Season One: Episode Twenty-Five and "Island of Illusion."
Life's a Masquerade.
"And did I request Thee, Maker, from my clay, to mould me man?" - Paradise Lost, John Milton.
Sentai Notes:
The Frankenstein Monster is called Dora Franke in Zyuranger, made to resemble Boris Karloff's portrayal of the Creation in the 1931 film, and like in the book he talks. He spends time hanging around, crashing a restaurant to eat noodles, and helping the digging of clay, plus tangling with Dan, before the real fights began. Now unlike in Power Rangers, Dora Franke fights the Zyurangers multple times. When Daijyuzin is beaten up, he disassembles. Then Tyrannosaurus takes Geki to the countryside to where he and Burai meet up to retrieve the Thunder Slingers (Ranger Slingers, in the show). That's where it links up with "Gung-Ho" (see previous entry). Once Burai and Geki got them, they return to help the rest of the team take out the improved Golem, like in "Gung-Ho." But it doesn't end there. They summon their guardian beasts to face Dora Franke, who proves to be very tough, even when they bring in Gouryuujin (Dragonzord Battle Mode). So, Burai suggests they use their Ranger Slingers to weaken Dora Franke, allowing Gouryuujin to finally defeat him with his drill.
But, unlike what happens in Power Rangers, the battle has only begun. After Dora Franke is drilled, he reforms and sheds his clothes to become Zombie Franke and an even greater challenge is summoned.
Strategy Notes:
Watching the Frankenstein Monster toss around a partygoer arouses suspicion in Billy into thinking the monster is not a man in costume. So he follows him out as Bulk and Skull flee, leading him to find the cave where the clay to make Super Putties is being dug up. Of course, espionage comes with strategy from knowing how to get out with the information, and especially being aware of one's surroundings. This mistake happens when Billy sets off the alarm and now has a monster to face on his own.
Jason decides to regroup things in a shuffle and turn everything into the "Mega Dragonzord" (as he calls Dragonzord Battle Mode). Now, Dragonzord Battle Mode defeated Spidertron easily and barely handled Spit Flower. Against Frankenstein Monster, it's truly stumped. That is until it powers up the Power Staff and drills the Monster.
Biblical and Mythological Homage:
Neither Biblical nor mythological, but the Frankenstein Monster is obviously based on Frankenstein's Creation in Mary Shelley's book, Frankenstein: or The Modern Prometheus. Finster could be a parallel to the myth of Prometheus in one way: the Greeks saw him as the creator of Man, just as Finster creates monsters. The fact he remains at Rita's side and makes a variety makes him lean closer to Prometheus' brother, Epimetheus, the creator of animals. He gives the monsters all sorts of talents to make them horrible, failing to give one positive trait at any point: the ability to defeat the Power Rangers, likely from a lack of foresight to know the Power Rangers had the means to destroy them. This episode provides an inverse, where Man was lacking in most positive traits due to this lack of foresight, making him weak compared to all the animals, Frankenstein Monster, the most human of the monsters yet, is actually the toughest the Power Rangers have come across thus far, in comparison to all those animal based monsters who are defeated constantly.
In some way, Alpha showing up at the party and winning, then running off with people chasing him to find out who he is, makes him a robot Cinderella. Missing from the picture is the glass slipper, the abusive stepmother, and equally abusive stepsisters.
Misc. Notes:
Billy morphs solo in this episode and he comes up with his own version of "It's Morphin' Time!": "It's time for molecular transmutation!"
Ernie dresses up as Count Dracula, another literary character associated with Halloween. It's perfect he hits on the girls, or not, possibly, since they are supposed to be minors and he could wind up a registered sex offender from it (though, when you think about it, vampires like the Count really are sex offenders, if not sexual predators, since they have powers to sway their victims over and then they take advantage of them with their bites).
