The
last few seasons of Adventure Time have
seen very sporadic release schedules. Sometimes there’s a slew of episodes all
coming out in a month and sometimes there’s nothing for weeks and weeks. It’s
not clear where seasons begin and end most of the time, and I was under the
impression that season 7 ended with the episodes ‘Preboot’ and ‘Reboot’, mostly
because they took five months to come out after the previous episodes – but now
I find out that’s midway through season 8 and I should have done my season 7
impressions in the March of 2016. Oh well.
Season
7 was actually the time that the show lost me somewhat, with season 8 episodes
only recently having piqued my interest again. This season’s major events
include Princess Bubblegum getting deposed by the cowardly King of Ooo, a
lengthy exploration of Marceline’s past and where she got her different powers,
and a real visit to the surreal parallel dimension Farmworld. There are also
more hints to Simon’s past, with Betty at large in the present day.
But
honestly, it’s partly the unpredictable release schedule, partly the feeling
that the show’s major ideas are now played out and partly a few dud episodes like
trying to figure out underwater political intrigues with blowfish and
porpoises. There wasn’t much badly wrong here, but a lot of momentum felt sapped
by the longer storylines, which unlike those of season 8 didn’t really feel
like they advanced the plot of characters very much, especially Marceline.
Princess Bubblegum got a little more depth, though.
In
fact, the problem with this season was that unlike the seasons surrounding it,
with major arcs largely focused on Finn, there’s not enough contrast between
light and shade. Marceline is all darkness, Bubblegum only treading between
bright pink and grey. What defines the current Adventure Time, a very long way out from its quirky initial pilot, is
that it can contrast its silliness with surprising depth and ambition. I can
see that this season brought to the fore some of the cleverer elements thought
up for secondary characters, but they really pale beside Finn or the Ice King’s
stories. And that leaves this season a little sub-par. But certainly, it
remains fun to watch.
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