After Sony’s Spider-Verse series, Arcane might just make it onto my all-time favorites list.
I absolutely loved Arcane Season 1 last year, and now I’m finally watching Season 2.
We need more shows like this.
And I’m definitely going to get closer to stories like these!




Warning: Major spoilers for Arcane Season 2 ahead.
Haven’t watched it yet? It’s best to leave now!
📝 S2E1 Summery
Season 2 picks up right after Jinx attacks the Piltover council with Fishbones at the end of Season 1. Her assault results in the death of several council members, including Caitlyn’s mother, throwing the city into chaos.




A memorial is held for the victims, but even that moment of mourning is shattered when forces from Zaun launch a second attack—proving that nowhere in Piltover is truly safe anymore.




As Piltover falls into a critical state, Noxus steps in—suggesting they’ll have an even greater impact in Season 2.
This episode ends with a shift in Jayce’s values, uncertainty about Viktor’s fate, and several clues hinting at what’s to come.




Review ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️
16:39 – Caitlyn sees Jinx — the one who killed her mother — inside a hallucination. The direction of how the hallucination begins and ends makes it all the more striking.








20:52 – Vi’s acting as she wakes up a drunken Loris is spot on, and Loris’s acting—pretending not to hear Vi and Nolen’s conversation—is just as impressive. 👍



21:00 — the highlight of Episode 1, running nonstop for about 10 minutes (intense, really intense).
The scene where Zaunites launch a sudden attack during a memorial for the Piltover council members.
Not only is the way tension is built impressive, but the choice to have the attack feel like an occupation rather than a stealthy sniper shot or bomb blast perfectly drives home the message that nowhere in Piltover is truly safe anymore.
The way each character appears and the direction of the scene are absolutely overwhelming.
Watching this sequence, I felt there wasn’t a single shot to waste.
It’s a scene worth watching repeatedly, and I tried to capture every detail my eyes could catch.


and this scene subconsciously reassures the audience that the space for the memorial speech is safe.


The audience instinctively follows her gaze, and in that space, Mel emerges—ready to become the new focal point of the shot.
This is a brilliant technique that changes the shot’s protagonist without cutting.



all based on strong acting choices, enriching the overall scene.










Rack focus is definitely worth diving into sometime 📝







Regardless of their actual height, Kiramman is shown last, followed by Caitlyn — enabling a smoother transition between shots.

the shot transitions from a medium shot, to a close-up, and finally to a wide shot.
Though the master shot remains consistent, the varied shot distances prevent visual monotony and keep the scene engaging.


subtle shifts in tone begin to surface —
cracking the calm atmosphere that once prevailed.


that suspicion for the audience crystallizes into certainty.

That subtle choice fits the pacing and tone of the scene perfectly.
Had it been dropped with a thud, it might have disrupted the tension built up so far, slightly breaking the immersion.

It feels more engaging thanks to the direction showing Mel and Jayce simultaneously.
The shots cut back and forth to reveal what’s happening on both sides, but it never feels jarring to the eyes.
They must have spent a lot of time perfecting this—or maybe they’re just geniuses, ㅎㅎ 😁









Did they actually create separate shots for each, or did they film one single turn and just adjust the camera settings in post to edit it that way? 🤔
Maybe I should ask Fortiche about this!
[A] <=> [B] Contrasting direction.


In live-action films, it’s common to use a trick where the same punch is shown hitting Mel from both the left and right shots—a kind of visual sleight of hand.
However, in this case, the punching motion is shown clearly and then continued seamlessly in the following shot.
This is the classic way to handle it, and since the scene transitions into slow motion, using the sleight-of-hand technique wouldn’t really fit the direction here.









Another insane entrance scene.















Though a wide shot from afar could capture Vi’s full exertion pose, close-ups of her expression and clenched hand reduce workload while effectively conveying the intended emotion.
[A] <=> [B] Contrasting direction.


Unlike the scene with A hitting from the podium, this sequence uses shot changes to show every hit — basically, the villain gets hit twice, right?
This kind of visual trick works perfectly for fast-paced scenes.







At the climax, everything is captured tighter — filling the frame completely.








It’s that thrilling feeling you get from perfectly timed offsets 🤩


The presence of the spear immediately signals that it’s Noxus.



35:10 Kiramman begins to move more assertively, while Ambessa’s expression seems to say, “You’re one of my kind.”


36:00 With nowhere left to retreat, Jayce breaks his promise to Viktor and creates the weapon.
While each enforcer’s entrance is impressive, the scene showing Vi stepping in wearing the enforcer’s badge is especially clever and stylish.









The attention to detail here is incredible. 👍
37:00 Even the foreshadowing is top-tier—Episode 1 really doesn’t miss.


I just realized that Jinx only appeared as a hallucination… What. A. Shock
<If you want the korean version>