So, the Power Rangers also dress up. Jason is Robin Hood, Zack is King Tut, Billy is Sherlock Holmes, Trini is Pocahontas, and Kimberly is a princess. While people will debate on how many Egyptian rulers were black (and King Tut's facial features, seen on his tomb, are distinctly Nubian, instead of the near Nordic like you see in The Ten Commandments), people these days might find it odd an Asian American would dress up as a Native American woman, whose life is buried under myth and countermyths of colonialism. Even the headband with a fake feather looks more like the typical image of Sacagawea rather than Pocahontas. Billy holding a pipe in his costume is based on the American concept since the stories by Sir Arthur Coyle don't mention such a pipe (and since it's a toy, it allows for Billy to pretend to smoke it, thus keeping accurately while not encouraging kids to smoke). Jason's Robin Hood is noticeably not with a bow, since the character is good in archery but not so with a sword. As to Kimberly, what sort of princess she is is never specified. And it turns out, Tommy was planning to dress up as Frankenstein's Creation the whole time, yet he took inspiration from the monster, instead.
The reveal is also a joke because (drumroll) Jason David Frank was playing the Monster the whole time. Well, technically he wasn't, since half of the footage is from Japan, where another actor played the Monster, but he was playing him in the American footage.
Bulk and Skull go through many costumes before showing up as themselves. First they go as Peter Pan and Captain Hook. Then they go as a horse. Then they go as Young and Old Elvis, and Paul Shrier's imitation of the King's Mississippi accent is hilarious ("Ma back" he says as he falls down).
Alpha wins by being himself. Who knew. Now, how did he get back to the Command Center and then back at the party so fast?
Another episode to feature the Zack and Angela subplot. Angela rejects him and Zack laments that "even a king is not good enough for her." As if she'd have the choice if hit on by the real King Tut. Don't know if he was sleeping in history class, but here's a fact: between him and the real King Tut are over four thousand years of history, which includes the rise of feminism and the concept of "All men are created equal". Also, the real King Tut died at the age of nineteen, in circumstances that still baffle historians, and he was married at the time of his death (to his half-sister, nonetheless).
The woman who dances with the Frankenstein Monster is named Sharkie, according to the Power Rangers Wiki, a remnant of an abandoned idea that Bulk and Skull were part of a gang, a kind of opposite of the Power Rangers. The team would be led by Bulk and there was also a black guy in the gang as the antithesis of Zack, while Sharkie was Kim's. They feature in the unaired pilot and in "Food Fight." When that was scrapped, the characters were soon removed, eventually written out.
The Sentai battle clearly shows how this was filmed on a soundstage with men in suits in an overhead shot, which made its way into Power Rangers. For an instant, you'd think Angel Grove / Tokyo ended with a wall just yards from where the fight was taking place.
Never mentioned in the show is the death count and property damage in the zord battle. Twice, we see Megazord collapse on a building, which crumbles beneath it due to its weight. After 9/11, I can't doubt both happened with several people getting killed.
We see a new trick with Dragonzord Battle Mode. It can use the fin on its head as a kind of boomerang and send it at the monster for an attack. Unfortunately, as the Sentai footage had it set, the Monster catches it and throws it right back at the Power Rangers.
The impaling of the Frankenstein Monster is a censored version of the Sentai footage. They could show it more with Spidertron since it's a big bug, but the Frankenstein Monster looks human enough to pass off as a person and the stabbing made it seem violent, apparently.
Saban clearly liked the Frankenstein Monster because years later he produced Big Bad Beetleborgs, which featured a haunted house called Hillhurst inhabited by monsters: a Dracula style vampire named Fangula, a wolfman named Wolfgang, a mummy named Mums, a phantasm named Flabber, and of course Frankenbeans (a play on Frankenstein). The last is in contrast to the monster in this episode, a loveable character with child-like mannerisms, baby talk, and often showing bravery at times against the bad guys, but silly. His creator, Dr. Baron von Frankenbeans shows up a few times as a father figure to him (something Victor Frankenstein never was to his Creation) and proves the only mortal man to scare the Hillhurst Residents consistently.
Thoughts.
There is plenty to say of this episode, but I'll start by saying how it adds in a monster inspired by Frankenstein, while not paying homage to the book. Frankenstein: or The Modern Prometheus, penned by Mrs. Shelley as a teen (just a few years older than Trini and Kimberly) is best known as the story of a young, ambitious doctor in Alchemy attempting to conquer death by bringing to life what was once dead. Yet, when his Creation is alive, even he spurns him as a monster, referring to him as a demon, wretch, or devil, and this leads to a great deal of philosophical undertones mixed with scenes of Gothic horror. I have an entry in my other blog about the book, and I'll summarize by saying Frankenstein's Creation wasn't a bad guy, but simply someone rejected and spurned for being ugly by everyone, including his own creator, which cause him to become what the world sees him. Victor Frankenstein (the real Frankenstein) is not the typical mad scientist, but he does cross the moral boundary in his temerity in believing he could create life or conquer death, both of which are powers that belong to God alone.
