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DuckTales goes back to Scrooge's prospecting days and does its version of The Great Train Robbery

TV Reviews Recap
DuckTales goes back to Scrooge's prospecting days and does its version of The Great Train Robbery
DuckTales’ “The Outlaw Scrooge McDuck!” Photo:

DuckTales wastes no time in getting into telling more adventurous, thrilling stories–literally, as “The Outlaw Scrooge McDuck” is framed around Scrooge regaling his gold-prospecting days to a bored, disinterested Louie. The green triplet has given up on his business drive after a seeing a long line of five whole people at the patent office, so Scrooge tries to inspire him with a tale of battle of wits and fists over a giant golden nugget back in the Old West. The frame story format is as old as storytelling itself, but cartoons usually have a bit more fun with them, with the kind of jokes in which Louie can call out things like how Scrooge can possibly know what Sheriff Cabrera and time-traveling Gyro were up to several hundred feet away. But other than a few nifty set pieces, the episode more or less just goes through the motions.

Not to say it isn’t a fun episode. It is! The stories of Scrooge prospecting days are an integral part of the character’s history, partly cause it’s a formative part of the character, partly because of it’s where the bulk of his interactions with Goldie have occurred. Yes, Goldie is back, and her rapport with Scrooge works better here than it did in “The Golden Lagoon Of White Agony Plains!” Many people disagreed with me, but I still think that in that episode, Goldie spent too much time praising some ideal of Scrooge. Here, the two are on a more even level, with their sporadic flirtations matching their mutual putdowns, their aggressive, compatible work ethic drawing out their competitive spirits, their manipulations being used for and against each other. It’s grounded (as grounded as animated show can be), so when their dual-digging for the gold nugget transforms into a scheme to get it back from John D. Rockerduck, it all works.

John Hodgman guest stars as Rockerduck, and normally I love Hodgman (he was perfectly cast in the second season of The Tick), but something seems off with his performance here. The comedic timing was perfect, as was the tough talk and the (obvious) conman vibe, but I think the issue is he never really felt like a real threat. The deed issue becomes irrelevant once they decide to rob the train, and other than his treatment of people on board that train, he doesn’t do much of anything else. Lin-Manuel Miranda returns as a sheriff ancestor to Fenton, and I suppose police work runs in his family? Still, he’s a fun addition, especially when Gyro arrives after some typical time-traveling shenanigans of his own. This and yesterday’s episode suggest the show is going to have a lot of causal, nutty fun with bringing in a random grab bag of established characters into its stories and letting them fly. Honestly, I am down for that.

That being said, “The Outlaw Scrooge McDuck!” is ultimately light on laughs and light on narrative tension. Seeing Scrooge and Goldie “together” is enjoyable, and I guffawed when Scrooge straight-up took Rockerduck out in two seconds flat. Beyond that, the episode just does what it needs to do: Scrooge and Goldie compete, then team up to take back the gold nugget from Rockerduck. The stakes never quite reach too high and the obstacles never become seemingly insurmountable–the train robbery goes smoothly all things considered, and even Jeeves makes for an unfortunately weak end boss (more on that in the Stray Observations). Gyro’s appearance is convenient, if somehow plausible; Sheriff Cabrera’s willingness to let them out of jail is less so (he may have realized he was conned by Rockerduck, but nothing really suggests he ought to trust these other two/three ducks: one started a fight, one manipulated everyone, the third appeared out of nowhere.) Still, it’s a rootin-and-tootin fun time, a solid window into Scrooge’s past, and it’s approached with a low-key sincerity that’s absolutely gold.


Stray observations

  • The battle with Jeeves in the train car housing the nugget looked so great, with the red highlights and shadows providing a dark, sinister edge to it. I was less enamored by how Scrooge escaped–by appealing to his salt-of-the-earth, workman respectability in regards to being exploited by Rockerduck, only to then give him a minuscule piece of gold. Somehow, this works out, despite the fact there’s a giant nugget of gold involved. I don’t know, this felt kind of lazy.
  • Gyro bathtub time machine makes an appearance, which he used many times in the original show.
  • The episode ends with the gold nugget shattering, a disappointment to Scrooge at first, but who ends up making a whole panning business from it. It’s meant to inspire Louie, but he ends up calling Goldie to get some coaching on how to operate his company “more shiftily.” I don’t know how much mileage the show can get out of “Louie wants to build a company but is lazy about it” in the long run, but I guess we’ll see!
  • As always, drop your comic knowledge about the comics, especially any good tidbits about about Rockerduck!

