Tag: Marvel (Netflix)

  • Marvel’s ‘The Defenders’ reveals Comic-Con trailer, ‘Iron Fist’ Season 2

    Marvel’s ‘The Defenders’ reveals Comic-Con trailer, ‘Iron Fist’ Season 2

    Netflix and Marvel Television hosted a panel at San Diego Comic-Con on Friday US time, unleashing a full trailer for THE DEFENDERS.

    It’s been a long time coming, but the heroes of Marvel (or at least the ones on Netflix are finally coming together. The two seasons of Daredevil, and the single series outings (so far) of Jessica Jones, Luke Cage, and Iron Fist have all found hungry audiences, although the quality hasn’t always been consistent. This trailer, on the other hand, is all killer and no filler. Plus: everything Krysten Ritter does in this trailer is a gift from the television gods.

    The cast will, of course, Charlie Cox (Matt Murdock/Daredevil), Krysten Ritter (Jessica Jones), Mike Colter (Luke Cage), Finn Jones (Danny Rand/Iron Fist), Sigourney Weaver (Alexandra), Elodie Yung (Elektra), Deborah Ann Woll (Karen Page), Jessica Henwick (Colleen Wing).

    Oh, they also announced IRON FIST Season 2, but we can’t say we’re exactly hanging out for that. Especially given that Danny Rand uses his powers more times in this trailer than he did in his entire series.

  • ‘The Defenders’ dated 18 August in new teaser

    ‘The Defenders’ dated 18 August in new teaser

    A ‘leak’ of some security camera footage has revealed the date and a viral site for Netflix’s next Marvel series, THE DEFENDERS. The footage, showing the four characters together for the first time, is time-coded with the release date. The URL in the top left corner, http://23.253.120.81, leads to a fun in-universe site.

    As we know from the previous series – Daredevil, Jessica Jones, Luke Cage and Iron Fist – those particular character confined together in lifts and hallways can only lead to elongated fight sequences, so we can only imagine what will go down when they emerge from Midland Circle Security Elevator B. 

    Enjoy.

  • Review: Marvel’s Iron Fist – Season 1 (Episodes 1 – 6)

    Review: Marvel’s Iron Fist – Season 1 (Episodes 1 – 6)

    MARVEL’S IRON FIST has some of the heaviest lifting to do of all the Netflix series so far. Not coming with the existing popular cache of Daredevil, or the backdoor pilot that Jessica Jones gave Luke Cage, IRON FIST is the final offering from this world before they come together as The Defenders later this year. In the first half of the season, the show often struggles to find the right balance between ‘origin story’ and universe lynchpin. 

    Billionaire heir Danny Rand (Finn Jones) returns to New York after disappearing with his family in a plane crash 15 years earlier. Trying to restore his name and legacy, he must not only prove himself to his former friends but also fight a creeping evil that is seeping into his home. Now equipped with the skills of a kung-fu master, he has the ability to tap into a mystical power that marks him as the Immortal Iron Fist.

    Iron Fist - Colleen Wing

    What makes Danny Rand immediately distinct is that the show begins with the character already able to access his powers, but a series of obstacles prevent him from doing so. The strongest comparison that IRON FIST will have to overcome is that of Batman Begins, with a thematically (and narratively) similar arc to that of Christopher Nolan’s Bruce Wayne. However, unlike the immediacy of Crime Alley tragedy, IRON FIST sets up a false barrier of Rand trying to regain his fortune, going so far as to lock him away in an asylum for two episodes in order to suppress his birthright. 

    Indeed, inner city dojo owner Colleen Wing (Jessica Henwick)  has a far more engaging storyline, one that mirrors Danny’s own. Her steel cage fights show a character caught between money and honour, something Rand is also struggling with, but at least Wing’s storyline maintains the street-level grittiness of the other Marvel series.

    Yet Jones is a likeable enough lead, even if his character is the most removed from the audience to date. There’s a childlike innocence to his outlook in these early episodes, and it’s a refreshing change of pace to the darkened brush that’s tarred Matt Murdock, Jessica Jones and Luke Cage. When we do get martial arts scenes, and hints of Danny’s true potential, they are lightning fast and reminiscent of old-school action. A hotel fight that spills into an elevator, bathed in red light, is almost as intense and exciting as Daredevil’s infamous corridor scene.

    Luke Cage began to show the limitations of the 13 episode format, stretching a story over six times the length of a feature film. IRON FIST suffers from some of the same problems, compounded by a first-season storyline (that is, a billionaire regaining his fortune) that strays from the core of the character. These episodes set up a lot of great potential, including the ultimate villains and the battle for New York that is to come, but you may need the patience of K’un-Lun to get there.

