki, nobody has any idea what is going on at all for the whole show. It's just a bunch of very dumb people bopping around for ten episodes, and I love it. This is why I love Emmitt, the epitome of the "dumb guy who makes a big mistake" Fargo character.
  5. Ray Stussy- I like Emmitt more than Ray, mainly because he has more character development and Ray never really gets a satisfying ending. But for the time he's alive, Ray was the center of season three's warmth. The first time you watch season three, it's unclear if Nikki actually loves Ray or if she's just using him. But on a rewatch where you know the full story, the scenes between Ray and Nikki become so sad.
  6. Sy Feltz- Poor Sy. He was just an idiot of epic proportions.
  7. Wes Wrench- When Mr. Wrench popped back up on that bus, my heart literally stopped beating for a second.
  8. Yuri Gurka- Yuri was, in my opinion, Fargo's scariest character. The Russian accent? The ruthless killing tactics? The unpredictability? The wolf mask? Horrifying stuff.
  9. Winnie Lopez- Winnie was kind, and she was a nice friend to Gloria. That alone gives her enough to be in the top ten.
  10. Meemo- Meemo wasn't as scary as Yuri, but watching him transform into a lawyer for that one scene was eerily terrifying. Unlike Yuri, Meemo was smart. Which, in a way, makes him a lot scarier.
  11. Larue Dollard- Larue, the hapless accountant who accidentally discovers Vargas' empire, was probably the most normal guy to ever enter a season of Fargo. Good for him for surviving!
  12. Ennis Stussy / Thaddeus Mobley- Season three's brief detour back into the seventies was a season high-point, but Thaddeus was too dumb to be that likable. Also, when he got older, he turned into a real homophobe. Not cool, Thaddeus.
  13. Gloria's Kid- I don't know his name, but I didn't care for this kid. Nothing against him, but the show didn't give him enough to do or give him enough of a character. Much like Greta, Fargo wasted another potentially great child character.
  14. Chief Moe Dammick- It's odd that the most easily dislikable Fargo character isn't one of the main villains, but this absolutely awful police chief. He literally does everything in his power to stop Gloria for NO REASON. I hate this guy so much.

SEASON FOUR- Season four got an unfair rep in my opinion. It wasn't on the level of the first three seasons, but it was still better than 90% of television. In fact, I loved the characters from season four. Loved them. My big problem is their endings. Half of the characters this season felt critically underused (probably due to the fact that the main cast was twice as large as it should have been), and some of the endings felt very out of place. Still a great season, but not as successful as before.
  1. Loy Cannon- Chris Rock was incredible as Loy Cannon, and he provided the one character from this season I have no problems with whatsoever. Everything about Loy and his arc I loved, and his ending was the saddest part of season four.
  2. Satchel Cannon- See what happens when you let the kids do stuff on Fargo, Noah Hawley?? Coming after Greta and mini-Gloria in the long line of underutilized children of Fargo, Satchel had a lot going against him... until East / West hit and it became clear season four was his story. I figured out Satchel was Mike Milligan fairly early on in the season, but the slow build to this reveal was beautiful, and that final shot of Mike Milligan loading his gun like Rabbi taught him was one of the best scenes in the series.
  3. Oraetta Mayflower- I love crazy people in shows and movies, so Oraetta was an instant win for me. Jessie Buckley turns in one of Fargo's all-time great performances as the deranged, racist angel of darkness. My biggest complaint is that Oraetta did nothing the whole season and felt like she belonged in an entirely different story. I wish so deeply that we could have seen her go full-Hanzee and start killing people as the season started to end, but instead she just... died. Eh. If she was actually given something to do, she would've easily jumped to #1.
  4. Gaetano Fadda- YES!!! In the beginning, I hated Gaetano. I thought he made no sense. He was supposed to be scary, but he wasn't. He was some weird, dumb freak who I didn't care about. And then he and Gaetano became best friends and I realized it... Gaetano Fadda isn't supposed to be scary. He's meant to be a weird, dumb freak who believes himself to be scary. Suddenly, he became my favorite part of the season. And watching him die by tripping over himself only solidified the idea that he really didn't mean anything to anybody.
  5. Josto Fadda- Josto was a so-so character given a great arc. I loved watching him slowly drive himself crazy, ending with him eventually getting killed by his own people. He was a little over the top, but Jason Schwartzman was great and the character's ending was great, so I have no complaints.
  6. Etherilda Pearl Smutny- Poor, poor Etherilda. She was introduced in episode one and I was SO EXCITED for her to be the no-nonsense moral center of season 4. I wanted to watch her crack the mystery. I wanted her to save the day. And instead... she did absolutely nothing the entire season. I spent the whole season waiting for her to become a main character again, and all she wound up doing was giving a dead guy's ring to Loy. Thankfully, she was still a joy to watch onscreen, and that ending shot was perfect, but WHY DID SHE NOT GET TO DO ANYTHING???
  7. Dick "Deafy" Wickware- Timothy Olyphant took a so-so character and made him legendary. He's docked a couple of points for dying like a wimp and not really adding anything to the main story, but he was a joy to spend time with.
  8. Doctor Senator- If he stuck around for a while longer, Doctor Senator would have placed a lot higher here. Unfortunately, his death was neccessary for Loy's character arc, but while he was still kicking, DS ruled.
  9. Rabbi Milligan- A true tragic figure, I liked everything about Rabbi Milligan. I liked his story, I liked his acting, I liked how he got sucked up in a tornado. I didn't love it, but I liked it.
  10. Odis Weff- Same as above. I liked him. I didn't love him, but I sure did like him.
  11. Happy- Happy only showed up in the penultimate episodes (appropriately titled "Happy"), but his appearance only made me wish that Happy was around longer. That guy was awesome! What was that whole thing with the frames? I want to know! I want his story! unfortunately, he was only in about two scenes and then died. But I loved Happy.
  12. Buel Cannon- Buel Cannon was awesome and didn't do enough. She deserved main-character status over Zelmare and Swanee 100%
  13. Lemuel Cannon- Lemuel was cool and played the trumpet. Another character who should've gotten more screen time, Lemuel deserved better.
  14. Dibrell Smutny- As far as no-nonsense moms go, I prefer Buel to Dibrell, but she still shined in a couple of key scenes. Plus, she was much cooler than her husband.
  15. That Freaky Sea Captain- He was kinda cool.
  16. Ebal Violante- I liked him in the first 10 episodes, but then in the final episode he went full Disney Twist Villain by taking a full 180 on his personality and becoming a supervillain. It was weird, but I get why it happened.
  17. Odie Sparkman- Much like nearly everybody else in the cast, Odie wasn't given enough to do, but his time in the spotlight in East / West was nice, if brief.
  18. Zelmare Roulette- Zelmare and Swanee were my least favorite part of season 4. They had no reason to be there, and I felt like they just took away time from the main cast. Episodes 1, 9, 10, and 11 were my favorites from season 4, which are the only 4 episodes these bozos don't appear in (well, Zelmare was in 11, but only for a second). Zelmare places higher because I liked her stuff with Dibrell (and because it was nice that Fargo finally did a good lesbian romance after the misfire in season two), but besides that I would count her story as Fargo's biggest misfire.
  19. Doctor Harvard- Ew.
  20. Swanee Capps- She was just a worse version of Zelmare. Her only redeeming quality was that she continued Fargo's long tradition of vomiting onscreen.

And here is my list of favorite characters from all four season:
  1. Lou Solverson
  2. V.M. Varga
  3. Peggy Blumquist
  4. Lorne Malvo
  5. Gloria Burgle
  6. Lester Nygaard
  7. Mike Milligan / Satchel Cannon
  8. Nikki Swango
  9. Loy Cannon
  10. Hanzee Dent
  11. Molly Solverson
  12. Emmitt Stussy
  13. Wes Wrench
  14. Ray Stussy
  15. Oraetta Mayflower
  16. Hank Larrson
  17. Sy Feltz
  18. Floyd Gerhardt
  19. Yuri Gurka
  20. Gaetano Fadda

What are your opinions? Who are your favorite characters?
submitted by bob_loblaw_0211 to FargoTV [link] [comments]

[Anime Season 4 Episode 4 Spoilers] Summary of the Events and Characters of the Anime

Hello! Season 4 is airing but there’s a one week hiatus between E4 and E5, so I decided to create this summary of the main events of the anime so far up to help people who are confused about the new events. Also an outline of the important new characters. Hope this helps!

SUMMARY OF SEASON ONE

More detailed summary of Season 1 here.

SUMMARY OF SEASON TWO

More detailed summary of Season 2 here.
  • After the Female Titan is captured, everyone begins to regroup. Hange interrogates Minister Nick, a member of the Wall Church, and realizes that the Walls are filled with thousands of Colossal Titans. The Wall Church is fully aware of this, but keeps it a secret. Hange examines the crystal material and deduces that it is identical to the material the Walls are made of.
  • Just hours after capturing Annie, they get news that Titans have been spotted inside Wall Rose, so they go to fight them and find the breach.
  • Meanwhile, the Survey Corps including the rest of the 104th (who were outside the city when the Female Titan was captured) have detected the Titans, and go around to warn nearby villages and try and find the breach that the Titans are entering from. Soldier Sasha Braus saves a young girl from being eaten by a Titan, while a team including Connie Springer find his home, Ragako Village, to be destroyed by Titans, though empty of human remains.
  • They search all day but can't find any hole in the Wall, so they stay overnight at an abandoned castle, Castle Utgard.
  • Titans attack them at night and seem to be led by the Beast Titan who can speak, give commands, throw rocks, and climb over the Wall.
  • Many soldiers die, but at the last moment one of the soldiers from the 104th, Ymir, saves them by transforming into a Titan and fighting them off. Reiner and Bertolt recognize Ymir’s Titan as the one who ate a friend of theirs years ago. After the battle another soldier, Christa Lenz, reveals that she is the bastard daughter of a noble, and her real name is Historia Reiss.
  • The next morning, reinforcements arrive, but suddenly Reiner goes insane and reveals to Eren that he and his friend Bertolt are the Armoured and Colossal Titans, and they want to take Eren back to their "Hometown". They explain that their mission was to infiltrate the Walls in order to capture something called the Coordinate”, but after many years they still weren’t able to find it. Now they think that Eren might have it.
  • A huge battle breaks out between the Armoured and Colossal vs. the regular soldiers. They capture Eren and Ymir and run away to Titan infested territory within Wall Maria. The military launches an expedition to rescue them.
  • Ymir reveals that she was once a mindless Titan, but gained the ability to shift after eating one of the friends (named Marcel) of the Armoured and Colossal when they were first coming to destroy the Walls 5 years ago. She reveals that she knows many things, but considers the Walls to be "doomed" so never told anyone. Reiner, Bertolt, Annie, and Marcel were sent to the Walls years ago to capture the Coordinate, and the Beast Titan is their leader.
  • Another huge battle happens and as all hope seems lost, the mindless Smiling Titan that ate Eren’s mother appears. Eren, desperate to survive, punches the Smiling Titan, and his “Coordinate” power suddenly activates and the mindless Titans seem to obey his commands. The Smiling Titan is devoured. Eren orders them to attack the Armoured Titan, and the soldiers all retreat back to the Walls. Ymir saves Reiner and Bertolt, and they escape into Titan territory.
  • One week later, Erwin is recovering from his wounds. Hange and Connie arrive and report their findings regarding the Titans. They believe that the Titans that suddenly appeared were actually the transformed residents of Ragako Village. The Titan lying on top of Connie’s house is in fact his transformed mother. Erwin, hearing this news, smiles and says they are now one step closer to the truth.