Since the book was less familiar to Japanese and American audiences than it is to the British, the parallels in both this and the Sentai show end in the name and that he is created by someone without holy intentions. The Sentai version is an homage to the Boris Karloff Monster in everything from appearance to mannerisms, even having the added idea of bolts on his neck that can be pulled and turned into a double mace. He doesn't go from Bandora and attempt to assimilate with humanity, and become spurned. Instead, he willingly helps the bad guys with their evil deeds and somehow hides well among humans. In Power Rangers, due to Americans having a more sympathetic viewpoint of Shelley's original concept (thanks in part to the recent release of the 1992 movie), much of the bad angle is toned down. However, one familiar idea of the Creation having a bride is kept through as one partygoer goes for a dance with the Monster, referring to him as "Frankie." And the idea of a costume party allowing him to blend in starts out a wish fulfillment of any Frankenstein fan, and also give some book worms the chance of seeing him with Sherlock Holmes (as Billy is dressed up as the latter).
In general, "Life's a Masquerade" is a good episode, a little better than "Gung-Ho." While it isn't a Halloween episode, it was treated as one, especially with it airing on October 30, 1993, and the characters are in costumes. There are good moments in the episode, such as Bulk and Skull going through costumes before going as themselves, Ernie appearing as a fat Count Dracula, Tommy revealing his costume in the end, and Alpha showing up at the party and people thinking he was a guy in costume. So, "Life's a Masquerade" is more of a comedy episode than a traditional spooky Halloween special. I did find the Frankenstein Monster interesting, even after reading the book and seeing how this one is meaner than the Creation ever was. Yet, it's a shame he is only there for one episode and then is killed off.
Island of Illusion, Part 1.
"All hope abandon, ye who enter," - Inferno. Dante Alighieri.
Sentai Notes:
In the Sentai show, this point of the story had Bandora's henchmen set up a pole in the middle of Tokyo. This pole had a head upon it. She uses it to summon Dai Satan at the end of the source battle. Meaning, Lokar in Zyuranger is the Devil himself. That explains why the upgraded Mutitus looks like something out of Doom.
The backstory is Bandora was once a mortal woman living in the time of the dinosaurs (don't ask). One day, a dinosaur killed her son. In her grief, she sold her soul to the Devil who turned her into a witch and she used her powers to make her revenge.
The summoning she does includes a ritual séance at an altar that briefly leaves Bandora blind as her eyes bleed. The pole is used to sacrifice thirteen children to give it the energy to bring Dai Satan forth.
Mutitus' Sentai counterpart is Zombie Franke, the resurrected version of Dora Franke, which explains the bolts on his neck. When Dai Satan breathes upon him, Zombie Franke becomes Satan Franke.
Strategy Notes:
Not much to bring up as it builds on "Life's a Masquerade."
Biblical and Mythological Homage:
Accordingly, we are told the Devil was once an Angel of God, with the name Lucifer, the Bringer of Light. Traditionally, it's said that when God created Man, He revealed evil was coming with the new creation but the world would be saved by a savior who would take form of a man born of a virgin. Lucifer found the idea that what he believed was a mere animal becoming a savior unacceptable and went against God's will by raising rebellion. We think of his deeds coming out of pride, his blatant statement of "I will not serve." For his pride and arrogance, Lucifer was cast out of Heaven, along with other angels who followed him, and he thus became the ultimate archfiend, the Adversary ("ha-Satan" in Hebrew, which the word Satan comes from). We generally get the image of a red devil with a pitchfork and horns on his brow, battling over us with an angel on our shoulder, yet Zyuranger depicts him as a floating head many times larger than anything on Earth.
The upgrading of Mutitus resembles the moment in Revelations where the Beast of the Sea is healed by the Dragon. With the face placed on his chest, along with one sticking up from his neck, and all the horns, Mutitus does appear to have seven heads.
