Part 23: Episode 2, Trial: Pulling Threads
Part 23: Episode 2, Trial: Pulling Threads
There are a few different threads to pull at here. However, only one piece of evidence was directly referenced in the testimony...

Music: Questioning - Moderato







Is that really an attack? Is spiky hair an insult? Is his hair really all that spiky?














Now that we've given her all these details, she's happy to slip them into her testimony.






Points to the judge for asking the key question here.



Music: Silence

Indeed. Everyone else has been calling the murder weapon a statue again. So how does Miss May know that it's a clock?


I do like how the music goes quiet here to get the player's attention. We're brought back to the same line of testimony, another hint that we should present a contradiction here. But first let's grab the "start over" dialogue.
Music: Questioning - Moderato




So is this piece of evidence a statue, or a clock?

Music: Silence

Music: Objection!








I'm surprised that statement didn't get an objection, but it gets the crowd buzzing again.






Goes to credibility, Your Honor. If the witness is lying about the murder weapon, she could be lying about who she saw commit the murder!


Your face is trivial!

What the shit kind of kangaroo court is this? Come on.

Luckily Phoenix grabs this one on his own.


Especially when the prosecutor is fabricating evidence! Don't think I've forgotten that one, Edgeworth!






I mean, we came all the way here, put on these fancy suits and robes, we might as well try to carry out some justice.


You're doing great, keep it up!




Are you asking me or telling me?







Were the windows even open? I thought the office windows were closed.

Not likely! This thread is the only one we have to pull on!




It's been awhile since the prologue, though we got a reminder along the way. There's no way she could have heard the clock! It wasn't working!

Triumph pose! Guess we got that one right.
quote:
Technically both options are correct; you can't hear a clock that isn't working, after all. Let's see what the first one gives us.
You were at the hotel!
There's no way you could have heard a clock go off in the building next door!
You have proof that she could not?
Uh...
Amateurs, amateurs. Listen to me, Mr. Wright.
In the courtroom, proof is everything. Without it, you have nothing. You ARE nothing.
Then I would like to propose a test to see if she really could have heard...
The prosecution denies your request!
Wh-what!? On what grounds?
This is a trivial matter with no direct bearing on the case at hand!
Indeed. Objection sustained.
(Damn! Time to switch directions... quick!)
Ready to proceed, Mr. Wright?
Interesting scene, but I wasn't interested in letting Edgeworth showboat on us again. Anyway, from there we're brought back up to the head shake and get the original prompt again. No penalty, either!

We get another choice here. There's a way to look up the answer if you don't remember, but I'll get to that later. The clock was hollowed out to hold some evidence - it's empty!


We get an immediate crowd reaction from that revelation.

It takes three gavel strikes to quiet everyone down this time.






quote:
The clock is broken! More than just broken, really, but let's see what this option gives us.
I-I think it's broken! That clock's busted!
You "think"?
J-just look at it! Your Honor, please examine the clock!
Hmm...
Oh!
See anything interesting, Your Honor?
Well, I'm not sure I would call this "broken," but I doubt it could ring...!
quote:
The batteries are not present at all; that kind of counts as them being dead?
The batteries in that clock should be dead!
"Should be," Mr. Wright?
Your Honor, if you would inspect the clock...!
Hmm... very well.
...
Oh!
Well, Your Honor? Are they...?
This clock has graver problems than dead batteries!
Music: Silence









I wouldn't normally jam three lines of dialogue into one animation, but this shot was a good oppportunity to show off two things: The facial tick that Miss May has on this sprite, and the varying speed at which dialogue is revealed in the text boxes at times.






Just like in the first episode, we have one more thing to prove with this statue/clock.

Music: Objection!

Uh-oh, Edgeworth has the fancy objection music now.



There's a legitimate objection here. The clock wasn't actually empty; it had some evidence stuffed in it, that the killer removed. So in an alternate universe where Maya is guilty, she could have removed the clockwork after the murder. Of course, no clockwork was found on her or in the office, so even if that scenario were true, where did the clockwork go?









We do?


Technically, that line of dialogue is optional and we didn't see it in this run, but go on.

Music: Silence



Phoenix was doing so well on his own, I was wondering when we'd have to provide some input again. There are still several items here we haven't used yet, but only one right answer for this prompt. Which one is it?