Mickey 17 Review: Robert Pattinson’s Rise Continues.

Six years after his Best Picture Winner, Parasite, Bong Joon Ho has returned with his latest film, Mickey 17.
Based on the book Mickey7 by Edward Ashton, the film stars Robert Pattinson as Mickey, a man living in the future who unintentionally volunteers for the worst job in existence, that of an Expendable.
Mickey must take on consistently fatal jobs and, every time he dies, he is cloned and has his memories replanted.

Worst. Job. Ever.

Given that Mickey is on a colonization mission lead by morally bankrupt politician Kenneth Marshall (Mark Ruffalo) and his wife Ylfa (Toni Collette), his deaths are often brutal.
Thankfully, Mickey has the support of his girlfriend Nasha (Naomi Ackie) to help him through the constantly traumatising process.
However, Mickey’s situation worsens when, on his seventeenth life, it is wrongly assumed that he died and an eighteenth clone is printed out.
Now, Mickey 17 must find a way to cohabitat with Mickey 18, or they will both be killed for being Multiples. 

The mix-up kicks off the movie’s conflict.

Mickey 17 is not doing so well financially at the moment, which is a shame because it is quite a good time.
Certainly not Bong Joon Ho’s best work but is still worth the price of admission.
For starters, the performances are all really good, especially Robert Pattinson as Mickeys 17 and 18.
Despite being clones of the same person, they have two completely distinct personalities, and Pattinson is able to pull off both masterfully.
Due to his efforts, you really feel for Mickey, as you watch him constantly be exploited by those around him. 

You can often tell the difference between the Mickeys, even when they look the same.

Along with the performances, the themes are also pulled off well, with Bong Joon Ho’s focus on the exploitation of the working class by the so-called elite.
He even brings in themes of animal and nature conservation, which has been present in many of his previous films, like Okja.
The special effects for the film are also top notch.
There was not a moment where I was drawn out of the film due to bad CGI, as everything looked great.
If I had to name any criticisms, it would be that I feel the film is a little overly long, and there is a subplot with Anamaria Vartolomei’s character which does not really go anywhere. 

I feel like if this subplot had been removed it could have made the film more cohesive.

Other than these two issues, Mickey 17 is a solid film, improved further by a terrific performance from Robert Pattinson.
I would recommend seeing it, especially in light of its financial disappointment. 

Chainsaw Man Chapter 196, Chainsaw Man to the Rescue! Review: Unnecessary Salvation.

Tatsuki Fujimoto concluded the previous chapter of Chainsaw Man by introducing the Death Devil, who said she was going to save everyone.
Based off this statement, and Yoru’s recent villainous turn, I theorized that Yoru would turn out to be the main villain of Part Two, while the Death Devil would serve a more heroic role.
Well, Chapter 196, “Chainsaw Man to the Rescue!” just proved me wrong.
The chapter begins with Fujimoto further exploring the personality of the Death Devil and, because this is Fujimoto, of course she is a complete loser.
She breaks down into a sobbing mess when no one pays attention to her.
Then, when someone tries to include her by asking her to take out the trash, The Death Devil says he should do it because he does not have special powers, unlike her.
The Death Devil being a nervous wreck, having a massive superiority complex and being completely socially unaware makes for a really funny character.
It does not, however, make her fun to be around, and she quickly earns the ire of her classmates, particularly the girl who bullied Asa way back at the beginning of Part Two.
The bully tells the Death Devil to go outside and kill ants, which she does.
The boy who tried to include her earlier attempts to do so again, only for the Death Devil to place a hand on his head.
“Through death I’ll release you from your earthly suffering,” she says, proving my theory about her being a good guy wrong.
The Death Devil certainly seems to view herself as a good guy, though, since she intends to “save” everyone, through death.
Before she can kill the boy, however, she is thankfully interrupted by Chainsaw Man, or rather, the fake Chainsaw Man.
The chapter ends with a full reveal of the fake Chainsaw Man’s form and, once again, Fujimoto has given us a sick design.
A gory mess of blood and bone, the imposter even has a cape made out of guts.
So, it looks like next chapter we are going to get a fight between the fake and the Death Devil.
This makes sense since the imposter is aligned with Fami, and she wants to stop Death.
It will be cool to get a look at Death’s abilities, and I wonder if the boy she tried to kill will survive.
Personally, I hope so because he seemed like a nice guy, trying to include the Death Devil even when she was rude to him.
Overall, “Chainsaw Man to the Rescue!” is yet another great chapter.
Fujimoto does a solid job developing the Death Devil and looks to be setting up a hype fight between her and the fake Chainsaw Man.

Chainsaw Man Chapter 195, Kill Me Tears Review: The Fourth Horseman.

