I just remembered the "Please. I don't want to see another human life destroyed by this place” line, and honestly did they have scenes of Luz starting to wonder if Belos' had a point and going into the island did destroy her life? If not, they should have had.
No, they did not have Luz ever wonder how the isles affected Belos--except in the storyboards:
Luz still calls him out for trying to destroy the isles and being a hypocrite but there's still that moment of empathy in which she asks point blank: "What do you think they DID to you?!" She briefly contemplates just why someone would go so far to destroy an entire population and what his mindset might be. Unfortunately, this was not included in the final version and Belos' expression is blank instead of pleading.
Then there's this storyboard from For the Future in which Luz, Eda, and King explain to the Collector how people like Amity and Lilith became their friends:
Luz's line about "people being complicated" is in the episode but the entire exchange between her and the Collector is not even though it opens up a lot of interesting ideas and themes. Without it though, the show becomes straight up hypocritical when it states that people are complicated but reduces its villains to generic archetypes and its hero characters as being simply misguided or victims of the villains.
And no, this doesn't mean that the show should have excused Belos' actions or even forgiven him; but they could have and should have acknowledged the complexity of his character by keeping this nuance in and how the characters react to it. By doing so, the message of "people are complicated" becomes clear and strengthens the other characters as well. Luz gets to self-reflect on how she sees other people and learn that even the worst people among us are incredibly complex and have driving forces that are uncomfortably close to our own, thus making it much harder to demonize them. The Collector--instead of being a Giant Star Baby--keeps both his childlike bluntness and keen observational skills that he had in season 2, thus fleshing out the character instead of devolving him.
Regrettably, that nuance is absent from the show and we have a rather black-and-white narrative about Good vs. Evil; people are only ever really "bad" if someone tricked them or if there was a misunderstanding and all the Real Bad People are just selfish jerks who are power hungry and controlling.
This is not compelling storytelling; this is a tale as old as time. And the worst part is that there was a great story in The Owl House but it was left in the rough drafts.
Storyboards by Yasmin Khudari and King Pecora
Hero Commission to Endeavor after he was publicly exposed as an abuser vs Hero Commission to Aoyama after being exposed as a traitor to save his own life and family
I really don’t know what this is tbh…got bored and made an anime cross over with my favorite blonde characters ig 💀💀💀
(Is it spelled blond or blonde??)
Anyways uhh yea
Well, now that the recent episode is out, let me tell you I’m still defending Yuga Aoyama they can never make me hate you
Rewatching MHA with my brother and catching new things. They had Aoyama say this in like season 4!!! That poor quirkless baby!!
Keeping myself somewhat sane by drawing silly doodles with Cobeb. And the funniest part is that all of them are canon lol
Bunnydoll Week 2024 Day 1 - Jealousy
Dont listen to Iida he has a concussion
The World's Tree
Captain America: The First Avenger (2011)
Thor (2011)
Loki (2023) — 2.06 “Glorious Purpose”
alternate ending
Oh, that's affection
What format of au content would you expect? Really, what would you like to see?
I do not know if bunnydoll hashtags are needed here if I make them free for different ships. Although let it be, for those who love this ship 🙌