Five Things From: The Owl House 2×19, Oh Titan Where Art Thou?

Hello everyone and welcome to another edition of Five Things From. This time we are looking back at season 2 episode 19 of The Owl House, Oh Titan Where Art Thou? Which five things stood out and for what reasons? Let’s take a closer look…

  1. Oh Hooty

Oh what naïve optimism poor Hooty has. When him, Luz and King arrived back from their trip, there were now wanted posters for each of them put up by the emperor’s coven. Hooty bless him thought they had put up pretty posters of them because everyone had missed them so much. Unfortunately not Hooty.

2. Should She Say?

Initially Eda had no intention of telling Luz that she had no plan to go against Belos. I get that she didn’t want to upset Luz but she was definitely leading her to believe that there was actually a plan. It was one of those times where she technically wasn’t lying but she was not being straightforward with the truth. It led to a very emotional scene later where Eda openly admitted that her plan was to keep Luz and King safe and was fully prepared to sacrifice herself to do so.

3. Guard Banter

Something I always have a soft spot for in movies and tv shows is the light-hearted banter that the villain’s guards and henchmen have with one another. It makes them more human and relatable, highlighting how they are just there as a job rather than being fully invested in their leader’s cause. We saw one guard moaning about having to work a double shift and couldn’t wait until the day after the day of unity so he can have a rest.

4. Darius

Finding out that Darius is actually a good guy willing to fight against the Emperor made me way too happy. Now I can properly root for him!

5. Steve

The whole subplot with King and Steve didn’t really work; it just felt too random. Why would King trust this guy. He came out of nowhere and it just all felt rushed and out of nowhere. The stuff with Lilith treating King differently that led into the Steve stuff was rather clunky too. There would have been much better ways to have King deal with his new found history than this.