字幕列表 影片播放 列印英文字幕 Pre-emptive warning: This video will contain spoilers for books 1-4 of A Starless Clan. If that's something you want to avoid, step away now. The fifth book of A Starless Clan, Wind, is now only a month away, and before that book makes whatever impact it will on the overall story and characters, I wanted to take stock of the wonderful things this arc has already done, and why I personally, at this point, consider it on track to be on of my favorite arcs in the series. Let's start off with the main new feature of any main series arc: the protagonists, and specifically, I'll begin with our darling little Riverclan gal: Frostpaw. The medicine cat protagonist has been a staple in every arc after the first, save for Dawn of the Clans where medicine cats didn't yet exist, and in the last three arcs especially, with the new team in charge, that protagonist having a difficult connection to Starclan, a clan that doesn't trust them, and a generally anxious and reactive rather than proactive personality has become the standard. Frostpaw was set up to, at this point, be a boring retread of several ideas that were done badly to begin with. But she has managed to set herself apart in a few ways. First is that cats she actively trusted and loved ended up being the ones manipulating her, rather than a phantom Starclan spirit or a cat she barely knew. Second is that she actually forms positive and sustaining relationships, as well, with cats who she can trust. But third, and most importantly, she has an arc around learning to trust herself and balance the needs of her clan with her own need to be safe, happy, and comfortable in her own skin. After a moon or more of distrusting everyone around her in case they turned out to be a murderer, her resolution came in going away from the clans to learn about meditation and grow a sense of safety with the cats there so that she was capable of acknowledging the harm Curlfeather and Splashtail had done to her. The solution was one she actively took part in and grew from internally rather than just letting the source of her problems fade away externally. Frostpaw is not the same cat now that she was at the beginning of River, and that's great. I just hope this growth keeps up for the rest of the story. Sunbeam is up next, who also looked like she might head in a poor direction when it appeared like she would fill the role of she-cat who falls for a tom and loses her personality and arc in the process. However, she managed to begin as and remain a compelling and complex protagonist, definitely my favorite without outshining the other two. From my point of view, the biggest advantage of Warriors as a series has always been that the large and closely-connected casts provide chances for plenty of engaging relationships, rivalries, torn loyalties, and growth through those relationships and trials. Sunbeam takes full advantage of that, having a story almost entirely focused on her personal relationships rather than an overarching plot. She began in a comfortable relationship with Blazefire as an established warrior hoping to be a mentor, lost that mate to her best and most reckless friend, and shut herself off despite prods from both Gullswoop and her mother. Then, she found Nightheart on their quick journey and, even if they didn't make a strong connection then, and the relationship seemed fairly shallow, she came to appreciate him when he stayed in Shadowclan with her, and eventually chose to leave all of her crumbling and destructive relationships in Shadowclan to go to Thunderclan with him. This too, could have been a point where they stripped her of her personality and arc and made her nothing but a mate, but instead they actively chose this moment to remove Nightheart from the lake and had Sunbeam forge new relationships and establish a sense of self in a new clan on her own. She and Finchlight developed a good friendship, she had a fiery rivalry with Cherryfall, and got to briefly live out her original goal of being a mentor with one of her unique challenges: teaching the kits to hunt in a day. I'm just crossing my fingers that this lovely characterization and culture keeps up when Nightheart returns. Speaking of the man himself, he is easily the biggest shock to me. With his story in the first and especially second books, it looked like he would be following some of the worst Warriors tropes of being a self-centered and volatile tom who is only warped into being sympathetic to the reader by making every cat around him, especially all of the she-cats, act needlessly and illogically cruel, or at least making the protagonist think of them in that way. Not to mention, he was following the same loathed-by-me pattern as Rootspring in that he fell for the older and more emotionally mature she-cat across the border who was just getting over a lost love and didn't return his