Fitting to mention the Serpent in the Garden for the near Eden-like Island of Illusion features a komodo dragon and a snake. Thankfully, there's no forbidden fruit around since this is not supposed to be paradise. Even the appearance of Goldar subverts the Genesis narrative where Adam and Eve talk directly to God, who only banishes them from the Garden after they ate the fruits. Before then, He simply gives instructions on how to tend to the Garden and what fruits to eat and what not to eat. He also gives Adam a wife in Eve (when you think of it, God gave Adam and Eve life, free food, and a place to live in peace, along with companionship - and He could have given them all the knowledge in the universe if He so chose - and only asked to not touch certain fruits, and they returned the favor with disobedience and thievery - something even an atheist critic would have caught onto). In contrast, Goldar merely welcomes the Rangers to the Island and taunts them to make them disappear, making him the hardcore Serpent instead of a twisted version of God.
Even the Eden-like Island of Illusion provides an example of how evil perverts something. At first glance, it looks like paradise. But it turns out not to be since the Rangers lose their powers upon entry. Then everything comes in to make the Rangers lose their confidence and gradually disappear. Driving home that this is not paradise is how Zordon tells Alpha the Rangers are beyond his help now. In a sense, the Island of Illusion is meant to be Hell, cleverly disguised so as it doesn't scare anyone at first glance. Kind of like in the old "Got Milk" commercials where a man is hit by a car, dies, and is in Heaven, supposedly, because it all looks beautiful. He even finds all the cookies he can eat, but opening the fridge reveals all the milk cartons to be empty, making him wonder if he is not in Heaven, and we cut to the logo on fire to further reinforce the implication.
Misc. Notes:
Lokar in real life is the name of an automobile company, founded in the late eighties, with the name from a desire of its founder, Skip Wells, wanting to make low cars, or hotrods. It's headquartered in Knoxville, Tennessee. Don't know why Saban chose it as the alternate name for Dai Satan, other than to avoid anything associated with Satan in the show, since it would be enough to get parents up in arms.
If Lokar's laugh sounds familiar it's because his voice actor, Robert Axelrod, would later go on to voice Lord Zedd.
Speaking of Satanic imagery, the computer game Doom came out the year Power Rangers premiered. It got flack from parental groups and religious leaders for the violence and the Satanic imagery, all of which make Power Rangers look tame by comparison (because of the blood and gore included). It also featured zombies. Indeed, the modified Mutitus even looks like something out of Doom, the first boss monsters called Barons of Hell in the game. Interestingly, a year later came Doom II, whose final boss is also a large head that grins at you the whole time, yet is never stated to be the Devil himself either.
First we learn Zack is afraid of spiders, now he is afraid of snakes.
The little guy seen a few times on the Island is named Quagmire. A quagmire is defined as a wetland called a peatland, a kind of ecosystem that takes in plants in decay. They are known to store vast amounts of carbon and the destruction of them is releasing the stored carbon, contributing to climate change. Quagmire is also a name given to the Vietnam War and the name of a cartoonist (plus a character from Family Guy).
Thoughts.
"Island of Illusion" is a two parter, and the darkest part of the series we have entered yet. It gets dark due to the way the whole thing is staged, from the match with Mutitus, who already looks ugly to begin with, the sudden darkness over the land that comes with the arrival of Lokar (explained in the Sentai series that he is the Devil himself), the defeat of the Power Rangers, and their flying into the island where they are stripped of their powers and their ability to contact Zordon, and they will vanish through fear and doubt. You can't get darker than that this early in the game.
The episode really gets interesting once the Rangers wind up in the namesake island, where you can see why I would include the famous line of Dante, one that gave Hell its infamous welcome sign. The apparent Eden-like setting of a tropical island is counter balanced by the fact the Rangers are without their powers, no means of getting home, no communication with Zordon, and there's Goldar gaslighting them the whole time they are here. Not going to sugarcoat it. Goldar was gaslighting the Power Rangers while they were in the Island of Illusion, and Rita is doing the same too, like all evil characters. All the while she finally has the Earth defenseless, yet she doesn't take advantage of the situation.
Right as it gets interesting, with no hope for the Power Rangers, we end on a cliff hanger.
The episode also goes against the tradition of Tommy getting tied up or trapped. Instead, he volunteers to stay and watch his students for a while. When the Power Rangers are getting beaten, Zordon calls him up and Tommy makes sure the boys will be safe while me morphs. Yet, when he shows up and summons Dragonzord to bail the Rangers out again, we see our expectations subverted where Mutitus holds both back and has them down quickly with his spittle. When even the Green Ranger is sent to the Island, that tells you how serious it is.
