Halon Chocolate said:
Wow, you guys were completely on the mark regarding this episode.
That "battle", for a defend-the-home-city type of fight it was over pretty fast. Also, more flashy action-figure esque combat with barely any tension. More characters pop up to look cool (save for one everybody feels needed to have her moment, I agree there.), and the dilemma of the Grimm hole is resolved in a snap. Typical RWBY battle at this point, I don't know what I expected.
Status Quo is god.
Some interesting stuff afterwards: Ozpin's higher-ups really don't like his modus operandi and appoint Ironwood to keep doing what hes doing.
Ironwood got infiltrated (his building, I mean) and no one seemed to notice. Did this not come to the council's attention? Did Ironwood cover it up? Why didn't Ozpin or Glynda report it, they knew about it? Why is Ironwood head of security if his guards can't guard worth a crap?
Torchwick is in the cubes jailhouse for who knows how long.
Unless he can break his losing streak, he can stay there.
Cinder's team maintains cover and receives possible aid from Adam of all people. Thats cool. Seasons done.
Step 1: Introduce villains of the volume
Step 2: Have them do vaguely evil things
Step 3: Confrontation
Step 4: Bring in the main antag of the next volume
Only step they didn't follow for this volume was having Cinder and pals be the ones confronted. Instead it was the White Fang and Toadlick again.
Yang meets...her mom? Food for thought to hold people over until Season 3. I'll forget it though.
The real question is, how does this affect the story? The bigger question is, does anyone really care?
Is it just me, or is the passage of time completely removed for anyone else? Maybe I just need to pay more attention, but I really can't tell you how long any PoV character has stayed at Beacon for the duration of the show. How long are their semesters? To see Jaune struggle with combat for a bit and then suddenly bring down a Grimm, it was comedic but a complete detachment from the pace. It just seems as if things are getting accomplished way too fast in such a short period of time. Which also brings me to this...
At some point, I honestly actually thought the tournament was completed off-screen. To see them at the end still talking about it made me think, wasn't that a big deal in Season 1? Its still a big deal now? I get that they're trying to build up this grand tournament as some kind of real big event folks are hyped up for, but the jarring on-off way the pacing is handling it just makes me throw up my arms and go "its still a thing?" every time someone resurrects the subject.
Despite these grievances, RWBY still holds a ton of untapped potential and I really want to see it become more than simply mediocre.
TBH I figured discussing the series as a whole would be off-topic, and reserved for a thread more broad.
But I enjoy talking it out, sooooo...
What the series needed was to take its time. It introduces dozens of new characters and plot points because the team seems to be aiming for a yonger audience and assume that not constantly having new things being shoved in would bore them. In addition they're stealing from various anime and western animation tropes. Like, Lie Ren having Ren as his first name (Japanese naming in which the last name sometimes comes before the first), or the unrequited crush that goes to obnoxious lengths (Jaune and Weiss).
Oh, and let's not forget how Miles is favoring his own character in the writing. Think about it, he even appears before Blake OR Weiss as "vomit boy" and then is the first secondary character to be introduced. He's nice to the main character, has a nice conversation with her, hits on Weiss and Pyrra, is the main source of comic relief for the series (even though they try to make the series have a humorous tone at times, which makes comic relief redundant), has his own character arc before both Blake (who got one) and Yang (who has yet to get one), he's played up as sympathetic in his arc, has 2 moments of the same development (disobeying Cardin and the Ursa fight), tells off Neptune and is played up as being in the right rather than a hypocrite, has this "potential" being played up in places, is the main focus of the dance along with his team, is the designated leader OF his team, might even have a relationship with Weiss (maybe, we get only a brief moment of Weiss re-evaluating Jaune at the dance), might have a relationship with Pyrra (if you consider their conversation not ship sinking), and got more time dedicated to him in the fight of this episode than some of the other characters, mostly for humor. And despite us not seeing his improvement, he can take down an ursa now when in volume 1 he nearly got killed by one.
The whole series probably needed a do-over, but they can't. Because WB picked them up, firstly, and because none of them probably want to admit the issues the series has, secondly.
The flow of time isn't even the biggest problem the series has. But it goes to show they don't care about that either.