One Piece: Into the Grand Line (Season 2, Episode 8 “Deer and Loathing in Drum Kingdom”) Review


“The Will of D. lives on.” — Dr. Kureha

One Piece season 2 finale, episode 8 Deer and Loathing in Drum Kingdom, lands like a perfectly timed Gum-Gum Pistol, wrapping the Drum Island arc with a whirlwind of action, heart, and that signature pirate whimsy that keeps the live-action series sailing strong on Netflix. This episode doesn’t just close out the season—it elevates it, turning a snowy island showdown into a full-throated celebration of friendship, defiance, and chasing dreams no matter how absurd. The Straw Hats face off against a ridiculous tyrant, welcome a new crewmate, and set sail with momentum that has you itching for season 3, all while staying faithful to Eiichiro Oda’s sprawling world without feeling like a carbon copy of the manga or anime.

Right from the jump, the episode dives into chaos as King Wapol makes his grand, grotesque return to Drum Island. He’s not the sniveling coward who fled years ago; now he’s juiced up on his Baku Baku no Mi Devil Fruit, which lets him eat literally anything—metal, stone, people—and regurgitate it as twisted weapons or minions. Picture him chomping down on rifles to spit out a cannon, or devouring his own soldiers to birth these lumpy, regenerating blob creatures that swarm the village like a bad acid trip. The practical effects shine here, blending squishy prosthetics with just enough CGI to make the absurdity pop without breaking immersion. Wapol drags Dalton, the noble rebel leader, in chains as a power move, taunting the villagers about his “superior” rule. Dalton’s no pushover, though—he hulks out later in a nod to his manga transformation, charging Wapol with raw fury born from years of oppression. It’s a classic One Piece villain dynamic: Wapol’s petty ego clashes perfectly with the heroes’ unbreakable will, making every clash feel personal.

The Straw Hats scatter into the fray with their usual dysfunctional brilliance. Luffy, fresh off his Nami-saving beatdown from last episode, shrugs off injuries like they’re mosquito bites and leaps into the thick of it, all grins and stretchy punches. His priority? Protecting the Jolly Roger flag that Wapol’s goons are shredding—because in Luffy’s world, that skull-and-crossbones is more than fabric; it’s the crew’s soul. Zoro’s in his element, swords flashing through the snow as he dices up those blob soldiers, their bodies reforming only to get sliced again. It’s a showcase for his cool-under-pressure vibe, with Mackenyu delivering those precise, deadly stares that make you believe he’s the world’s greatest swordsman. Usopp, evolving from comic relief to clutch player, MacGyvers traps with his slingshot and gadgets, picking off threats from afar and proving why the crew needs his sharpshooting heart. Sanji kicks through the horde with flaming legs, flirting with Vivi mid-battle while dodging Wapol’s shoe cannon—pure cook energy, equal parts suave and savage.

Vivi’s arc gets a massive payoff, transforming her from hesitant princess to frontline leader. She’s directing the rebels through secret tunnels, rallying Zoro and Usopp while grappling with her own baggage from Alabasta. When Wapol mocks her, ripping the Straw Hats’ flag and declaring himself untouchable, Vivi steps up with a speech that echoes her father Cobra’s lessons: a true king protects his people, not abandons them. It’s fiery, it’s vulnerable, and it lands because the season built her up slowly—no rushed hero turn, just earned resolve. Her chemistry with the crew shines, especially when Sanji teases her “adopted sister” status, lightening the tension without undercutting the stakes. By episode’s end, she recommits to the Straw Hats’ wild detour, eyes set on Baroque Works, but with that lingering “we’ll part ways eventually” promise that teases her canon fate.

Then there’s Chopper, the pint-sized reindeer doctor who steals the show and the crew’s hearts. Building on his tragic backstory—abandoned by his herd, taken in by Dr. Hiriluk, shaped by the tough but caring Dr. Kureha—Chopper’s torn between his cozy life on Drum and the call of adventure. Kureha, that chain-smoking witch of a doc, puts him through tough-love wringers, smashing his medical sake and growling about him dying out there. But it’s all facade; her grief over Hiriluk mirrors Chopper’s pain, making their bond achingly real. Luffy’s blunt invitation—”You’re our doctor now”—pierces right through, and Usopp’s outsider-to-outsider pep talk seals the deal. The sleigh ride off the mountain is magical nonsense: Chopper in full reindeer mode, cherry blossoms blooming impossibly in the blizzard (a gorgeous manga callback), Kureha saluting with a cannon shot and Hiriluk’s flag waving proud. It’s the kind of corny, triumphant moment One Piece does best, hammering home themes of found family and believing in your own worth.

