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ZORO VS HODY – One Piece Episode 535 and 536 – Rich Reaction
2022.10.06
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ZORO VS HODY - One Piece Episode 535 and 536 - Rich Reaction
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Hordy has got to be one of my least favorite villains in the series.
I can’t wait for the flashbacks of this arc.
I love your opinion here :
Chopper got thrown before because he is not human, and gets thrown now because he is (with) human.
Man, i love your reactions… especially one piece.. the post time skip is going to be wild, I hope you enjoy it.
The simp is strong with Sanji, to the bitter end…
Wasn’t it Hody?
Fun Blowfish Facts
“Turn around…” – Bonnie Tyler
This episode features the best kind of content: mermaid reverse vore.
Anyway, we see one of Usopp’s new ammo plants, the Rafflesia. This is a completely real plant, the genus Rafflesiaceae, and odds are, the specific type of rafflesia is R. arnoldii. Rafflesias don’t have any roots or stems or leaves, which may leave you wondering, wait, so how does it survive? Well, it has something similar to roots called a haustorium, which grows inside of other plants’ vines and parasitically sucks nutrients out. The largest flower ever discovered was a rafflesia, being 111 centimeters in diameter (3146 point font) and weighing as much as 11 kilograms (about 1/2557 the weight of the copper in the Statue of Liberty). The trait we see Usopp use is the rafflesia’s most well-known characteristic; the fact that it smells freaking awful. A lot of fruits and flowers smell good, to entice animals to eat them so their seeds can be pooped out far away and thus spread out, but a rafflesia’s scent is meant to smell good to flies. You know, the things that swarm around decaying meat. And if you’ve never seen a rafflesia before but it still looks familiar to you, you’re probably thinking of the Pokémon Gloom and Vileplume.
This episode is particularly bad when it comes to padding. The whole Fishman Island arc is much slower than is typical for the series because the anime was almost caught up with the manga at this point (for numbers, this episode came out in February 2012 and was based on a chapter from March 2011), so they added a lot of extra scenes to fill time. Many are inconsequential, like seeing Franky and Den’s taxi ride or Robin’s brief arrival at the Sunny. But this episode has a couple added scenes that snarl the story somewhat.
First, Zoro’s fight against Hody Jones is much longer in the anime than it was in the manga. In the manga, Zoro made one slash underwater and it was over, emphasizing just how powerful he’s gotten; the more involved fight we see in the anime kinda makes Jones without his steroids seem stronger than he’s supposed to. More importantly, the backstory scene of Dosun being attacked by human pirates, Jones trying and falling to save him, and Arlong coming to the rescue is entirely anime-only, with no equivalent scene in the manga. I’ll explain much later why this is an issue, so please try to remember it.
Perhaps the defining scene of this episode is Jones using his own subordinates as human sh- I mean, fishman shields. It’s noteworthy because, as I pointed out a long, long time ago, Arlong was the first antagonist of the series who actually was a good captain to his subordinates. Like, as awful as he was to Nami and the other humans, he cared about Choo, Kuroobi, and Hatchan, he got angry at Zoro and Luffy for hurting them. Arlong’s one redeeming quality was that he was just as attached to his crew as Luffy is to his. That gives us a very clear message: Jones does not have Arlong’s sense of honor, and for all his self-righteousness about humans being bad because of how they treat fishmen, Hody doesn’t actually care about fishmen either.
Lately, YouTuber Th3Birdman has had me thinking about coincidences in storytelling, and why they’re sometimes a problem and sometimes not. This episode gives two great examples of coincidences being well-written in a way that doesn’t detract from the story. First, the fact that even though Luffy didn’t get Jimbei’s message, he still just happened to be going to Coral Hill for completely unrelated reasons. While that is a bizarrely improbable coincidence, we still know that the normal, non-coincidental version of the story is just… Luffy gets the message and goes to Coral Hill to meet with Jimbei. The only real change that arises from Shirahoshi’s involvement is that the same event happens in an unexpected and more interesting way. Second, the even more bizarrely unlikely occurrence that Neptune was able to guess the means by which his daughter was spirited out of the palace. That one works because, as nobody believes him, it doesn’t have any impact on the plot and is just hilarious. I’m still working out my thoughts on coincidences in storytelling in general, but this was a couple cents on this episode.
What havoc is Decken about to wreak to find Shirahoshi? What are Nami and Robin up to? Is Sanji about to forfeit his life by turning around?
Until next time, Rich Nation.