Luna and Celestia take a sister vacation while Twilight and her friends struggle to cover the princesses' many royal duties.Luna and Celestia take a sister vacation while Twilight and her friends struggle to cover the princesses' many royal duties.Luna and Celestia take a sister vacation while Twilight and her friends struggle to cover the princesses' many royal duties.
Tabitha St. Germain
- Princess Luna
- (voice)
- …
Tara Strong
- Twilight Sparkle
- (voice)
Trevor Devall
- Fancy Pants
- (voice)
Ashleigh Ball
- Applejack
- (voice)
- …
Cathy Weseluck
- Spike
- (voice)
- …
Andrea Libman
- Pinkie Pie
- (voice)
- …
Aloma Steele
- Princess Luna
- (singing voice)
- Directors
- Writers
- Lauren Faust
- Gail Simone
- Bonnie Zacherle(uncredited)
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaCapper, one of the characters from the movie, has a 2-second silent cameo during Celestia and Luna's musical number, where he leans back against a tree.
- ConnectionsReferences My Little Pony: The Movie (2017)
- SoundtracksLotta Little Things
Music by Daniel Ingram
Lyrics by Gail Simone and Nicole Dubuc
Performed by Nicole Oliver and Aloma Steele
Featured review
Radiant dawn with no signs of darkness
Season 9's standard when it came to the previous episodes was rather uneven, with the only outstanding (meaning highest possible ratings awarded) outings being "Sparkle's Seven" and "Student Counsel" and not many were that unique. There were not to me any misfires from the previous episodes, certainly not to the extent of the worst of Seasons 6 and 8 which were real low points, and none wasted as much great potential which was a relief.
Really loved the concept for "Between Dark and Dawn", though with it containing two subplots in structure rather than being one big story there was the danger of feeling like two episodes rolled into one and being disjointed. Luckily that was not the case, and "Between Dark and Dawn" turned out to be for me one of the best episodes easily of Season 9 and a sign that 'My Little Pony: Friendship is Magic' had not completely lost it. As one would naturally think if they were disappointed in Season 8, which again from personal view one of the show's weakest.
"Between Dark and Dawn" is one of those episodes where everything about it works a dream. Both subplots work brilliantly individually and tie seamlessly together, there isn't much much of a two stories in one feel so there isn't a disjointed-ness that there easily could have been. Twilight's story's biggest strengths are Twilight being relatable and the episode portraying her delegating responsibility responsible in a way that never breaks her out of character, the sincere moral, the situation while not novel being easy to identify with and the genuinely hilarious and clever humour (including some fourth wall breaking).
Celestia and Luna shine like the brightest of stars in their subplot, which not only like "A Royal Problem" addresses the constant criticism of them being underused and not doing enough it also lampoons it. Doing so with equally hilarious humour and showing that the two characters have great comic timing as well as being the voices of reason and authority figures that they were in their other appearances. The callbacks, sight gags, the chemistry between the two, the sight of them being "normal" in comparison and capturing the fun and excitement of going on holiday are done beautifully. Lots of cameos are here and they are entertaining and don't feel pointless. Also beautifully done is the emotional impact, with there being a good deal of genuine heart and touching warmth, especially when delving into their feelings and how much they appreciate each other.
Animation is rich in colour and detail as always as well as showing the increasing polish and ambition that showed as the show progressed. The music fits perfect and has energy and nuance throughout, "Lotta Little Things" is very catchy and meaningful. All the voice actors do a great job, with the nuanced work of Nicole Oliver and Tabitha St Germain standing out.
Overall, outstanding. 10/10.
Really loved the concept for "Between Dark and Dawn", though with it containing two subplots in structure rather than being one big story there was the danger of feeling like two episodes rolled into one and being disjointed. Luckily that was not the case, and "Between Dark and Dawn" turned out to be for me one of the best episodes easily of Season 9 and a sign that 'My Little Pony: Friendship is Magic' had not completely lost it. As one would naturally think if they were disappointed in Season 8, which again from personal view one of the show's weakest.
"Between Dark and Dawn" is one of those episodes where everything about it works a dream. Both subplots work brilliantly individually and tie seamlessly together, there isn't much much of a two stories in one feel so there isn't a disjointed-ness that there easily could have been. Twilight's story's biggest strengths are Twilight being relatable and the episode portraying her delegating responsibility responsible in a way that never breaks her out of character, the sincere moral, the situation while not novel being easy to identify with and the genuinely hilarious and clever humour (including some fourth wall breaking).
Celestia and Luna shine like the brightest of stars in their subplot, which not only like "A Royal Problem" addresses the constant criticism of them being underused and not doing enough it also lampoons it. Doing so with equally hilarious humour and showing that the two characters have great comic timing as well as being the voices of reason and authority figures that they were in their other appearances. The callbacks, sight gags, the chemistry between the two, the sight of them being "normal" in comparison and capturing the fun and excitement of going on holiday are done beautifully. Lots of cameos are here and they are entertaining and don't feel pointless. Also beautifully done is the emotional impact, with there being a good deal of genuine heart and touching warmth, especially when delving into their feelings and how much they appreciate each other.
Animation is rich in colour and detail as always as well as showing the increasing polish and ambition that showed as the show progressed. The music fits perfect and has energy and nuance throughout, "Lotta Little Things" is very catchy and meaningful. All the voice actors do a great job, with the nuanced work of Nicole Oliver and Tabitha St Germain standing out.
Overall, outstanding. 10/10.
helpful•91
- TheLittleSongbird
- Feb 14, 2022
Details
- Runtime22 minutes
- Color
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 1080i (HDTV)
- 480i (SDTV)
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