SUMMARY OF SEASON THREE PART ONE

More detailed summary of Season 3 Part 1 here.
  • After they get back, they regroup and start to recover. They realize that the Wall Church and the government are hiding many secrets. The government refuses to give the Survey Corps enough resources to launch an expedition to take back Wall Maria and find what's in the basement. The Survey Corps deduces that the Titans who appeared inside the Walls were actually normal villagers who were somehow turned into Titans by the Beast Titan, and they realize that all Titans are humans who are stuck in Titan form. Eren and the 104th, led by Levi, hide from the government.
  • Minister Nick is found killed a few days later. Hange and Levi capture some Military Police and learn the government has secretly been killing people who try to develop new technology and don't want anyone to leave the Walls. The current Royal Family, the Fritz family, are actually false rulers, and the real rulers are the Reiss family. The Survey Corps decide to lead a coup to replace the government and put Historia on the throne instead.
  • Commander Erwin is arrested by the Military Police and put on trial, while Eren and Historia are captured by the Reiss family.
  • The Military Police has a secret division, the Central Brigade, which is the secret police. They have developed a type of 3DMG called "Anti-Personnel Maneuver Gear" which is designed to kill humans using guns instead of swords. The leader of this unit is named Kenny Ackerman, who is Levi's uncle. It is also revealed that Levi and Mikasa are distantly related, and that the Ackerman family is stronger than normal humans.
  • Historia and Eren are brought before Rod Reiss, the true King, in a huge underground cave. Rod reveals that the Walls were created by the First King using the Coordinate. According to Rod Reiss, the First King believed that true peace could only be reached with humanity living inside the Walls and ruled by the Titans. The Coordinate ability was passed on generation after generation in the Reiss family, and has the ability to control Titans and wipe memories. His legitimate daughter, Frieda Reiss, had it, but on the day that Wall Maria fell, Eren's father Grisha killed the entire Reiss family and stole the Coordinate ability by eating Frieda. Rod was the only survivor. He unlocks Eren's memories to reveal that Grisha sacrificed himself to Eren in secret, and that's how Eren became a Shifter and gained the Coordinate. Eren was forced to eat his father. Grisha is dead.
  • Rod wants to return the Coordinate to Historia, his last living relative, by having Historia transform into a Titan and eat Eren. This is because only members of the Reiss family can effectively control the Coordinate. The Reiss family is also at risk of being brainwashed by "The Will of the First King", which for some reason prevents them from using their full powers and changing humanity’s current situation.
  • Meanwhile, the Survey Corps led by Levi and Hange managed to fight off the Military Police, and Erwin's plan begins to work. While Erwin is on trial in front of all the nobles, Pixis, the leader of the Garrison, and Zackley, the general of the military, declare that they will support Erwin and overthrow the government. At the last moment, Nile Dok, leader of the Military Police, decides to side with Erwin as well. Thus, the nobles are arrested and replaced by a military government. The military then goes to find Eren and Historia and save them from Rod.
  • They arrive at the cave and fight the Military Police. Inside the cave, Historia decides to live her life with pride, and chooses not to obey her father. She smashes the "Titan serum" on the floor, then goes to free Eren. Rod, desperate, licks up part of the serum, transforming into a huge 120 meter Titan. This causes the cave to collapse, but Eren quickly grabs another Titan serum and takes that, which gives him the Hardening ability that the Female and Armoured Titans have. He uses this to shield his allies.
  • Rod's Titan is mindless, as Titans only become Shifters by eating another Shifter. It begins moving towards the nearest city to eat the humans. The SC is eventually able to stop it. Historia lands the killing blow and is hailed as a hero.
  • Meanwhile, Kenny dies, but before he dies he reveals he stole the last serum, and gives it to his nephew, Levi. He reveals that the Ackerman family were once the bodyguards of the Royal Family, but they disagreed with the Royals and were persecuted.
  • Historia is crowned the new Queen of the Walls, though the military has the real power. She cares for the common people, and even starts an orphanage. She and the military make peace with some surrendering nobles, and begin planning their next operation.
  • Using Eren's memories of Grisha, the Survey Corps talk to Keith Shadis (the drill instructor), who was friends with Grisha. Shadis reveals he found Eren's dad wandering outside the Walls about 20 years ago. This means Grisha came from outside the Walls.
  • A few months later, the Survey Corps has enough resources to launch another huge expedition to retake Wall Maria using Eren's new Hardening ability to seal the holes. They have created a Levi is entrusted with keeping the Titan serum syringe that he was given by Kenny, to use whenever he judges to appropriate. Erwin insists on coming with them on the Expedition to reclaim Wall Maria despite Levi’s protests. Erwin admits that he is determined to reach the Basement and uncover the truth of the world. The Survey Corps has a night of relaxation to prepare for the operation and they reflect on the past. The next day at sunset they prepare to head out from Trost District. Erwin says some badass things and then they depart for Shiganshina District.

SUMMARY OF SEASON THREE PART TWO

More detailed summary of Season 3 Part 2 here.
  • Their force travels to Shiganshina District under cover of night. They arrive at the city at dawn. They quickly use Eren’s Hardening ability to seal the Shiganshina Outer Gate. Reiner appears and attacks them. The Beast Titan then also appears from north of the city along with an army of mindless Titans and a seemingly intelligent Titan carrying cargo on its back, called the Cart Titan, and he arrays his minions to form a semicircle around the city to prevent the soldiers from retreating. Some of the soldiers including Erwin and Levi remain outside the city with the horses, while another group including Eren, Mikasa, Armin, Hange, and the 104th stay within the city.
  • Reiner is attacked by soldiers wielding Thunder Spears. Thunder Spears are a new explosive weapon invented by Hange that is powerful enough to puncture the Armour Titan’s armour. Reiner is severely injured by the Thunder Spears but survives, and is able to scream out a signal.
  • Meanwhile outside the city, the Beast Titan (whose name is revealed to be Zeke) throws rocks to kill many soldiers. The survivors along with the new recruits and the horses take cover behind rows of buildings. The Beast Titan also throws a barrel containing Bertolt into the city. Bertolt transforms into the Colossal Titan, resulting in a massive explosion causing devastating damage to the city and wiping out many soldiers. It appears as if Eren, Mikasa, Armin, Jean, Connie, and Sasha were the only survivors within the city.
  • Outside the city, Erwin and Levi discuss what to do while the surviving recruits begin to panic. Erwin reflects on how he just really wants to the see the Basement and he has massive survivor’s guilt and life sucks. Levi tells him to get over it and reveal his plan. Erwin thinks of a way to take down the Beast Titan, but it will be a suicide mission. Levi tells him to give up his dream and die. Erwin gives the new recruits an epic speech to convince them to sacrifice their lives, with the hope that their comrades who survive will carry on their legacy and give meaning to their sacrifices.
  • Erwin leads a suicide charge directly towards the Beast Titan. The Beast Titan annihilates the charging soldiers. However, this distracts him from Levi, who snuck around the side and wiped out half the stationary Titan army before even being noticed. Levi destroys the Beast Titan and captures Zeke. Levi hesitates in killing him, hoping that the Titan serum Levi possesses can be used to save a wounded soldier. The Cart Titan surprises Levi and is able to rescue Zeke. Zeke commands the rest of the Titan army to attack Levi. Meanwhile one of the recruits, Flocke, is revealed to have survived the suicide charge.
  • Armin works with Eren to attack the Colossal Titan. Eren pretends to be incapacitated while Armin latches onto the Colossal Titan’s face and forces Bertolt to weaken himself by using steam attacks against Armin. Bertolt seemingly kills Armin, but his sacrifice buys an opportunity for Eren to successfully attack the Colossal Titan and capture Bertolt. Meanwhile, Mikasa, Jean, Connie, and Sasha battle the Armoured Titan. Reiner is brought down and captured by the sudden reappearance of Hange, who survived the explosion but lost an eye.
  • Zeke, riding the Cart Titan, approaches Eren. Zeke says that Eren looks nothing like his father (Grisha). Zeke explains that Eren has been brainwashed by Grisha, and vows that he will save Eren one day. Reiner delivers a letter from Ymir before being rescued by Zeke and the backpack Titan. The three of them retreat, forced to leave Bertolt behind.
  • Armin is revealed to be still alive, albeit dying from his intense burns. Eren begs Levi to use the Titan serum on Armin and feed Bertolt to Armin’s Titan to save Armin. Levi hesitates. Flocke appears with the mortally wounded Erwin and begs Levi to save Erwin instead. A debate and fight breaks about regarding who should be saved. Eventually, Levi decides to save Armin instead, and Erwin dies. Armin eats Bertolt and becomes the new Colossal Titan.
  • Shortly afterwards, Armin wakes up, fully healed. There are only 9 survivors in total (Levi, Hange, Eren, Armin, Mikasa, Jean, Sasha, Connie, and Flocke). They decide to finally go to the Basement. They reach the Basement. Inside the Basement, they find 3 books and 1 photograph. The photograph shows Grisha along with a woman and a young boy. Grisha’s notes reveal that far outside the Walls, there are other human civilizations that have advanced technology and exist without fear of the Titans.
  • A flashback begins, showing Grisha’s past. Grisha grew up in a ghetto in Marley, a world-spanning empire. Grisha and his family belong to an ethnicity called the “Eldians”. Around 1820 years ago, an Eldian named “Ymir Fritz” allegedly made a “Deal with the Devil” and gained the power of the Titans, becoming able to turn into a Titan. The Eldian people were granted with the potential to become Titans if injected with Titan serum. (Note: The story is described as a religious myth, so we don’t know what is true and what is fiction.)
  • When Ymir Fritz died, her “soul” was split to 9 Eldians, each of whom became a Shifter. One of the 9 Shifters was the master Shifter with the power of the Founding Titan. The Founding Titan can control Titans, and thus ruled all of the rest of the Shifters. This was the Fritz Family. The Founding Titan's power is the "Coordinate" that Eren now possesses. The Eldians used their Titan powers to conquer most of the world.
  • For many years, the Eldians ruled, passing the 9 Shifting powers down from generation to generation. The Eldians claim they were good rulers who built infrastructure and improved farming, but the Marleyans and other normal humans claim the Eldians were genocidal and committed war crimes and rape (we don’t know who is telling the truth, it is possible they are both correct).
  • There would sometimes be periods of civil war as the noble Eldian families feuded with each other, but the King would always use the Founding Titan power to end the fighting. However, when the 145th King Fritz, inherited the Founding Titan, he decided not to intervene. The feuds erupted into the Great Titan War. At the same time the Marleyans decided to launch a Rebellion against the Eldian Empire. The Marleyans somehow “stole” 7 of the 9 Shifter powers.
  • The King, instead of ending the War, decided to take some of the Eldian people and sailed away to Paradis Island, where he created the 3 massive Walls out of hundreds of thousands of massive mindless Titans. He wiped the memories of the Eldians and prohibited the advancement of technology to ensure that the Eldians he took with him would remain inside the Walls and live in “peace”. Thus, he became the First King of the Walls. He makes a threat to the Marleyans: if they attack the Walls, he will unleash the army of Wall Titans, and they will crush the entire world. Mutually assured destruction. The First King only wants to be left alone in peace.
  • Meanwhile, back on the mainland, the Marleyans eventually won the war and became the dominant force in the world. They hated the Eldians for oppressing them for so many years, so they locked the Eldians up into ghettos. Since only Eldians can turn into Titans, they believe Eldians are truly devils and monsters. After this, the world enters an Industrial Revolution, creating new technology such as photography, advanced cannons, and airships.
  • A few decades after the war was won by the Marleyans, Grisha was born. One day, he snuck outside of his ghetto with his sister, to show her a blimp. They were caught by Marleyan soldiers, Sgt. Gross and Kruger. Grisha was beaten, while his sister was taken away. Later her body was found near the river. Grisha is furious, and as a child doesn’t understand why the Marleyans hate them. His parents are nearly brainwashed by Marleyan propaganda into believing that Eldians are evil and deserve to be treated badly.
  • When Grisha turns 18, an Eldian resistance movement recruits him. The Eldian rebels have a spy within the Marleyan government, known as “The Owl”. The Owl gives them secret documents about Eldian history, and sends them Dina Fritz, the last surviving member of a branch of the Fritz Family that chose to stay behind on the mainland instead of sail to Paradis Island.
  • Grisha and Dina fall in love and are married, and have a son, who they name Zeke (who later became the Beast Titan). This means Eren and Zeke are half-brothers. They and the Eldian rebels plan to one day overthrow the Marleyans, and believe Zeke will be their saviour. When Zeke turns 5 years old, the Marleyan government reveals plans to conquer Paradis Island and end the last remnants of the Eldian Empire once and for all. The Owl, however, reveals that the true reason is to secure the reserves of natural resources on Paradis Island, since they need fuel to power their war machines to maintain their power.
  • The Marleyans create the Warrior Program, recruiting Eldian children who will become child soldiers and use the captured Shifting powers to destroy the Walls. They need Eldian children because only Eldians can turn into Titans. Grisha and Dina decide to use Zeke as a sleeper agent to infiltrate the program and become a Shifter. However, after 2 years of training, Zeke betrays his parents and tells the Marleyans about the Eldian resistance. The Marleyans capture them all, but cannot find the Owl.
  • The rebels are taken to a port on the southern coast of Paradis Island, where Eldian criminals are punished by being turned into mindless Titans forever, a fate worse than death. This is where all the mindless Titans outside the Walls come from. The rebels are turned into mindless Titans and set loose via an injection of Titan serum, which is revealed to be spinal fluid taken from the spine of a Titan. Dina becomes the Smiling Titan that ate Eren’s mother. However, at the last moment, before Grisha is transformed, the soldier Kruger reveals that he is the Owl, and is a Shifter. He transforms and kills all the Marleyan soldiers.
  • Once everyone is dead except for Grisha and Kruger, Kruger reveals that all Eldians are connected through immaterial Paths, and Shifters suffer from the Curse of Ymir, which causes Shifters to die 13 years after they gain their powers. He has planned for Grisha to be his successor and inherit the Shingeki no Kyojin (Attack Titan). He tasks Grisha with the goal of heading to the Walls, capturing the Founding Titan power from the Royal Family, and at last using it to free the Eldians. Grisha accepts this mission. Before Kruger is eaten, he states that Grisha must complete his mission for the sake of “Mikasa and Armin”, though neither men understand what these names mean. Grisha eats Kruger and gains the power, then heads to the Walls. Thus concludes the backstory of Grisha Jaeger.
  • Back in the present day, Eren and the rest are trying to figure out what to do now. There is a military meeting where they contemplate their options. They decide to reveal everything they have learned to the public, and realize the only way they can fight back is to use the power of the Founding Titan to control the army of Wall Titans. However, Eren cannot use the Founding Titan power as he does not have Royal Blood, and giving it to someone with Royal Blood is useless as the Will of the First King would brainwash and stop them. So, they are stuck. Eren theorizes that he may be able to use it if he touches Historia while she is turned into a Titan, but does not tell anyone, since he does not want her to be condemned to such a fate.
  • They also deliver Ymir’s letter to Historia. Historia reads it and also gets a flash of memories depicting Ymir’s life story. Ymir used to be a random homeless orphan, but an Eldian priest took her in, and claimed that she was a Messiah who would save the Eldian people. The Marleyans attacked her church and brought her and all of her followers to Paradis Island, turning them into mindless Titans as punishment, until one day she accidentally gained the Shifting power by eating Marcel. Ymir says she will likely be dead soon, and reveals her only regret is that she was not able to marry Historia. (Note: in the manga this is where Ymir’s backstory is originally revealed, whereas in the anime it was inserted into Season 2 without context. The anime depicts it as a brief flash of memories seemingly triggered by Paths, but I wrote out the full thing here since it was already shown previously. Just to put it into context.)
  • Over the course of the winter, all of the Titans inside Wall Maria are killed off with no human casualties by using Titan guillotines, a weapon Hange invented that lures Titans to their deaths. Once several months have passed and all the Titans are dead, they at last resettle Wall Maria, and venture beyond. Finally, they reach the ocean. Eren, however, has become very thoughtful, and instead of celebrating, he stares across the waves, wondering “if we kill them, will we be free?

