The Reckoning
"The Reckoning" is the sixty-first televised episode of the series Gargoyles, and the forty-eighth episode of Season 2. It originally aired on May 7, 1996.
- Story Editors: Brynne Chandler-Reaves & Gary Sperling
- Story: Lydia C. Marano
- Teleplay: Gary Sperling
- Director: Dennis Woodyard
Contents
Summary
Demona allows herself to be captured and imprisoned in the Labyrinth in a scheme to clone the gargoyles and convert Angela. Goliath and the Manhattan Clan are lured into a trap, by Thailog and the Clones. But, realising she does indeed love Angela, Demona turns on Thailog and the two seemingly perish in a blazing inferno.
Continuity
Thailog and Demona appear for the first time since "Sanctuary". They are initially still allies, although their partnership dissolves at the end of the episode. Demona reappears in "Hunter's Moon Part One", now apparently the sole owner of their jointly-formed Nightstone Unlimited.
The Golden Cup Bakery Building suffers its second gargoyle attack in the series when Demona breaks into it at the beginning (the first time being Coldstone's raid on it in "Legion"). This marks its third appearance in the series, since it was also the site of Goliath and Xanatos's opening battle in "Vows".
The Mutates appear for the first time since "Kingdom" (even Fang, who is still in prison following his actions in that episode). The clones are introduced in this episode, and they are taken to the Labyrinth by Talon to join the Labyrinth Clan. The Labyrinth Clan (both gargoyle and Mutate members, excluding Fang) next appear in "Invitation Only".
Although Thailog is not heard from again in the remainder of this season, he did survive the roller-coaster fire. He next appears at the end of "Invitation Only" as an unwelcome guest at the Labyrinth, out to reclaim the Clones (though only Brentwood freely leaves with him, in the end).
Fang next appears in the first issue of Gargoyles: Bad Guys, "Strangers", as a member of the Redemption Squad working for Robyn Canmore. His escape from the Labyrinth will presumably be explained in the third issue, "Estranged".
Tidbits
"The Reckoning" was originally intended as being a two-part season finale, but was later on shrunk down to a one-parter after "Hunter's Moon" became the season finale. (Goliath's "new beginning" line would certainly have fitted this setting, but "Hunter's Moon" made a far better season finale; for one thing, it resolved far more issues in Gargoyles than "The Reckoning" did, including Goliath and Elisa's feelings for each other and the feud with Xanatos.)
The names of the male clones, of course, are Los Angeles-based parallels to the New York-based names for the trio and Hudson, rising from the question that the Gargoyles production team had asked itself out of amusement: "What if the gargoyles had been awakened in Los Angeles rather than New York?" (It obviously helped that Greg Weisman lives in Los Angeles.) No explanation is given in the script, however, for precisely why Demona would choose those names for the Clones; there was never any indication in the series that Los Angeles had any particular meaning for her. Greg Weisman has suggested that she was making fun of the names the Trio chose for themselves. (The scene where she reveals their names also evokes a scene in the first Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles cartoon where Shredder, having produced four mutant frogs to battle the Turtles, names them after his favorite historical figures - Attila the Hun, Genghis Khan, Napoleon, and Rasputin - as a counterpart to Splinter's naming the Turtles after his favorite Renaissance artists.) Delilah, of course, was named after the biblical betrayer of Samson; the "bad girl" connotations of that name would clearly have appealed to Thailog.
(In The Goliath Chronicles, Thailog appeared in only one episode, "Genesis Undone", where he succumbs to a virus and is turned - apparently - permanently to stone.)
One of the regulars in the projected Gargoyles 2198 spin-off was a namesake descendant of Delilah's - who would, naturally, be a member of Samson's team.
In the episode as originally aired, when Fang watched Demona change into human form he said, "Kinky." In later airings, Toon Disney has censored this line.
See also
Links
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