the book had a line from the person who invented the alternate universe device before, talking about how fiction is a window into other dimensions. a thoery which I, as someone who came up with that same idea when i was a kid, am a fan of.I enjoyed the Darkwing episodes well enough but this season has been pretty mediocre compared to the previous in my opinion. There are way too many characters on the show and they're not great at balancing them.
One thing that struck me as odd in the Darkwing two-parter... So the machine pulls things from alternate universes. Right? Current Darkwing was a fan / actor who replaced previous Darkwing, also an actor. So since when is an in-universe TV show an alternate reality? Also, why were the villains real? Shouldn't they have been actors playing roles? This stuff is too convoluted for its own good. My recollection of the previous DW stuff isn't great so it's certainly possible I've forgotten some old explanation that clears this all right up!
Oh really? I must've missed that! Thank you.the book had a line from the person who invented the alternate universe device before, talking about how fiction is a window into other dimensions. a thoery which I, as someone who came up with that same idea when i was a kid, am a fan of.
Disney's Fluppy Dogs is a one-hour animated television special that aired on November 27 (Thanksgiving), 1986 on ABC, and was intended to be a pilot for the third Walt Disney Television animated series. The special suffered low ratings and it was cancelled. It featured five pastel-colored, or "fluppy", talking dogs that came through a fluppy interdimensional doorway and into the lives of Jamie and his teenage neighbor Claire.
the book had a line from the person who invented the alternate universe device before, talking about how fiction is a window into other dimensions. a thoery which I, as someone who came up with that same idea when i was a kid, am a fan of.
Well, this was a hell of a deep cut. Somebody at Disney loves their job;
And yes, I had to look up what it was in reference to, I was four when this originally aired.
I mean it's a really old school idea, you can go back to the tale of 2 flash's comic where up till that point most golden Age heroes were comics in the silver age dc universe(and where Barry got his name), bit it turned out they were in an alternate parallel timeline instead(that later got remerged)The 'every story is real in another dimension' was also the plot of a REALLY good episode of Justice League ("Legends" if anyone is interested). They did it in reverse though, with the League being transported into a fictional comic book world, but there was still a Launchpad (Green Lantern) who was a huge nerd for the source material and owed his career and life to it, same as in Ducktales.
Well, this was a hell of a deep cut. Somebody at Disney loves their job;
And yes, I had to look up what it was in reference to, I was four when this originally aired.
seeing a lot of praise for this week's episode from those who watched it early
gonna dig in myself in a bit
So I really liked last week's Darkwing Duck episode. I really want a Darkwing Reboot.
... I finished this week's episode noticiably more excited and pumped than I did last week's special event. This episode felt like the mid-season shake-up/halfway point that last week was advertised as.
Boy, I really thought they were going to reveal Beakley as a traitor for a moment there.
I doubt she's a traitor, but she's lying about her relationship with Webby and it probably has something to do with FOWL.I wonder if this is an actual thing or just the paranoia talking.
1876 was the year Hortense McDuck, Donald's Mother, was born. Hortense was mentioned and shown when Webby first met the nephews in the first episode.
"The traitor" is on a note near Hortense and Quackmore.
It looks like that thread is connected to something unseen pinned behind the McDuck's Shadow note and below the "Friend or FOWL?" note.
Escape from the ImpossiBin!
The bit with the villain knowing everything Scrooge does is odd, though. I mean, it makes perfect sense, but they already used that gimmick last season with the moon guy (where it made less sense). It kind of reminds me of how Naruto filler arcs often had a filler villain with the same gimmick as a canon villain before the arc with that canon villain.
They called them Rosa Runes what more do you want!!! :PEscape from the ImpossiBin!
I'll agree that this was the best episode in a while, with fun traps and Webby being a menace.
The bit with the villain knowing everything Scrooge does is odd, though. I mean, it makes perfect sense, but they already used that gimmick last season with the moon guy (where it made less sense). It kind of reminds me of how Naruto filler arcs often had a filler villain with the same gimmick as a canon villain before the arc with that canon villain.
Also, my biggest wish for this adaptation was a straightforward adaptation of the Don Rosa story where Magica has control of gravity before Jojo Part 6 came out, which had an extremely similar stand battle (complete with taking place at an airport), and unfortunately this episode dooms that.
I specifically wanted the sequence at the airport so people could make comparison videos once Jojo Part 6 is animated.
dang what is going on in that second picture, i cant figure out what perspective theyre supposed to be on. i know john d. rockerduck has some long boots but they gotta be on a steep slope for that to work.
Beakley and Scrooge probably just briefed the whole family on all the current FOWL agents and FOWL has been spying on the duck family this whole time.It was nice seeing the (almost) full range of FOWL agents now being an active threat though clearly there have been some off screen encounters as everybody knows everybody now.
I think it was! Two... Maybe.Episode is out
Also was that a JoJo's Bizzare Adventure reference?