I appreciate other details in the episode, like Tommy getting his call while standing near a D.A.R.E. poster. The Sentai footage of Rita summoning Lokar has the airs of a Black Sabbath Mass without any pentagrams or the Baphomet statue. Instead, she has an arrangement of a crystal and skulls before her, where she does her ritual chanting and séance that appears to mock the Altar of the Lord (the placement of the candles upon the altar, while a skull and a crystal is placed in the center, not too different from what I have seen of churches with the altar arrived with candles, the scriptures on one side, and the Tabernacle in the back). Yet as Rita summons Lokar, the way the stage goes up is enough to remind children that summoning demons is no child's play (pun intended).
As to Lokar, I am in the mixed category of emotions with him. This demon that Rita summons is a floating head and I do not know if he was to be the antithesis of Zordon, or something else. The fact that in the Sentai show he is called Dai Satan is one thing. It's not carried through in Power Rangers because...well, would you really expect the Devil to be explicitly named in a daytime television show geared to children? Cow and Chicken, along with I Am Weasel, had something like the Devil, which they call The Red Guy. Later, Powerpuff Girls gave us another version of the Devil, which they chose to call "Him" because he's so evil his name is too dreadful to be uttered. Same way, Saban and the writers chose not to use Satan in the show, especially after dropping the dreadful subplot of children being sacrificed.
One good hindsight to think of in not referring to the floating head as Satan in the Power Rangers, which Zyurangers didn't seem to handle right, is if that really is Satan appearing to help Rita, one has to wonder where does God fit in with the Power Rangers? It's clear in spite of how the Rangers look up to him that Zordon is not God. Does God even exist in Power Rangers? So, by bringing Satan into the show, Saban would clearly be opening a can of worms right there, so by downgrading him into an interdeminsional being summoned by Rita, and renaming him Lokar, Saban avoids it. However, the Satanic imagery is still present in Rita's summoning scene and in the designs.
That leads to another issue. If Lokar were to be kept in the original concept, shouldn't he be the one gaslighting the Power Rangers instead of Goldar? Why include a lesser form of the Devil and create what can be considered a Hell in disguise, if a lesser demon working for a witch is the head seen in the sky instead? It's the sort of thing to think on and also why "Island of Illusion" doesn't rank very high in my opinion on the polls.
Island of Illusion, Part 2.
"Hear the voice of the Bard." - The Songs of Experience. William Blake.
Sentai Notes:
When the Zyurangers were ejected from their mecha, they are sent to the Lapless Room, where Geki learns of his brother's condition and Clotho sends them all to the interestingly named "American Camp" to tend to a group of kids affected by Dai Satan's gases. Half of them do so while the other half fight off the bad guys. Then they go and seek out a disk where they were to list out their virtues in order to restore Ultimate Daizyujin. Apparently, he defeated Dai Satan once, but was rendered imperfect and needed the Zyurangers to restore him, hence why Burai was brought back to life.
The Zyurangers were also challenged on finding their virtues, which Mei figures out by recalling something she did. Thus, they each announce their names and their virtues: Mei is Warrior of Love, Boi is Warrior of Hope, Dan the Warrior of Courage, Goushi of Wisdom (translated subtitles on Youtube make it Knowledge), Burai of Power, and Geki of Justice. This allows Daizyujin and Dragon Caesar to be restored and they defeat Satan Franke and combine with King Brachio to become Ultimate Daizyujin, who sends the Devil back to Hell.
The Island of Illusion is partially based on the Land of Despair, where the Zyurangers went to to retrieve their weapons. There are plenty of differences, including the fact the Power Rangers already have their weapons and they are to fight against the illusions of the island to return to reality.
Strategy Notes:
Much of the episode deals with the Rangers facing their worst fears or something that makes them doubt themselves. Zack has snakes, Kimberly sees Bulk and Skull as civilized and sensitive, Tommy suffering Puttie shock, Jason fears letting his friends down, Billy doubts his intelligence, and Trini worries she's next and recalls a traumatic moment. In each, they get a pep talk from Quagmire, who speaks irritatingly in rhyme, and then they recall their past victories and that gives them the confidence to break Rita's spell. In short, they fight the battle of the mind and get over the fear and doubt.