feelings until late into the relationship, at which point it felt more like stealing the she-cat's agency and dignity for the sake of the young tom's satisfaction or arc. However, Nightheart has managed to surprise me. Once he left Thunderclan out of blind love and spite, he had time in Shadowclan to become more mature and develop a genuine rather than superficial connection with Sunbeam. I still wish Warriors in general was better about showing gradual rather than sudden changes in their character arcs, which is an issue I have with both Nightheart and Frostpaw, but it was a nice direction to see him grow in, and it was made all the better when he then returned to his clan and had a resolution with his mother where he got an apology from her and apologized himself for assuming the worst of her, which retroactively make the earlier books somewhat better as we now know this to be the perspective of an angsty teenager coloring the view of cats around him, rather than being exactly what the readers are supposed to see the world like. He also had a nice friendship with Frostpaw on their journey, dropping everything to help this stranger out and reaching out to her when he could. And uh, like I said in regards to Sunbeam, I think getting him away from Sunbeam for this book was the best decision they could have made once they moved her to Thunderclan. It helped them to each spend time growing independently from each other rather than being established in this second half of the arc to only be relevant as part of a pair. Our protagonists aren't the only ones making this arc great, either. Our antagonists are equally as intriguing. Curlfeather was a loving but controlling and manipulative mother who wanted to use her daughter and get her into a position of power in order to fulfill her ambitions and make herself Riverclan's leader. Splashtail is a spunky and equally ambitious upstart who posed both as a loyal Riverclan warrior, a supportive friend to Frostpaw, and a willing lackey to Curlfeather in order to eventually subvert all of them and instate himself as Riverclan's de facto leader instead, even being so young and without an apprentice. Berryheart is a volatile and bitter woman who hates the changes to the code and the potential for outsiders to hurt the clans, as happened with Darktail when she was younger. She is using her influence and seemingly righteous anger to not only go against the code changes and anyone who uses them, but to ally with like-minded cats in an attempt to plant a new leader in her own clan and show how easy the new code is to abuse. All three have a large amount of active impact on the story and characters along with clear goals that are revealed over time and underhanded actions they are willing to take to achieve those ends. All three are also definitively clan cats with clan-related problems rather than being another ambitious, cruel, or scorned outsider, which is a very welcome change. So far, with Curlfeather killed and sent to the Dark Forest on the way to become leader and Berryheart's plan foiled when Puddleshine turned out to be working against her, Splashtail is easily succeeding the most, and none of their plans or actions have been the key driving focus of recent books. However, in such a character-driven arc, I don't find that to be such a problem, and one of the biggest things that makes these antagonists so engaging to me is that they all have close relationships to our protagonists. Berryheart is a demanding and sometimes manipulative mother to her daughter, who often knows she is wrong but occasionally slips into her rhetoric as well, when her friend seems to betray her or when the cat she was beginning to love back leaves on a whim. Curlfeather and Splashtail both forcefully took up the role of Frostpaw's confidant as a good mother or friend to the vulnerable and overwhelmed young medicine cat and both became very trusted by her. Even outside of the antagonists, the clan culture among all three protagonists' clans has been richer in this arc than it has been in a long time, arguably since Power of Three. In addition to cats like Duskfur, Icewing, Lilyheart, Spireclaw, Fringewhisker, Gullswoop, and other mostly-background characters having distinctive personalities and roles in their clans and the story, the protagonists also have several important relationships outside of romance that change and develop as time goes on. Sunbeam was best friends with Lightleap who has become more reckless lately in response to her perceived cowardice in the last arc and was mates with Blazefire who started to grow apart from her when he realized she was too uptight in comparison to her friend. The three of them fragmented bit by bit until Blazefire and Lightleap became mates instead and Sunbeam was left unhappy with both of them. Sunbeam's relationship with her new mate's family, Sparkpelt and