
So "The Shippening" is a bit difficult to evaluate. It's an episode designed to be pandering, stemming from Ben asking fans to come up with odd pairings to incorporate into the show, and to the show's credit, the pandering gets pulled off pretty effortlessly. It never felt like an episode made out of the writers' obligation, and if anything, in terms of sheer entertainment value, it's one of the most fun and charismatic episodes in quite a while.
But they don't call me Mr. Wet Blanket for nothing. Or they used to, so now I have to conform to the label a bit. And that's not to say it's bad, because it's certainly not, but with Gumball being the only show that would come anywhere close to executing the idea with legitimate dedication, there's some ways that it comes up a bit short.

It's very difficult to explain, but this is a show that has almost always been able to get a firm grasp on whatever it's trying to mimic: instead of poking fun at horror movie tropes, "The Joy" is a legitimate thriller, and for "The Detective," the show actually slowed down the show's pacing to sync up with the beats of a mumbly Southern detective drama. "The Shippening" is affectionate, but... undisciplined, for a lack of a better term.

This is really another standard episode of the show with a little bit of twiddling around. The tone is as wry as always, the writing is as you'd hope, and the episode, more than less, stays on-track. And that's sort of the issue. I was expecting a bit more stylistic mimicry—something we got with the visuals (that gradient effect on Carball was egregious but true-to-form) but not the writing. There was an emphasis on hectic wordplay, and that led to a lot of great moments, but the prose felt very broad and straightforward. Maybe a bit more decadence would've helped; the writing oriented the visuals, but it was a mere aid more than strong independent of it.


-I never addressed it, but it was nice seeing Gumball and Darwin take the shift from doing commentary to actively intervening in the episode, and Sarah, though always a difficult character to implement, worked quite well in her little niche.
-The assortment of Awesome Store paraphernalia-related gags at the beginning was a nice creative exercise, and having the final object being glasses that just... serve their purpose was particularly fun.
-"I would say it looks like Cupid needs to lay off the ambrosia for a while."
-"I'm your cousin, Zacharia Lopez Kirby! I have a hyper mood, and I like paragliding and ducks! I hate arguments and itchy hats."
-"And I'm Zacharia's girlfriend, Bexi. It's short for Albexandra. Backstory: I was raised by my uncle Timutet and his twin dogs Rahmir and Castro. Catchphrase: 'This bird is out of control!'"
-"What did you do this time?" "Nothing, I swear! I was just writing some non-canon AT and AR ships, the odd one out here and there, and a bit of OOC, some OC drawings of course, but mostly OTP squees and fan service."
-"It's like a commercial for male deodorant out there!"
-The reference to Yuki x Nicole slash, I'm sure, made a lot of people very happy in many regions of their body.
-Stop staring at that image.

For the last Gumball review of "The Neighbor," CLICK HERE.
Considering how many 10/10 I have seen for this episode, quite suprising that you gave it a B.
ReplyDeleteAlso, it should've been a The Happening parody, or at least Death Note. I can't be the only one who thought about this, right?
It was a The Happening and Death Note parody. Just, you know, toned-down because this is still a children's show, no matter how many times they reference age-inappropriate material or burn on things that wouldn't interest normal kids, like fanfiction, searching for the meaning of life, and US politics (*cough*The Candidate*cough*).
DeleteOr, y'know, it could just be that the whole "Everything I X becomes a reality" type thing, which has been done multiple times over. And "The Candidate" isn't explicitly about US politics... we've been over all of this.
DeleteBut Leancarp, I'm honestly surprised to an extent bordering on concern how fast you wrote that comment after I posted the review. But I want to put the disclaimer that there are some instances that scores aren't totally relative; for instance, I can think "The Shippening" is better than a couple of B+ or A- grades, but it struggles with things pertaining exclusively to itself, and thus I have to evaluate it in accordance to that. I suppose what I'm saying is that grades aren't the definitive means of ranking the show, and I want to put that out there before I get mercilessly attacked again for quote unquote hating on good things.
DeleteIs liking an episode not enough? Eh, whatever.
Weird coincidence, I literally only visit this blog like twice a week, I'm in the US right now (which isn't my natal country) so I don't have much time to be here neither. I'm quite making a exception now.
DeleteAh, cool. Hope you're enjoying your time here, at least.
DeleteEven if they played by the books, the concept was so daring it didn't mattered for me at all. They pull out the obsessiveness of the fans really well, it didn't feel heavy and it didn't incurs in mistakes such as shady references or edgy scorn of stereotypes.
ReplyDeleteI think they succeded in creating a community referential episode that was truly appealing for those who know the Gumball fandom, (unlike mlp who just throwed roses at their fans) they poked the fans with the most aberrant hilarious creations with an easy-going attitude.
I admit that maybe it could be better but as novel and entretaining as it was, it's simply amazing.
Eh, I think episodes need to really hit a conceptual and executional sweet spot. I'm not going to go off and say, "Oh, the only reason all you people enjoyed it is because the show is forcefully winning you over to hide its weakness," because that's certainly not the case; I just think it has to do with potential and how "The Shippening" did what you'd want and nothing further.
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