SUMMARY OF SEASON FOUR (ONGOING)

  • We open with a timeskip that is 3 years after the ocean scene (4 years after the events of Seasons 1-3). We switch perspectives and are now following characters on the mainland, instead of the old cast and setting on Paradis Island. When Reiner, Zeke, Ymir, and the Cart Titan returned to Marley, news got out that Marley had been weakened, since they had lost 2 Titan powers: Annie with the Female Titan, and Bertolt with the Colossal Titan. A country called the Middle East Union decided to attack Marley. For the past 4 years, Marley and the Middle East Union have been at war, and the story begins with the final battle of this war. Marley is winning, and Fort Slava is the last remaining Middle East Union stronghold.
  • Marley uses Eldians as frontline soldiers, and also runs the Warrior Program to select new holders for the Titan powers they possess. Due to the timeskip, several of the current Warriors are due for replacement, so this battlefield is also being used as a test for the new Warrior Cadets. Colt Grice has already been selected to become the new Beast Titan. Falco Grice (Colt’s younger brother) is competing with Gabi Braun (Reiner’s younger cousin** and Udo and Zofia for who gets to earn the Armoured Titan. The Warrior unit is led by a Marleyan named Theo Magath. Additionally, Ymir has been killed and her power (the Jaw Titan) has been given to a new Warrior, named Porco Galliard.
  • Gabi disables some of Fort Slava’s defenses. The Armoured Titan (Reiner), Jaw Titan (Porco), Cart Titan (Piek), and Beast Titan (Zeke) destroy the rest of the Middle East Union forces and wipe out the fort, as well as their fleet. The Cart Titan has been equipped with a harness that attaches machine guns to it. Zeke is somehow able to turn certain Eldians into mindless Titans on command by shouting. Reiner is injured in the battle but ultimately survives. The war is won by Marley, but it is clear that Marley’s rival nations are creating new technologies that will eventually make Titans obsolete. Now that the war is over, the Eldian soldiers and the Warriors return to their home, the Liberio Internment Zone ghetto in Marley. A mysterious man with a hat is shown to be walking around in Marley.
  • Zeke has 1 year left until he dies from the Curse of Ymir, so Colt Grice will be the next Beast Titan. Zeke has apparently not told Marley about his Royal Blood. Reiner has 2 years left, and Gabi is the most promising candidate, with Falco in second place. Falco and Colt have joined the Warrior program in order to atone for their family, as their uncle had been an anti-Marley rebel. Falco additionally wants to become a Titan in order to spare Gabi, because he likes her.
  • In meetings, it is revealed that in the past few years several Marleyan scouting expeditions have gone missing, so the Marleyans have no idea what is happening on Paradis Island. They suspect the Paradisians are destroying them with their captured Titan powers. Marley still intends to conquer Paradis eventually. The Warriors discuss the Tybur family, one of the old noble families of the Eldian Empire that possess the Warhammer Titan. A century ago, the Tybur family fought against the other Eldians. They helped the Marleyan hero Helos succeed in the revolution. Since then, they’ve been living in luxury as Honourary Marleyans, but remain neutral. The Tyburs are hosting a massive press conference at a Festival in Liberio, where they will reveal to the world their plans.
  • Flashbacks show that Reiner is suffering from intense trauma and guilt. He is secretly half-Eldian and half-Marleyan, and his mother told him that becoming a Warrior would give him and his mother a better life. He worked hard and was selected for the power of the Armoured Titan when he was young. However, his father wanted nothing to do with him. Flashbacks continue and show that Reiner, Bertolt, Annie, and Marcel Galliard were sent to Paradis Island to steal the power of the Founding Titan in Year 845. Marcel reveals that Reiner didn’t truly earn the Armoured Titan, and Marcel actually influenced the authorities to give it to Reiner so that his brother, Porco Galliard, was spared from becoming a Warrior. Shortly afterwards, Marcel was killed and eaten by Ymir. Reiner takes command of the mission, and they proceed to attack the Walls. Their attempts to spy on the interior were thwarted by Kenny, which ultimate prompted them to attack Trost District in Year 850. Despite his mission, Reiner became quite friendly and attached with the other recruits, including Eren Jaeger. This manifests in extreme guilt and self-hatred in the current day, culminating in him nearly committing suicide.
  • Falco befriends a wounded veteran who asks him to deliver letters. The veteran says his name is “Mr. Kruger” – he is secretly Eren Jaeger in disguise. Eren claims to be a wounded veteran who is hiding from his family. He asks Falco to send some letters for him, which Falco does. Eren tells Falco he will return home after the Festival is done. Eren also meets his grandfather, Mr. Jaeger, though Mr. Jaeger does not know who he is.
  • Willy Tybur, the head of the Tybur family, meets with Commander Magath. He reveals that the Tybur family has secretly been ruling Marley from the shadows the whole time. However, they allow the Marleyans to do whatever they want, and they have allowed the persecution of their fellow Eldians out of guilt. He plans to reveal this at the Festival along with his plan. Willy is concerned about the future of Eldians and Marleyans as technology continues to advance and render Titans less and less useful. Magath has also expressed concern over Marley’s constant warmongering, and wishes to bring back Marleyan conscription so that Marleyans will get a taste of the horrors of war. They both feel that Marley’s current leadership is lacking. Willy asks Magath to work with him. Magath is promoted. Willy and Magath also believe that Eldians from Paradis Island have infiltrated the mainland.
  • The Festival will consist of festivities during the daytime and a stage performance by Willy at night. The Warriors enjoy their time during the day.
  • Many visitors from around the world arrive for the conference. Among them is a woman named Kiyomi Azumabito, an ambassador from the nation of Hizuru, who seems sympathetic to Eldians and saves Udo from punishment when he accidentally spills wine on her kimono. The other nations all seem to dislike Marley, but also dislike Eldians. However, they are very friendly with Willy. They raise a toast to the coming play.
  • Just before the start of the announcement, Falco excitedly leads Reiner to an underground basement, to reunite Reiner with his “old friend”. Eren is waiting for him.
TO BE CONTINUED.
It is currently 4 years since the Battle of Trost (first half of Season 1), the Female Titan expedition and Battle of Stohess to capture Annie (second half of Season 1), the Beast Titan’s attack on Wall Rose and subsequent struggle against Reiner and Bertolt (Season 2), coup against the military and the Battle of Orvud District where Rod Reiss was slain (Season 3 Part 1), and the Battle of Shiganshina to reclaim Wall Maria and reach the Basement (Season 3 Part 2). There was a roughly 8 month timeskip to reach the ocean, and now a further 3 year timeskip has occurred to reach the present day. It has been 9 years since Wall Maria fell. Eren has 4 years left before he succumbs to the Curse of Ymir. Armin has 9 years left. Reiner has 2. Zeke has 1.
TL;DR: Centuries ago someone named Ymir Fritz somehow got kickass Titan powers. Her tribe and their descendants use their Titan powers to conquer the world. Eventually the 145th King gets bored of ruling everything, destroys his own empire, creates the Walled Kingdom of Paradis full of mindwiped people, and lets the normal humans take over the world. Erwin gets tired of the corrupt bourgeoisie and seizes the means of production. Wall Maria is retaken and they finally reach the Basement. Timeskip. Eren hates beach episodes. Timeskip. Marley and their Eldian servants destroy the Ottoman Empire and get hype for a speech, while Eren cosplays as a hobo.
Want to learn more? Wait for Episode 5 on January 10th, and beyond. Or read the manga!
submitted by H-K_47 to ShingekiNoKyojin [link] [comments]

Why Victoria Justice failed and is making a Comeback

After starring on Zoey 101, Victoria Justice cemented herself as a tween icon when she took on the lead role in Nickelodeon's Victorious. Set at a performing arts high school (so Fame, but with a laugh track), the show introduced Justice as a talented singer named Tori Vega. The series also gave pop star Ariana Grande and Dynasty actress Elizabeth Gillies their first tastes of fame. It was a good time to be on Nickelodeon, as the 2000s were truly the golden age of the popular kids' network with its wacky sitcoms about young people. But starring on a major TV series by the age of 15, as Justice did, is no small feat and it certainly isn't easy. Thankfully, Justice was rewarded for her efforts with a slew of kudos, like three Kids' Choice Awards nominations. While appearing on Victorious, Justice also stayed busy with a pop music career before going on to score some voice work and guest-star gigs. However, she's definitely not as visible as she once was during the early 2010s ... and here's why. Hollywood has always been a stratified world of niches. Once stars get entrenched in a certain genre, style, or medium, it's hard for them to get casting agents and audiences to accept them beyond the areas where they've been pigeonholed. That's why we have terms like "Scream Queen" to describe actresses who made a name for themselves in cheesy horror movies and "Former Child Star" to label performers who struck it big when they were kids. Victoria Justice has two such typecasting roadblocks in her way. First, she was a teen star, and second, she'll forever be linked with Victorious, the show that made her a household name. So, she may have difficulty getting taken seriously as an adult actress, because she's primarily associated with kid stuff that aired on basic cable years ago. Some young actors from cornball cable sitcoms have left that kind of work in the past and moved on to more relevant material. Take Cole Sprouse, for instance, who went from The Suite Life of Zack & Cody to starring on the CW's dark and twisted Riverdale. Hver, dozens of other actors have faded into relative obscurity (like Sprouse's twin brother, Dylan). So, this is simply a battle Justice must keep on fighting. By 2012, Victorious was a huge hit with kids, and Victoria Justice was, too. So much so that Nickelodeon made the no-brainer decision to cast the actress in the lead role of a theatrical film — Fun Size. There aren't all that many Halloween movies that aren't horror movies, and Fun Size looked to fill that niche. Justice plays Wren, a high school senior who wants to go out and party with her friend April (Jane Levy of Suburgatory and Castle Rock) on Halloween, but she's stuck watching her little brother ... who disappears into the craziness of the night. Don't worry — it's a comedy that's sort of like The Hangover for tweens. But critics didn't find Fun Size all that fun, giving it a score of just 25 percent on Rotten Tomatoes. Curiously, Justice's fan base didn't go flock to see the movie either, as it raked in a paltry $9.4 million at the box office. At the peak of her fame and popularity, Justice was given a chance to break out ... and it didn't pan out. That might have made studios less likely to cast her as the lead in movies. Where do Nickelodeon viewers go when they grow too old to watch Nickelodeon? MTV, of course, which has long offered up teen shows for teens instead of tween shows for tweens. In 2015, MTV hoped to move eyeballs over from its sister network by placing Nickelodeon star Victoria Justice at the center of a more mature drama called Eye Candy. A creepy thriller in the vein of hit scripted shows like Teen Wolf and Scream, Eye Candy was based on a book of the same name by horror master and millennial icon R.L. Stine. The plot, according to Deadline: A tech wizard named Lindy, played by Justice, gets into the online dating scene only to discover that a potential mate is a murderous cyber stalker. So, you know, the usual Tinder stuff. The show's ten episodes explore Lindy tracking down the deadly pursuer on the mean streets of New York with the help of a crack team of hackers. And it was a major stylistic shift for Justice, a grab at something totally out of her wheelhouse. Fans didn't respond, however, and MTV shut down Eye Candy after a single season, where it averaged less than 600,000 viewers. Over the 2010 to 2013 run of Victorious on Nickelodeon, star Victoria Justice and scene-stealer Ariana Grande made 57 episodes of kid-com TV magic together. But, unfortunately, there were rumors that they maybe kind of hated each other. That's right — Justice and Grande seemingly engaged in a good old-fashioned Tinseltown feud. For years, rumblings of a rivalry between the stars spread around young Hollywood circles and the internet. The main reason, it would seem, was that Justice made life a nightmare for Grande on the set of Victorious. Justice attempted to "set the record straight" on a January 2015 episode of The Meredith Vieira Show. "So basically, there was an article in Seventeen magazine where [Ariana] had said that she was bullied on set, and the magazine basically alluded to it being me," Justice explained. She noted that Grande had even given her a heads-up before the article came out to let her know that she was actually referring to somebody from her Broadway days — not Justice. "But once it got out there everyone thought I was this bully and mean to her," Justice said, "which couldn't be further from the truth." As the breakout stars of Victorious, Victoria Justice and Ariana Grande used the show to help launch singing careers ... because, well, that's the kind of cross-media branding that Nickelodeon (and the Disney Channel, for that matter) loves to do. Justice's time as a singer came first, and her songs were all over the soundtrack for Spectacular!, a made-for-TV musical that was Nickelodeon's answer to High School Musical, and three Victorious compilations. Justice scored a couple of minor hits from those albums, such as "Freak the Freak Out" and "Best Friend's Brother." And ... that's it. Justice's music career fizzled out right around the time that Victorious left the air. Without the series to showcase her music, and without her music to showcase her show, Justice got overlooked by radio stations and music buyers — the same ones who made Ariana Grande a full-fledged pop superstar. Since launching her music career in earnest in 2013, Grande has left Victorious far behind to become one of the biggest pop stars in the world, scoring chart-toppers like "7 Rings," "Thank U, Next," "Problem," and "No Tears Left to Cry." Broadcast TV networks have gone out of their way to make musicals happen, marketing them as massive TV events that bring the electricity of live theater to viewers at home on their couches. Some of these remakes of beloved Broadway and movie musicals have been huge hits, such as Grease, The Sound of Music, and Jesus Christ Superstar. Actors who appeared in them have earned rave reviews and a credibility boost, too — John Legend even scored an Emmy nomination! Sure, every actor is a unique person, who brings their own something special to a role. But, be that as it may, a lot of performers share a certain "type," and some even look near-identical. For example, Amy Adams and Jessica Chastain are both red-haired actresses who play tenacious but restrained characters. Similarly, Victoria Justice and Nina Dobrev are two performers of the same mold. Both broke through at about the same time — the late 2000s — with popular teen-oriented television series, with Justice starring in Victorious and Dobrev appearing in The Vampire Diaries. And, well, they look just like twins. While it's certainly not a negative for either of these women to be confused with the other (they've both got fame, fortune, talent, and beauty, after all), it could definitely affect their future acting prospects. Is it possible that some casting agents may not think to consider Justice because Dobrev already read for the part and they made up their mind that she's not the "type" they're looking for? Or maybe they already saw Dobrev, turned her down, and didn't bring in Justice, because they simply didn't realize that she's an entirely different person. Since MTV discontinued Eye Candy in 2015, star Victoria Justice continued to appear on television — just not as regularly or in the starring roles she once enjoyed. After showing up on two episodes of Undateable (playing a fetching singer named Amanda), the actress appeared on a couple installments of Cooper Barrett's Guide to Surviving Life as a deceptively nice cutthroat businessperson. Justice then put in an appearance on Matt LeBlanc's Man with a Plan as a babysitter, as well as a passive-aggressive classroom helper on American Housewife. What do all these shows have in common? None of them are exactly high-profile. Undateable and Cooper Barrett were both short-lived and little-watched sitcoms, while Man with a Plan and American Housewife are middlingly successful network offerings overshadowed by flashier entries in this age of "Peak TV." While Justice certainly gave every part her all, those brief and fleeting roles just didn't reignite her career. To move into the future, one must sometimes look to the past ... and latch onto it. As the TV industry has been obsessed with reboots and reunions in more recent years, it seems like any at least mildly successful show has staged a comeback, everything from Twin Peaks to All That. Basically, the climate is theoretically ripe for some kind of Victorious revival. It's not something that's been publicly announced or anything — at least as of this writing in 2020 — but Victoria Justice, perhaps looking for a boost from revisiting familiar territory, is already very much on board. "If the decision was ever made to do a reunion, I'd be down for that, and I think everyone else would be too," Justice told HuffPost back in 2016. "It was all kind of like a theoretical thing, and it never really came to fruition." Seeing as how Justice made these comments years ago, during which time costars Ariana Grande and Elizabeth Gilles became far too busy to likely revisit their old sitcom, more Victorious episodes probably aren't on the way to help revive Justice's career. Victoria Justice may not be headlining a top-rated, long-running sitcom anymore, but by no means is she all washed up. First of all, she's only in her mid-twenties, and she's got plenty of time left to make it in show business — or, rather, make it again in show business. She's still working, too, and on projects that are way different than Nickelodeon sitcoms and MTV dramas. Near the end of the 2010s, Justice starred in two potentially major film projects. One of them was 2019's Summer Night, an ensemble comedy-drama in the vein of Love Actually about a bunch of young couples falling in and out of love. Justice played a character named Harmony, opposite Shameless actor Justin Chatwin and America's Next Top Model contestant Analeigh Tipton. Justice's other major recent film: Bigger, a 2018 biopic about Joe and Ben Weider, the brothers who basically started America's obsession with fitness in the mid-20th century. The actress co-starred as Kathy Weider, Joe Weider's first wife. Unfortunately, neither Summer Night nor Bigger enjoyed a wide release, and Justice wasn't even featured on the poster of the latter. It looks like it might be a while until there's justice for Justice. As of 2021, Justice has focused on her music career and has released her latest single "Treat Myself". You can listen here https://youtu.be/XSLIgUkrdio.
submitted by stlikk to victorious [link] [comments]

