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YJ: Failsafe and Disordered Reviews and Cameoes
Very spoiler intensive. Beware!
- Failsafe
Brief synopsis: Earth is invaded by mysterious aliens, and as the JLA is quickly taken out by them, leaving the Team to mount a resistance movement on their lonesome. As time goes on things go from bad to worse, the aliens look like they might very well win, but how will the team fare?
Review: On the whole, I wasn't a huge fan of this episode. Don't get me wrong, the voice actors do a REALLY good job in this episode, particularly Miss Martian's, and the plot is pretty much well constructed... It just didn't grab me that much.
Maybe it's because BTAS' Over the Edge held a similar thing and did it better, I don't know. I just didn't really get a good feel of the story this time around.
But, on the plus side, yay for Megan getting a power-up, something that was hinted at back in the episode with Psimon way back when. The team continuing their trend of having more than one outfit depending on the situation also continued, with them exhibiting Arctic versions of their costumes, which were cool to see.
On the whole, there were good elements, but it worked better as a set up for the next episode, Disordered, which I also review below.
The cameos weren't really that huge compared to previous episodes either, though we do get appearences of,
- Brother Eye (in the form of Batman's spy satellites).
- Iris West
- Wonder Woman makes her first appearance in yoinks, but she disappears again pretty quickly. Although I do like that they're giving lesser known heroines room to breathe in this series, I do hope that she at least gets a line at some point. Especially as she's apparently been superheroing in this universe for at least WW2 according to one interview I read a while ago.
- the alien motherships look amusingly like the same technology used by the pseudoWhite Martians from the opening episodes of Justice League, back in the DCAU.
- General Wade Eiling appears, and the fact that he's not an ass to the characters could possibly be seen as an indicator that the Team are aware of him, but not of his possible anti-meta prejudices.
- Jason Bard, aka the private detective that dated Barbara Gordon for a while appeared. And, again, he hurt his leg.
- Megan and Conner's schoolfriends reappeared, including the Wonder Twins.
- Icon, Zatanna, Garth and his Atlantean girlfriend showed up as a back up resistance group.
- And during a motivational speech by Robin, Alfred, Barbara and Bette can be seen cheering him on.
Disordered
Synopsis: Traumatised by the events of the above episode, the Team are councilled by Black Canary as they try to get past what they endured. And while that's going on, Conner teams up with the Forever People and gets an in on the Kirby side of the Young Justice Universe.
Review: I liked this episode a lot. Not as much as the Red Tornado one, but it was still a great episode for the most part.
Little details such as the New Gods speaking a different language to humans, NOT automatically fighting Conner because he had their "property" and references to the Religion of Crime were also kind of cool.
All around I was impressed that the episode not only managed to build some more on Conner's character, he's now very different from the angry jerk he was when the series began, but it also fleshed out not only the other members of the team but also some of the adults that supervise them as well. Black Canary shows multiple parts of her character that were interesting to see, such as her recounting how she once stopped speaking for a while after she accidentally near-deafened her First Grade Class.
The Forever People were an interesting bunch, each managing to show something of a personality in the relatively brief time they were on screen. The connotations behind them all merging into one form to fight evil were actually addressed, to my suprised. Addressed hilariously so,
Conner: Glad me and my team aren't that close.
Wolf: Lower beings tend to fear... intimacy.
The introduction of Intergang and Desaad were both fairly well handled, with the latter definately giving off vibes of creepiness from everything from his character design (he appears to have been blended with the Elephant Man) to his voice acting. Kudos to the creative team for that.
I am interested as to how they slot into the Grand Scheme being planned by Lex, Ra's and the other members of the Light though. The Psimon episode indicated that the Light appeared to have SOME kind of thing going on with the Fourth World, but the shape of it isn't really as clear as it was in STAS' version. There Darkseid and his mob slowly tested the waters for an invasion by providing Intergang with weapons to test on Superman (Earth's most powerful defender at the time), trying to indoctrinate children via Granny Goodness etc. Here... I don't know. We'll have to wait and see.
I am REALLY looking forward to how they treat Darkseid though, as for the most part the YJUniverse has had some really good versions of DC's characters so far, Brent Spiner's somewhat... lackluster version of the Joker not withstanding (personally I'd have gotten John DiMaggio back, because he's pretty much awesome in whatever he does).
In all, a great episode in a number of different levels, and leaves open some interesting plotlines to be picked up in the future as well.
Oh, and Wolf was hilarious in this episode. From his suprise at the Supercycle to him riding around in it he was awesome nearly everytime he was on screen. The shapeshifting New Goddess pretending to be a bankrobber's mother and othering him a coat was also really funny.
A minor thing that I thought was morbidly interesting, was how the human criminals pointed out that it would be easier just to smoosh Superboy, but Desaad just handwaves this suggestion by saying that the thing they were trying to kill Superboy with had part of his personality, and thus wouldn't kill him because it was more amusing to make it more drawn out and painful.
SO: by taking the more evil route they just left an outing for the hero to escape, thus showing one of the main problems with villains like Desaad, who define themselves by their villainy. The problem in that they're really... at the end of the day kind of thick. And no matter now many wholesome teenage superheroines he might possess, dress in S&M gear, give boobjobs and murder folk, Desaad's still the kind of bad guy who'd fail at robbing a bank because he'd park his car across free disabled parking bays, getting towed in the processs.
Being evil for evil's sake is one thing, but when you've got a goal beyond just messing with people, doin't let the urge to be an asshole get in the way of efficiency.
Okey, Cameos.
- The Forever People! Don't ask me their names, I'm more familiar with the team they inspired during Final Crisis.