    NB: Netflix graciously provided us with advance copies of the first six episodes of IRON FIST for review purposes. A review of the full season will follow in due course.

    [stextbox id=”grey” bgcolor=”F2F2F2″ mleft=”5″ mright=”5″ image=”null”]2017 | US | Developed by: Scott Buck | Cast: Finn Jones, Jessica Henwick, David Wenham, Jessica Stroup, Tom Pelphrey, Rosario Dawson | Distributor: Netflix | Episodes: 6 (of 13)[/stextbox]

  • ‘Jessica Jones’ Season 2: Every episode will feature female directors

    ‘Jessica Jones’ Season 2: Every episode will feature female directors

    JESSICA JONES executive producer Melissa Rosenberg has revealed at the Transform Hollywood panel that all 13 episodes of second season will be directed by women. Variety reporter Mo Ryan shared the news via social media.

    No details have been released as to which specific directors have been chosen, but this is terrific news for a show that has already been praised for being a Marvel superhero series with a powerful and sex-positive female lead in Krysten Ritter.

    The first season of JESSICA JONES had 9 different directors, 3 of which were female: S.J. Clarkson, Rosemary Rodriguez and Uta Briesewitz. By way of comparison, every director on spin-off series Luke Cage was male, in a series that The Washington Post called “undeniably and unapologetically black and beautiful.”

    Based on the Marvel comic Alias, the series follows the titular Jessica Jones as she tries to rebuild her life as a private investigator, following a traumatic incident in her past. Her increased strength makes her a superhero, but she tends to downplay that side of her persona.

  • Review: Luke Cage – Season 1

    Review: Luke Cage – Season 1

    Marvel won’t be stopped until they’ve dominated all forms of media. From comic book beginnings, Marvel Studios has its sticky fingers in cinematic, televisual and streaming pies, and for the most part is showing the Distinguished Competition how it should be done. LUKE CAGE follows Daredevil and Jessica Jones in bringing the superhero fight to the mean streets of Netflix, and while it might be a slower burner than its predecessors, and lacking a solid hook, it is nevertheless an important entry in the Marvel canon.

    Ex-con Luke Cage (Mike Colter), imbued with super strength and unbreakable skin due to an experiment gone wrong in prison, is back on the streets of Harlem trying to stay low key. Yet as a power play for the area breaks out between mob boss Cornell “Cottonmouth” Stokes (Mahershala Ali) and his politician cousin Mariah Dillard (Alfre Woodard), Cage must decide whether he should step up and use his powers for good, or continue to fly under the radar.

    Many superhero adaptations talk about bringing comic books into the real world, but this might be the closest we have come to seeing that.  LUKE CAGE is an incredibly aware show, not just embracing the rich black cultural history of New York and Harlem, but by actively commenting on social issues that continue to make headlines. “There’s something powerful about seeing a black man who is bulletproof and unafraid,” is uttered aloud, a meme that runs throughout the series, and Marvel and show creator Cheo Hodari Coker (Notorious, TV’s NCIS: Los Angeles) are highly conscious of this. As a manhunt takes place for Cage, the intent of overt scenes of police brutality and “stop and frisk” policies is not lost. All credit should go to the show for taking such a firm stance on the eve of a divisive US election.

    Marvel's Luke Cage - Cottonmouth

    So it’s a shame that almost everything else in LUKE CAGE is played by the book. Wrapped in a facade of faux exploitation films and hip hop noir, the show plods its way through alternating scenes of oppressively repetitive gunfire and posturing. Indeed, by the middle of the series, there’s a overwhelming sense that every conversation is simply a delaying tactic, as if the writing team of a dozen people hadn’t consulted with each other and were collectively told to spread too little narrative over too much digital space. Here we start to see the limitations of the expected Netflix binge structure, one that necessitates a certain length to the series. While there are peaks and troughs of cool and important moments throughout, this is not a story that needed 698 minutes to tell.

    Cage himself is a fascinating hero, one that spends much of the series denying that moniker. Yet he isn’t granted a great deal of dimensionality in this series, somehow even less than his supporting role in Jessica Jones. For the most part, he’s a tank with legs, given a Wolverine-esque backstory and only conflicted as to how much good he is going to do. Far more interesting is the reappearance of ‘Night Nurse’ Claire Temple (Rosario Dawson), a rounded character that admittedly has the benefit of four seasons of cameos to pad out her character, but she is given the best lines and moments. The introduction of detective Misty Knight (Simone Missick) will probably do more for existing Marvel fans than it will for new viewers, as she mostly plays the well-worn trope of the skeptical cop with a heart of gold.