After so many memes in the fandom about different characters being the Death Devil, it seems that Fujimoto has finally revealed her in Chapter 195, “Kill Me Tears.”
The chapter begins with Asa turning her finger gun on herself, but she is thankfully too scared of death to end it.
She then goes back to aiming at Denji and threatens to kill him if he does not kill her.
Asa’s reasoning for doing so is that Yoru is planning something much worse than the extinction of humanity, so she wants to stop Yoru before she can accomplish it.
Asa calls herself an idiot for thinking that she could be friends with a Devil, but Denji responds, “I think you could be friends.”
This is a great callback to Part One where Denji was confident in being friends with Devils, due to his bond with Pochita.
However, after much insistence from Asa, Denji relents and attempts to kill her with a chair, only for Asa to jump out of the way and humorously call him a murderer.
She states she was not mentally prepared to die, and Denji responds that nobody is, even him, and he can come back to life.
This paints a grim picture of Denji’s constant deaths throughout the series since, despite his immortality, they still impact him.
In the end, he is able to temporarily appease Asa by convincing her to have fun with him shooting buildings.
This was a great scene between the two.
It built upon Asa’s growing fear of Yoru and showed Denji’s opinion on his constant deaths.
Fear of death is a clear theme in this scene and the entire chapter, which makes it very fitting that Fujimoto ends it by supposedly introducing the Death Devil.
We see her arriving as a transfer student at the school, where the other students are preparing for the festival Fami talked about last chapter.
The supposed Death Devil nervously introduces herself, claiming she is here to save everyone, ending the chapter.
It is strange that the Death Devil turned out to be such a nervous wreck.
I mean, she should theoretically be the strongest Devil since every human fears death.
For her to end up with a personality similar to Kobeni is pretty funny.
That is, if she is the Death Devil because she could always be the reincarnation of the Control Devil.
This seems unlikely though because Nayuta was a kid when she reincarnated, and this new Devil looks like a teenager.
Assuming she is the Death Devil, her saying she is here to save everyone is especially interesting.
Combine that with Asa’s terror at Yoru’s plan, and it makes me think that Yoru may actually turn out to be Chainsaw Man Part Two’s big bad.
Perhaps she intends to kill the Death Devil so there can be constant war with no death, which will empower her?
Either way, I am looking forward to seeing how the Death Devil (if this is her) will interact with the other horsemen.
Her and Yoru will obviously be at odds but what about Fami?
Overall, “Kill Me Tears” is a great chapter.
Fujimoto used the theme of fearing death to supposedly introduce a Devil fans have been anticipating for a while.
The fallout of her arrival should be interesting.

Squid Game Season 2 Review: The Games Return.

Like most of the world, I was enthralled by the first season of Squid Game.
It was both an intense and emotional experience that had a lot to say about the way capitalism exploits people in South Korea.
And because the show became so popular, of course companies had to milk it, with ads and even some Squid Game inspired reality shows.
It is sadly ironic that the show criticizing exploiting people lead to the creation of more shows which exploit people.
As for the original Squid Game itself I, like many others, were curious how Season Two would turn out.
Would it be a worthy follow up, or would it pale in comparison?
Well, after finally sitting down to watch it, I can happily say that Season Two is a great continuation of that first season.
I do still prefer the original but Season Two carries the same energy. 

Squid Game stays strong with its second season.

The season continues years after the first, with the previous game’s winner Gi-Hun (Lee Jung-jae) working to track down the Recruiter and Front Man (Lee Byung-hun) to try and put an end to the death games once and for all.
Eventually joined by police officer Jun-ho (Wi Ha-joon), Gi-hun eventually finds himself placed inside the games again and must desperately work to save as many people as he can.
Going into Season Two, I was worried it would just be a repeat of the first season, however, this is not the case.
The first few episodes follow Gi-hun’s attempts to track down the Front Man and this is just as enthralling as the games themselves.
This is in large part due to Gong Yoo’s performance as the Recruiter.
Given a small role in the first season, the Recruiter gets a big showcase here for the first episode and they did a fantastic job expanding on his character, creating a truly twisted individual who is both entertaining and terrifying to watch.

The Recruiter was the star of the first episode.

The season also expands on the Front Man, who takes a personal interest in Gi-hun, allowing for a much more complex look at his character.
As for Gi-hun, he is just as compelling as in the first season, and so are many of the new characters we meet in the games.
My favorites of the bunch are definitely Hyun-ji (Park Sung-hoon), a transgender woman and former soldier, Dae-ho (Kang Han-neul), another former soldier who enthusiastically joins Gi-hun, Jung-bae (Lee Seo-hwan), a friend of Gi-hun’s who finds himself in the games, and Thanos (T.O.P), a rapper with a drug addiction and a lot of funny moments. 

Of all the new characters, Hyun-ji is probably my favorite because she has a lot of heroic moments.

Along with the new characters there is also a new twist to the games.
The players must now vote to stay or leave after every game but, if they choose to leave, they will only receive the accumulated prize based on how many players have died.
This creates a situation where a gambling mindset kicks in for many of the players and, through watching the season, it is easy to understand why.
I found myself cheering for characters when they succeeded in games like the six-legged pentathlon, resulting in me seeing just how simple it would be to become addicted to winning these games, despite their lethality.
This gives the season plenty of thematic weight to go alongside the intensity of the games.

You can clearly see how some of the games were set up to motivate the players to continue.

However, much like in the first few episodes, the season does not entirely focus on these games.
For starters, there is Jun-ho’s subplot, which sees him try to track down Gi-hun on a boat with a band of mercenaries.
This storyline is unfortunately the weak point of Season Two.
Pretty much every scene of it drags and the big twist surrounding it was obvious for the get-go. 

I hope Jun-ho’s storyline is interesting in Season Three because it certainly was not here.

