"
Silvertail the Renegade" is yet another episode that really should have been shoved back a few places in the chronological episode queue. This doesn't come across at all in the
manga, in which
Kimba is a leading "adult player" from the very beginning. On TV, by contrast,
Kimba starts off by engaging in kiddie
hijinks with pals Dot, Dash, Dinky, and Dodie, which lead to (1) the first, brief encounter with the titular
Silvertail and (2) an unpleasant rendezvous with a hive of "bees" (or, perhaps, of spider wasps left over from the aftermath of "
The Cobweb Caper"). Fearing "punishment" from
Dan'l, the badly-stung
Kimba literally
hides under the bed -- in his case, a pile of leaves -- and is only rousted out when
Dan'l comes to tell him that
Silvertail has arrived in search of assistance. Assuming that
Kimba has "been up to mischief,"
Dan'l gives him a sound thrashing, not even stopping to listen to
Kimba's explanation. This is even more painful to watch than it must have been for
Kimba to experience.
Even after recovering from his embarrassment (and his variegated sores),
Kimba is strangely passive and lets other animals take the initiative in the fierce debate over whether or not to protect
Silvertail (Gilbert Mack), an aging lion who has sought refuge in the jungle after raiding a village and incurring the wrath of its inhabitants. The affronted villagers promptly form a posse that displays all the legendary persistence of
the "guys" who chased Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid. As
Pauley Cracker argues that
Silvertail should be turned over to the humans for his crimes and
Dan'l Baboon counters that the old lion deserves protection,
Kimba just sort of fades into the background. Not until near the end will the jungle prince leap into the fray, fighting the posse's hounds and borrowing
a strategem from Macbeth, of all places, to get close to the unwelcome visitors and stage a counterattack. In the meantime, it's
Dan'l who is the prime mover, stashing
Silvertail in a cave with a sulphur spring that's supposed to keep the dogs from picking up the lion's scent.
Whereas the TV
Silvertail is a rather generic, somewhat whiny lion with Gil Mack's standard old-guy voice, the
Silvertail of the
manga looks a lot more feral, hungry, and desperate. To extend the Shakespeare parallels, the fact that the unknown
manga artist draws
Silvertail with his mane askew may signify that the lion is at least partially
insane, much as
Ophelia's loosening of her hair in
Hamlet indicated that she was going round the bend. For sure,
Silvertail's attack on Dodie in the TV episode is much less frightening than
this one.
Kimba does fight
Silvertail briefly on TV during this first encounter, but
Silvertail turns and vanishes rather quickly, not showing up again until he arrives at the animals' jungle-clearing meeting place. In the
manga, once
Kimba pitches into
Silvertail for the first time, the latter stays on the scene for the rest of the story. Notice, as well, that
Silvertail appears a bit more willing to stand up for himself (at least verbally) during this initial scene. The TV version of the character, by contrast, displays no apparent free will of his own, allowing himself to be directed by
Dan'l and others at all times.
Pauley's point about the entire jungle being put in danger by the presence of the renegade is certainly well taken, but it's hard not to regard his negative attitude here as being the "dark side" of his loyalty to
Kimba in such episodes as "
Destroyers from the Desert" and "
Jungle Thief." It's probably easier to imagine
Dan'l having this opinion, especially in light of his appeals to "The Law of the Jungle." Perhaps
Dan'l saw something of himself in the over-the-hill lion, a "there but for the grace of
Kimba go I" vision? Or perhaps he remembered that
Kimba's father Caesar was also in the habit of raiding human villages for his own purposes? The jungle animals ultimately divide over the dilemma, and we even get the standard "quarreling" scene that featured so prominently in
eps like "
Battle at Dead River" and "
The Return of Fancy Prancy." Unfortunately, the scene is given a semi-comical tone that really doesn't fit the mood of this episode, with
Pauley and his allies literally walking all over
Dan'l on their way to lynch, er, serve walking papers on
Silvertail. (Since
Pauley neglected to consider that he doesn't know where
Dan'l hid
Silvertail, the march turns out to be a very short one.)
Kimba finally gets involved as it becomes more and more obvious that, despite
Dan'l's best efforts, the posse is willing to go to
any length -- including attacking any other animals that get in its way -- to hunt down
Silvertail. After
Kimba's attack on the dogs fails to convince the interlopers to leave,
Kimba hatches the scheme of having the animals disguise themselves as trees and bushes and sneak up on the bivouacked posse, the better to catch its members by surprise. This is pretty ingenious, I guess, though it relies heavily on the posse simply staring in slack-jawed puzzlement as the animals perform their
Birnam Wood act, as opposed to figuring that
something is amiss and firing into the foliage. After
Kimba and his subjects overpower the posse,
Kimba launches into "improbable" speech and scares the group's imperious leader (Ray Owens) into agreeing to leave on the condition that
Silvertail never raid the humans' village again.
The standard-issue "departure while
Kimba and his subjects stand watching on a cliff" ending scene is given a little extra twist by the brief sight of
Silvertail, the "redeemed" renegade, bowing his head and shedding a tear. The extra helping of pathos makes one wonder: to what extent has
Silvertail's spirit been broken by his crimes? Will he be able to fit into
Kimba's civilization as easily as some other newcomers have?
I'll be back this weekend, or early next week, with some final thoughts.