âAccidents Will Happenâ started promisingly enough with the Guardians of the Galaxy reluctantly putting on their new uniforms as part of their induction into the Spartax empire. Aside from Star-Lord a.k.a. Peter Quill (Will Friedle), none of the Guardians were particularly happy about this development. While they did appreciate the access to Spartaxâs intelligence network, the team was reduced to working for Quill instead of working with him. Meanwhile, he got to go off and assume his role as a prince alongside his father, JâSon (Jonathan Frakes), in a council meeting of the other intergalactic empires.
It didnât take long for Quill to screw that up, as he had the Kree and the Rigellians on the brink of war with a few carelessly uttered words. Look, we know that Quill is a huge idiot on this show, even more so than in the live-action movie. Presumably JâSon isnât a fool…and yet he allowed his son to have this moment without considering the consequences? Canât we count on anyone to act like an adult on this show?
The problem is that Guardians of the Galaxy plays like it is written down to its target audience and it seems to assume that everyone watching it canât handle even a hint of nuance. JâSon immediately sprung Quillâs sister on him as a potential replacement heir. Captain Victoria (as voiced by Cree Summer) is a fairly recent addition to Quillâs extended family in Marvel’s comic book universe, and it was a good idea to bring in a character who would take Quillâs arrival as a personal threat to her place in the royal family.
However, this episode really dropped the ball with Captain Victoria by making her almost as shrill as Rocketâs mom and more one-dimensional than Quill himself. Even when Captain Victoria came around on her feelings towards Quill, it was beyond stupid when she and Quill asked the Guardians to âdonât get madâ in unison at the end of the episode. Why did she adopt Quillâs vernacular when he was being incredibly condescending to her for most of the episode? The only thing that showed a hint of promise was the way that Quill and Captain Victoria came to regard each other as family.
As for Quillâs other family, the Guardians felt somewhat rejected by him when he remained behind while they attempted to catch Ronan (Jonathan Adams) off guard. But it was just a trap, as Ronan and Nebula (Cree Summer, again) quickly captured Quillâs team. Back on Spartax, Quillâs punishment was to accompany a refinery asteroid on its way to the Kree as reparations for Quillâs actions at the council meeting. Along the way, Quill inadvertently started a revolution in his name when he repeated the Star-Lord prophecy that Mantis mentioned in last weekâs episode.
Nebula and Ronan used the Guardians to get inside of the refinery to set up an assassination attempt on the Kree Supreme Intelligence and start a war with Spartax as a way to seize control of the Kree empire. As evil plans go, it wasnât bad. Plus, it was an excuse for another Nebula (Vanessa Marshall) vs. Gamora fight, which tends to be fun.
It was the Drax (David Sobolov) vs. Ronan fight that turned out to be a letdown. The animation was unusually choppy in that sequence. That was unfortunate, as Drax had some of his best moments by demonstrating that he could use his brain in a fight. Drax actually outsmarted Ronan simply by not trying to trade punches with him as he had in the past. I love the idea of Drax becoming a smarter fighter, and hopefully it wasn’t a one-time thing.
Rocket (Trevor Devall) also had some very good moments when his expertise in explosives proved to be the deciding factor in saving the asteroid and everyone on it while destroying Ronanâs ship. If this show had any guts, then either Ronan or Nebula should have been killed off in that explosion. But itâs far too likely that weâll see both of them again.
Strangely, this episode introduced Thor (Travis Willingham) and then did nothing with him after the initial council scene. Lokiâs appearance on this series a few weeks ago seemed to indicate that he would trick Thor into declaring war on the Guardians, but that wasnât followed up on here. Instead, Thor seemed to actually like Quillâs bro comments until JâSon left the room.
Unfortunately, most of this episode felt like it squandered the progress the series had made in the last few episodes. While there are occasional animation problems on this show, itâs greatest weakness is still the terrible writing. I know this is a show for children, but thatâs no excuse for this series to be so sloppy. This weekâs episode was particularly hard to watch.
What did you think about this week’s Guardians of the Galaxy? Let us know in the comments section below!
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Image Credits:Â Marvel TV/Disney XD