Another storyline focuses on one of the workers in the games and the confliction she feels when someone she knows joins.
This is interesting, but it does not really go anywhere this season.
I will not hold this against the season though because it feels like it’s something that is going to be followed up on in Season Three, which will air in a few months.
This makes me okay with the fact that Season Two ends abruptly on a massive cliffhanger.
If we had to wait years for it, it would have been less tolerable.
Overall, while I prefer Season One, Season Two is still a fantastic follow-up to the original Squid Game.
It delivers intense scenes, loveable characters who you want to survive, and perfectly illustrates a gambler’s mentality, even in lethal situations.
I hope Hwang Dong-hyuk can end his story well with Season Three. 

Chainsaw Man Chapter 194, Fun School Festival Review: A Great Visual Gag.

Having missed a few of my usual Chainsaw Man reviews, I will begin by saying the last few chapters have been solid, with some great humor and development for Denji and Yoru.
The previous chapter brought the story full circle, with Denji once again being promised sex if he takes down a Devil.
Yoru really proved to be very similar to her sister Makima.
The only differences in her offer to Denji is that Yoru wants Denji to kill the Death Devil instead of the Gun Devil, and Yoru actually likes Denji because her feelings are influenced by Asa’s.
Sadly, Denji was just happy to have someone who genuinely likes him, so Chapter 194 “Fun School Festival” begins with him having stayed with Yoru.
The chapter starts with some regular Denji humor, as Denji states he could not sleep because he had “too many boners.”
But it is here where Fujimoto also shows how Denji has developed because, rather than touch Yoru while she’s sleeping, he instead covers her up with a blanket.
He’s not completely delusional about his situation though because he acknowledges to Pochita that staying with Yoru and Asa is likely to end with him getting screwed over, given his track record with women he likes wanting to kill him.
From here, the chapter cuts to Yoshida and Fumiko, who reveal Public Safety are so desperate they are willing to team up with Fami.
Unfortunately for them, the day the Death Devil is supposed to arrive is also the day of a festival at Fami’s school, which she has been chosen to help plan.
Much like Yoru proving to be like Makima, Fami proves herself to be like Nayuta, as both humorously refuse to save the world because of school.
The situation gets even funnier when Fami’s friends arrive and literally hoist her away in a fantastic visual gag which gave me the best laugh of the chapter.
The comedy continues when Yoshida is more disappointed in Fami claiming he is no fun, frustrating a somehow still alive Fumiko.
A few chapters ago, Fumiko seemingly gave her life to help Yoshida and the others escape the Aging Devil.
However, she has still stuck around.
Fumiko is one of the most confusing characters in the manga to me.
Her motives seem weird to me, and her still being alive is weird to me.
I honestly cannot tell if Fujimoto plans to reveal something about her or not.
The final scene of the chapter shows Denji and Yoru hanging out, with Yoru blasting buildings for Denji’s amusement.
The fun and destruction ends when Asa takes back control and holds Denji at finger gunpoint, proving him right and concluding the chapter.
We have not seen Asa’s perspective since she escaped the Aging Devil’s world so I’m curious to see what she thinks of Yoru’s actions, and why exactly she is now threatening Denji.
Overall, “Fun School Festival” is a fun chapter.
It has development for Denji and a hilarious scene with Fami, including one of the series’ best visual gags.

Chainsaw Man Chapters 188 and 189 Review: Typical Fujimoto Craziness.

Going into Chainsaw Man Chapter 188, “Octopus, War, Chainsaw,” I knew to expect more insanity from Tatsuki Fujimoto.
I had seen a preview of the first few panels so knew that Denji would throw up Yoshida but to see it actually happen sure was something.
Yoshida is quick to understand the situation and suggests working together to escape.
Asa refuses to accept Yoshida’s apology for cutting off her arm but he humorously twists this into a handshake.
Denji is also reluctant to work with Yoshida, but he uses a bear analogy, stating they should put aside their differences to return to the outside world.
Now working together, Yoshida quickly proves his worth.
Knowing that Denji’s stomach is connected to Chainsaw Man, he asks to put his hand down his throat, to which Denji smiles, ending the chapter.
From here, things only get weirder with Chapter 189, “Heart, Pass, Octopus,” as our heroes continuously shove themselves down Denji’s throat in their attempts to escape.
First, Yoshida shoves his hand in, using the Octopus Devil to attack.
Then, Yoru fires blindly before, in one of Chainsaw Man‘s most bizarre panels, she climbs through Denji’s mouth to get a clear shot at the Aging Devil.
All of these attempts fail, with Yoru’s attempt resulting in the Aging Devil warping her into an old woman.
Thankfully for her and Asa, the aging fades when she returns to the other dimension.
Following all of these failures, help arrives from an unexpected source: Fumiko.
As she lies bleeding on the ground, both she and the Aging Devil see what appears to be a hallucination of herself, which announces that she promised herself she would side with the winner in her final moments.
Fumiko then gives her heart to Yoshida, who feeds it to the Octopus Devil, powering it up.
The Octopus Devil then leaves through Denji’s mouth and crashes through the building in the chapter’s final panel.
This whole ending scene is weird, but I don’t mean that in a praiseworthy way.
I actually have no idea what is even going on with Fumiko.
If she was hallucinating herself, then why could the Aging Devil also see the hallucination?
Also, Fumiko’s motives just seem all over the place.
First, she’s a creep who touches Denji without his consent.
Then, she has an emotional backstory about why she wants to help Denji.
Next, she abandons him and Nayuta to save her own skin and is fine with Denji being ripped apart.
Then, she’s willing to sacrifice her own body to stop the Nostradamus Prophecy.
Finally, she switches sides and helps Yoshida because she thinks he’s going to win, even though they were losing up until that point.
Her whole character seems pretty inconsistent, unless we get some context, but that seems unlikely since she just literally gave up her heart in a contract.
Still, despite my issues with Fumiko’s character, these were some really good chapters.
Once again, Fujimoto proves himself to be creatively insane with the concepts he comes up with.
Interested to see if Yoshida’s alliance with Denji and Asa still holds after they escape.

