Last week on the Guardians of the Galaxy animated series, Peter Quill (Will Friedle) did something very stupid. To regular viewers of this show, thatâs not a surprise. The only shocking part is that other characters call out Quillâs stupidity in this episode…but that doesnât make his actions any less asinine.
To briefly recap, the Guardians spent the bulk of the season chasing the Cosmic Seed, only to discover that it was stolen from Asgard decades ago by Quillâs father, Jâson of Spartax (Jonathan Frakes)…and then the Cosmic Seed was stolen again by Loki (Troy Baker) as a pretense to bring Asgard and Spartax to war in the present. There, thatâs all you need to know about this season. In fact, I may have made it sound more interesting than itâs actually been.
“Asgard War Part One: Lightnin’ Strikes” picks up where last weekâs episode left off, as Quill burst into an intergalactic council meeting to accuse his father of stealing the Cosmic Seed without leading with the more important revelation: that Loki has it now. So, in short order, Thor (Travis Willingham) declared war on Spartax and Jâson had the Guardians arrested for treason. As plans go, that was not a well thought out move by Quill. And even Quill’s half-sister, Captain Victoria (Cree Summer) told him how foolish heâs been.
It would have been great if the show had successfully set up the bond between Quill and Victoria in her previous appearance, but the childish writing wasnât very convincing. And does this series have any setting for female characters that doesnât include shrill? Itâs disheartening to see some promising characters like Victoria and Mantis lack even a single dimension of characterization.
The reason I bring this up is that Victoria believed in Quill despite his lack of proof, and she enabled his escape with the other Guardians. Again, that would be a nice character turn, if it had been earned. Instead, itâs just a convenient way for the team to temporarily get out of trouble. When even Drax (David Sobolov) comments on how stupid it is, then that should really say something. The writer of this episode clearly knows this, and yet here we are.
There are actually some good parts of this episode, primarily in the confrontation between Quill and Jâson, which turns into element gun fight with shades of Avatar: The Last Airbender. Jonathan Frakes is just really good at playing a Machiavellian schemer, although Jâson doesnât have the benefit of the great writing that David Xanatos had in Gargoyles. Even so, Jâson has emerged as the most interesting person on this show. He sold out his own son to make him a better thief and heir, and Jâson even destroyed Quillâs evidence of Lokiâs guilt because he wants a war with Asgard. And Jâson thinks he can win this time.
A great villain can do a lot for a show, even this one. Although it was pretty shameless for the episode to use the old âhero falls to his death, only to be saved by his shipâ trick. It was in that moment that Jâson showed even a hint of concern for Quillâs life. At the end of the episode, Jâson didnât even seem to care when Quill was seemingly killed in the battle.
Ah yes…the battle. Letâs get back to that. Rather than send a fleet to Spartax, Thor led a contingent of his best warriors â but no Volstagg? â and the Destroyer while Loki seized the throne on Asgard. You know, standard Loki stuff. Itâs what he does. And it was almost funny the way that no one gave a s*** when Loki confessed his crimes at the end of the episode. Youâd think that at least Angela (Nika Futterman) would have something to say about her brother betraying their other brother. But nope! That was a head scratcher.
Also, the episode tried to build up Victoria as almost a match for Thor in single combat, and it was hard to buy into that when the Asgardians were taking out the Spartax fleet with swords, mystical hammers, and maces. Some of that action was occasionally diverting, but it wasnât as epic as the show seemed to think that it was.
After Loki inevitably took control of the Destroyer while Rocket (Trevor Devall) attempted to recover the footage of Loki stealing the Cosmic Seed, Quill and Thor faked their deaths. That led to the incredibly awkward final scene in which Jâson and Loki declared a truce and tried to blame the war on the Guardians…who were standing right beside them without being under guard! And then Rocket presented his recovered evidence of Jâson and Lokiâs guilt…and Jâson did nothing to stop him. Come on! Sometimes, this showâs not even trying.
For the first installment of a multi-part episode, this one seemed to wrap things up too quickly…until Thanos (Isaac C. Singleton Jr.) and his fleet arrived in orbit of Spartax in support of Jâson. And thatâs not a bad cliffhanger.
In the hands of more talented writers, this could have been so much better. This showâs problems almost always circle back to the creative team behind it. Either they arenât up to the challenge, or they are deliberately writing down to the showâs intended audience under the assumption that theyâre morons.
Not every series can have the epic scale or writing of Star Wars: The Clone Wars and Star Wars Rebels. But thatâs not an impossible standard! Guardians of the Galaxy has great characters and a fantastic premise, both of which have been badly mishandled through its current run. Iâm not expecting a miracle finish from the first season, but it seems too much to ask for this series to even aspire to a higher level of quality.
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