SMG4 Analysis Megapost (ft. r/Nivelacker) (1/2)

I've teamed up with a fellow pro-Classic SMG4 comrade named u/Nivelacker and he has given a wonderful analysis on what's wrong with modern SMG4 and some solutions and data to bring back what made SMG4 good. I back up and agree with everything he's said. Also this is only part 1, part 2 is coming shortly
Take it away. Nivelacker, the spotlight is yours
"SO I'VE COME TO MAKE AN ANNOUNCEMENT, THE HOBO BROS. ARE RUINING THEIR SHOW. THAT'S RIGHT. THEY'RE RUINING THEIR OWN SERIES AND-
Just kidding, this isn't how I'm going to talk about such an important topic. I only started with that because it got your attention. Allow me to introduce myself properly: I'm NivelackeThe Nivelacker, a longtime fan of Smg4 and a former lurker of the Smg4 subreddit. As someone who has seen hundreds (but admittedly not all) of the series' episodes, I know what I do and do not like. I'd appreciate anybody willing to read this in its entirety, though I understand if you cannot read all of it now. Please read the entire thing before commenting, or replying, or whatever you would like to call it, as you don't want to ask questions that were answered prior to their conceptions, or anything else that would make you look foolish, would you? Now, please don't take anything I say personally either, as I mean no harm to anybody. I seem to be out of warnings, so I will now begin.
Part 1: "Smg4 is Smg4!" That may be true, but this isn't Smg4 anymore.
As anybody on the subreddit would be ready to tell you, there is more than one era of Smg4. How many eras there are, however, cannot be decided. That isn't relevant, so I'll explain the most agreed upon version: There are two eras: Classic and Modern. Classic is chaotic and is said by many to be the best form. Modern is more like other internet cartoons and more understandable, also regarded by many as the best form. For an indeterminate amount of time, both sides have fought over which is the true version of the series, and which one is a waste of time.
As someone who has seen a lot of things on every side, I can come to a conclusion. Both sides can be funny, and both sides can be boring, or even enraging. I had to make my decision based off of something that most people do not consider: Individuality. Everything in the world, real or not, has its own way of being known, simply by being what it is. That is why I have decided that "Classic" Smg4 is better than "Modern". In a sentence, Smg4 is meant to be a chaotic mess of a show, filled to the brim with black comedy. If you do not know the meaning of black comedy/humor, you should take a moment to learn its definition elsewhere.
And don't worry, I'm aware of the fact that the modern community would be unhappy if classic Smg4 were to suddenly take over the channel, and I will provide a solution to this later. That's a promise.
Smg4 was one of many series of "bloopers", as they were known, among dozens of other series. The height of their popularity was in the early 2010s, as most series were discontinued later. The point of a blooper was to use official, famous characters in ways they would never be used in their original series, as well as putting them in situations of similar possibility. Memes were also a prevalent part of every good blooper, as they added more comedic value. Smg4 was one of the most well-known series, due to its creator's undying determination to make many high-quality bloopers at an extremely fast rate compared to most others. Luke continued to make episodes for the series long after the bloopers lost their popularity for years to come, eventually having his brother Kevin help write the stories for the episodes.
You may wonder why I recited the synopsis of Smg4's creation, and that will be answered. The bloopers were known for their lack of common story structure, as well as their absurd amount of memes and black comedy. By attempting to please YouTube's algorithms by being "safer", the Hobo Bros. are sacrificing the things that make their show unique. Episodes may be more logical and have structure, but at what cost?
For the episodes of 2020, I can usually predict the story of an episode by recognizing the story trope it uses, which essentially spoils the entire rest of the episode. I decided to go watch an older episode that I had not seen before, just to see if I could do the same thing there. I couldn't. The stories of "classic" videos never seemed to use already-existing tropes, and seemed to be written as they were filmed.
Another thing that is harmed by the changes to the show is the integrity of it's rules, such as: Death is a temporary inconvenience, morality is irrelevant, logic is disregarded in favor of violence and insanity, the consequences of any event don't last, and more. For example, characters dying was a common occurrence, happening several times an episode with no lasting impact, as the characters would usually be intact in the next shot. In recent story arcs, however, characters can die permanently, which breaks that rule. Now that death has consequences, it can't really be used as a joke without contradicting major plot points, can it?
By changing, Smg4 is losing what it's supposed to be. It's ultimately the decision of the Hobo Bros. as to what happens, so I ask to them: Are you willing to make your series become lost in the crowd by taking its identity from it for the sake of being "safe" from demonetization? Or are you going to let it be what it's supposed to be? I understand that you're afraid of incurring Susan's wrath upon you, but that was the point of the show, to have a sick sense of humor. I also understand that you want to make more story-based shows, but that's what Glitch Productions is for, right? You can just keep making shows there instead of changing Smg4. There are plenty of cartoons like "modern" Smg4 on the internet already, so what's one less? I know how to fix this, but it will require your attention. If you are willing to go back, I can help you do so. This is only part 1, after all. In part 2, I'll explain the basic story rules of Smg4. Just give me a chance…
Part 2: The way things should be, and why.
Assuming you're going to hear me out, I will now recite the basic rules of Smg4, and why they must not be broken. Ever.
I'll start with death and destruction, as I have already shed some light on it. Since the dawn of bloopers, death/destruction has been nothing more than a device used for comedic effect. As previously stated, killed characters are usually not stated to be dead, though that's because it isn't exactly important to the story, as they are usually in perfect physical condition later. It's not just people that this applies to, either. Peach's castle has been "renovated" dozens of times in the series, only for it to also be in perfect condition in the next episode. Also, the world has exploded due to the events of several different episodes, only to be, you guessed it, still there in the next episode. Even the very first episode of the series features Mario exploding in rage, dying instantly. Death and destruction are not permanent, and should never be.
Next, I'll discuss morals. Like death, it's not meant to be taken seriously. Mario has killed potentially thousands of innocent people singlehandedly, yet he only goes to prison when he is caught actively committing a crime. Luigi has been needlessly harmed about as often as Mario has killed someone, being subjected to harm almost every time he's in a scene, usually never receiving a break. It's okay to make things work out and for the characters to do the right things sometimes, but ultimately, the show is funny because it's wrong.
The logic, or a lack thereof, is one of the many things this series is known for. Using Mario as an example again, he always acts before thinking, unless he has an obvious reason not to start killing everything. Mario wouldn't just attack someone who could destroy his spaghetti at any moment, would he? Threats can come from anywhere, or be anyone. Remember when in that boating episode, Mario, Smg4, and Toad just so happened to encounter the shy guy pirates for no reason? Remember when the stove was left on in that famous episode, setting the castle on fire, killing Luigi? Those things didn't have any real reason to happen, but they did. They added more to the episodes without feeling unnecessary. You shouldn't need to have a reason for something to happen beyond "well, it can happen, and it can be funny, so it will happen". True reason behind events should only occur to explain the relevance of something else, and it should not be a given.
Black Comedy is another staple of this series. I honestly could have made death/destruction be a part of this, but I chose not to. A lack of morality allows the show to do practically anything it wants, as there is no line to cross. The episode 0% of Spaghetti mostly consists of Mario and Smg4 breaking into a guy's house, stealing his spaghetti, and killing the guy by blowing up his house as they escape. I'm aware that Susan Washingmachine doesn't like black humor and will surely demonetize your videos if you do something like that again, but I'm going to give you a workaround in part 5. People rarely find your channel by having it recommended to them anyway. Should you ever need financial support, you can probably just ask your fans to help you, if you ever need it. There's loads of cartoons on the internet, but there's only one Smg4. People who dislike black comedy can surely find a different show to watch, such as your other shows on Glitch Productions. Also, while generally not a part of black comedy, memes should always be used excessively. Can't forget those.
Story structure is important in Smg4, and by that I mean you don't have to know how an episode will end when you start filming it. Who Let The Chomp Out is the most popular video for two reasons: It was based off of a meme, and it had a complete train wreck of a story, and that's a compliment. Things kept causing each other all throughout the episode, until it ends with the Chomp being contained as a result of the climax, though that doesn't solve every other problem that was caused. Don't be afraid to make more scenes for an episode, as they make more opportunities to make even more jokes. The Hangover was essentially a "how did we get here" story, except it was also a series of events building on each other, told in reverse order. Extra content in Smg4 is only needless filler when it has no purpose/comedic value.
Last, but not least, we have pacing. You've proven that you can easily fit a few jokes into one scene, simply by making some of them happen in the background, making some of them be memes, and the rest only lasting a few seconds each. People have complained that they can't keep up, but I think that's okay. An episode can always be watched again, and with excess jokes, each viewing can provide a new experience. You especially don't want an episode to be boring due to a lack of action.
Each of these things are vital to making a good episode of Smg4, and you can use any of the provided examples as proof. Next, I'll talk about the characters. I will answer the questions of who they should be, who they are currently, and why they should be different.
Part 3: The character bible of Smg4
Some characters require more change than others to fit into this show. A reoccurring theme with most flawed characters is that they are too sane/intolerant of the insanity to fit into the world of Smg4, when they should just roll with it instead. You may be hesitant to change how the characters are, but it is necessary to balance the show. I asked myself the question of "how can they compliment the tone of the show?" instead of "how do I want to write them?". If the characters were written to be like real people, Smg4 would turn into a sitcom with an overdose of generic slapstick. We don't want that now, do we?
Mario: The face of Smg4 is starting to become lost to his stereotype. Mario isn't just an idiot, he's an idiot savant, always catching the viewer off guard by doing the worst things possible in response to practically anything, not a generic "I'm dumb, so all I do is run everywhere being dumb" kind of person. He should only act like that when he's excited. This second change isn't even to his character, but to his presentation. You see, Mario is supposed to come across as the unpredictable fool who can ruin everything on a whim, and the way he's animated nowadays hinders that. His SM64 model is being used less and less often, with more Gmod animation taking its place. This may not seem like much, but it does. He's more expressive in gmod, and less in sm64. By being more static with his emotions, Mario comes across as more insane when he acts, due to a lack of foreshadowing provided by his face. Gmod should still be used to make his infamous warped expressions, but he should otherwise be in SM64 mode in most cases. On a minor note, Mario seems to lack one of his signature gags: public nudity. I rarely see it used anymore, despite it being so iconic to him. Lastly, Mario can have some moments of lucidity, though these should be very rare.
Luigi: Like his brother, he should mostly use his SM64 model, mostly for the same reasons. As one of his brother's foils, he has many different jobs to help pay for damages. This could be used more often, as it's the perfect excuse to put him in any scenario given. Something I would change is his sexuality. You see, the joke about Luigi being homosexual was funny because not only was it actually false, but everyone believed otherwise, despite Luigi objecting to it every time he's asked. Other than that, Luigi doesn't need any major changes. As a reoccurring joke (about every few episodes or so), he could win by doing absolutely nothing. This used to be a common gag, but it faded away over time. Perhaps it could be subtle most of the time to avoid it becoming stale.
Smg4: As the two before him, he should use his SM64 model more. Something I noticed is that he isn't shown in his profession anymore, being a memer on his computer at the castle. Smg4's computer was an important part of many episodes, from being the way the characters accessed the news via Youtube, to being Smg4's berserk button, whenever someone destroys it or tries to look at his collection of memes. A major flaw with his current self is that he usually doesn't do much besides just stand there and ask logical questions about the current scenario (something you know that nobody should be doing if you paid attention to part 2). What he SHOULD be doing is trying to stop the insanity, instead of just questioning it. Also, don't forget that he isn't always the logical one either, especially when his previously mentioned berserk button is pressed. Make him actually do things. As a reoccurring joke, he could sometimes use a specific line when injured, the one that Luke uses on Hobo Bros. (Fill the blank to complete the quote: "OOH MY _ _ _!".)
Meggy: She has the same problem as Smg4, being that she usually doesn't do anything besides question things. Despite her proficiency with weapons, Meggy usually just kicks things during fights. Why doesn't she put her weaponry skills to good use in the face of danger instead? As for her use in episodes, you could make her become a full-time cop, as you could use that as a better reason to put her in the episodes by having her show up to stop the current catastrophe. She should still be competitive, so when faced with the opportunity to participate in a competition, Meggy will surely join. Her reoccurring joke could be her hiding in various places (like when she hid in a trash can during War on Beeg Smg4). This would go well with her being an officer, as she could go undercover this way. Just don't use this too often.
Tari: Warning, as this is going to be a major character overhaul. I think her first appearance in the series was her best portrayal, though even that was not perfect. Tari's current purpose is to get hurt and cry about it as well as be wholesome, though she fails at the latter due to the former. She should be the one who's too nice for her own good, constantly being harmed/killed, more often than anyone else, even more than Luigi. Despite her constant misfortune, she should never cry or be sad about it. She just puts her smile back on no matter what happens, encouraging people to do the right things, and comforting those who need it. I want her to be able not only to take it, but also to just keep smiling. This would make her be seen as an optimist instead of pathetic and annoying (many people do like her, but the others don't like her for the previously-explained reason). She could also still like ducks, but she shouldn't have a cuteness overload from it. A new idea would be to give her a berserk button, but not one you'd be accustomed to. Under certain circumstances, she could put her cybernetic arm to use. It will physically enhance her strength and fighting ability (to angry Steve levels), as well as make her eyes glow cyan. This would be her last resort when being nice won't solve anything and nobody else can help. Tari is in complete control during this, and will return to normal via deactivating voluntarily. She doesn't use this normally as she doesn't want to hurt anyone if she doesn't have to, so this is a once or twice a season type of thing. Her cyborg arm doesn't get used for anything anymore, so I gave it a use. Again, she'll almost never use it, as she doesn't give up on kindness easily. She only wants everyone to get along, though that's never gonna happen in this show. Not that she's ever going to truly give up on that.