Sanji, for his part, gets a quieter but meaningful bit of shading while Nami recovers. In a brief conversation, he opens up about growing up with a sickly mother and the weight that put on his shoulders, framing his obsession with feeding people as something more than just a gag. It’s not a long monologue, but it’s enough to suggest that seeing someone he cared about waste away left a mark, and that his insistence on never letting anyone go hungry comes from a very real place. The show doesn’t linger on it—this is still Chopper’s spotlight—but the detail adds a touch of vulnerability to the smooth-talking cook that fits nicely with the ensemble’s evolving emotional texture.

Production values crank to eleven. Drum Island’s fortress under siege looks massive, snow whipping through cannon fire and sword clashes in wide, dynamic shots. The score mixes epic orchestral swells with punky guitar riffs for battles, then soft piano for goodbyes—spot-on emotional whiplash. Fights are a highlight: Luffy tanking Wapol’s T-Rex cannon form (yes, he eats a whole dinosaur statue), Zoro’s three-sword barrage, Dalton’s beastly charge. Pacing juggles a ton—Wapol’s invasion, crew skirmishes, Chopper’s farewell, Vivi’s resolve—but mostly sticks the landing, building to a cathartic flag-raise where the villagers cheer as the Straw Hats unite.

That said, it’s not perfect, keeping things balanced. Wapol’s hamminess tips into over-the-top at times; his static-haired minion and shoe gags are funny but dilute menace when the drums war flashbacks try for gravitas. Some CGI on the blobs and Wapol’s transformations glitches in slow-mo, not quite matching the seamless human fights. Nami’s sidelined in recovery, and while her brief talk with Sanji deepens his character, it can feel slightly wedged in amid the frenzy. Miss All Sunday’s cryptic phone call and shadowy exit primes Baroque Works intrigue but cuts short, more teaser than substance. The runtime squeezes big arcs, occasionally rushing quieter beats like Kureha’s full Hiriluk eulogy.

Casting carries it all. Iñaki Godoy’s Luffy is chaotic sunshine incarnate, Taz Skylar’s Sanji oozes charm, Emily Rudd’s Nami grounds the heart. Newcomer Ty Keogh nails Dalton’s quiet heroism, and the Chopper suit—expressive eyes, cloven hooves—brings the manga cutie to life without uncanny valley. Adaptations tweak smartly: expanded rebel fights for live-action spectacle, Vivi’s speech streamlined for punch, Chopper’s forms hinted at for future growth.

As a season finale, Deer and Loathing in Drum Kingdom nails the handoff from Loguetown’s tease to Grand Line proper. Drum Island swaps setup for liberation, forging the crew tighter with Chopper aboard and Vivi locked in. It whoops with unhinged action, weeps with goodbyes, and inspires with Luffy’s “I’m gonna be Pirate King!” roar over the horizon. Flaws like hammy villainy and CGI wobbles don’t sink it—this is One Piece live-action firing on all cylinders, proving Netflix can wrangle Oda’s beast. Season 1 fans get their fix; newbies get hooked on the heart. Trust: stream it, sail on.

One Piece: Into the Grand Line Season 2 Episodes

Join #MondayMania For Sidekicks!


Hi, everyone!  Tonight, on twitter, I will be hosting one of my favorite films for #MondayMania!  Join us for 1992’s Sidekicks!

You can find the movie on Prime and Tubi and then you can join us on twitter at 9 pm central time!  (That’s 10 pm for you folks on the East Coast.)  See you then!

Song of the Day: The Theme From Trip With The Teacher by Igo Kantor


Today’s song of the day is the oddly cheery theme music of 1975’s Trip With The Teacher.  Composed by Igo Kantor, this music may be inappropriate for a film about a teacher and four students who are kidnapped by a sociopath with narcolepsy but I defy you to get it out of your head!

