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Spider-Man: The New Animated Series Episode Review

Episode #113, "Mind Games, Part Two"
Original Episode Airdate - September 12th, 2003
Recapping Part One of Mind Games: after escaping their armored prison transport the diabolical The Gaines Twins, Roxanne and Roland have brain-blasted Spider-Man into believing that Mary-Jane Watson has died at the hands of Kraven the Hunter. Convinced by Frank Elson, a mysterious stranger, that the only solace is revenge, Spider-Man now tracks down Kraven in order to pay him the identical fate he inflicted on MJ. Part Two begins with Kraven drawing his final breaths under Spider-Man's might. Moments from delivering Kraven the final blow, Spider-Man notices that the surroundings don't mesh with some of his more recent memories. Combine that with a few of Kraven's conflicting syllables and Spider-Man determines that his reality has somehow been tampered with. The questions is, how or more like by whom? The Gaines Twins are behind everything and while Spider-Man seeks them out to confront them. During the confrontation it looks like Spider-Man is winning as he frees MJ from their grasp. Things take a turn for the worse when the twins use their mental power to trick Spider-Man into harming Indy. After this, the chatter (along with the rest of New York's sentiment) is all anti-Spider-Man and unfortunately a grief stricken Peter Parker agrees. This leaves Spider-Man one last obligation. He tracks down The Gaines Twins at a propane factory where their end is nothing short of explosive. Lastly, a spiritless, dejected and morose Peter Parker tightly packs up his Spider-Man suit and throws it into the Hudson River allowing it to sink into the murky depths. Is this the end of Spider-Man? Or a new beginning for Peter Parker?

Credits
Screenplay By: Steven Kriozere
Directed By: Tim Eldred, Brandon Viette
Music By: John Digweed, Nick Muir and William Anderson
Animation By: Mainframe
Guest Starring: Ed Asner as Officer Barr, Angelle Brooks as Indy, Micheal Dorn as Kraven, Kathy Griffin as Roxanne, Jeremy Piven as Roland



Review and Media by Stu:
The season finale to Spider-Man: The New Animated Series is simply the best episode this show ever did. Completely different from most superhero cartoons, as the show itself is, in that we see what happens when our hero snaps. Despite how cliched it sounds, this was easily the best episode of the show, and one of the best finale episodes I personally have ever watched, due to how well the whole story was executed, and how well all the characters were portrayed.

Dream sequences are tricky to pull off, but most episodes usually focus on changing the characters world, not the character themselves. But here, we see Spidey as pissed as humanly possible, tricked into believing MJ had been killed by Kraven. I could tell we were in for a violent episode just moments before the opening credits, as Neil Patrick Harris perfectly delivered that "I'm gonna rip you apart, Kraven!" line. Straight from the bat, you could tell the episode was trying that little bit extra harder to be special. I've always been a fan of two part finales, and a lot of shows have taken to using them to set up their upcoming seasons/storylines. X-Men Evolution did this especially well. God willing, Spider-Man The New Animated Series will be given another chance to do a season finale.

The opening fight scene between Kraven and Spider-Man is the best the show produced, with some great boarding, stunning animation and brilliant dialogue, which really emphasised the fact that Spidey was out for blood. Michael Dorn was absolutely outstanding as Kraven, a villain, who in the comics sometimes can come off as really corny instead of threatening, but was great here, thanks to a cool redesign and great dialogue. Of all the villains, Kraven is by far the best this show did. He was everything an awesome villain should be, then some. Not bad at all for a character who's strictly a B-stringer in the comics. The MTV version is without a doubt the greatest version of Kraven ever.

The villains have always been the weakest part of this show. Despite not being given access to most of Spider-Man rogue's, the one's who did get used were pretty good. Most of them aren't too faithful to the comics, but still prove entertaining enough. Kingpin was a little bland, Silver Sable and Electro were fine, and Lizard was awesome. He made a brief cameo in this episode, as the subject of Mary Jane's nightmares. Is she really terrified of a creature she never actually met? Are the producers simply saving time/money and reusing an old model? Both. The commentary on the DVD set reveals that this scene, however brief it was, was a fanboy moment.

I wasn't expecting them to get rid of Indy so early, especially the way they did with it being Spider-Man's fault, giving him yet more grief to live with. It's obvious they weren't allowed to let Peter and MJ hook up in this cartoon, when millions where going to pour to theatres to see it happen in Spider-Man 2, or maybe even Spider-Man 3 but I was expecting Mary Jane to be the centre point of the finale, when really it was Indy's. Peter's speech at the ending moments summed up Spider-Man perfectly; this is what a Spider-Man cartoon should be about. The music was also very fitting for the scene. Since I probably haven't said it before, I'll say it here. The music is absoloutly perfect for this kind of show. Everything just fits so well. Muir, Anderson and Digweed should be damn proud of themselves.

I hope the show does get a second season, to leave it all here would be a great shame, there are more stories to tell and Peter putting on the costume again after this seasons finale is one of them.

Screenshots







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