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Time-travel shenanigans allow DuckTales to shine in its chaotic element

“Timephoon!” works on essentially every level: slick and stylish animation, exciting sequences, and growing tension between two rich characters.

TV Reviews DuckTales
Time-travel shenanigans allow DuckTales to shine in its chaotic element

There’s two main ways an episode of DuckTales can get a high grade. The first way is to establish a significant development in an ongoing arc, hitting its dramatic/aesthetics beats with honest fervor, strong pacing, and a satisfying catharsis, positive or negative. The second way is to do a one-off episode that’s running on all creative cylinders, per se: even if the overall story doesn’t advance, the dramatic, comedic, action, and narrative momentum all run smoothly and seamlessly together, with well-executed sound cues, sharp animation, and a great score to tie it all together. But sometimes we get something like “Timephoon!”–an episode that manages to do both those things at once. If last Friday’s episode struggled with some moments because everything seemed off, this episode absolutely made sure everything was on.

“Timephoon!” has what might be Louie’s best idea yet for Louie, Inc.–at least theoretically: use Gyro’s time tub to travel back in time to “take” ancient artifacts before the traps/obstacles are built around them, or to bypass them completely. (Launchpad mentions that this could be misconstrued as stealing, but but the bottom line is that it’s all stealing, traps or no, but let’s not think too much about that). He returns on one particular trip and accidentally brings along Bubba, the infamous caveman from the original DuckTales.

And Bubba is fine! He’s a fun, ridiculous character, and they didn’t change him too much from his original version. He’s still weirdly amendable to modern conveniences: skateboards, sunglasses, keytars. But the episode isn’t really about him, save for Huey’s crazed frustration that Bubba’s behavior doesn’t match the research he gathered on caveducks. Instead, this episode is about the time travel fallout of Louie’s scheme: the disruptions in the timeline combined with a dangerous storm are causing characters to randomly jump back and forth into the past/present.

As a regular, typical adventure, it works. It has Louie running a scam that goes out of control, but in a way that he couldn’t really predict, so it doesn’t come off as Louie being a greedy clod. It has the funny B-story of Huey losing his mind over Bubba’s comfort with contemporary bric-a-brac while Dewey and Webby gleefully accept it. It has a natural progression of escalating dangers and problems as more past figures appear in the present and, more horrifyingly, members of the Duck family (and Gyro) start zapping into the past.

It has a comfortable degree of self-awareness about the whole thing without getting bogged down in smarminess–both Scrooge and Ms. Beakley recognize immediately the time/space disruptions and jump to figure out how to fix things. And it has the background runner in which Della and Beakley argue over proper parenting, over how to best “discipline” the children, before the small problems they ostensibly cause grow into unwieldy, unmanageable bigger ones.

And that final point ends up being the real kicker to the entire episode. Look, I will be very honest and say that I had some real doubts that the creative team were actually aware of the understated discomfort/hostility that is present between Louie and Della. Or, more accurately, I figured they were treating it as a fleeting side reference that would easily somehow resolve itself by the end of the season with minimal commentary. But “Timephoon!” shows I was wrong. This episode pushes that element a bit more to the forefront: Della, after watching the chaos unfold around her, and watching her other children disappear in a shot of time-electricity, puts her foot down and ends Louie’s pursuits, including Louie Inc. This occurs, mind you, after an episode of watching Della’s lenient responses to the kids’ earlier behavior, and the generalized forgiveness that the rest of the Duck clan bestows on Louie’s actions. In that light, it’s stark and sudden, indicative of perhaps a significant change in Della’s character–but that it’s directly at Louie is telling. So his response, “I wonder who I got that from,” after Della’s accusation that he did what he did without considering the consequences or who he could hurt, absolutely hits hard, because it is, in so many ways, true. It even shocks the rest of the group.

“Timephoon!” works on essentially every level, from its slick and stylish animation (the animators are have so much fun with the facial expressions), to its exciting sequences (the Beakley/Della vs. ninja fight was so damn fun), to the growing tension that’s burgeoning between two rich characters. There’s three more episodes to go in the season–here’s hoping they can end strong!

Stray observations

  • One thing that strikes me odd about Bubba is that he very much acts like his original version, but the creators have been vocal about avoiding or tampering down the “lamer” aspects of the original show, like revamping Webby or Doofus, or “mine cart chases.” But by all accounts though, Bubba was/is kind of lame, but for here they kept his original characteristics around. My point is, the kinds of things the creators are changing wholesale versus the things they’re keeping, are feeling more and more arbitrary.
  • One really tricky thing DuckTales tries to do is allow its characters to be the bold, endearing, crazed adventurers they are, but at the same time, form narratives around regulating/controlling them (the concept of “a proper adventure” is meaningless if you think about it). Specifically, Louie doesn’t do anything egregiously worse than what Huey or Dewey has done in the past–or Della or Scrooge for that matter. That’s sort of why Louie’s backtalk to Della stings so much. Still, it’s hard to parse the line that DuckTales is trying to place between the kind of adventures that are worthwhile to go on versus the kind that require restrictions of some kind. I think the show is trying to narrow that through the specific opinions and stances of individual characters, but it has yet to commit to it.
  • Beakley says a little tough love makes them better people later. When Della asks if that’s true, Beakley responds that it worked on her. But I think the tone of that scene suggests that that’s not true. Is Della a better person? What does it even mean to be “a better person” within a family that’s defined by its embrace of dangerous, crazy adventures? She took Dewey on a death-defying question in the Arctic just a few weeks ago. It’s kind of clunky but admittedly I’m very intrigued where this goes.
  • Apologies for the lateness of this review, the internet’s been on and off all day for some reason.

