Riley gets his turn in the spotlight and Chase continues to be the hot shot!

Check our newest Power Rangers Dino Charge review!

Both of these series took the surface elements ofPR,but never captured the feeling of old schoolPower Rangers.

It was all so empty.

This weeksDino Chargehowever was full of life.

Riley comes into direct conflict with Chase over their styles of training and dealing with problems.

They butt heads and arent even under the control of a spell!

He sends the monster to Earth to give the Rangers some massive toothaches.

Is it not possible two different paths can lead to the same destination?

Chase skateboards throughout the city and following his instincts finds the monster.

He takes on the monster alone and gets a mouth full of cavities for his trouble.

Which of course, they do with aSamuraiworthy pun, Aint that the tooth!

This episode proves just what the last four years have lacked.

That you’re free to say, Go Go Power Rangers.

you’re able to talk about teamwork.

you’re free to have remixes of theMMPRtheme.

you could have wacky food gags.

But those are just surface elements.

It was just a solid episode with a good lesson that tied into the action.

However, it also went farther thanMMPRusually did, with some genuine character conflict that builds on previous episodes.

Its likeDino Thunderin that way, and thats my favorite season, so its hitting all the right buttons.

Keep this up,Dino Charge.

Youre on your way to being one of the best seasons ofPower Rangers.

Stray Thoughts:

-Oh god, I love these extended villain scenes were getting every episode.

-Man, Chase has gotten some focus in nearly every episode.

Even in others focus episodes he still plays a big role.

-I hope Kendall is right about the Gold Energem.

Setting up future plots!

-Did Riley and Chase fist pump across a split screen?

Only in Power Rangers.

Rating:

5 out of 5