Arcane Season 2: A Gorgeous Conclusion

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Arcane Season 2: A Critical Analysis

The video game adaptation as the age-old punchline is seemingly on its way out. Live-action TV shows like Prime Video’s Fallout and HBO’s The Last of Us have dominated streaming. At the same time, Netflix has made moves to own the conversation on animated adaptations with properties like Castlevania, Dota: Dragon’s Blood, Tomb Raider, and the steampunk fantasy series sensation Arcane: League of Legends. The first season of Arcane took the world by storm when it debuted in 2021. Based on Riot Games‘ popular League of Legends video game franchise (which is also the world’s largest esport), Netflix’s Arcane gave fans what they always dreamed of while acting as an easy in to the world of Runeterra for new viewers.

The Rise and Fall of Arcane Season 2

Fans and casual viewers alike have waited eagerly for Arcane Season 2, especially in the wake of a crazy cliffhanger. But now that it’s finally here, it appears that Netflix’s animated series, unfortunately, doesn’t have enough steam to carry its momentum to the finish line. As with the first season, Arcane Season 2 is split into three acts. The first picks up seconds after season one’s cliffhanger finale, seeing the heroes licking their wounds after the attack on the Piltover council chamber by Jinx (Ella Purnell), formerly known as Powder. The response to this attack is displayed largely through the lens of Piltover’s politics, with Ambessa Medarda (Ellen Thomas) seizing more power in the chaos.

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Character Development and Plot Progression

The groundwork is further laid out by a strike team led by Caitlyn (Katie Leung), who is joined by series lead Vi (Hailee Steinfeld), as they venture into her childhood home of Zaun. Vi being sworn in as an Enforcer, the same foot-soldiers of Piltover that haunted her and Jinx in their youth, is a massive shift for the character. Much of Arcane Season 2’s premiere episode is spent on Vi struggling with accepting this offer. Yet, not nearly enough dramatic weight is put into her putting on the uniform, with it instead revealed through a triumphant team shot.

This speaks to one of the worst tendencies of Arcane Season 2 — a pivot away from its drama and character dynamics towards flashy montages and slow-motion action beats. Nearly every episode opens with dialogue-free sequences that play like music videos, soundtracked by deeply overindulgent and toothless pop, rap, and metal. These scenes are used to display what would otherwise be interesting opportunities to flesh out the new, unfamiliar situations in which our characters have found themselves. Instead, they feel like trailers for a show that we’re already watching.

The Artistic Vision and World-Building

The urge for the writing to be hands-off, thus allowing the animation to speak for itself, is understandable on the part of co-creators Christian Linke and Alex Yee. After all, Arcane is still as gorgeous as ever in this latest season. The game’s steampunk aesthetic makes for a beautiful canvas that French animation studio Fortiche then runs freely on with its lovely painted art style. Ultimately, though, even that strength is somewhat diminished as this season moves too far away from the strong world-building its predecessor boasted. Piltover’s politicking is largely just noise, with the ultimate concern of Zaun’s threat to the city not being nearly specific enough to warrant all the time talking about it.

Vi rips Jinx's gatlin gun in half, revealing all of its electric wires, using her atlas gauntlets during an epic fight scene from ARCANE Season 2 on Netflix

Character Dynamics and Plot Progression

In fact, the poverty-stricken city of Zaun as an entity feels like a headless chicken for the first act of Arcane Season 2. Following the loss of Silco (Jason Spisak), Zaun has no one to speak for it, a role that Jinx is obviously meant to embody but spends her time running away from. While this makes for some interesting characterization for Jinx later in the season, it does little favor to Zaun. It’s now gone from a multi-angled character in its own right to a battleground for sisters Jinx and Vi to wage their war against each other on (a war which is, again, largely developed through musical montages).

Vi, voiced by Hailee Steinfeld, shows off her new black warpaint face makeup as she looks into a broken mirror in ARCANE Season 2

Critical Analysis and Plot Progression

With Zaun, the sense of grit that coated the entire first season is gone, replaced by the sanitized marble-white and gold of Piltover. Even if this utopia is less than, well, utopian, Zaun doesn’t do much for the counterculture posturing that many of the characters are built around. Speaking of the cast, Arcane‘s strength as an ensemble story is also largely lost. For a show that spends most of its time in Piltover, characters in that cast like Mel (Toks Olagundoye), Jayce (Kevin Alejandro), Viktor (Harry Lloyd), and Heimerdinger (Mick Wingert) are quickly swept off the board, with priority being shifted entirely to a choice four characters.

Conclusion

Despite the incredibly strong first season, Arcane’s second season sadly gets tangled in its plot (or lack thereof) for too much of its runtime. Though it manages to pick up the pace and recapture some of what made its prior season so special, it spends too long spinning its wheels to offer anything quite as compelling. It remains to be seen how the final act will close the book on Netflix’s beloved animated show as a whole, but it’s hard to envy quite how many threads are left for Arcane Season 2 to pull together for a satisfying conclusion.

Rating: ⭐⭐⭐

Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs)

Q: When does Arcane Season 2 release?

A: Arcane Season 2 is released in three acts – November 9 (Act I), November 16 (Act II), and November 23, 2024 (Act III).

Q: Who are the main voice cast members of Arcane Season 2?

A: The main voice cast includes Hailee Steinfeld, Ella Purnell, Katie Leung, Kevin Alejandro, Brett Tucker, Mick Wingert, JB Blanc, Amirah Vann, Ellen Thomas, Toks Olagundoye, Harry Lloyd, Reed Shannon, Lenny Citrano, and Jason Spisak.

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Credit: discussingfilm.net

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