12 Comments

  • jshie20-av says:

    Duck, duck, goos3!

  • coolman13355-av says:

    Here’s 3 things I’ll add.1) Louie so would complain about the prospector lingo and then find contemporary slang worse.2) I loved the Back to the Future reference(s).3) Old West Gizmoduck

  • 98275298692834u-av says:

    I liked it for going back to Scrooge’s roots though there are some discrepancies with the comics-timeline here:

    – How did Scrooge meet Goldie? In the comics, it was in the Klondike just before finally striking it rich. I guess in this series they must have met earlier since Scrooge is still a struggling prospector here looking for his fortune.

    – In the Don Rosa comics, Rockerduck’s father, who Scrooge met in his prospecting days, was a self-made man like Scrooge and actually taught him to work harder, deal with others honestly & literally how to swing a pick. His spoiled son became the present-day antagonist Rockerduck (featured only in 1 Barks comic as a fairly generic tycoon rival but for some reason becoming a very popular recurring character in the Italian comics). This series seems to be using the present-day Rockerduck in place of the one from Scrooge’s past which, eh, is fine with me. No idea how well this portrayal of him matches the Italian character. Anybody?Scrooge makes a few hilarious expressions that I’ve never seen on a Disney duck character before. This show’s animation is looking better all the time.

    • coolman13355-av says:

      Well they certainly can and do change things from the comics canon. That being said even just tracking his backstory in show continuity madness may lie that way.

  • nt1-av says:

    I spent part of my childhood in Italy and thus read a lot of Italian-produced Disney comics, which were translated all over Europe. In these stories, Rockerduck was Scrooge’s most frequent antagonist (with the Beagle boys and Magica De Spell, of course) while Flintheart Glomgold’s appearances were few and far between. Actually, I don’t think European readers became really familiar with Glomgold until Don Rosa and the first Ducktales show reintroduced him in the 1980s.
    I always like Glomgold better because he was more of a rarity and he felt more evil. Rockerduck’s characterization depends on the writer, of course, but he was generally portrayed as a pompous fool. This might be one of the reasons of his appeal for Italian readers. Unlike Scrooge, Rockerduck inherited his fortune, so he is arrogant and entitled, almost childish in his desire to overcome Scrooge and prone to fits of anger when defeated. In short, he is more of a massive jerk than a really threatening villain. What I liked about the guy is that he was often subjected to all sorts of comical humiliations at the end of the stories. Sometimes, he would actually eat his bowler hat in frustration, which I found really hilarious as a kid.
    I’d say that the episode captured well Rockerduck’s snobbish/arrogant aspect (John Hodgman’s voice acting was perfect on that behalf), but the character could have been developed better. He has a lot of comedic potential, so I hope they bring him back and give him more screen time.

  • alanlacerra-av says:

    I loved seeing the bathtub time machine from the original series!

  • alanlacerra-av says:

    There were store signs that I thought were funny, like how you can get your tooth pulled for 5 cents but if you want it done painlessly you have to pay double, and how “The Mad Haberdashery” plays on The Mad Hatter.

    • coolman13355-av says:

      I saw the Pain Less sign and wondered what I was missing. Now I know.

    • thepantweaver-av says:

      And even better that there was an Alice dress in the window where Goldie got her fancy disguise from.

  • alanlacerra-av says:

    The Disney Wiki suggests that this version of Jeeves is a combination of Oddjob and Jaws from James Bond. Certainly, the metal mouth made me think of Jaws. Steelbeak from F.O.W.L. on Darkwing Duck also had a metal mouth.Apparently, the Jeeves that historically accompanied Rockerduck in other media was more assistant than thug.

    • thepantweaver-av says:

      I definitely agree he reminded me of both henchmen so I’d say that’s spot on. The inside a train fight is also a Bond staple. This one reminded most of the fight with Mr. Steelfingernails from SPECTRE.

  • simonc1138-av says:

    Hats off whoever thought to cross-pollinate a time-travelling Gyro with Scrooge’s classic adventures. All the pieces were available to pull this off in the 80s series, but the swerve itself feels modern – I think if the 80s series had tried anything like this they would’ve framed it from Gyro’s perspective like the Camelot episode. Love the bit where Scrooge dons a top hat for the first time and we see him shed the roughneck exterior and start becoming the man/duck we know him to be. It reminds me of the same moment from Casino Royale where Bond puts on a tux for the first time – I don’t know if Casino Royale pioneered that kind of reveal, but it’s the only example I can think of. 

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