Finchlight in particular, is heartwarming, with Sparkpelt nearly adopting her and standing up for her against her mother and Finchlight becoming her closest friend in her new clan. Yet even in this clan, she and Cherryfall had a distinctive rivalry that Sunbeam clashed against and worked through, and that was fun to see play out. Nightheart, as I mentioned, has a complex and developing relationship with his family, and though I still wish he had shown his friendship with Bayshine in more than one scene, his new friendship with Frostpaw is very sweet and a rare occurrence given their complete lack of romance. Frostpaw also has a nice relationship with Whistlepaw, even though they haven't spent many scenes together, amicable and with a fair bit of trust and care, especially after Frostpaw was nearly murdered and Whistlepaw saved her and snuck her away. The Erin team still hasn't made an effort to check past portrayals of characters, especially more supportive or minor ones, to keep those personalities consistent, but they have kept and, importantly, used, the ones they introduced in this arc which makes reading about life in these clans so much more satisfying. Another important factor is in how this arc has carried over elements from A Vision of Shadows and especially The Broken Code, making it feel like one continuous story about the lives of these clans. The changes to the code, mentioned but not made explicit in the end of The Broken Code, are now the forefront of Berryheart's storyline and have already caused three distinct couples to come together, two of which have been central focuses to the story. Bramblestar was deeply affected by his experiences across all of The Broken Code and it caused him to be a depressed, disconnected, and ineffective leader and eventually to step back, using that new code again, and let Squirrelstar take charge, also giving both of them the chance to have the calmest and most amicable dynamic they have *ever* had, yes including in The New Prophecy and Power of Three. Squirrelstar is also a much more assertive, strong, and sometimes even pushy leader thanks to her experiences effectively leading the clan in the last arc. Meanwhile Ivypool, the new deputy, and Rootspring are more subtly affected by their grief over Bristlefrost's death, even though neither have been especially prominent characters. Shadowsight has calmed down since his time as a protagonist and became a good voice of reason friend to Sunbeam, and even the usually disconnected events of A Vision of Shadows are relevant as they are Berryheart's internal justification for her actions. The pacing across this arc, so far, is also the best it has been in years, as the mystery driving Riverclan's conflict and the pieces in Shadowclan connected to it have been revealed slowly and has yet to be totally resolved even at the end of the fourth book. All of the new team's arcs have been distinctly divided into the first three books, where a planned conflict occurs and is resolved, and a latter three books that tend to flounder in both direction and quality. This arc, even if it messes up the last two books, has already broken that pattern, which is fantastic. It is a joy to be this late in the arc and still be able to wonder what Splashtail will do now that he is in charge, if Berryheart still has a part to play, what Lightleap was doing at the border near Reedwhisker's death, how Frostpaw, and maybe the other protagonists, will solve their issues, who Riverclan's new leader really will be, how Sunbeam and Nightheart will continue their relationship, and so on. They even managed the phenomenal task of integrating super edition material, from Riverstar's Home, nicely into a story, by using the Cats of the Park as a way to teach Frostpaw about facing hard truths and developing self-esteem and confidence. With that and the fact that the team has already stated they actively planned and are excited for the next super edition, Ivypool's Heart, which will tie into the sixth book of this arc and involve her grief over her daughter, I think it's safe to say we may still have things to look forward to even now, though I don't want to jinx it. To put it simply, I have loved this arc so far, and I hope it manages to stick the landing in the last two books. Even if those disappoint me, however, I think I will still be able to look fondly back on these four books for how many tired Warriors tropes they have managed to break away from and how uniquely engaging it has managed to be. Good luck, A Starless Clan. I'm rooting for you. Thank you for watching, and always remember that hope isn't always crushed. Sometimes, it's okay to be optimistic.
B1 中級 美國腔 是什麼讓A Starless Clan(貓戰士第八部)如此優秀? - Sunny's 演講 - 貓戰士分析(What Makes A Starless Clan So Good? – Sunny's Spiel | Warriors Analysis) 20 0 WarriorsCatFan2007 發佈於 2024 年 03 月 17 日 更多分享 分享 收藏 回報 影片單字