Scene that I Love: Yojimbo


Yojimbo (1961, directed by Akira Kurosawa)

The great filmmaker, Akira Kurosawa, was born 116 years ago today, in Tokyo.  Kurosawa would go on to become one of the most influential directors of all time, making 30 films over a career that lasted 57 years.  Though Kurosawa is often cited as an influence on westerns (Seven Samurai became The Magnificent Seven, Yojimbo inspired Serigo Leone to create The Man With No Name), Kurosawa’s influence goes for beyond just one genre.  He directed action films.  He directed gangster films.  He directed social problem films.  He directed historical epics.  Kurosawa taught an entire generation of future film film directors the language of cinema.

In honor of the anniversary of Akira Kurosawa’s birth, here is a scene that we all love from his 1961 masterpiece, Yojimbo.  Playing the lead role of the lone swordsman is, of course, Kurosawa’s frequent star, Toshiro Mifune.

 

4 Shots From 4 Films: Special Akira Kurosawa Edition


4 Or More Shots From 4 Or More Films is just what it says it is, 4 shots from 4 of our favorite films. As opposed to the reviews and recaps that we usually post, 4 Shots From 4 Films lets the visuals do the talking!

Today, the Shattered Lens honors both the birth and the legacy of the great filmmaker, Akira Kurosawa!  It’s time for….

4 Shots From 4 Akira Kurosawa Films

The Hidden Fortress (1958, dir. by Akira Kurosawa, DP: Kazuo Yamasaki)

Yojimbo (1961, dir by Akira Kurosawa, DP: Kazuo Miyagawa)

Ran (1987, dir by Akira Kurosawa, DP: Takao Saito)

Dreams (1990, dir by Akira Kurosawa, DP: Takao Saito)

Monday Live Tweet Alert: Join Us for Slaughter in San Francisco!


As some of our regular readers undoubtedly know, I am involved in hosting a few weekly live tweets on twitter and occasionally Mastodon.  I host #FridayNightFlix every Friday, I co-host #ScarySocial on Saturday, and I am one of the five hosts of Mastodon’s #MondayActionMovie!  Every week, we get together.  We watch a movie.  We snark our way through it.

Tonight, for #MondayActionMovie, the film will be Slaughter in San Francisco!

If you want to join this watch party, just hop onto Mastodon, pull up Slaughter in San Francisco on YouTube, start the movie at 8 pm et, and use the #MondayActionMovie hashtag!

Enjoy!

Music Video of the Day: Don’t Let Me Be The Last To Know by Britney Spears (2001, dir by Herb Ritts)


It’s Britney on the beach!  This video was controversial when it was first released.  It seems rather tame now.

This video was directed by photographer Herb Ritts and Britney’s boyfriend was played by French model Brice Durand.  Supposedly, neither Justin Timberlake nor Lynne Spears were happy with this video.  Lynne felt it was too explicit and Justin apparently had an issue with Britney kissing another guy, even though Britney was just acting, it was just for the music video, and it’s not as if Justin wasn’t messing around behind Britney’s back.

Enjoy!

Lisa Marie’s Week In Review: 3/16/26 — 3/22/26


Rest in Peace, Chuck Norris.

Films I Watched:

  1. Color of Night (1994)
  2. Dodgeball: A True Underdog Story (2004)
  3. Evil Nanny (2016)
  4. Fear City (1984)
  5. Fire Maiden From Outer Space (1956)
  6. Firewalker (1986)
  7. Hard Ticket To Hawaii (1987)
  8. Mortal Thoughts (1991)
  9. Once Upon A Time In Venice (2017)
  10. Out of Death (2021)
  11. Resident Evil (2002)
  12. Setup (2011)
  13. The Siege (1998)
  14. 10 to Midnight (1983)
  15. Used Cars (1980)

Television Shows I Watched:

  1. 1st & Ten
  2. CHiPs
  3. The Love Boat
  4. Miami Vice
  5. Pacific Blue
  6. Radio 1990
  7. Saved By The Bell: The New Class

Books I Read:

  1. Out of the Woods (2025) by Gregg Olsen

Live Tweets:

  1. Hard Ticket To Hawaii
  2. Evil Nanny
  3. Fear City
  4. Resident Evil

News From Last Week:

  1. Chuck Norris Dies At 86
  2. Art Critic Calvin Tomkins Dies At 100
  3. Nicholas Brendon Dies At 54
  4. Director Jamie Blanks Dies At 54
  5. Actor Matt Clark Dies At 89
  6. Oscars Ratings Hit 17.9 Million Viewers, Down 9% From Last Year and Lowest Since 2022
  7. The Latest Season Of The Bachelorette Has Been Canceled
  8. Champagne socialists in Cuba stage concert, stay in 5-star hotel as country plunges into nationwide blackout
  9. Afroman Wins Civil Trial Over Use of Police Raid Footage in His Music Videos
  10. Box Office: ‘Project Hail Mary’ blasts off with $80.5 million, a best for Amazon MGM, and the year

Links From Last Week:

  1. Painting Chicago’s River Green – Happy St. Patrick’s Day 2026!
  2. Jenny Driver

Links From The Site:

  1. Arleigh reviewed Project Hail Mary, Made In Abyss, Interspecies Reviewers, and Dune Part One!  Arleigh reviewed episodes 4, 5, 6, and 7 of One Piece: Into The Grand Line!  He shared a song from Led Zeppelin!
  2. Brad wrote about Soldier and Chuck Norris!
  3. Erin reviewed Look Who’s Talking and The Whole Nine Yards!
  4. Erin shared Too Many Girls, St. Patrick Bishop of Ireland, Nurse On The Beach, Die Hard, Johnny Havoc, Invasion USA, and Amazing StoriesShe also wished all of you a happy St. Patrick’s Day!
  5. Jeff shared music videos from House of Pain, INXS, and INXS again.  He reviewed Blind Date and Beavis and Butt-Head Do America!
  6. I shared scene of the day featuring William Shatner, Gary Oldman, Wesley Snipes, Bruce Willis, Peter Graves, Kurt Russell, and Erik Estrada!
  7. I paid tribute to William Shatner, Russ Meyer, Chuck Norris, Hollywood, Bruce Willis, Luc Besson, Kurt Russell, and Bernardo Bertolucci!
  8. I shared songs from Angelo Badalamenti, The Dust Brothers, Badalamenti again, Bruce Willis,  The Who, and Alan Silvestri!
  9. I shared music videos from Tomoyasu Hotei, Laura Michelle, Afroman, and Tom Jones!
  10. I reviewed the Oscar ceremony!
  11. I congratulated you — yes, you! — for surviving Oscar Sunday!
  12. I shared my early Oscar predictions!

Click here to check out last week!

Review: Project Hail Mary (dir. by Phil Lord and Christopher Miller)


“I am happy. You no die. Let’s save planets!” — Rocky

Project Hail Mary delivers a crowd-pleasing space adventure that captures the spirit of Andy Weir’s bestselling novel without reinventing the sci-fi wheel. Ryan Gosling shines as the reluctant hero, carrying the film through its mix of brainy puzzles and heartfelt moments. Directed by Phil Lord and Christopher Miller, this big-budget adaptation balances wonder with some familiar tropes, making it a solid popcorn flick for fans of hard science fiction laced with humor.

The story kicks off with Dr. Ryland Grace, a brilliant but socially awkward science teacher played by Gosling, who wakes up alone on a spaceship hurtling through the solar system. He has amnesia, no crewmates, and a mission he can’t quite remember—saving Earth from a mysterious microbe called Astrophage that’s dimming the sun and threatening global catastrophe. As Grace pieces together his past through flashbacks, we see how he went from a disgraced academic debunking fringe theories to humanity’s last-ditch savior. The setup echoes The Martian, Weir’s previous hit, with its lone survivor using wit and science to beat impossible odds.

Gosling nails the everyman genius vibe, blending wide-eyed confusion with deadpan quips that keep things light. His Grace is no stoic astronaut; he’s a guy who’d rather teach middle school than lead a suicide mission, cracking jokes about his fear of commitment even as he’s rigging experiments with duct tape and hope. The performance anchors the film’s emotional core, especially in quieter moments where Grace grapples with isolation and doubt. Sandra Hüller adds gravitas as Eva Stratt, the no-nonsense project leader who strong-arms world governments into action—she’s all icy efficiency, a nice counterpoint to Gosling’s rumpled charm.

Lord and Miller, the duo behind The Lego Movie and Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse, bring their signature visual flair to the vastness of space. The Hail Mary ship feels lived-in and jury-rigged, with practical sets that pop against sweeping CGI vistas of alien planets and swirling Astrophage clouds. Early scenes use dreamlike tilts and blurred transitions to mirror Grace’s foggy memory, creating a disorienting but captivating rhythm. It’s not always seamless—the nonlinear structure can jolt you out of the immersion—but it builds tension effectively as revelations stack up.