Saiko: Like a couple other characters I've already discussed, Saiko has no real use at this time. Despite supposedly being insane and her first few appearances, she doesn't do much. What I want to do with her is make her into a wild card. Instead of always being friends with everybody else, she could be neutral by default. When provoked at any point, she will become angry at whoever triggered her, no matter who they are. Perhaps she could sometimes try to resist losing her temper, but she'll will generally fail to do so when attempted. When against someone, Saiko will be about as forgiving to them as she was prior to Luigi's Lesson: Not forgiving at all, and on a near-unstoppable rampage. She should be more likely to forgive the main cast, though she could be an episode's villain instead if she loses her cool. I wanted Saiko to have purpose again, as her battle prowess has been neglected, along with her namesake.
Bowser: And now we have a perfect example of flanderization. If you don't know what that means, look it up. Bowser is meant to be the villain who never gives up, despite his constant failures and lack of competence. He hasn't been used as a villain since Stupid Mario 3D World, and that was almost 2 years ago at this point! Of course, he can also take the role of rival for Mario when needed, as they compliment each other's stupidity. Just stop shafting him by making him be a dad, he never needed to be one in the first place.
Peach: Another flanderized character, Peach is not meant to be a Karen. She is a person who doesn't stand for the chaos, despite how often she's roped into it herself. Peach should be the one to throw out Mario when he starts causing trouble in the castle, assuming she can get to him in time. The joke that she was cancer incarnate was funny because it wasn't true, just like in Luigi's case.
Wario/Waluigi: These two seem to have been mostly forgotten. There's nothing wrong with them, just their prevalence. Make these two occasionally appear in the background, scamming people, robbing banks, and being pursued by the police. The Waluigi Launcher should become a reoccurring joke again, along with "Wario dies", and Waluigi's Taco Stand.
SwagmasteChris: These two have the same problem as the Wario Bros.. I'm aware that you've lampshaded this more than once, but they still need to be truly be used in this show. Being unemployed means you can make them show up wherever you need them to, so use them! (Come on, do you really expect me to believe that they're gonna work at Arby's forever?)
Toad: Same story as the previous characters. Just actually use him in your episodes.
Leet Police: Just when you started using new models for them, they disappeared. Their infamous "STAHP RIGHT THERE" was another iconic part of this series, so you should use them again. Like with Mario, Luigi, and Smg4, these guys should mostly use their SM64 models for the same reasons.
Bob: His signature schtick should be used again, as it's been absent. He does something selfish/acts like a jerk, only to immediately receive bodily harm. Don't forget his signature catchphrase to go with it (oW My oVarIEs)! I think that he looks better in gmod only, as he's supposed to resemble a dirty rag. Watching him flop around emphasizes this. Lastly, let him be a scammer like the Wario Bros., except he works alone.
Fishy Boopkins: Slightly flanderized, he needs to not be a loser you sympathize for, and instead be the loser you don't feel bad for at all. Make him as annoying as possible, always using over-exaggerated expressions, always whining every time he gets hurt, and always bothering people with his anime obsession. Unlike Tari, who needs to not be annoying to work, Boopkins needs to be as annoying as possible so the audience can find his own misfortunes funnier than they normally would otherwise. To make him even more annoying, make him summon his dad to help him as a reoccurring joke, as he doesn't do that anymore, either. Like Bob, he needs to use his gmod model more often, though in this case, it's to make him be able to over-exaggerate himself.
Mr. Monitor: His first appearance was the best, followed by Officer Meggy. His "approach the person committing the crime slowly and menacingly before going nuts" schtick should be his signature gag, as it works so well compared to everything else he does. Making him appear more often is the only other thing to do with him, honestly. Just don't make him overshadow the Leet Police by appearing too often.
Smg3: The idea of him being a truly serious villain was a neat one, but I think he does best as the villain who, despite his competence, keeps losing every battle and never succeeds in taking over Smg4's channel/the world. Making him sympathetic by giving him a dramatic backstory is the same way, as it only makes us feel a little bad when he inevitably loses now, especially when you realize he would never be evil in the first place if it weren't for his nemesis ruining his career. His petty, yet well-concocted plans are more fun to watch than literally becoming god with the YouTube remote. Smg3's Gauntlet of Gloom is a good example of what his plans should be.
Shroomy: I want to get rid of his duel personality with Doom-Shroomy, as it gets in the way of his actual role as a character. Being awesome and casually playing it off is what Shroomy does best. (Do you remember that he can make a rocket launcher with nothing more than a stick and a rock?) That's pretty much all I have to say for him.
Steve: He seems to be falling into the role of only existing to get mad at people for hurting his chickens. This should be a very rare occasion, as it's going to become boring and predictable if that's the only thing he does. He can be funny just by being effortlessly awesome like Shroomy, except he's also more destructive, albeit not intentionally.
Axol: Something most fans in this community know is the fact that Axol has only been used on a few different occasions since the Anime Arc. Since he doesn't have much going for him, I'm just going to improvise. I think he should become mostly a cameo character under the pretense that he's getting ideas for his anime by watching the events of the episodes unfold before him. You can have him be important to an episode sometimes, just not often. I wouldn't change anything about his personality, though.
Rob: This living scarecrow was, as other have been, best in his debut. He should usually be seen serving as Steve's crop defender by saying messed-up things to those who try to steal the corn (which sends them running away, screaming). He can also try to sell corn to people in the backgrounds of various scenes as a cameo, though he usually ends up scaring them away due to only being able to say disturbing things. Rob's real eyes should be obscured by his hat by default (while protecting/selling corn), only lifting up his hat when talking to the other characters. When he talks, most of his dialogue should revolve around a disturbing obsession with corn, though he can talk normally by taking out his stereo and pressing specific buttons on it. The reason he couldn't properly communicate with anyone in Corn was because of the stereo, after all.
Whimpu: Whimpu needs something to do (or a girl to simp for) in order for him to work. I suggest making him Saiko's assistant, as he would always help his "queen". This makes sense now that he knows that the girls on the internet are actually not real. Whimpu could try to calm down Saiko whenever something triggers her, though he will not hesitate to follow any orders she gives him, even if they entail helping her beat up the other characters (by giving her weapons, as he clearly can't fight), when she's the episode's villain. He knows that violence is usually not the answer, though he won't fail his "queen". She's the only real one, after all.
Jub-Jub: His lack of personality due to being a toddler means that he's going to be shafted to mostly being a background character, specifically to wander into danger and get hurt for comedy. His big brother can also be seen trying to keep him safe, though they'll usually both end up in harm's way as a result. Here's an example: Jub-Jub walks onto the street in the middle of the city, and Boopkins is distracted until after Jub-Jub is already in danger. Fishy Boopkins yells for his little brother to come back because it's not safe, following him onto the road. Jub-Jub obeys and starts to come to Boopkins, only for them both to be hit by an oncoming truck. Perhaps in episodes where both Jub-Jub and Fishy Boopkins are protagonists, Jub-Jub could wander off and get lost, prompting Boopkins to go looking for him. As a reoccurring gag, when in the vicinity of Mario, Jub-Jub should be on the receiving end of "kick the baby". This should almost always happen, and to avoid it becoming stale, Mario could find new ways to do it each time.
Belle: I'm going to make her more unique by giving her something that no other character will ever have: Plot armor. In contrast to Tari, Belle will never receive any harm whatsoever, with all danger barely missing her at worst. I recommend lampshading this occasionally, as the other characters will notice that she's always so lucky. Since there isn't much to really do with her, she's mostly just going to exist as Tari's rival.
Yoshi: As a criminal, he's always hiding from the cops, and usually trying to do something illegal, be it selling drugs to other people, or continuing to evade his taxes. He acts friendly towards the main cast to avoid attention from the authorities, thought that might be what gets him caught in the first place.
Melony: Background character. Not much a watermelon can do, besides conveniently falling on specific objects. It's simple, but it works well.
That's all of the major characters. In part 4, I'm going to rank every character in the show by prevalence, as the balancing algorithm currently being used isn't exactly fair. You may not agree with what I've done with some characters, but as I said before, they wouldn't fit into Smg4 as they currently are.
Part 4: "Perfectly balanced, as all things should be." Well, maybe not...
Yet another thing that most of the community can agree on is the fact that many characters keep getting shafted in favor of making more room for others (especially Mario). I checked, and there wasn't much of a limit on who would show up in older episodes, or even a status quo. Characters who didn't make an appearance in one episode would likely make a cameo in the next. Since there are so many more "important" characters today compared to before, balancing them is more difficult, but still possible. There will be a role-to-appearence ratio for each category, to give you an idea of how often the characters should be important to an episode, and how often they should just appear in the background as cameos/to be used as jokes. The lists aren't in any specific order, so don't make some characters more important for their places within a list. Characters that are always used together will be listed as one, and characters that have different rules will be discussed after the list, and will be marked with this symbol (?!). Warning: You will see a couple names that shouldn't be on these lists, but I'll explain them in part 5. I promise.
Primary characters: I have yet to see a true Smg4 episode that lacks at least one primary character, as they make cameos at the very least. And no, spinoff series (The Wacky Wario Bros., GnR, Sonic The Derphog, etc) don't count, as they're spinoffs, and aren't meant to be about the usual cast. These characters are the most likely to have an important role in any given episode, and the events of an episode will also usually revolve around them. The ratio is 3:4. Now for the trio:
Mario,
Luigi, and
Smg4.
Secondary characters: They are still very important to the series, they just aren't garunteed to have a major role or even appear in an episode. Some characters that appear here may surprise you, until you remember that most older episodes were about completely random things, and not having a specific, non-flexible cast. By the way, original characters shouldn't automatically be more prevalent than others just because you made them yourself. Some of your best episodes have none of your OCs in them at all. The ratio for them is 2:3. Here they are:
Meggy
Tari
Bob
Fishy Boopkins
Peach
Toad
Bowser
Leet Police (?!)
Tertiary: This group is longer than the first two combined, and they are still important to making a good episode. Only a few need to appear in each one, however. They can be important to any episode if it's based around them, though they can play a part regardless. Their ratios are 1:3. Here we go:
Yoshi
Saiko (?!)
Mr. Monitor (?!)
Smg3 (?!)
Wario/Waluigi
SwagmasteChris
Shroomy
E. Gadd
Steve
The Mario Recolors (?!)
Supplementary characters: These characters are meant to only appear in certain locations, or only when a specific other character is present. I'll put the names of the places/characters the supplements are tied to in parentheses next to the names. They can have cameos, of course, but they won't have any major roles in episodes without being with their associated place/person. The ratio for this group is 1:4. The list:
Toadette (Toad)
Whimpu (Saiko)
Jub-Jub (Fishy Boopkins)
Belle (Tari)
Bowser Jr. (Bowser)
Kamek (Bowser)
Desti (Meggy)
Toadsworth (Peach's Castle)
Rob (Steve's farm) (?!)
Cameo/Meme characters: These characters almost exclusively exist to be a part of background jokes, almost never actually serving an important role in any episode. They are still important to the series, so make sure there is at least one of these for each minute of an episode. This is also the longest list, which is to be expected. Having them barge into the action to make the situation worse is usually the closest they'll get to serving a role. The ratio for these guys is 1:10 (harsh, but true). Here's the last list:
Frankie,
Toast Guy,
Gourmet Guy,
The Old Man,
The Old Lady,
The Wizard Rock,
Lakitu,
Weegee Doll,
The Teletubbies,
The FNAF animatronics,
Greg,
Melony,
Axol,
Heavy/The TF2 characters,
Susan Whatyougonnado,
Sonic,
Dr. Robotnik,
Baldi,
Kermit,
Shrek,
Bowser's minions, and
literally everyone else.
Now for the special cases (the ones I marked):
The Leet Police and Mr. Monitor should only appear when there's a crime to bust, unless you can give them a different role (such as in Mario Runs Out of Toilet Paper). As discussed in part 3, Meggy can also apply to this rule, though that won't be her only reason to appear.
The villain/antagonist trio (Bowser, Smg3, and Saiko) will generally appear only to oppose the characters in an episode (or in Saiko's case, to be provoked by something beforehand). Bowser can just be a jerk sometimes, as he doesn't always have an evil plan to initiate.
The Mario recolors have been heavily requested by many fans for years now (no, that isn't a joke), and while I understand that you don't think they are worth using, the fans do have a point. X is a calm and generally pleasant guy, FM is a level-headed cop who actually thinks before he shoots, Enzo is an old villain of Mario's creation, who wants the main cast dead, and will murder them without hesitation. These three do have potential to be used in this show, as they roll with the chaos (or cause it, in Enzo's case) instead of stopping it by applying logic, as the current cast usually does nowadays. There are more than just these, but they are the most unique and requested. If you really don't like them, you don't have to give them lots of appearances, hence their placement in tertiary. Just give them a chance, okay?
Rob, despite being a supplementary character, can have roles without being at Steve's farm (The Corn Trip), though I recommend that you usually keep him there when he's not trying to sell people corn in the background.
In the next part, I'm going to bring a major issue with this to the light, though the remedy is going to be...
Interesting. Do you trust me to set things right, no matter what?"
.....
PART 5-7 IN THE NEXT MEGAPOST
Here's a link to Megapost 2: https://www.reddit.com/SMG4/comments/k461uo/smg4_analysis_megapost_ft_rnivelacker_22/?utm_medium=android_app&utm_source=share
submitted by Birdygamer19 to SMG4 [link] [comments]