Biblical and Mythological Homage:
The set up from part one continues, though there seems a twist this time around. Quagmire plays a benevolent serpent in giving the Rangers advise on overcoming Rita's spell, something that makes it an inverse of the Fall. In the Book of Genesis, the Serpent tempts Eve with the forbidden fruit, telling her she won't die if she eats it, but instead "will be like gods knowing good and evil." Not to mention, after Adam and Eve ate the fruit, they repented of it and were cast out. Here, Quagmire's pearls of wisdom were to inspire the Rangers to overcome their fears and doubts by recalling their past victories, something the real Serpent never does to Eve or Adam (since they had no past, having been created within a day, they wouldn't recall that anyway).
Two of the virtues mentioned in the Sentai show are Love and Hope, two of the fruits of the Holy Spirit, with Faith as the third. "Island of Illusion" has a motif centering around keeping faith, though not exactly in the Biblical way. The Rangers are told to believe in themselves, something that runs contrary to scripture. Proverbs says, "Whoever trusts his own mind is a fool..." which is demonstrated in how the Rangers let their minds become tricked by Rita. Their recalling their past victories sort of turns it around makes it seem the only thing that is holding them down is themselves, something most people wouldn't want to hear.
Misc. Notes:
When Quagmire is finally summoned, he says, "Speak my name and I appear." It's a rephrasing of the saying, "Speak of the Devil and he shall appear." It's a sort of superstition that followed that of Ancient Greeks who wouldn't even speak of Hades, lest he'd show up. Ever wondered where the taboo of saying Beetlejuice or Lord Voldemort in their respective franchises came from? At least Quagmire is a good guy.
The second time all six Power Rangers are present in the cockpit of the Megazord, and the first time all of them are present in the Megadragonzord and the Ultrazord cockpits. Unfortunately (spoiler alert), it's the last time for all three.
Twice, Kimberly calls Quagmire "Quasimodo." He's the title character in The Hunchback of Notre-Dame (at least in English translations, despite being absent in the middle of the book).
Quagmire in part one fled the Power Rangers at the mention of Rita, thinking she sent them there (correctly, but not as he thought she did). When Kimberly says Rita is making Zack disappear, Quagmire realizes they are no friends of Rita's. This action embodies the expression, "The enemy of my enemy is my friend."
Thoughts.
After such a build up with Part One, Part Two opens with us still in the Island and the Rangers dealing with the Illusions. Zack gets over his, but now it's five to go. I can see why Mistare Fusion called it redundant to have to keep going through the dance of the Rangers fading, Quagmire giving advice in rhyme, the Ranger recalling a past triumph, and everyone rejoicing when he or she is intact. As much as I like how Quagmire is willing to help, his speaking in rhyme can get annoying. One can't help but ask, why doesn't he speak English normally?
Yet in the six, some of the illusions seem real and others aren't. I can assume Tommy is facing PTSD from being a Power Ranger, as are the others, Kimberly having her faith shaken at the sight of Bulk and Skull being sensitive, and Trini has trauma, and Billy is doubting his mind after so much has happened, but Jason's fear of letting his teammates down as leader of the Power Rangers is most serious. This becomes something he struggles with later one when (spoiler alert) he winds up letting one Power Ranger down and it weighs on him in the remainder of his term. Thus, Jason is more than just a jock and the guy calling the shocks. He is a man with his own fears and concerns.
There is a good message of faith in this episode, but it seems wrapped up in the message of self-confidence. It brings up the opening song from the series Arthur, where a line tells kids, "Believe in yourself for that is the place to start." It's an upbeat and uplifting message, but believing in yourself can only go so far. There comes a point you must turn to a greater power than yourself. Yet Power Rangers doesn't seem to offer that in this episode. Instead, we get a little guy who talks in rhyme and somehow it makes them confident.
With this overtaken, the Power Rangers return to reality, just as Rita grows big and destroys the Island of Illusion. The zords restored, we see Mutitus and Lokar defeated quickly, while the historic moment of all six Power Rangers together in the cockpit is shown. Too bad they didn't have the ability to duplicate it for future Megadragonzord scenes or Ultrazord scenes. So, the episode gives us the moment of Zack dancing in the contest and doing his best, which is just about the only thing to cap it off. It does tie in nicely with the start of part one where Zack was hoping to have the confidence to dance. By the end of part two, he has that confidence.
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