    The show is sometimes unsure as to which villain will pose the real threat, and the four potential choices are all less than menacing as a result. Cottonmouth and Mariah disappear for episodes at a time, while Willis “Diamondback” Stryker (Erik LaRay Harvey) and henchman Hernan “Shades” Alvarez (Theo Rossi) are so ill-defined as to make them perfunctory. Unlike Daredevil‘s Kingpin, or Jessica Jones‘ Purple Man, there’s just no constancy to their sense of threat. As a result of this, the non-ending simply sputters out into an anti-climax, which might keep with the realism credo, but leaves the audience without as satisfying a payoff after half a day’s worth of viewing.

    There’s a strong story behind LUKE CAGE, and his extensive comic book history is referenced in some wonderful Easter eggs throughout the 13 episodes of the show. Yet if this story had been half the length, or even showcased in a feature film, it would have had twice as much impact. Even the final episode, one of the shortest of the series, feels as though it has wrapped up 15 minutes into its running time, and the rest is just spinning its wheels. Maybe that’s the Marvel credo at this point, building up to The Defenders on the small screen and the next Avengers on the bigger screens. Either way, as good as LUKE CAGE is, we know Marvel can (and will) do better.

    [stextbox id=”grey” bgcolor=”F2F2F2″ mleft=”5″ mright=”5″ image=”null”]2016 | US | Creator: Cheo Hodari Coker  | Cast: Mike Colter, Mahershala Ali, Simone Missick, Theo Rossi, Erik LaRay Harvey, Rosario Dawson, Alfre Woodard | Distributor: Netflix | Episodes: 13[/stextbox]

  • Marvel’s ‘Luke Cage’ teaser trailer, ‘Iron Fist’ first look and poster, ‘The Defenders’ teaser and ‘Daredevil’ Season 3

    Marvel’s ‘Luke Cage’ teaser trailer, ‘Iron Fist’ first look and poster, ‘The Defenders’ teaser and ‘Daredevil’ Season 3

    The San Diego Comic-Con has unleashed a massive salvo of trailers and posters for upcoming Marvel/Netflix productions, including first looks at LUKE CAGE, IRON FIST and THE DEFENDERS.

    To the strains of Ol’ Dirty Bastard’s “Shimmy Shimmy Ya,” LUKE CAGE comes tearing onto the screen. Mike Colter, last see in Marvel’s Jessica Jones, leads the cast that also includes Simone Missick as Misty Knight, Frank Whaley as Rafael Scarfe, Mahershala Ali as Cottonmouth, Theo Rossi as Shades, Alfre Woodard as Mariah Dillard, and of course, Rosario Dawson as Claire Temple. It hits the streaming service on 30 September.

    Next up is a trailer for IRON FIST, in which Danny Rand (Finn Jones) fights relentlessly to regain everything he’s lost in Marvel’s Iron Fist, coming soon to Netflix.

    Iron Fist poster

    Then it all comes together in the very brief teaser trailer for THE DEFENDERS, uniting Daredevil, Jessica Jones, Luke Cage, and Iron Fist. Featuring the voice of Scott Glenn as Stick, the visual montage is set to Nirvana’s “Come As You Are.”

    Finally, it was also revealed that an inevitable third season of DAREDEVIL will make its way to the streaming service “soon,” although there is no indication of whether that will be before or after 2017’s THE DEFENDERS.

  • First poster for Netflix series ‘Luke Cage’

    First poster for Netflix series ‘Luke Cage’

    Following the success of Jessica Jones and two seasons of Daredevil, Netflix’s has released the first poster for their next big Marvel series, LUKE CAGE. The poster for the show, due to drop worldwide on the streaming network 30 September 2016, is designed by artist and Marvel Entertainment CCO Joe Quesada.

    “There’s always great pressure with superhero posters,” Quesada told TV Insider. “You’ve got one shot to encapsulate a character with a pose that’s provocative and that you hope will someday be iconic.”

    The series will star Mike Colter as Luke Cage, reprising his role from Jessica Jones. The rest of the announced cast includes Simone Missick as Misty Knight, Frank Whaley as Rafael Scarfe, Mahershala Ali as Cottonmouth, Theo Rossi as Shades, Alfre Woodard as Mariah Dillard, and of course, Rosario Dawson as Claire Temple.

    Luke Cage poster (Netflix)