My All-Media Mega-Watchthrough Part 5: The Fifth Doctor

Previous posts: 4th Doctor part 2, which links to the others in turn.
Well it's been 10 months, meaning I greatly underestimated how long this would take. Maybe it's a consequence of the overwhelming amount of Big Finish that each Doctor comes with now, or maybe it's the massive ongoing global pandemic that sapped my motivation. Who's to say?
Regardless, to the delight of some and the dismay of most, I am back once again.
Continuity:
There's quite a few Annual stories that Eyespider has to do some wild mental gymnastics for, since they feature Adric, Nyssa, and Tegan. All of them are awful and not worth bothering to place, and the most positive note I have on any of them is a 2.5/10 and the comment "it almost gets the Doctor's characterization right" written beside.
There's also a running plot thread of the TARDIS knowing Time-Flight would happen, and doing everything in its power to prevent it. Which, after seeing the episode, yeah, I get it.
I didn't write down in my notes the first time it was mentioned, but I believe it was Iterations of I, where the TARDIS lands in the 80s, nowhere near Heathrow, and the Doctor calls explicit attention to the fact that it's almost like she doesn't want to land there in the 80s.
So all of season 19? Every EU story that starts with Tegan wailing "I thought you were taking me to Heathrow?" It's all because the TARDIS just really really did not want this world to see Time-Flight.
But, you know, Earthshock is fine. She doesn't want to avert that.
There's also Kamelion. Every writer accidentally agrees on Kamelion's fate, though differ on how he got there, creating some problems. Kamelion is built like crap. His design is inherently flawed and he gets taken over by anything that moves. He even once begins to turn into Tegan because she's so mad at him.
He cannot do a single thing right. In the end of every story, be it Big Finish's Kamelion trilogy, The Crystal Brucephalus, or the short trip One Perfect Twilight, Kamelion comes to the conclusion that he's a danger to the TARDIS crew, and should be sent to live in a sort of Zero Room in the TARDIS, where he can't be interfered with.
Of the three times it happens, one decides it's not a happy ending at all. Big Finish and Brucephalus both imply that he can at least know what's going on outside, so he's basically just watching Doctor Who in his room until Planet of Fire. And then the short trip implies it's basically a prison for him. So you get to take you pick on how much he's suffering in your canon, based off how much you hate him.
Oh, and Kamelion Empire makes him a war criminal for some reason. One who has a laser in his chest that makes a stock sound effect that I recognize from Danganronpa, meaning I couldn't take it seriously at all. Next time you watch any of season 21, just remember a really shittily build war criminal is in the TARDIS watching it too.
Other thoughts:
Right off the bat it feels like a direct evolution of season 19. Most eras feel like a pull in a new direction, which of course they are, but season 19 just hits different. It's a breath of fresh air after a full year of Tom Baker, and I think a big part of it is the companions. Giving 4 the season 19 cast just before his death was a stroke of (accidental?) genius. It's no longer just one companion who turns to the camera and says "oh my god guys this is so weird" and then goes "I am fine with it now actually" by the end of the first episode. It's an adjustment for them all, to varying degrees. I think it's the best take on regeneration of them all honestly.
Even though he's fully settled past the turbulent stage and memory loss, he still needs to actually find himself again. It's a period of adjustment, as opposed to "Colin Baker jumps off the floor, goes absolutely mental for 2 serials, and now knows himself again."
Despite this, 5 doesn't really have a character arc. Rather he just gets more and more stressed as the weight of worlds build on his shoulders. This is most apparent in season 21, where it was the theme of the season. "There should have been another way."
As brought up with season 18 last time, I very firmly believe that EU content should try to capture the era it's set in. Don't write a Pirate Planet in season 18, don't write a fun little murder mystery in season 21.
And then they do. Very frequently. We go from Frontios, the bleak edge of the universe where some of the last humans are slowly dying out, to Time in Office, a 4 part comedy romp where 5 has to actually perform his duties as Lord President.
Now, I love Time in Office, it's one of the best Man Range releases I've heard. But it shouldn't be in season 21. In a marathon like this, it breaks the atmosphere and the slight character arc of the Doctor being relentlessly beaten down by the universe because of unlucky circumstance. Of course, nobody is meant to experience the stories like I'm doing. I get that for 5, BF is limited in where they can place things. But it doesn't stop me from being disappointed.
"It stopped being fun, Doctor," loses its impact if you know that between TV episodes there were dozens of normal stories, some that just wrote Tegan out by saying "she just stayed in the TARDIS, it's not because we couldn't get Janet Fielding."
And not related to anything, but I want to talk about the lighting for season 21. My god, it is abysmal. Everything is overlit. The only story that escapes being lit by the sun placed 5 feet away from the stage is Caves of Androzani. Maybe because of being set underground and partially filmed on location, maybe because fate just decided this episode deserved everything going right, but either way it's better than anything around it. Even then, the lighting still rears its hellish head in the scenes of the military base or Morgus' room.
It leaves the whole season feeling flat. I can't look past it, it's a massive detriment to every story. They just did not want a single shadow in this season. [This is an underground scene].(https://i.imgur.com/cEp1hvs.jpg) This is an underground scene from a story that understands there's not a nuclear explosion just off camera.
Best Part of the Era Overall:
The companions, easily. Though not for the same reason as last time.
No, whereas the companions were the only redeeming quality of the Fourth Doctor's era, here they serve the very important purpose of having someone for a much quieter, more reserved Doctor to play off of. People often call Five the bland Doctor, a criticism which I wholeheartedly disagree with. He's trying to be nice, give everyone the benefit of the doubt, and save the day amicably. But by God he is three seconds away from losing his mind at all times. He is very stressed and if you don't stop bickering in the back seat he is going to turn this TARDIS around right now, kids.
Tegan is the best example. Their every interaction is taking years off his life, and with 5 he's at his best when stressed. Sure, he has disputes with Adric because who wouldn't get mad having to put up with him, and he isn't too big of a fan of Turlough at first, but they can't hold their own like Tegan. She's the only one who could match 5's underlying anger through confronting it with her own.
Without her, the TARDIS would be a very dull place. Sure Adric would be annoying occasionally because, well, he's Adric, but he would cower like the worm he is if push came to shove.
Nyssa is... well, she's there. TV doesn't know what to do with her, and Big Finish only do sometimes. Turns out what you can do is point and go "hey! Look at all this trauma over her people's genocide! Want the longest stretch of EU content so far with this character and not really overcoming that?"
The exception to this is scientific debates. Usually some new science or technology will happen/be in place where they land, and the Doctor will say "the ethical implications here make me nervous for when parts 3 and 4 happen and I'll have to turn to the camera and ask if I have the right" and Nyssa will say "no doctor. It is good actually. Can you not see the good this is doing for the majority who are not being tortured to make Torture Juice?" and then they'll argue. I do like it, it's definitely a new type of conflict, but it really needs more than repeating it every other story.
And speaking of companions: Peri, who is just... oh man. Peri.
Worst Parts of the Era Overall:
Yeah. Peri. You were probably expecting this.
Now, I don't hate Peri. I'm excited to see what the EU does to her with 6, because I think she has potential. I was never the biggest fan of her on TV, but I'm sure BF can salvage her.
But oh my God she did not need all of this. She literally has more stories than Adric. And then in Peri and the Piscon Paradox she gets mindwiped of all of them so Caves of Androzani can work.
And then they fuck that one up by not mindwiping the Doctor himself in that episode.
You know, the reason people complain about his fearless sacrifice to save someone he hardly knows being diminished by these 47 stories.
So yeah. People have their own takes on whether the 5/Peri gap is good or not, or whether it devalues Caves. And as the sort-of-technically most qualified person, I can say: haha oh my god no. No it's not. It is so bad.
I don't fully agree with saying it lessens 5's sacrifice in Caves. It's the closest a Classic Who episode gets to perfect, just edging out The War Games. There's no real theme to it that you could say is ruined by this EU content. You just can't say how cool it is that 5 sacrificed himself for an almost total stranger anymore.
But in trying to get that back, the EU fucks it up. They know these stories really don't need to exist and, it seems, the writers sometimes almost don't want them to. But you can't have it both ways. You can't write 3 years of Peri's life out of existence with a mindwipe, while still writing more and more in there.
Oh and they both completely forget about Erimem, but you know what? I'm not broken up about it.
Peri is though because holy shit is she gay for her. Like goddamn, they try so hard to say they're just good friends, and write everything short of a sex scene. Paraphrasing from every other PErimem audio:
ERIMEM: "Oh dear Peri, you appear to have walked in on my changing clothes."
PERI: "[comment about her body delivered so so so not-heterosexually.]"
This is what happens when you try and have a bunch of male authors write a "sisterly bond" (their words, frequently), while being as unashamedly horny as most Who authors are.
There's a scene in The Veiled Leopard where Peri and Erimem go to a party in the 60s, acting like a couple, and tell the guy out front that they're sisters, despite being different races and looking nothing alike. I could not possibly write a more "gay couple trying to act straight in the past" scene and I literally have, as an author of awful Doctor Who fanfic.
And then later that audio Peri is holding Erimem upside down into a trash chute, seeing up her dress, and makes a very heterosexual comment about her underwear.
Sisterly bond though guys, trust us.
Anyway then there's the time the writers go the complete opposite direction and make Peri just really really bigoted and call Erimem the N-word, which was almost unreadable. (Thanks, Blood and Hope.)
Then Erimem left for a shitty heterosexual "finding her true love" ending with a man she had no chemistry with in her final story.
Peri also doesn't remember her own age now because we just cannot help ourselves.
She's 19 in EU material near her introduction. She then has at least three timeskips that I can remember:
Warmonger features a one-year timeskip and is the least of its problems. The Kingmaker strands Peri and Erimem 2 years back from the Doctor, making them wait to catch up. And The Son of the Dragon also has a few stationary months waiting for Erimem to stop having another awful heterosexual romance out of spite for the Doctor.
The Erimem arc is really just her getting on the TARDIS, saying "Doctor I want to leave" "sorry, I was confused, I will stay one more trip" and that happening until she finds a mediocre white guy on Peladon and marries for political power, and this is supposed to be a good thing.
And speaking of companions we forgot, remember Amy and Zara? No?
I didn't remember until 3 drafts in either. They're just so bad. The one thing I will say about Amy: Ciara Janson does a perfect voice for her, and I really like it.
But the character herself deserves to be put on Adric's freighter. Not because she's awful, but because the entire Key2Time trilogy is just a dumpster fire.
There's no originality to it. "Hey remember that thing from 20 years ago? Did you like it? Did you? Cool. Buy this now."
Now, that is Big Finish's business model, but usually (okay, sometimes) they make those stories really work, despite not really needing to be a sequel to whatever.
This is just crap. We even pull the same twist that "yooooo the castle was the segment the entire time, isn't that wild? It's like when the planet was a segment, remember that?"
Zara is comical in the sense that her existence makes me laugh because haha what is she doing here? She's here to be evil. Cool. The Black and White guardians are here too though sooo-
Anyway, hope you're all excited for their return in the Main Range as "old friends!" Preorder now! Please forget the fact that it literally makes no sense to know them unless we're inserting a superfluous solo gap into the superfluous 5/Peri gap where he just leaves her frozen in time a while for no reason at all! It's fine!
I still have no idea what Graceless is and do not wish to learn. All I know is the thought that Key2Time got a spinoff is hilarious and you can't convince me it's canon because I'd have to listen to it.
Also, on companions: Thomas Brewster has the charisma of dog shit on my porch, and did not deserve a happy ending.
Best Novels:
Fear of the Dark:
The best Doctor Who novel, no competition. My only criticism is the ending feeling just a little rushed, but it's almost irrelevant. For once I can remember every side character, they're all distinct, everyone acts in understandable ways, there's no useless edgelord-ery, and I've read it twice. Once before this series and now again, and it held up both times. And I say that as someone who is filled with terror by the idea of rereading a Who book because they've conditioned her to fear them.
The Doctor and companions are perfectly written. 5 is at his absolute best here, it's easily the best depiction of him in any of the novels, and honestly better than some from TV. He's pushed to his breaking point, in a struggle to survive against an ancient evil older than time itself on a forgotten planetoid, cut off from any escape. Imagine how he acts in Caves, except he ends up getting out alive.
Everyone is dropping like flies and the deaths are actually compelling, even for the side characters. Did you like 5 in caves of Androzani? Did you like "SO YOU SEE, I'M NOT GOING TO LET YOU STOP ME NOW!," the best line delivery in the entire franchise? Good. Get this. It's that but for an entire book. At one point 5 almost mercy-kills another character, and it's actually understandable and I wouldn't say it's even overly edgy. That's how good this book is. It makes the usual edgy "will he shoot? The man who never would?" believable, understandable, and have actual stakes.
If you're ever looking for a Doctor Who book recommendation, get this one. I can't imagine anything topping it from my list.
The Sands of Time:
Set directly after Fear of the Dark on Eyespider, it makes the unprecedented two-good-novels-in-a-row streak.
Now, it has its flaws. Nyssa is thrown into a coffin for almost the entire story, Tegan slips out of character sometimes, and the ending is bizarre even before the author writes 5 pages of alternate ending, then writes a page amounting to "but God did not like this ending, so he rewrote it." Maybe they accidentally didn't send out a final draft, who knows.
It's actually a very good mix of Moffat-like timey-wimey (ugh) and Chibnall "globetrotting" styles, with the story being spread across a dozen times and locations out of order. It's sort of a mystery book, except instead of being a murder it's "what is happening with Nyssa and how do we free her?" 5 is well characterized and once more is prepared to do whatever it takes, Tegan is a delight as ever, and all the side characters are actually pretty good.
It also manages to not just fanwank Black Orchid, City of Death, and Pyramids of Mars, but make them all play a role in the story. Though the ending does seem like cheap bullshit if you've not seen Black Orchid, but if you're reading PDAs you probably have.
Divided Loyalties:
Yeah. You heard me.
Now, I absolutely cannot recommend this book. It's fanwank to the highest degree. The dialogue rages from strained to abysmal.
In spite of that I like it. And usually I think it's laughable when people review things like that, saying "it's all bad but it's so fun to read" because it usually ends up being just weirdly defensive of an author they like slipping up and just pumping out some garbage. See: Warmonger (and oh we will).
So take my defense of this novel with a grain of salt. I'm not even going to lie and say it's well written, the go-to "I can't defend anything in this but I feel I have to."
The thing I like is the character interactions. The little slice of life in the TARDIS bit we get is just perfect, I can't really explain. Of course then it comes with bad dialogue and things like this, confirming Adric to be an Alzarian Neckbeard. It's definitely full of winks and nods to continuity because of course, it's a Gary Russel book. The TARDIS crew are all doubting their role after the Doctor's recent regeneration, and you get to see how they think of themselves. Adric's ego matches almost mine, but he's unaware of it. Most of the book for him is spent wondering why everyone picks on him which yeah, I'd buy that that's what's in Adric's head.
The plot is cool. It expands on the Great Old Ones and if you can't tell by the first two novels I mentioned, I am an absolute sucker for elder god/higher being stories.
I like the idea of the Doctor having fucked up something in his past, before leaving Gallifrey. I dislike everything about the Deca, a group of ten young Time Lords in the academy. Consisting of the Doctor, Koschei (the Master), Ushas (the Rani), Mortimus (the Monk), Drax, Vansell (some godawful Big Finish creation that didn't need this), That One Time Lord From Genesis of the Daleks, two characters exclusive to this novel, and Magnus, also known as the War Chief. (The War Chief is not the Master, in case you cared/were still confused.)
So yeah. I can't defend this. I like it. Don't ever read it.
Goth Opera:
The first PDA, and it... it certainly showed what was to come. It's needlessly edgy, dumb as all hell, and by all rights I shouldn't like anything about it.
And yet. I think I just appreciate the atmosphere and Buffy-ness of it. It was definitely entertaining for being (I have to say it, I'm sorry) batshit and having moments like this, where Nyssa fights a baby and then becomes a vampire and fills the rest of the book with hungry gay vampire lust.
