Entertainment

The New ‘DuckTales’ Is ‘Game of Thrones’ for Kids

Woo-oo! This show has no right to be this good.

Emma Chao/Courtesy Disney Television Animation; Fatherly; Getty Images

The new DisneyDuckTalesreboot has taken on a mythology all its own, one far more complicated than the show we might remember from the nineties. The theme song threatens “racecars, lasers, aeroplanes,” but those things seem tame compared to what the ducks are facing now: Duels on erupting volcanoes, shadow creatures, sorceresses, gladiators, sky pirates, undersea realms, cursed talismans, and full-blown demigods. That’s more than a duck-blur. This is someGame of Thronesaction, only with less murder, more jokes and a lack of crushing disappointment from the conclusion. At least for now.

Sound silly? Well, the new version ofDucktales;于2017年开始,recently ended its stellar second season on — of course — a cliffhanger, has more in common with the world of Westeros than the Disney-verse of old. And not just because its characters are perpetually pantsless.

Consider the stacked star wattage. FormerDoctor WhoDavid Tenant leads the cast as Scrooge McDuck. Regulars likeBobby Moynihanand Ben Schwartz bring comedy chops. Guest stars have included everyone from Oscar winners (Allison Janney, Jim Rash) to prestige TV favorites (Michael Chiklis, character actor Margo Martindale), and even Lin-Manuel. That roster reads more like prestige TV than most 22-minute kids’ shows. I mean,Daniel Tigeris great, but it’s not like they’ve got Christian Bale doing the voice of Dad Tiger.

The complexity of the stories that unfold across the two seasons ofDuckTalesis what brings it more in line with shows likeThrones. The show isn’t just a bunch of throwaway gags and one-off episodes — yes,DuckTalesis very funny, and nobody would get too lost if they dropped in mid-season with no prior knowledge. But the series offers layered storytelling that unfolds across each season, with extreme attention to character details and journeys, cliffhanger endings, and long-term payoffs across the narrative. It’s a fully realized, lived-in story masquerading as a silly show about wise-cracking, adventure-seeking fowl. It’s stealthily heady in the way it takes this simple premise — ducks go adventuring, sometimes butt up against the Beagle Boys or evil Flintheart Glomgold — and makes it into a sprawling quasi-epic.

That might turn off some folks just looking to unplug, but this is the new world order in our era of rebooted nostalgia properties that speak to new millennial parents as much as — if not more than — their kids. It’s the same reason thatMy Little Pony: Friendship is Magicoperates in an Equestria that’s closer to Hogwarts in its sprawl. These are shows for kids, yes, but they’re also for parents who want to remember their favorite shows. As such,DuckTalesis a cult hit for many grownups in the same wayAdventuretimeis, with websites like The AV Club dedicating precious re-cap space for long reviews and recaps for the show right along with adult prestige fare likeThrones.

The newDuckTalesis dotted with references both obvious (Raiders of the Lost Ark)and deeper (Twin Peaks: The Return?!), but the smartest thing it does is breaks past the reference-heavy,眨眼的东西存在怪物史莱克and wisely makes references to, well, itself. That’s no easy task. One of the most pandering moves a show can make to cater to adults is a rib-poking meta-reference to another show or a jarring needle drop that suddenly sends the characters dancing to old pop music. That’s easy. ButDuckTalesmanages to drop in everything from inversions ofA Christmas Carolto a reunion of Donald Duck’s Three Caballeros while layering in callbacks to its own decades-spanning mythology. And make no mistake,DuckTaleshistory is unexpectedly rich, to the point that it wouldn’t be too surprising if there was a blogger working on the McDuck saga’s version ofThe Silmarillionas we speak.

All of this is pretty weird when you considerDuckTalesbegan its life in 1987 as a way to repurpose old Disney IP. The plot, initially, makes zero sense, but in the ’80s studios seemed to be playing MadLibs with their characters. That would explain why Scrooge — he of Dickensian redemption and infinite greed — was reimagined as a modern-day Indiana Jones (or honestly, more like Indy’s dad, Sean Connery) who had a thing for swimming in a vault full of coins. Suddenly, Goofy was roller-blading with Paulie Shore, Balloo the bear was a smuggler pilot in a bomber jacket, and Chip and Dale became private eyes, complete with fedoras and Hawaiian shirts. It was… a strange time.

Most of those ideas have faded away into obscurity like much of the ’80s misremembered nonsense. But somehow,DuckTalesendured, spawning mythology-bolstering comics and hugely popular video games remembered as among the best of the NES era. So when reboot culture became the norm, it only made sense that it would resurface.

That nostalgia is the key to the hearts of millennial parents, who all but demand a bite of “memberberries” in what their kids watch. Usually, they’re bringing with them baggage; a desire for resolution on stories and more myth-making. To them the journey of Launchpad McQuack and Webbie demand resolutions, season-long character arcs, and emotional depth.

Lucky for them, theDuckTalesteam more than delivers on these unreasonable appetites. The show’s got heart. Epic adventures. Metatextual commentary. Long-term consequences. And, of course, fan service. It’s a hilarious show, one that seems to know that fans want it to be huge, and thus goes bigger while giving kids something to hold close. It’s prestige TV for kids and parents trapped in their nostalgia, a prime example of generationally transferred fondness. And it’s not showing any sign of stopping.

In this year’s gripping finale — two words that should make no sense in reference to anthropomorphic ducks — the show managed to skewer toxic fandom, gritty reboot culture, and nostalgia for the past while simultaneously offering up a resolution to a dense season-long plot, complete with enough in-jokes, callbacks, and visual gags to fill out a season ofArcherand enough double-crosses, trippy visuals, and white-knuckle conflict to satisfy aThronesdie hard. It ended with a cliffhanger, a twist, and the introduction of a powerful new foe. Winter is in fact coming to Duckberg. And it’s looking fantastic. Woo-oo!

You can watch the newDuckTaleson theDisneyNow app. Though, it’s very likely the show’s third season will find its way into thenew streaming Disney+ bundle.