Chainsaw Man Chapter 187, Barf! Review: Treesaw Man.

Going into Chapter 187 of Chainsaw Man, I was excited to see the fight between Pochita and the Aging Devil.
Sure enough, it did not disappoint, as “Barf!” begins with Pochita’s heart crashing through the building, his body forming before anyone can stop it.
Pochita immediately slices the Aging Devil apart but, being a Primal Fear, it takes more than that to kill the Aging Devil who turns Pochita into a tree.
These panels are excellent, once again showing off Tatsuki Fujimoto’s skill.
Back in the Aging Devil’s dimension, Denji continues to kill and eat the tree people to power Pochita up.
However, no matter how many times Pochita cuts through the Aging Devil, it always regenerates.
Left with no other option, Denji tells Pochita to vomit up a Devil that will help them.
The chapter then ends with Denji about to barf up this Devil.
There were theories going around after this chapter that Denji would either throw up the Nuclear Weapons Devil, or the Octopus Devil, but we know from some teaser panels released that Denji will throw up Yoshida himself.
Not only is this teased panel grossly hilarious, but it also adds more weight to the theory that Yoshida is the only person who once escaped the Aging Devil’s dimension.
He will probably help Denji and Asa escape next chapter so the fight with the Aging Devil can continue.
As for Chapter 187, it is a brief but exciting one, with a lot of great action panels.
I am interested to see how Yoshida will help next chapter.

Chainsaw Man Chapters 184-186 Review: Return of the Perpetual Motion Machine.

Having fallen behind in my Chainsaw Man reviews, I have decided to review all three at once before Chapter 187 releases tomorrow.
Chapter 184: “Run Denji” is a short chapter, but one that shows his development from the previous chapter.
It begins with Denji running around the lake in the Aging Devil’s dimension, while Asa and Yoru sit down, confused by his actions, and the crazy guy continues to imitate a cicada.
While Denji runs, the Aging Devil appears to try and make a contract with him.
If Denji convinces Pochita to eat the Aging Devil, thus dooming thousands of children, he will be freed.
Denji refuses and the Aging Devil finds it odd how optimistic he is after Nayuta’s death, cruelly concluding that he never loved her.
It is then that Fujimoto shows why Denji’s memories of Aki, Power, Reze, and Nayuta last chapter were so vital.
Denji now knows that no matter how many loved ones he has lost, he can always find a new family, while remembering the old.
Although hopeful, it is pretty morbid when Denji says that he can find a new family repeatedly if they keep dying.
It’s not really a good sales pitch for potential loved ones, you know?
With this, Fujimoto brings back the concept of a perpetual motion machine from the original Eternity Devil Arc.
There, Denji used it to defeat the Eternity Devil, now he is using it to motivate himself to keep moving.
The Aging Devil calls Denji stupid for believing this, and the chapter then ends with Denji calling him stupid back, stating that his escape plan is already in motion.
I would say that “Run Denji” is a solid chapter, which builds upon Denji’s emotional growth.
It also leads well into the next chapter, “Stomach in Another World” where we see the beginning of Denji’s plan unfolding.
Before this though, we get more of the Aging Devil’s blathering.
It once again state that it is impossible to escape the dimension, revealing that all of the humans who came before have turned into trees after thousands of years trapped.
This fascinates the Aging Devil, who wants all humans to live long enough to become trees and “discover unseen concepts,” providing another motivation for it, beyond the murder of thousands of children.
Or, at least, that seems to be what the Aging Devil claims when speaking to the elderly government official, who it is currently using as a chair.
Denji then reveals his master plan: Using a weapon created by Asa to cut out a tree person’s guts and then eat them.
Since Denji’s stomach is in the real world, this allows Pochita to revive himself.
It is kind of funny how in Chapter 104, Denji told Asa Chainsaw Man would only eat people the “one time” (referencing Makima), and now he is doing it again to save both himself and Asa.
In my review of Chapter 183, I also predicted that whatever Denji’s plan was, it would be stupid enough to work.
Well, with Pochita’s revival, this proves accurate.
The chapter concludes with the Aging Devil warning Public Safety that Chainsaw Man is on his way.
Good thing too because if the chapter went on for another page, we would probably see all of the Public Safety Agents crap their pants in terror.
Chapter 186, “Yank, Blorsh, Bdoom” begins with Pochita beginning his lightning-fast advance towards the Aging Devil.
Thinking quick on its feet, the Aging Devil offers a contract to the Public Safety officers, including Fumiko.
If they give it charge over their bodies, it will save them from Chainsaw Man.
All of the officers agree, and the Aging Devil sacrifices their nails to bloodily incapacitate Pochita.
However, due to Denji constantly eating in the other dimension, Pochita is able to revive.
It is at this point that Fumiko tells the Aging Devil not to worry about them, and continue to use their bodies to defeat Chainsaw Man.
Bold of you to assume that the Aging Devil actually gives a damn about you, Fumiko.
As for her, I continue to wonder just what Fujimoto has planned for her character, if anything.
Her stated motivations do make sense with her backstory but, at the same time, I cannot help but believe there is something incredibly sketchy about her.
Maybe it’s just because I’m still mad she refused to help Nayuta, leading to her death.
The Aging Devil takes Fumiko’s liver, causing her to vomit blood, and then takes another officer’s eyes.
And so, another perpetual motion machine is created where, every time Pochita falls, Denji eats in the other dimension, reviving him.
Pochita eventually decides to accelerate the motion, ripping out his own heart and throwing it right at the Aging Devil.
He used this same move to fight Makima back in Part One and it is no less metal here, with the chapter ending on it.
So, next chapter we will finally see the confrontation between Pochita and the Aging Devil.
It will be interesting to see if Pochita can end it quickly or if the Aging Devil will put up more of a fight.
Either way, Pochita is definitely not going to eat the Aging Devil, at least not willingly.
Overall, these three chapters were a lot of fun, delivering on character development for Denji, and perfectly displaying the insanity of his plan.
Fujimoto also brought the old concept of a perpetual motion machine back, this time to reference Denji’s constant loss of loved ones, and to reference the cycle of Denji reviving Pochita.
I look forward to reading the next chapter tomorrow and seeing the outcome of the fight between Chainsaw Man and the Aging Devil.