- the New Genesis Sphere morphs into the Supercycle, which Wally dubs it as such at the end of the episode.

- Whisper, in the comics she's a former servant of Ra's al Ghul and current prominent member of the Relgion of Crime. Here she's more of the token female member of Intergang. No snakepowers, at least none shown on screen.

- Ugly Mannheim. I found him more interesting in the Intergang/Darkseid storyline in STAS to be honest.

- Infinity Man, aka a cross between Captain Planet and a Power Rangers' robot. With more Innuendo!

- Desaad, now with more lumps! Also, he seems to have borrowed a disguise from Total Recall. HA!

For legality, a contextless panel from a romance comic,

- Failsafe
Brief synopsis: Earth is invaded by mysterious aliens, and as the JLA is quickly taken out by them, leaving the Team to mount a resistance movement on their lonesome. As time goes on things go from bad to worse, the aliens look like they might very well win, but how will the team fare?
Review: On the whole, I wasn't a huge fan of this episode. Don't get me wrong, the voice actors do a REALLY good job in this episode, particularly Miss Martian's, and the plot is pretty much well constructed... It just didn't grab me that much.
Maybe it's because BTAS' Over the Edge held a similar thing and did it better, I don't know. I just didn't really get a good feel of the story this time around.
But, on the plus side, yay for Megan getting a power-up, something that was hinted at back in the episode with Psimon way back when. The team continuing their trend of having more than one outfit depending on the situation also continued, with them exhibiting Arctic versions of their costumes, which were cool to see.
On the whole, there were good elements, but it worked better as a set up for the next episode, Disordered, which I also review below.
The cameos weren't really that huge compared to previous episodes either, though we do get appearences of,
- Brother Eye (in the form of Batman's spy satellites).
- Iris West
- Wonder Woman makes her first appearance in yoinks, but she disappears again pretty quickly. Although I do like that they're giving lesser known heroines room to breathe in this series, I do hope that she at least gets a line at some point. Especially as she's apparently been superheroing in this universe for at least WW2 according to one interview I read a while ago.
- the alien motherships look amusingly like the same technology used by the pseudoWhite Martians from the opening episodes of Justice League, back in the DCAU.
- General Wade Eiling appears, and the fact that he's not an ass to the characters could possibly be seen as an indicator that the Team are aware of him, but not of his possible anti-meta prejudices.
- Jason Bard, aka the private detective that dated Barbara Gordon for a while appeared. And, again, he hurt his leg.
- Megan and Conner's schoolfriends reappeared, including the Wonder Twins.
- Icon, Zatanna, Garth and his Atlantean girlfriend showed up as a back up resistance group.
- And during a motivational speech by Robin, Alfred, Barbara and Bette can be seen cheering him on.
Disordered
Synopsis: Traumatised by the events of the above episode, the Team are councilled by Black Canary as they try to get past what they endured. And while that's going on, Conner teams up with the Forever People and gets an in on the Kirby side of the Young Justice Universe.
Review: I liked this episode a lot. Not as much as the Red Tornado one, but it was still a great episode for the most part.
Little details such as the New Gods speaking a different language to humans, NOT automatically fighting Conner because he had their "property" and references to the Religion of Crime were also kind of cool.
All around I was impressed that the episode not only managed to build some more on Conner's character, he's now very different from the angry jerk he was when the series began, but it also fleshed out not only the other members of the team but also some of the adults that supervise them as well. Black Canary shows multiple parts of her character that were interesting to see, such as her recounting how she once stopped speaking for a while after she accidentally near-deafened her First Grade Class.
The Forever People were an interesting bunch, each managing to show something of a personality in the relatively brief time they were on screen. The connotations behind them all merging into one form to fight evil were actually addressed, to my suprised. Addressed hilariously so,
Conner: Glad me and my team aren't that close.