Screenwriter Drew Goddard, who collaborated with Weir on The Martian, stays faithful to the book’s plot beats and scientific grounding. Astrophage isn’t just a plot device; it’s a clever microorganism that feeds on starlight, explained through Grace’s whiteboard scribbles and explosive demos. The film dives into real astrophysics—like orbital mechanics and xenobiology—without dumbing it down, yet it keeps the pace brisk with problem-solving montages set to a retro-futuristic score. Think Guardians of the Galaxy vibes, complete with a catchy farewell tune that hits surprisingly hard.

About halfway through, the story pivots to its most memorable element: Grace’s encounter with Rocky, an alien engineer from the 40 Eridani system. Voiced and puppeteered by James Ortiz, Rocky is a spider-like creature with a high-pitched ammonia-breathing voice, communicated via a bulky translation rig à la Arrival. Their friendship is the heart of Project Hail Mary, turning a solo survival tale into a buddy sci-fi romp. The xenolinguistics—figuring out math and music as common ground—feels fresh and fun, with practical effects making Rocky endearing rather than creepy.

That said, the film isn’t flawless. Clocking in around two hours, it rushes some of the book’s deeper world-building, like the global panic on Earth or the crew’s backstories, which get condensed into quick flashbacks. Grace’s arc from coward to hero leans on a simple mantra—”bravery is fighting for someone else”—that’s uplifting but predictable. It doesn’t push cinematic boundaries like Interstellar or Dune, settling for feel-good spectacle over profound philosophy. The massive budget shows in the polish, but it occasionally feels like a theme-park ride: thrilling set pieces, like a high-stakes EVA gone wrong, prioritize awe over subtlety.

Visually, the film excels in its alien encounters and spacewalk sequences, with IMAX-friendly shots of Eridani b’s jagged landscapes and bioluminescent horrors. The Astrophage effects are a standout—tiny, shimmering specks that swarm like deadly fireflies, rendered with meticulous detail. Sound design amplifies the isolation, from the hum of life support to Rocky’s echolocating chirps. It’s all wrapped in a score that mixes orchestral swells with synth grooves, evoking 80s space operas while feeling modern.

Thematically, Project Hail Mary champions collaboration across species and borders, a timely nod amid real-world divisions. Grace’s growth isn’t just about smarts; it’s about vulnerability, learning to trust Rocky despite zero shared language or biology. The film handles this with sincerity, avoiding preachiness by grounding it in humor—imagine two nerds bonding over thermodynamics while one’s in a pressurized suit and the other’s a five-eyed rock. It’s optimistic sci-fi that posits curiosity as humanity’s superpower, even if the execution stays safely within blockbuster lanes.

Supporting cast fleshes out the ensemble without stealing focus. Tracy Letts chews scenery as a blustery politician, while smaller roles like the multinational crew add diversity to the stakes. Production design nods to NASA realism, with the Beetle probes (Grace’s mini-shuttles) stealing scenes in their plucky, R2-D2 fashion. Pacing dips in the mid-act info dumps, but Goddard trims the fat smartly, ensuring the climax—a desperate race against entropy—delivers white-knuckle payoff.

Early reactions praise its fidelity to Weir’s page-turner, with fans thrilled by the faithful visuals and emotional beats. Detractors might call it formulaic, but in a genre crowded with grimdark dystopias, this one’s a breath of fresh (oxygenated) air. It’s not the most original sci-fi, but it’s entertaining as hell, blending laughs, tears, and light-speed thrills.

For book purists, the adaptation honors the source without copying verbatim—key twists land with impact, and the science holds up under scrutiny. Weir himself has endorsed it, chatting about Rocky’s creation and making quantum mechanics accessible. If you’re burned out on capes or zombies, Project Hail Mary offers smart, hopeful escapism that sticks the landing.

Ultimately, this is peak “movie medicine”—a fun, moving reminder that lone wolves become legends with the right friends, human or otherwise. Gosling’s charisma, paired with Lord and Miller’s playful direction, makes it soar higher than its plot alone might suggest. Worth the ticket for any sci-fi buff craving brains with their spectacle; just don’t expect it to redefine the stars.