Not much to say about this episode. Uryu battles, he wins. Chad battles, he wins. Rukia battles, she doesn’t so much win as her opponent just gives up. The fights are about as boring as you can get. Then again, I’m not too keen on the one-on-one battle thing, so maybe there’s some personal bias in there.
In any case, hopefully now we can move on to a more interesting plot. Sadly, I don’t think we do.
One-on-one battles. This is the part of Bleach that gets me. Ichigo gets matched up with the top opponent, then everyone on down gets drafted like in the NFL Draft to find out which opponent they will be taking on one-on-one. Almost never do we see two-on-one or two-on-two battles. It gets old and repetitive after a while. Even One Piece doesn’t always follow this pattern.
But that’s what we’ve got here today, one-on-one battles, which all consisted of the same substance: our heroes get the first blow in, then the opponents reveal their true power, then they exchange names, then they give away what their powers are, then they go all out at it. There’s nothing different amongst Rukia, Uryu, and Chad’s fights. They’re all almost exactly the same.
There wasn’t even any time for comedy in this episode. As much as I hated the Pesche comedy show in Hueco Mundo, I kind of miss having some brief comedic moments to lighten the mood. Just an overall dull episode.
The villain of this arc checks in on the boy who is in an “EVIL” arraigned marriage with Rurichiyo and makes sure he’s nice and bored. He then checks in on his subordinates, giving them extra power so they can go back and fight Ichigo again.
Meanwhile, Kenryu and Enryu keep going over the top trying to shield Rurichiyo from her peril, but finally it comes down to Ichigo having to fight off the bad guys, and lesser villains taking on Rukia, Uryu, and Chad, that way they can feel useful. Sad that even Rukia’s been reduced to the “lesser villain” role. But at least she’s fighting, which is something Rurichiyo can’t say as she continues to be the Princess Peach (non-movie version) of this arc.
There’s also a moment with that super-sappy song that is a direct rip-off of “Sadness and Sorrow” of Naruto fame. That Bleach song irks me because of its incredible sappiness, yet it continues to get played in almost every episode. “Sadness and Sorrow,” on the other hand, is excellent, except when played over the reasons for the difficulty of the written test at the Chunin exam, when it was in fact too sappy.
By the way, the “Peach” in the Super Mario Bros. movie was actually Daisy. For marketing purposes, they changed Peach’s personality to be like Daisy’s instead. It may have worked at the box office, but to a Mario purist, it felt weird.
This episode is rather straightforward, and not in a good way. We get boring battles between Ichigo and these bad guys trying to capture Rurichiyo, and we get this coup d’etat being run by the one bad guy over in the Soul Society. He picks the boy who Rurichiyo is being forced to marry (again, as always, arranged marriages have to be portrayed as EVIL!), and he takes over the clan while Rurichiyo is off being a spoiled brat to Ichigo.
Some of the fighting is nice, but it’s just hard to take seriously when Ichigo’s having trouble with this random purple-haired guy, when he could take down Grimmjow. I guess it’s not supposed to make sense. Yoruichi had to step in to help SAVE Ichigo. But hey, nice battle scenes!