Wolf: Lower beings tend to fear... intimacy.
The introduction of Intergang and Desaad were both fairly well handled, with the latter definately giving off vibes of creepiness from everything from his character design (he appears to have been blended with the Elephant Man) to his voice acting. Kudos to the creative team for that.
I am interested as to how they slot into the Grand Scheme being planned by Lex, Ra's and the other members of the Light though. The Psimon episode indicated that the Light appeared to have SOME kind of thing going on with the Fourth World, but the shape of it isn't really as clear as it was in STAS' version. There Darkseid and his mob slowly tested the waters for an invasion by providing Intergang with weapons to test on Superman (Earth's most powerful defender at the time), trying to indoctrinate children via Granny Goodness etc. Here... I don't know. We'll have to wait and see.
I am REALLY looking forward to how they treat Darkseid though, as for the most part the YJUniverse has had some really good versions of DC's characters so far, Brent Spiner's somewhat... lackluster version of the Joker not withstanding (personally I'd have gotten John DiMaggio back, because he's pretty much awesome in whatever he does).
In all, a great episode in a number of different levels, and leaves open some interesting plotlines to be picked up in the future as well.
Oh, and Wolf was hilarious in this episode. From his suprise at the Supercycle to him riding around in it he was awesome nearly everytime he was on screen. The shapeshifting New Goddess pretending to be a bankrobber's mother and othering him a coat was also really funny.
A minor thing that I thought was morbidly interesting, was how the human criminals pointed out that it would be easier just to smoosh Superboy, but Desaad just handwaves this suggestion by saying that the thing they were trying to kill Superboy with had part of his personality, and thus wouldn't kill him because it was more amusing to make it more drawn out and painful.
SO: by taking the more evil route they just left an outing for the hero to escape, thus showing one of the main problems with villains like Desaad, who define themselves by their villainy. The problem in that they're really... at the end of the day kind of thick. And no matter now many wholesome teenage superheroines he might possess, dress in S&M gear, give boobjobs and murder folk, Desaad's still the kind of bad guy who'd fail at robbing a bank because he'd park his car across free disabled parking bays, getting towed in the processs.
Being evil for evil's sake is one thing, but when you've got a goal beyond just messing with people, doin't let the urge to be an asshole get in the way of efficiency.
Okey, Cameos.
- The Forever People! Don't ask me their names, I'm more familiar with the team they inspired during Final Crisis.

- the New Genesis Sphere morphs into the Supercycle, which Wally dubs it as such at the end of the episode.

- Whisper, in the comics she's a former servant of Ra's al Ghul and current prominent member of the Relgion of Crime. Here she's more of the token female member of Intergang. No snakepowers, at least none shown on screen.

- Ugly Mannheim. I found him more interesting in the Intergang/Darkseid storyline in STAS to be honest.

- Infinity Man, aka a cross between Captain Planet and a Power Rangers' robot. With more Innuendo!

- Desaad, now with more lumps! Also, he seems to have borrowed a disguise from Total Recall. HA!

For legality, a contextless panel from a romance comic,

no subject
Even though I knew the characters weren't dead, (The next episodes' previews spoiled that) it was interesting to see how the other characters "reacted". I was actually surprised that there wasn't at SBxMM "hold me" moments (which is explained in the next episode).
Now...Disorder was very good. You got my favourite line (re: "intimacy"). And I think Serafin (cowboy kid) was my favourite of the Forever People from this episode. I don't know why.
It's interesting as YJ focuses on the more minor characters of DC we see more minor characters of New Genesis (no Orion, and Darkseid isn't even mentioned by name)--making it all more believable. :)
no subject
I was surprised about the lack SBxMM "hold me" screen time as well, and pleasantly surprised with the decision not to send them in that direction after the events of Failsafe. I'm curious how they will develop this potential conflict in their relationship, and if it will force them to reach out to others instead.