Worst Novels:
(Content warning: basically everything from here out.)
Alright. First off the shilling.
My favorite segment is the novels, as shown in literally every post where they take up so much space. I realize that these posts are a lot, they're usually right up against the character limit. They take hours to read, and days to write. I realize maybe not everyone is so interested in the novels and me just ranting. Hell, I had to cut out my Blood and Hope, Ultimate Treasure, and King of Terror reviews entirely for this post. All of which would be as long as my Warmonger rant.
So I created a youtube account where I will be making a series of videos going more in depth about the books, probably reviewing some audios, and, more importantly, making some companion videos to this series.
Now, it doesn't have any videos on it at the moment. I'm currently moving between countries, and I have nowhere to actually record where it won't sound just awful. But I will be uploading soon, almost definitely by the end of the year, and if more of this is appealing to you it'd mean a lot if you subscribed and watched when that actually gets started.
Or alternatively just following me on Twitter, where I do livetweet threads of the awful books I have to read. I'm currently reading Synthespians™, which is notoriously stupid.
Warmonger:
Fuck this book. This brings out a hatred I have not felt since Combat Rock. It doesn't even have the decency to be hilariously incompetent in the edge, like Mick Lewis.
Here's my Twitter thread for it. I'm going to try to get it all together here, but due to the character limit I'm going to have to cut stuff out.
So this book is written by Terrance Dicks, the man who should have a better grasp on the Whoniverse than anyone else, having novelized most of it. A legend in the fandom, having written a lot of older fans childhoods. I get wanting to defend him.
Don't do that. There is no excuse for this book.
Every review on Pagefillers is "everything about this is awful. It's written poorly. But the pages fly by! I just can't hate anything uncle Terry makes. 9/10."
Just because someone you like wrote something doesn't give it value. This book fails on its own merits. At the very least, it's a showcase into the importance of editors, and people who will tell you no.
So the first thing that happens is a 40 page long "present day" sequence where Peri is a guerilla leader who doesn't care about her group of rebels, and offhandedly mentions one of them was raped and has PTSD. Which really just sets the tone here, doesn't it?
After getting captured by the bad guys, despite their group being apparently the only 6 people standing in their way, they then sentence them to execution in the morning, giving them 12 hours to escape.
They also care about committing war crimes for some reason. Then Peri and only Peri is saved by a military of Sontaran/Draconian/Ogron alliances, and brought to "the Supremo."
Surprise! It's the Doctor! Record scratch. Time to find out how we got here. Jump back one year.
It all started because a bird alien thing attacked Peri and the Doctor fought it off by voring it. Peri's arm is, like, really badly hurt. Just so messed up.
So messed up, in fact, that the Doctor doesn't know what to do. He's in the TARDIS but, as we're told many times, there's just nowhere in all of time or space he can take her to fix up a not-even-detached arm. Can't be done. Nowhere. Not even Gallifrey. There's only one man who can do it, and we're told it's an under 40% survival rate.
Not only can nobody in literally ever fix a lost limb, they can't even stop you from dying from blood loss. Now, call me stupid, but I'm pretty sure people on Earth have survived that.
The Doctor shows some touching concern for Peri, clearly behaving exactly as he did in Caves, the very next story after this.
The "one man in the universe" is Solon, who you may remember as "that one dude from Brain of Morbius" or "literally who?" His assistant Drago is here, with two hands, making this a prequel.
The story is set on Karn and oh boy. Apparently there's a building just off camera in Brain that used to be like, some sort of castle, but is now a hospital? I don't even know, it's stupid.
It's worth noting that the writing is just awful in every way, and this reads beat for beat like my own writing from last year. The editor must have died on the job and fell onto the "yeah start printing" button beside him.
Then the book just drags ass. The entire first 3rd is spent here, waiting for Peri to get better from a surgery I cannot believe would even be a problem in the future. I can't imagine thinking it was a logical plot point to include, it's so incredibly contrived.
Solon poisons Peri after she finds his lab, where he's decided to make some Frankenstiens, and then uses this as leverage to get the Doctor to go to the Sisterhood and beg for just a drop of elixir, madame.
The Sisterhood want to know if he's a high ranking Time Lord and he goes "haha no :)" because Dicks just straight-up forgot he wrote The 5 Doctors.
5 then just fucking namedrops being pals with Hitler out of nowhere, while having the gall to mention honour in the same paragraph.
Were you wondering what happened with Drago? Has that been a burning question on your mind since 1975?
Well first, get some professional help. Dicks explains that anyway. It's a lobotomy. Enjoy! Maybe Drago can even read this book now and give it a 9/10 on Goodreads.
Peri wants to interfere with Solon and stop his evil plan, but the Doctor just keeps shooting it down. "Peri we can't interfere. I can't tell you why. Just wait one more day and we can leave."
She asks him dozens of times, but he does not care. He doesn't explain that he literally knows the future and Solon gets what's coming to him and fails anyway, hurting nobody. Because if he did, that'd make the entire second half not happen. The whole plot hinges on him refusing to fanwank, in a PDA.
Suddenly, on the eve of a... diplomatic meeting... a mysterious Time Lord shows up! Holy shit! I'm at an utter loss as to who this could be in a prequel to The Brain of Morbius (1975). Is it the Master? The Rani? That One Time Lord From Genesis And Also *Divided Loyalties?
It's a good thing Peri was shopping (we do always B shopping) for clothes in this fucking hospital so that they now have something to wear to this event. Most of the hospital staff and patients are invited to this fancy dress intergalactic diplomacy mission because fuck it.
The Doctor then bugs the intergalactic meeting because he's curious who the Time Lord on Karn in the same time period as Solon is. You see, Time Lords can mindscan each other at first sight, but this guy is shielding his. Curious.
It makes the Doctor a real clown for falling for all of the Master's disguises but sure. Anyway, in the "peace" conference we find out holy shit! It's a lie! It's a plan to band together and take over the galaxy! And this Time Lord... is Morbius! I'm very confused because I thought it was the War Chief but I'll go along.
Peri refuses to believe the creepy man dressed in all black and who looks like he wants to kill everyone is evil, because she wants to have sex with him now. She refuses to believe the Doctor recounting word for word what they said about her in their secret meeting, and then goes back to Morbius. She gets kidnapped by him because no shit, Peri.
Peri contemplates killing herself, they taunt her with gang rape, she cuts off chunks of her skin to fake a disease and gets thrown into an escape pod and abandoned. What the actual fuck.
Meanwhile the Doctor goes to Gallifrey to tell them Morbius is doing bad things. He gets there in a spaceship, somehow bypassing the transduction barriers and everything established about Gallifrey. He needs to be disguised, because the Time Lords don't like him. Despite the last fucking plot point being that a Time Lord can always tell when another is hiding their identity.
So he wears a blackface drug because the future's priorities are weird I guess. Arm fixing? Nope, get fucked. Blackface drug? Let me hook you up.
He's so afraid of incurring the Lord President's wrath because the Time Lords hate him. You know, the Lord President? The position he was given in The Five Doctors, that Dicks wrote?
And then he just shits onto the page. He doesn't even give a fuck about continuity. This is Gallifrey in the past. When? Fuck you. It mentions being before Borusa tutored the Doctor, aka before he left Gallifrey. But then they all know who the Doctor is, and his stealing of a type 40. Then all his crimes are mentioned, how the Time Lords still want to put him on trial for interfering, etc. So it's like, between The Beginning and War Games, but with 50 conflicting history elements. Even if Galifrey ran concurrent to Karn, they sent the 4th Doctor there what can't be 20 years later. This would have to take place after Deadly Assassin at the very least, but it just doesn't. He just forgot Gallifrey was in anything other than War Games.
They get the Doctor to promise to lead their space military to chase down and destroy Morbius by granting him a pardon for all his crimes. You know, the one he wouldn't get if they were pre-War Games.
We begin recruiting every race you've ever heard of in Doctor Who to fight Morbius. The Draconians join, and we keep getting told how weird and foreign their vaguely-Asian culture is, and he literally always brings up their "slanted eyes."
We get the Sontarans by just... fuck knows. Promising a war?
The Ogrons show up and pledge themselves to the cause because fuck it. Whatever.
Then we get to the Cybermen, by appealing to their emotions of arrogance and paranoia. They have literally one character trait, and it's their lack of them. You fucked up the only thing about them.
Somehow Ice Warriors get involved off screen because just why not. You've heard of them. Like it. The story is good now.
We're caught up to present day, and then this shit happens. There is too much to unpack here. I think it sums up this book really well. "Peri, I would have sex with you, but that would be incest for some reason. HEY, REMEMBER THAT THING FROM TV 20 YEARS AGO?"
Anyway the final battle starts to happen, having herded Morbius back to Karn. It's utter tripe and it's just lasers firing at each other. Cool.
The Man Who Never Would picks up a gun and mows people down, this crap happens, whatever. I am so tired.
So we capture Morbius, the Time Lords want him executed, the Doctor has to keep time on track, zzzzzz. He lets Solon do his thing and steals his brain, then fakes the execution and leaves.
In the TARDIS he and Peri conclude that they'll literally just move past their PTSD saying "oh nah I didn't like that." Peri asks the Doctor to recount Brain of Morbius for her and he finally complies, ending the story there so you could go watch it.
All in all, I have to say Peri summarizes nicely. And, just like Combat Rock, he's kind enough to write this line that's so open to mockery it makes my job comically easy.
There's also a part where the troops just decide to start using fascist iconography and holding military parades and stuff to appease "Supremo." Because that's where fascism comes from. It's just when your soldiers want to hold military parades actually, you're just giving them what they want. That's definitely what happened in North Korea. Good job Terry.
The Doctor has to be nerfed and not realize the Brain of Morbius ever happened, and yet he spends every 4th page screaming about how cool it was.
Overall this book is on Combat Rock's level, the second worst I've ever read, surpassing even Rags. It doesn't even entertain me in its edge. It's a shittily written slog all the way through, filled with lame or incomprehensible plot points, edge, rape, and blackface drugs.
Best Audios:
Time in Office:
I touched on it earlier and am running low on space. It's easily one of the best and funniest main range entries, I've heard it 3 times. The only problem I have with it is it taking place after Frontios, and its explanation of Turlough "resting" in the TARDIS because they couldn't get Strickson, despite the story taking place over weeks. I guess he was really tired.
And You Will Obey Me:
The whole trilogy is great (I look forward to the time I understand what the fuck happens in The 2 Masters), and the Master manipulating his "children" for years is very entertaining. It has a nice creepy atmosphere, though the inclusion of the alien race is weird and doesn't really seem necessary. The ending is a little rushed, but Peter Davison is on top form here.
Devil in the Mist/Black Thursday/Power Game/The Kamelion Empire:
It's such a good trilogy. Kamelion gets to exist and, even though he's still pretty useless, it's nice to at least see him get some characterization. All of the stories are incredibly fun, especially Power Game. I'm a big fan of "Doctor Who but they're in a satire of game shows," and it doesn't disappoint. Also confirms Kamelion is a nonbinary icon. There's also a great part in Devil where the Doctor breaks his spine and has to come to terms with being paralyzed until his next regeneration, and it hits harder than a standard "he's really badly injured but doesn't want to worry anyone" plot. Mainly because it wouldn't end his life, but still impact it. It being the start of the trilogy is good too, because it gives at least a little bit of stakes to the whole thing. Sure, he'll get better by the end of the trilogy, but by this audio? Listen and see.
Spare Parts: It's better than Chimes of Midnight. I said it.
I love it. The horror is fantastic, and it being an audio only helps. Now they can't commit what I find the cardinal sin of the Cybermen: showing us. See: the Lone Cyberman. It's a family show, and you could never do the Cybermen justice on TV there.
Conversion is hell. You are mangled beyond recognition, jammed into a suit, and kept alive. You're not putting it on like a costume (fuck you, Timeless Children/Attack of the Cybermen) because it's not meant to fit a human inside it. Not before they've fucked you up so hard that even if taken out of the suit you'd be disfigured for life.
It's one way. That's what this story shows. It's left entirely up to you what it looks like. There's one line from a side character, seeing a Cyberman for the first time, that I think is perfect: "my daughter looks like roadkill."
This is the perfect genesis of the Cybermen, and possibly the best Big Finish audio ever.
Circular Time:
Okay, this is just because of Circular Time: Winter. I'm not too big a fan of Spring and Summer though.
Autumn is a Doctor Who story without outside conflict. It's pure, low stakes character drama, and it hits it out of the... park? I don't know a cricket analogy. It would be funnier if I did.
Oh and for some reason Nyssa has sex.
Winter is equally poignant, set in the dying moments of the 5th Doctor, and taking place entirely in his mind. It's a perfect sendoff for him, and watching concurrently with Caves made it all the better.
Warzone/Conversion:
Finally, another story that knows how to properly use the Cybermen. I don't want to spoil anything, the first part is a bit stupid but the second part is fantastic. It once again features the Doctor going full "NOT GOING TO LET YOU STOP ME NOW."
Worst Audios:
Key2Time, for reasons explained before.
The Axis of Insanity:
It's bog standard Doctor Who and the only interesting idea, a crossroads of all timelines, is almost irrelevant. The villain is the most grating I've ever heard. Peri and Erimem are incredibly generic when they're not out of character, and it beats you over the head with "witty" dialogue in every sentence.
Nekromantia:
You knew it'd be here.
My immediate reaction was shock. Not because it's the worst thing ever, but because it wasn't. I was told this audio would be hell, I would come out screaming in agony, etc.
It's not worse than the average PDA.
I'm not even joking, it has like 5 awful scenes, and is otherwise dull as hell. That's most books I read.
Now, that's not a defense of Nekromantia, more so a condemnation of the novels. If this script was so bad that Peter Davison got the writer fired and we all agree that's good (I do), why did most PDAs happen?
The Helliax Rift:
The most boring BF story in recent history. UNIT hating the Doctor is confusing and stupid, it takes ages to get anywhere, and the moral dilemma is hamfisted and dull. The only thing of interest is that a character's mother shagged an alien.
Dalek Soul:
Have you heard Natural History of Fear? Did you like that twist? I hate it. This is just that with Daleks.
Best Short Stories:
Artificial Intelligence:
Told through the point of view of an AI with the default personality of a teenage girl. Her knowledge increases exponentially, ascending beyond anything we could understand and yup, it's a higher being story. The Doctor's involvement is only in the last few pages, but I'm not even complaining. It's great.
Not So Much a Programme, More a Way of Life:
It's satire on Doctor Who fans. I agree, we're awful. 10/10.
Worst Short Stories:
Lackaday Express:
I don't even know. It's dreamscape trash. It's completely incomprehensible, and I mean completely.
White Man's Burden:
The Doctor annexes South Africa.
Dishonourable mentions: every Annual story.
Comics:
No best or worst here. I read them, they're just unrateable. They don't really feel like Doctor Who, they're in their own liminal space. They have good moments, decent storylines, and I like Stockbridge. But the Doctor still is yet to actually be in character.
Final Thoughts:
No Best or worst TV episodes this time either. I need room to fit the Warmonger rant, plus I like almost all of them.
So yeah. Now that Tom Baker is defeated, I have a will to live again. I'm hoping after my move I can get started on my Youtube thing, because I have 4 whole books I couldn't even get to because I wanted to talk abuot Warmonger. There's even a few audios and short trips I couldn't talk about. This post is at the edge of the character limit, making it the longest one yet.
I'm really looking forward to 6, and seeing if his character arc works across his whole life, or if, like season consistency in EU content, they just do more or less whatever.
As there's more and more content per-Doctor, I find it harder to summarize my thoughts in only one post and am having to rethink how I do this. Hence my branching out into videos and possibly even a shit blog, just to catalogue it all. At one point this post was 51k/40k characters long.
New ranking too: 5 > 12 > 8 > 6 > 7 > 2 > 11 > 1 > 3 > 9 > 13 > War > 10 >>>>>>>>>>>>>>> 4
And finally, the fun fact to end on: in addition to taking a blackface drug, 5 takes space-cocaine in an Annual story, after which he defeats a giant space-ship-eating monster with his bare hands.
See you either on Youtube or Twitter, or in another 6-10 months.
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castle rock cast season 1 episode 2 video

