Kallo wrote:Though, I could do with a Fuli episode or something, for a change. A Kion solo episode that digs deeper into his character would be nice, too. He is the main character, after all.
A Fuli- or Kion-based episode would certainly be more interesting, or at least break the trend. I don't really dislike the other guard members, but most of their potential arcs aren't really all that fruitful story-wise, so anything related to them just feels like a detour from the main story, which like you said isn't necessarily bad but it just feels kind of filler; plus they're kind of "just there" characters that don't seem all that dynamic. Fuli would be a bit of a departure character herself, but she seems like she could offer more interesting stories. (Maybe introducing some siblings of hers, or explaining why she's friends with these other animals (particularly Kion, since he's the one she seems to be closest with), or maybe addressing her grievances with lion rule, since she's really the only character - sans hyenas - in the entire franchise who has actually called out this monarchial system.)
Of course, actually giving Kion more attention wouldn't hurt at all. I honestly don't feel like we've really established his character in the first place - which I blame largely on
Return of the Roar for being more focused on hastily assembling the team and making callbacks to previous material (and giving Bunga way too much attention) rather than actually fleshing out their main character at the beginning - so we're left to assume and infer a lot of things about him in order to have a point of reference for when he undergoes some "growth". When they do put the focus more on him it doesn't usually feel like a character-building story, rather we the audience just experience significant events from his perspective because of his proximity to the king and such. Given that it doesn't seem like he actually calls up Scar in the upcoming TV special, that's potentially another opportunity lost.
Kallo wrote:The episode itself doesn't look particularly interesting. Especially since we just had "Babysitter Bunga" and this one seems to basically follow the same basic concept, at least. It seems quite a few episodes in this series deal with a member of The Lion Guard looking over another new character like a "babysitter". Seriously, like 1/4th of the episodes. It's getting kind of an old thing by now.
I think part of that is just because they're a bunch of adolescents/preteen animals of disparate species - some of whom are less physically capable than others when it comes to actually defending the territory - so you're kinda limiting the stories you can tell with that setup. (Plus the preschool/"educational" focus means you always has to have cute baby animals of a variety of species on hand.)