Arcane Season Two, Episode Nine, The Dirt Under Your Nails Review: An Ambiguous End.

Before starting the final episode of Arcane, I was excited but also nervous.
I am sure we have all had instances where there is a show we are really enjoying but then the ending drops the ball.
While I mostly doubted this would happen, I was still concerned the conclusion would be a little rushed because it felt like some things were glossed over in previous episodes, most notably the Piltover and Zaun conflict.
Thankfully, Episode Nine, “The Dirt Under Your Nails” is a great ending for Arcane, which opens the door for more stories set in this world.
Sure, I do think the finale would have benefitted from having more scenes but, overall, it is still a more than satisfactory conclusion.
“The Dirt Under Your Nails” begins by showing the disturbing direction of Jinx’s “break the cycle” comment from the previous episode.
She cuts her hair, burns down the Last Drop and then attempts suicide by triggering one of her bombs.
We can only watch in horror as the explosion begins to eat away at Jinx in slow motion, until that motion thankfully rewinds with the arrival of Ekko and his Z-Drive.
I remember screaming, “Ekko, you bloody legend!” when this happened.
What follows is a thoroughly depressing sequence of Ekko continuously trying to talk Jinx out of killing herself, only to rewind every time he fails.
With every attempt, he is more injured from the explosions and Jinx heartbreakingly notices this so attempts jumping at one point, so she won’t hurt him.
Ekko is finally able to get through to Jinx, talking to her vaguely about his time with the alternate universe Powder.
“No matter what happened in the past, it’s never too late to build something new. Someone worth building it for.”
The depressing scene ends on a thankfully hopeful note with Jinx considering Ekko’s words.
This scene was honestly one of the hardest to watch in all of Arcane.
Watching Jinx attempt suicide over and while Ekko kept desperately trying to save her delivered gut punch after gut punch.
And to think Ekko would have probably never been there to save Jinx had it not been for the alternate version of Powder teaching him to not give up on her.
Following the final opening of the show, we see Vi, Caitlyn, Jayce and Mel planning for the final battle in Piltover.
The plan is to hold the Noxians off, thus buying enough time for Jayce to disable the Hexgates before Viktor reaches them.
This proves difficult when fighting an experienced warrior such as Ambessa, especially when she is aided by Rictus’ magical runes.
However, she does provide a target for Piltover’s forces, as a Noxian corrupted with Shimmer brings out Viktor’s cocoon to bring him to the Hexgates.
Loris tries to shoot the egg, but he is quickly killed when the Noxians break through their defenses.
Speaking of Loris, I have to ask what exactly the point of him and the rest of Caitlyn’s squad were?
With the exception of Maddie, they’re all pointless, especially Loris who just acts as Vi’s friend for a few episodes before dying.
Getting back to the fight, Caitlyn uses the Grey to provide cover, giving her team the chance to blow up Viktor’s cocoon.
However, the bomb has been sabotaged by Maddie who is a Noxian spy, as predicted by many.
“I did appreciate your warmth,” she says, as she is about to put a bullet in Caitlyn’s head.
Damn, that’s cold.
It also makes it incredibly satisfying when Mel deflects the bullet using her magic, killing Maddie.
What’s even more impressive is that Mel did this behind a closed door before making her dramatic entrance.
Her dramatic entrance has nothing on Jinx’s though, who arrives with brand-new drip.
She also flies a hot air balloon constructed from her old hideout and even has a soundtrack to hype up her and Ekko’s arrival, with “Come Play” acting as their hype train.
Jinx’s smoke bombs act as cover for Sevika and the other Zaunites (who Jinx and Ekko convinced to help off screen), and they ambush the Noxians.
This gives the Piltover/Zaunite team enough time to blow up Viktor’s cocoon… only to learn he has long since left it, proving this attack to be a diversion.
At the Hexgates, Jayce is confronted by a full transformed Viktor.
His design is especially intimidating, with his messiah-like cloak, runes floating around his head and, of course, his mask now being his actual face, with the remains of the old one still being visible.
At the same time, Viktor’s avatars arrive on the battlefield, turning the tide again, as they infect most of the Piltovan and Zaunite forces, including Sevika.
This leaves Caitlyn and Mel to face off against Ambessa.
She proves to be unstoppable with the runes she has, so Caitlyn removes them at the cost of her eye.