25 Comments

  • mattthecatania-av says:

    I miss time travel popsicles.This was fine, but “A Nightmare on Killmotor Hill!”is worthier of an A-range grade.

    • graymangames-av says:

      Agreed. “Killmotor Hill!” hit that sweet, “Civil War” spot where everyone got their little character moment, but the story was still very much about Lena’s development and how she’s changed since the first season. I think it may be in my top ten of the season. 

      • roam85-av says:

        I think my favorite was Whatever Happened to Donald Duck? But I just like it when they use Donald. I also disagreed with the reviewer that it was an armchair psychoanalysis of Donald Duck. It was an armchair discussion of Donald Duck cartoons. Cartoons in which, exactly as surmised, the world is literally built to and conspires against Donald Duck specifically to enrage him. I thought it was brilliant.The anger management counseling just explains how they plan to use that in this series, and it is.  And they use it well.

    • alanlacerra-av says:

      I miss time travel popsicles, too.

  • marshalgrover-av says:

    I thought this one was fun, and that ending was great.

  • luasdublin-av says:

    It should at least get bumped up half a grade for working some of the title song lyrics into the shows dialogue.

  • thefunboy3version-av says:

    Well, this puts a new spin on just about every Louie scene this season: on top of every other emotion he’s feeling about Della’s return, he’s mad at her. He feels badly about it most of the time (the scene in “Nothing Can Stop Della Duck” where he admits mixed feeling as to her return just took on a whole different tone), but the thing is he’s not wrong. Very interested to see where this goes; it doesn’t feel like something that will be resolved over a bonding adventure.

  • lightjak-av says:

    It makes perfect sense that Della would punish Louie after everything that happened. Della’s greatest fear when she was on the moon was that she would never see her family again. Then she witnessed her family disappear into the infinite recesses of time and she didn’t know if she was ever going to see them again. Seeing for herself how much chaos Louie wrought over a get rich quick scheme made her realize she couldn’t tolerate Louie’s behavior if it meant everyone was going to be in mortal danger.I love that Launchpad took 4 seconds longer than everyone else to understand Louie’s swipe at Della. Gyro had the line of the night for me when Scrooge told him to find the Time Tub right before Gyro disappears after getting hit by time lightning and Gyro exclaims “I’ve immediately failed you”.

  • thezmage-av says:

    The changes aren’t “arbitrary,” they’re in service to the story. Bubba was keptbpretty much the same because he wasn’t going to be (presumably) sticking around and all he needed to do was give the non-Louie kids something to do in this episode

  • alanlacerra-av says:

    I like how the fight against the ninja ends with the Santa Trap, recalling “Last Christmas!”, another time travel episode. One of the triplets even corrects a where to a when as in that earlier episode.

  • alanlacerra-av says:

    Bubba and Tootsie = OTP. But seriously, I loved everything about Bubba, then and now. “Lame”? I think not.

  • alanlacerra-av says:

    Launchpad will see us at the end of the world.

  • MelOrr-av says:

    I, for one, always loved Bubba (and Tootsie, too!) and I don’t think he’s lame at all.

  • oopec-av says:

    Launchpad’a idiot savant works for me. His larger and larger understanding of time travel, and throwing out that the end of the world is happening very soon, were a few of the highest marks for an episode of almost nothing but high marks

  • whoiswillo-av says:

    If Launchpad’s end of the world speech is prophetic, the season finale is going to get dark.

  • shota9-av says:

    Great episode good for della For learning that being a parent means sometimes yu have to tuff on yur children. So those gyro Clones I mean the ones he was definitely Not making an army for. Do we think the line from Launchpad about the future and (see yu there soon) was a throw away line or something to come maybe next season?And lastly we’re does lena Live now? Or was she doing her own magic adventure with that other girl I forget her name … marry feather something. Amazing episode 9.0 KAMPAI! 

  • docprof-av says:

    Santa. Trap.

  • bobgrey-av says:

    I think it feels less like an arbitrary decision and more that Bubba just works better as a one off call back rather than a regular or recurring character like Webby or Doofus. He’s fine in one episode, but there’s not really anything to explore in the long term. I was pretty relieved when he was deposited back in his own time as I was suddenly flooded with not so great memories of him in the original show.

  • robgrizzly-av says:

    This is exactly the kind of episode I needed, after the one with Louie and Goldie. His schemes are getting out of hand (and yes, he’s becoming a straight up thief) and I’m glad the show is (somewhat) aware enough to have Della put her foot down. Great scene. Maybe it’s just me, but I am living for the inter-family conflict on Ducktales. So good.I also love when Huey said Bubba won’t understand Dewey’s “funky fresh” ways.

  • coolman13355-av says:

    So glad they’re doing something Louie and Della.

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