I was learning programming to become a game dev since I was 12, so I felt so close to Tulip the first time I watched Book 1. This show was incredible in every way and even though I doubt it it'll happen, I still hope the other 4 books will be made. With every fiber of my being. This show would've helped so many people mature emotionally but they decided to pull the plug. Owen deserved better for his vision.
You gotta give it to her parents, they tried to be civil about it afterwhat, and they can get along for her sake even if they are divorced, my parents broke apart when I was 2 years old so I never really knew what it was like to have my 2 parents around all the time but they made agreements with each other for my sake and 28 years later they can be friends, but my mom would never take back my dad, and my dad ain't interested in her anymore either, but they can joke, play cards, and get along on stuff concerning me, also helps they do have a lot of things they agree on, but the love between them is gone, it's just now platonic friendship. Hopefully it will be like that with her parents, and stay that way.
although it’s sad that infinity train was cut short and we never got to see what happened to Hazel, I think it’s also a fitting message that not every action is owed closure. Although grace has become a better person, she’ll still have to live with the guilt of her actions, and Hazel’s story not having a resolution serves as a good reminder of that.
Adventure Time finale: We cried. Regular Show finale: We cried. Ok Ko Let's Be Heroes finale: We cried. Clarence finale: We cried. Steven Universe finale: We cried. Steven Universe Future finale: We cried. The Amazing World of Gumball finale: WHAT THE WHAT?!
I’m mad that they had such a fantastic relationship and then all of a sudden Simon just turns on Grace. Like all that camaraderie and affection and he turned on her
@@twist_ending7545 it felt sudden…all that time they were together as friends down the drain in the span of what? A couple days? I saw the signs building but his descent into madness was so quick. Like it was always there just ready to happen.
@@MayTheOddsBeInYourFavor when you consider that they were friends for almost a decade, yeah its sudden when you think about it that way. But what we saw in the season? Not sudden.
oh lord I can’t watch this right now. I’m 29 my parents got divorced a year ago. I’m a grown adult with an older sibling. But this is breaking my heart. It was harder than I thought it would be.
Apex was the one good thing Infinity Train had going for it past season 1, but they ruined it by shoehorning Simon into a cartoonish villain role rather than exploring the morally-grey depth of Grace and Simon.
The lack of media literacy here is almost remarkable. Simon was not some “cartoonish villain” for the plot. He and Grace were both so wrapped up in their own wrong logic and reasons when forming the Apex, making strict sets of rules and regulations to follow and preach to the younger (more impressionable) children they indoctrinated. Grace was willing to change after her dream, willing to admit she was wrong and afraid. Simon, on the other hand, was not. Deeming himself as “always right” he was so caught up in his own personal grievances of trust and rules that it made him beyond saving to the both audience AND the train. They were both morally grey characters, and the seasons progressed to show how you can change to be better (Grace) or be worse (Simon).
I love the hypocrisy of the Conductor saying how One-One and Atticus had a place and by Tulip taking them out of it she put them in danger. While she literally took One from the place he belonged, basically creating a cult worshipping a false conductor that wheels denizens and wrecks the train.
When I first watched this, my parents hadn’t been divorced yet. I was the same age as Tulip. I felt so seen by her character. The following year, quarantine happened, the divorce started to happen, and everything went downhill. I wish I got a decent ending like Tulip did where she still gets to have both of her parents in her life. My life wasn’t great before, but the divorce and absence of my mom messed me up.
I adore the other books and they all have some emotional moments but everything in book 3 has so much weight behind it, the ages of harm the apex has caused to denizens, grace and simon just being children who grew up believing awful things because no adult was around to correct them, everything about tuba's and hazel's bond, hazel being a denizen but not being recognisable as one, simon's harmless crush on grace turning full incel rage the moment she disagrees with him, and it all comes together in this beautiful and tragic melting pot of emotion, it is so fantastically made! Truly hits different!
Unlikely, I'm sure breaking into someone else's pod was flagged by the system. And they probably know where it is so most likely a steward was dispatched and tranqed him, and put him back where he belongs, hopefully.
well depending on the denizen, one of two things could happen, A. the denizen could use whatever supernatural ability they possess (assuming they have one) to mimick having a number. EX. if a denizen could shapeshift, hypothetically they could shift there aperence into tricking the train that they have a number or B, the sadder one. They simply would not be able to leave the train without finding some weirdly creative way into tricking the train, like how Lake used their reflective body to mirror jesses number
The first episode shows white Grace can be redeemed, but Simon can’t. 1:11 shows Grace, talking about having high spirits, and just having fun on the train. While 1:15 show Simon talking about talking about hating one one or the “false conductor” Grace shows she just wants to have fun on the train. While Simon cares about just caring out the message, no matter what Grace just wants to have fun but Simon just wants to make sure that his way is the only way
I love how this demonstrates a difference between knowing and accepting. Just because you know and acknowledge something bad happened doesn’t mean you’ve accepted it. Tulip doesn’t deny her parents had a divorce, but she hasn’t excepted that it will bring change and growing pains.