This allows Mel to send Ambessa to the world of the Black Rose, where she is immediately captured by the mysterious sorceress who inflicts a fatal injury.
However, Mel intervenes, rebelling against the Black Rose’s control.
The sorceress seems surprised by this but, honestly, I don’t know what she expected.
She admitted to killing Mel’s brother and even murdered her friend right in front of her.
In what world would she ever trust them?
If they wanted to recruit her, they should have gone about it in a way that made them seem much less insidious.
After rescuing Ambessa from the Black Rose, she passes in Mel’s arms, her dying words being, “You are the wolf.”
And so Ambessa dies, defeated yet content in her daughter’s strength.
It also seems that Ambessa’s forces become loyal to Mel after her death, which is interesting in its implications about Noxian culture.
Did Ambessa leave orders for them to follow her daughter in the event of her death, or do they follow her simply because she had the strength to defeat Ambessa which Noxus values?
The Noxians may be out of the fight, but Viktor and his avatars remain.
This, sadly, includes Warwick, who has had all humanity stolen from him.
It is truly tragic to see Vander, nothing more than an animalistic shell of his former self, fighting his own daughters.
Their fight, leads to Jinx crashing her balloon, knocking Ekko unconscious.
As Jinx and Vi prepare to fight Warwick, Jinx tells her sister, “I’m always with you, even when we’re worlds apart.”
Meanwhile, Viktor harnesses the power of the Wild Rune, and levitates himself to the top of the Hexgates, passing Jinx and Vi.
He then uses it to begin his “glorious evolution” of connecting everyone, whether they want it or not.
This includes Ambessa’s forces, proving she really was out of her depth when dealing with Viktor.
Vi, Jinx, Jayce, Caitlyn, Mel, Sevika, they are all being absorbed into the glorious evolution and no one can stop it… except for the Boy Saviour.
Ekko rushes in on his hover board, wielding a broken piece of clockwork.
Quite fitting, given his time travel ability.
It is an ability he uses to its full potential here, using the Z-Drive to avoid the attacks of Viktor’s avatars.
That is until Ekko is stuck in a situation where four seconds is not enough.
Left with no other choice, he pushes the Z-Drive to its limit, going even further back in time to throw the device in Viktor’s face, where the Wild Rune explodes outwards.
In doing so, Ekko allows Jayce enough time to convince Viktor to stop, saving everyone.
Ekko definitely lived up to the title Jinx gave him of “Boy Saviour,” not only saving Jinx from suicide, but also saving pretty much everyone else in the world as well.
He is absolutely my favorite character of Act Three, which is a massive step up since he barely featured in the season’s first two Acts.
Inside the dimension Viktor resides, Jayce shows Viktor the horrible outcome of his glorious evolution by embracing him.
Through this, we also see the identity of the mysterious figure who rescued Jayce as a child: Viktor himself.
“There is no prize to perfection” the future Viktor tells Jayce. “Only an end to pursuit.”
Yet another fantastic line in this fantastic story.
I had heard the theory of Viktor being the one who rescued Jayce and to see it confirmed was great.
Usually, whenever time-travel and alternate universes get thrown into the mix of a story, it gets messy, but Arcane uses it perfectly.
The rules of Ekko’s time travel and the buildup to Viktor’s reveal allowed the story to flow without breaking any suspension of disbelief.
It is through Jayce wanting his partner back, Viktor learning what the consequences of his own actions will be, and seeing the ingenuity Ekko developed without the glorious evolution that convinces Viktor to stop.
However, this is not an act he has to do alone, for now that Jayce has his partner back, he is not letting go.
In a brilliant, dazzling sequence of animation, Jayce and Viktor finish their work together, putting an end to the glorious evolution.
The two vanish, their physical forms being sucked into a vortex, leaving their fates unknown.
Personally, I feel like this is a fitting end for both characters.
It is not the only ending for a character we get in this finale though because next, much to my dread, was Jinx’s conclusion.
Back when the season got leaked, I was spoiled about Jinx and Viktor dying, so I spent much of the episode praying it would not happen.
But, when I saw Vi standing over a fallen Warwick, and remembered a shot from the trailer which showed her screaming in grief as someone fell, I knew where this was heading.
Sure enough, Warwick wakes up and attacks Vi, only for Jinx to save her and then be left dangling over a ledge.
