WE IGNORE CANNON IN THIS HOUSE
The loss of Crosshair’s helmet is so significant. The fact that he didn’t even bother to look for it, even more so.
The animators have always used helmets to represent a dichotomy. Pre Order-66, it was a symbol of a soldier’s individualism, as most troopers opted to paint their helmet to their liking; something to make them easily distinguishable from their brothers. Post Order-66, helmet-wear was used to signify the loss of a soldier’s autonomy. Yes, obviously for cranial protection as well (keep the melon safe during battle, you know), but once Order 66 was issued, aside from Batch members, seeing a clone trooper without their helmet on was a very rare sight.
In Season 1 Episode 1, Crosshair opted to keep his helmet on during the flight back to Kamino after Order-66 on Kaller, and through the halls of Tipoca city until they reached their barracks. I think the writers and animators were trying to symbolize that he had lost a large portion of his control.
Through the rest of the first season, Crosshair was largely hidden behind his new imperial helmet; one that was completely lacking resemblance or connection to his past as a member of CF-99. I think his Imp helmet was something that, at least in the beginning, he wore proudly; it was a symbol of his new role, his new rank, his future, his new ideology.
But in The Solitary Clone (S2 E3), after a poignant discussion with Cody, we see Crosshair look at his helmet with implied contempt, regret, and even possibly, repulsion. This was new.
In the first minutes of Season 2 Episode 12, we see him reprimanded by an imperial superior officer for not wearing it, which I found interesting. Keep in mind, Crosshair was also helmet-less when he met with Cody before their mission to Desix. Same scenario: waiting by the ship for a debrief from his commander before leaving for the mission. But this time, the writers opted to emphasize that his face was exposed.
Now, his helmet is completely gone. In a mission gone sour, it was eaten by an avalanche. And I found it very interesting that Crosshair’s first thought after emerging from the snow, was to find and save Mayday, a reg commander who he’d met only hours previously, and who took all of Crosshair’s imperial ideology and challenged it. He carefully puts Mayday’s helmet back on him, but doesn’t even spare a thought for his own.
In the final minutes of E12, we see Crosshair, and his face in all its glory, shoot his Lieutenant. An angry murder noodle move, yes... but also a desperate, frustrated one.
The presence of Imperial Crosshair feels diminished. The reemergence of Bad Batch Crosshair feels imminent.
*pls note that I used the term “reg” to reference Crosshair’s previous intolerance for regular clones, and was not meant in any derogatory sense*
im shane’s laughter as ryan screams at a chair
Tell me what you think because I realised this shit as I was falling asleep and I now I can't go unless I get it out there:
Does the colour scheme of the background sort of look like the colour scheme of the houses and buildings on Pabu?
So, theory: Cid didn't sound...normal? the last time she contacted the guys and it's actually because the empire has gotten hold of her to try to bait the bad batch into coming into contact with her again. Well, that didn't work, so Cid suggests contacting Echo alone and tells him about Cross needing help (she knows the group has split) and that checks the "Cid is going to betray them" checkbox. Echo and Rex fall for it, contact the rest of the batch because they are going to need as much help as they can get in infiltrating Tantiss, and head to Pabu to rendezvous. That's where we get the long awaited Echo and Omega reunion. The group head to Tantiss, get Crosshair out, but in the process Omega is captured. They are forced to leave her to save injured/drugged/traumatised/comatose Cross and themselves. We open season 3 on Omega being experimented on or being mistreated to get Nala Se to cooperate.
So, we have five names only: Norman, Grant, Bertrum, Lacie, and Susie.
We also know that this can’t have something to do with the story itself - because in the story, every single employee died. Therefore, it’s likely this pertains to their IRL selves. But the question is: Why only these five, and what does this mean?
First, we know there are two sets of some employees. There’s their IRL selves, and then the ink monster copies that exist in the story. Allison and Tom clearly spell this out - in the IRL letter they’re both alive and married, while in the story they are both very dead. In other words, the versions in the story are copies, not the actual IRL people - even if they are nearly identical. (Presumably, the IRL Ink Machine doesn’t need sacrifices to work based on this.)
