In Growing up With Its Audience, Scott Pilgrim Takes Off Becomes a Better Version of Itself
Photo Courtesy of Netflix
In the time of reboots and remakes, it is rare to find one that truly stands out among the hoards of television and films released each year. It seems like each week there’s a reboot announcement on Twitter, which people clamor to with varying responses: will this reboot be any good? Will it surpass its original? Oftentimes, the answer to those questions comes in a resounding “no,” echoing from the Internet chamber all the way to conversations with coworkers and friends. So, when an animated Scott Pilgrim show was announced, fans were rightly worried. But, with creators Bryan Lee O’Malley and BenDavid Grabinski in charge, it seemed like perhaps we would be lucky this time around.
When the first trailer for the new animated spinoff series debuted, it appeared that Scott Pilgrim Takes Off would be a cut-and-dry remake. Certain scenes looked identical to shots in Scott Pilgrim vs. the World and the entire original cast from the film was returning, and with no indication otherwise, it truly seemed like just an animated version of that original movie. Even the show’s first episode plays out like a step-by-step rehashing of scenes we’ve already seen, whether it be on paper or on the big screen. Frame by frame we watch as Scott (Michael Cera) goes to band practice, sees Ramona Flowers (Mary Elizabeth Winstead) skate by him, becomes infatuated with her image, and then later falls head over heels for her at a party.
While watching the first episode, you can’t help but wonder if you have signed up to watch a strict remake, but once Ramona’s evil exes are finally introduced, it becomes clear that Scott Pilgrim Takes Off is anything but ordinary. When Scott is inevitably forced to battle Matthew Patel (Satya Bhabha) at a battle of the bands, instead of beating him in a fashion we’re familiar with, Scott doesn’t just lose: he dies. His death leaves you reeling and trying to conceive how a show named after its titular character can go on with said character dead. Somehow, though, it works, and we slowly begin to realize that maybe Scott wasn’t the reason why the original adaptation was so successful.
After Scott dies, his famed love interest Ramona quickly becomes the show’s main focus. In this version of the story, she takes the reins of her life, battling it out with her various evil exes in a way that wasn’t present in the film. With Scott now gone, Ramona is finally able to break free of the manic pixie dream girl chains that she was shackled with in the previous adaptation. Yes, Mary Elizabeth Winstead was a standout in the Scott Pilgrim film, but that doesn’t mean that the film’s story was truly kind to her character. Here, though, Ramona is finally allowed to grow into a more mature (and less sexualized) version of the initial character we fell in love with. And all Scott needed to do to make this happen was bite the dust.