Warwick is pulling her down, and only Vi’s gauntlets are keeping them from falling.
Jinx realizes their weight will cause the construction to fall, killing Vi as well, so chooses to sacrifice herself.
“Always with you, sis,” she reminds Vi, before pulling the Hex Crystal out of the gauntlet, and falling with Warwick.
Before they hit the ground, Jinx activates one of her bombs, supposedly killing them both.
I say supposedly because I don’t think Jinx is dead.
This is not just blind hope though because there is some evidence to back it up.
For starters, when Jinx triggers the bomb, we don’t see her consumed by the explosion, like we did during her suicide attempt.
What we do see, although briefly, is a purple shimmer blip before the explosion, suggesting that Jinx used her shimmer abilities to get out of the way.
Later, we see Caitlyn inspecting the remains of Jinx’s bomb, while looking over air duct schematics.
This implies they never found Jinx’s body, and Caitlyn is researching if it is possible for her to have escaped through their air ducts.
Then there is the final shot of Arcane, which is of an airship flying away.
At the beginning of the story, Jinx said she would fly in an airship one day.
Along with this, the following “The End” title is in the glitches Jinx sees whenever she hallucinates.
To me, this is all hinting to Jinx surviving the explosion, and then leaving Zaun and Piltover, taking her hallucination of Silco’s advice.
The hallucination told her, “Jinx, I think the cycle only ends when you find the will to walk away.”
Well, now Jinx is walking away, or flying away, I guess.
It also works with her earlier statement to Vi, “I’m always with you, even when we’re worlds apart.”
This is all circumstantial evidence, but it’s what I choose to believe.
To be honest, I would be pretty disappointed if Jinx died right after Ekko convinced her to live.
So, yeah, my headcanon is that Jinx survived, and it will stay that way unless her death is confirmed in a subsequent show.
But what about the other characters’ endings?
Well, as I said, Jayce and Viktor’s sendoff is fitting.
Vi and Caitlyn’s final scene shows them together, which is nice.
Ekko’s ending is sad, since he is mourning Jinx.
Mel looks to be heading back to Noxus, with a mysterious multiple-eyed crow following her.
This seems to be suggesting a Noxus storyline will be the next show set in the Arcane universe, which is something to look forward to.
We see that Singed has successfully resurrected his daughter.
I find it hilarious that Singed, the character responsible for at least 90% of the tragedy and conflict in this show, got the happiest ending out of every character.
Finally, there is Sevika, who we now see has a seat on the council as a representative of Zaun.
This, I have issues with.
I do believe it is a good ending for Sevika, but the issue is we got almost no buildup to it.
Sevika had absolutely zero lines in Act Three, and this makes me wonder if she had a storyline that was cut for time.
As a result, there are multiple questions surrounding her ascension to the council.
How was she chosen?
What do Vi and Caitlyn think about it since they fought her numerous times?
Does this mean Zaun has independence now and, if so, how did that happen?
That last question points to the extreme lack of screen time the Zaun and Piltover conflict got in Act Three.
This is my biggest issue with Season Two.
Season One was all about the conflict between the two cities but that fell to the wayside with the threat of the Noxians and Viktor in Season Two.
I understand why but, as someone who was invested in that part of the story, I wanted a better resolution for it.
This is not the only thing I believe was cut for time with the ending.
We do not see Mel’s reaction to Jayce’s death, and Vi and Ekko do not share a single word the entire season.
It just feels like a lot was cut out from the season and it is this that makes me prefer Season One.
That being said, Season Two is still great.
The character work is excellent, the animation is groundbreaking, and I once again teared up at multiple points.
As for “The Dirt Under Your Nails,” it is an excellent finale, even if it feels like it could have used more scenes.
Overall, Arcane has been a terrific experience, and I cannot wait to see the next show in its universe, even if I have to wait years for it again.
To celebrate Arcane, I will be rewatching the show in its entirety.
Once I have done that, I will put out a Top Ten Characters and Episodes List, so be on the lookout for that.
Arcane is an excellent show, and I am so thankful to have experienced it.
Once it got under my nails, I just couldn’t clean it out.