Now, you might have picked up on something throughout the narrative. Most ink creatures do not remember who they are. Allison, for example, says that she doesn’t know her name, and doesn’t remember how she got here. (Hard to say how much Tom remembers - he responds to his name, but who knows if he realizes that’s actually his name or not.)
The Butcher Gang members seem to be in character, from what little dialogue we have (for example, the Fishers occasionally say “yar har, it’s cold”). Boris doesn’t seem to be lucid, seeing as he has no problem chomping on a human femur. And who even knows how much Bendy remembers?
This one message from 5 also implies not remembering who you were is a pretty common place thing in the studio:
Even Sammy, who’s one of the ones who has some idea who he is, doesn’t seem to remember well - he doesn’t even recognize Henry. His memories seem hazy, at best. Heck, according the Hot Topic Q&A, he can’t even remember what his hair color was or who his significant other was.
But there are a few exceptions to this - and here’s where you’ll start to see a pattern.
Dreams come true, Susie. Dreams come true.Â
Alice remembers being Susie.
We never really had control at the studio. Either you in someone’s pocket, or you were putting someone else into yours. I just wanted what was promised to me. I just wanted to be beautiful!
Alice remembers her transformation.
Alice even remembers more than Henry himself does - which also means she’s aware of this being a loop, or at least, Joey’s doing.
No, Henry! I know who you are! And I know why you’re here!
She’s not the sole exception though.
First off, that’s literally his human head. And judging by his dialogue, he also remembers who he is, why he’s here, and what happened to him:
But then… oh Mister Drew. For all your talk of dreams, you are the true architect behind so many nightmares. I built this park. It was to be a masterpiece! My masterpiece!Â
And don’t forget Norman:
He doesn’t seem capable of human thought so we don’t know how much he would theoretically remember, but much like Bertrum, he does retain his human body.
And, of course, Grant:
We don’t know what he turned into - but we know from his writings that while he’s completely insane, he does remember working for Joey, what his job was, and what happened. One of the messages even hints at Joey killing him - “What will Joey say?”
If you haven’t figured out the correlation here yet, it’s that all four (excluding Lacie as we don’t know anything about her) retain their human memories/forms. They know who they are, and they know what happened.
In other words: The ink creatures that are based off of employees that are still alive IRL have memory problems - because those aren’t their memories. The only ones who do are the ones who are dead IRL - the ones who were actually sacrificed.
Remember that tape about Susie’s sacrifice?
Susie is the only character who has this much emphasis placed on her death/sacrifice, despite everyone being killed within the story. (Joey even says that it’s a “small project” and invites her to join, possibility implying not everyone was killed, just a few.)
And in a very similar way, not only are Alice, Bertrum, and Grant the only ones who reference actually transforming to something (Sammy knows he’s supposed to be human, but doesn’t mention the transformation itself), but Grant even gets an entire tape dedicated to it.
The reason for this might be because all of the other characters were created from nothing - no sacrifices, just ink. They never transformed, and the memories they inherited are hazy at best. Which is why Allison says this:
One minute we don’t even exist.… just… thoughts. And the next minute… this place.Â
(Joey even has a reason for killing those 5 in particular - Susie seemed like she’d be a perfect Alice, Grant was unable to stop the studio’s bankruptcy, he wanted to take Bendy Land from Bertrum and Lacie’s probably a package deal, and Norman sees everything and thus might’ve seen the sacrifices if he wasn’t killed as well.)
And this is why Henry can’t remember anything, and why his Chapter 3 tape is just labeled as “Henry” - because he’s not really Henry Stein, even if he is based off of him.
THIS EPISODE WAS BONKERS. Plan 88.. “You have to hide, they’re after-“ HE WASNT TRYING TO ESCAPE, HE WAS TRYING TO WARN THEM, AND PROTECT OMEGA. ITS LIKE DAD MODE ACTIVATED IN HIM. This man would rather die protecting them, and Omega, than give them up. He cares so much about them still. Also, hey Empire, LEAVE OUR HUSBAND ALONE YOU SICKOS.
I have some older art tips that I keep forgetting to post here. I'll add a few in the next few days, at least those that aren't too outdated!
This one is about giving an extra feel of weight to your characters.
Giovanni
Archie
Maxie
Cyrus
Ghetsis
Lysandre
Welcome to Wolfgangs kingdom, a place for frogs to come together. A young artist who does not post often
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