Lucky them. Or not. They'll have to wait over a month to see the second episode.
For all of its storytelling and fairly well drawn characters, Daredevil almost came unglued due to its exceptionally dour tone and humour imbalance.
...but if the Netflix MU crew are all going to be so dour it could be hard to digest unless the creators begin to develop a lighter side to their characters and their shared universe.
Didn't think you could get darker and more adult than Daredevil.
Didn't think you could get darker and more adult than Daredevil.
Perhaps it was more of a "not-my-type-of-quippy-humour", but barring one episode (flashback to Matt/Foggy college days) I found a great deal of the humour to be forced into the equation rather than flowing naturally. I'm not sure if Foggy's humour was "trying to hard" because the character was trying to hard, or the writers were. It was the kink in the armour for me for the show (along with 8 episodes worth of story deconstructed into 12 or so) and something I hope they take more time to address in series two.For all of its storytelling and fairly well drawn characters, Daredevil almost came unglued due to its exceptionally dour tone and humour imbalance.
...but if the Netflix MU crew are all going to be so dour it could be hard to digest unless the creators begin to develop a lighter side to their characters and their shared universe.
I thought there was plenty of terrific character humor in DD, with Foggy and Karen being particularly funny in their interplay with Matt and with each other. I found it an effective balance that kept it from being too grim.
Didn't think you could get darker and more adult than Daredevil.
That might just mean, we see a nipple or two...
Marvel released a tiny comic based on this TV show today.
"Meh?"
Bendis wrote it and Gaydos drew it.
Nothing much happened.
Yeah, the writing in the comic was actually mature, not just "Rated M For Mature."Didn't think you could get darker and more adult than Daredevil.
Well 'Daredevil' was (literal sense aside) only "dark and adult" in terms of tone (specifically a crime drama) with some occasional unflinchingly brutal graphic violence.
If 'Jessica Jones' sticks close to the source material then it will be much more mature in terms of the subject matter. It's not a matter of blood, violence or the presence of boobies, but the kind of topics it deals with. Can't articulate it very well without getting into spoilers, but let's just say the nasty stuff is much more psychological than physical.
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