Arcane Season Two, Episode Eight, Killing Is a Cycle Review: In a Prison Cell?

The penultimate episode of Arcane, “Killing Is a Cycle” begins by continuing Mel’s storyline from the fantastic Episode Five.
After exposing the Black Rose’s disguise of her brother, she is chained up, only to escape using her mysterious power, which reveals her as a mage.
It turns out her captor referring to her as “sister” was meant in terms of a sisterhood, rather than a familial sense.
This captor, a sorceress in her own right, attempts to convince Mel to join her, tasking her with stopping her mother.
Kind of unnecessary, considering Mel was planning on doing that anyway, but her magical powers certainly make that task easier.
Unfortunately, this is all we really get in regards to the Black Rose.
The identity of the sorceress is never revealed, and neither is the overall goal of her and the Black Rose.
It feels like the storyline in Season Two was mainly buildup for another show set in the Arcane universe.
Don’t get me wrong, I would certainly watch such a show, given how great Arcane is, but I would have liked a little more answers.
My only other option is to either wait years for the explanation or look up the League lore.
Following the intro, we fittingly cut from Mel to Ambessa, who has given Singed the task of reviving Viktor.
He succeeds and, like Episode Six showed, Viktor’s mindset has changed to wanting to evolve others beyond humanity in what he calls, “the glorious evolution.”
Ambessa makes a deal to get him to the Hexgates if he will empower her own soldiers.
I have heard some argue that Ambessa’s decision to help Viktor does not make sense, what with how obviously shady and powerful he is, but I guess it just goes to show how desperate she is to find a way to defeat the Black Rose.
Meanwhile, Vi awakens in Piltover to learn that Jinx has been imprisoned.
She and Caitlyn get into an argument about it, with Vi stating, “You can’t trust her enough not to shove her in a box.”
Well, it’s kind of hard to trust someone when they kill your mother, Vi.
I’m surprised Caitlyn didn’t bring that up, to be honest.
She does reveal that Jinx surrendered on her own, though, and Vi’s pleas do convince her to talk to Jinx.
Traveling to the bunker cells below, Caitlyn meets with Jinx, who is understandably in a pretty bad state after Isha’s tragic death in Episode Six.
Her braids are undone, she is not eating, and she is self-harming.
She ends the conversation by admitting she did not know Caitlyn’s mother was there when she fired the rocket, not that it would have made a difference.
Seeing Jinx in this state ultimately convinces Caitlyn to give Vi the chance to free her.
Before that, however, Jinx hallucinates Silco, seeing his scarred eye as a Hex Crystal.
Silco talks about the cycle of killing stating, “Jinx, I think the cycle only ends when you find the will to walk away.”
This line has multiple implications, both disturbing and hopeful, as shown in the next episode.
For now, it is at this moment when Vi shows up to free Jinx, only for her to lock Vi in the cell to stop her from following.
Jinx tragically declares there is no good version of her, which we know is not true.
Not only did we see a good alternate version of her in the last episode but Jinx herself has also done plenty of good as well as bad.
She gave Isha a family and inspired countless Zaunites.
After Jinx’s departure, Caitlyn comes to free Vi and reveals her part in allowing Vi to free her sister.
Vi throws herself at Caitlyn and what follows is a pretty explicit sex scene, which I found kind of funny because of how much the shippers were demanding one.
The writers certainly knew how to play with their feelings.
First, they had the two kiss and then immediately break up in Episode Three.
Second, they had Caitlyn rebound with a barely established character, crushing the shippers’ spirits.
Now, they rebuild those spirits with this sex scene in a dank prison cell.
That being said, the scene has also received some criticism, as a few viewers have said Vi should be rushing to stop Jinx’s suicide attempt, not have sex with Caitlyn in the exact same prison cell.
However, to be fair to Vi, I think her statement of, “I really believed she’d help” makes it pretty clear she did not think her sister planned to kill herself.
If she did know this, she would have run to save her the moment Caitlyn freed her.
Vi and Caitlyn’s storyline this episode ends with their intimate moment, but they are not the only couple featured in “Killing Is a Cycle” because we earlier see Jayce and Mel reunite.
Both have been through a lot and their relationship is clearly strained, with Jayce realizing it was Mel’s mage powers which saved them from Jinx’s attack.
Any separation or reconciliation between them is halted with the arrival of Viktor, using a transformed Huck’s body as an avatar.
He tries to convince Jayce to let him reach the Hexgates peacefully, but Jayce has seen what will transpire if Viktor is allowed to do so.
A fight ensues, in which Viktor’s avatar is only defeated because he is distracted by something, which I think is Ekko returning from the alternate dimension.
Following their fight with Viktor, Jayce holds a meeting with the Piltovan and Zaunite leaders, including Sevika, to propose they join together to stop Viktor and Ambessa.
It is here where my big issue with Act Three comes into play.
While Sevika and some of the Piltovan elites do not agree to join Jayce, many others do, and I don’t really think there was enough justification for this.
For starters, not only did none of the Piltovans see the fight with Viktor, but why are so many of them okay with fighting Noxus?
They were allies just a few episodes ago.
Yes, Caitlyn betrayed them, but she did that on her own.
I feel like the Piltovans either should have learned about Ambessa orchestrating the attack on the memorial, or we should have seen them also suffering under the Noxian martial law, maybe both.
As for the Zaunites, their reasoning for joining the fight also does not make much sense.
Piltover has been oppressing them for years so why do they suddenly believe them when they announce the threat Viktor poses?
If I were them, I would assume this was a ploy to arrest more Zaunites and put them in Stillwater.
Again, this could have been explained away if the Zaunites saw the threat of Viktor’s glorious evolution.
His sanctuary was in Zaun so maybe a few residents could be attacked by his avatars, which proves to the Zaunites that they need to help.
I think Act Three really needed more scenes to help explain these things and, unfortunately, this issue does persist into the final episode.
Going back to Episode Eight, though, its final scene sees Mel visiting her mother in a final attempt to convince her to back off.
Ambessa’s resolve is firm, however, for Viktor has already created his army of metal avatars.
We see this process in a flashback, where Viktor doing so results in the sacrifice of Sky.
Was she real, a hallucination, or a facade created by the Hexcore to manipulate Viktor?
I still have no idea.
Whatever the answer is, Sky as a character felt pretty underdeveloped.
Using Warwick, Singed fully revives Viktor, resulting in the tragic erasure of all his memories, killing Vander forever.
The episode then ends with Viktor fully transforming inside his cocoon, his face splitting open to reveal an ominous, shadowed face, revealing the big threat for the final episode.
Overall, I would still say “Killing Is a Cycle” is a good episode, despite its issues.
It reconnects certain characters and sets up the main threat for the finale well.
I just wish there was more time to explore the wider Zaun and Piltover conflict, which was the main overall conflict for Season One.