Castle Rock season 1 episode 2 'Habeas Corpus' REACTION ... Castle Rock Season 1 Episodes 1 & 2 Review & Reaction ... Castle Rock Season 1 episode 2 Review - Habeas Corpus ... Meet the Cast with Castle Rock Peters  Find Me in Paris ... Castle Rock Season 1 Episode 2 Spoiler Discussion - YouTube Castle Rock: Season 1 Episode 2

The season 2 premiere of Castle Rock premiered tonight and saw Annie Wilkes from Misery as a young mother stranded in the fictional Stephen King town. With Season 2's focus on one of King's most infamous characters, Misery's Annie Wilkes (Lizzy Caplan), a nurse struggling with her mental health who finds herself stuck in the town of Castle Rock ... Castle Rock (TV Series 2018–2019) cast and crew credits, including actors, actresses, directors, writers and more. Last September, we were left with an unsettling, head-scratching finale for Castle Rock season 1. It was confounding then, and it's probably pretty tough to remember now — so here's what you ... The mystery of Shawshank prisoner deepens as Henry’s past continues to come back to haunt him. A recap of Castle Rock Season 1, Episode 2: ‘Habeas Corpus’ Minor spoilers ahead for Episodes 1-3 of Castle Rock Season 2. Though both seasons take place within the Stephen King universe (and in the same town), any connections between Castle Rock Seasons 1 ... Created by Sam Shaw, Dustin Thomason. With Bill Skarsgård, André Holland, Lizzy Caplan, Melanie Lynskey. Based on the stories of Stephen King, the series intertwines characters and themes from the fictional town of Castle Rock. Episode List. Season: OR . Year: Season 2. S2, Ep1. 23 Oct. 2019 Let the River Run. 8 ... Castle Rock and Jerusalem's Lot get ready for a parade celebrating the history of their beloved cities. A history that dates back 400 years ago when a young woman drastically changes the lives of those around her. S2, Ep8. 27 Nov. 2019 Dirty. 7.8 (777) 0. Rate. 1. Rate. 2. Rate. 3. Rate. 4. Rate. 5. Rate ... Hulu's Castle Rock features several original characters from some of Stephen King's most notable short stories, novellas, and novels. Throughout season 1 and season 2, fans of his literary works can expect familiar names, places, and situations that all take place in one of the three fictional towns created by the author; Castle Rock, Maine.While some are more recognizable than others, they ... Lizzy Caplan leads the cast of Castle Rock Season 2, which also stars Tim Robbins, Paul Sparks and Barkhad Abdi in a story that takes elements from Stephen King works like Misery and Salem's Lot...

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Castle Rock season 1 episode 2 'Habeas Corpus' REACTION ...

About Press Copyright Contact us Creators Advertise Developers Terms Privacy Policy & Safety How YouTube works Test new features Press Copyright Contact us Creators ... Hey Guys This is Torque Dawg with another VIDEO!-----Social MediaGoogle +TorqueDawg-----Get Partnered With Cursehttp://www.unio... Find Me in Paris is a fun fish out of water story about Lena Grisky, a Russian Princess and student at the Paris Opera Ballet School that accidentally time t... Castle Rock Season 1 episode 2 Review - Habeas Corpus On tonight's first official aftershow for Hulu’s Castle Rock, hosts Veronica Valencia, Xia Anderson, and April Dawn discuss Henry Deaver’s return to Castle R... Castle Rock season 1 episode 2 'Habeas Corpus' REACTION*****Merchandise website: https://alpha...

castle rock cast season 1 episode 2

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