Black Lightning
Episode six : "Three Sevens: The Book of Thunder"
Kahlil's atheistic rant may be his immaturity at work (along with the influence of Tobias), who certainly mocks faith and/or mistakenly blames it for not getting what he wants in life. I'm guessing he will be the test subject of whatever Gambi-connected treatment/experiments Jefferson's father investigated long ago, leading him to either seek revenge on Jennifer, or use her to lure BL into a trap. Its easy to imagine an enhanced Kahlil taking on BL and Thunder (or defeating both) somewhere near the season finale.
Thunder's costume is awful. In today's world of cosplayers who create costumes just as good as screen-used work. She should go online and ask for pointers.
GRADE: B+
i give it an A...but i am biased, being a dad of 2 daughters, so I really connect with Jefferson the dad, whohad some good scenes in that role. I might have to have a talk soon with my oldest daughter as Jefferson did with Jennifer.
^ Personally, I rather like how garishly comic-booky Anissa's costume is, especially for a young hero just starting out. Beats the hell out of the drab Bryan Singer X-Men-style suits the LSH members were saddled with on Supergirl.
Black Lightning started off with a fairly measured pace to its storytelling, but the last couple of episodes have really been jam-packed. Not a complaint, just an observation -- the show continues to be smart and involving at any speed. And from the looks of the preview, next week promises to be especially exciting.
Yes, the pacing is great...but some great moving of the story.
Oh..and regarding the costume... i thought they posted a different costume before the series came out...so this might be a phase, with some jokes I am sure.
TVline.com posted this photo
i still think the wig is a
really good idea, and wish the new Black Canary would use it.
Well. I was just thinking that I hoped the secrets between Anissa and her parents wouldn't last much longer, since it's frustrating when characters keep secrets and never get to have real conversations about certain things. And I certainly got what I wished for tonight. Though I have mixed feelings about the Black Lightning-Thunder throwdown. On the one hand, it was pretty cool to see how well Anissa held her own, and the choreography was pretty effective. On the other hand, it's a bit implausible that Jefferson didn't recognize his own daughter's features. Lynn obviously did, and it's not like that face paint was much of a disguise. Maybe they should've set up the scene so that the office's lights went out before BL arrived.
Then again, I've been having a little trouble recognizing Anissa from scene to scene myself. For some reason, I was having a hard time getting used to the actress's face. I've never been great with faces, and sometimes it takes me a while to learn someone's face well enough to recognize them. I realized today that I think the reason I've had trouble with Anissa is that she changes her hairstyle so often, and changing hairstyles can throw off my limited facial-recognition abilities. So it's taken me a while, but I think I'm finally getting the hang of it with her. Still, her own father should be used to all her looks by now.
Maybe that reason is light racism?

Lots of other cues to help you know its Anissa...
Anyway, now everyone but Jennifer knows about Anissa, and Anissa knows about her father. I kind of hope they all sit down as a family and bring Jennifer into the loop too, rather than finding some contrived excuse to keep lying to her.
I'm really tired of the cliche of heroes having to be talked down from killing for revenge. Just once I'd like to see a story where the hero refuses even to consider killing the murderer of their parents/spouse/whatever because that would mean becoming like them, or because it would betray their loved ones' memory. But they handled it pretty well here.
I like it that Thunder's public debut was trashing a Confederate memorial. As soon as Anissa was arrested for the protest, I knew she'd be coming back in costume later on, though I didn't expect it to be so public. I'm also surprised that their fictionalized version of the white-supremacist counter-protest was so close to reality. This show doesn't pull its punches with the social commentary.
I take it this is a Southern city, a pseudo-Atlanta? (Though one without southern accents).
I don't mind a little garishness in principle, but this costume is pretty ugly. Especially the way it seems to have cartoon breasts and decolletage drawn onto the front. It's very much an adult Halloween costume sort of thing rather than a proper superhero costume. I hope Gambi gets to work on her upgrade pretty soon.[/QUOTE]
...yet one would think that someone going public as a woman with superpowers would use something more utilitarian than something that looks like a bad dance skin from 1982.
Well, the season is moving toward its mid point, so the conflicts all grow at this point.
...and considering how next to no one ever recognizes faces or voices behind flimsy disguises in superhero fiction, BL's reaction was justified. Some viewers need to remember that in this series' universe, BL is the only superhero game in town. There's no casual references to "that man in Metropolis" or "that man in Gotham". Jefferson thinks he's the only one, and with The 100/Tobias/Green Light trouble going on, there's no questioning Jefferson's actions.
That's not true... they made a VERY vague reference to "other" superpowered beings...
And Freeland just might be a place where superheroes never come, so they aren't at the forefront of interacting with them, so it seems like far off in the distance and not affecting day to day life. I was in Door COunty Wisconsin with 9/11 hit... the thing is, most people get there purely by car, so all the airlines stuff i am sure did not affect them much.
Or more importantly...all the stuff that happens in poorer urban communities doesn't affect day-to-day life in suburbia, so there is little interaction between the two.
A note about crossovers: Before the series debut, some wondered if Black Lightning was set in the same universe as the other CW/DC shows, or if crossovers were possible, but the general tone, level of performances and direction of the series makes BL so different than the others, that any sort of crossover would seem forced, as they are speaking different ideological and creative languages. BL--if WB/DC allow it--can use other DC characters down the line, in the event the showrunners want to add more superheroics, but any attempt to add any other Berlanti series to BL would be as unnatural and jarring as trying to merge the Transformers with the film Coming Home.
i think you overblow the differences... the difference between, say Black Lightning and FLash would be no different than the range Black Panther and Guardians of the Galaxy give us...and both will be in Avengers in May.
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I really look forward to Iris meeting with Lynn and getting mentored by her in the spousal support area...
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Random thought -- just noticed that Garfield's mascot is a Panther...wonder if that was deliberate?
Also, i was wondering if someone can help me out with the timeline.. i am a little confused as to Tobias Whale...so he killed Jeffrson's dad when Jefferson was a boy... but he later became a city councilman in addition to his crime business?
And Jefferson went to college and partcipated in the Olympics... so started his superhero career about 20 years ago? Had about a 10 year career? Off for 9 years? Trying to piece it together...as Anissa is 20 something...(23, if Jennifer is 16?)
One last thought... Black Lightning, like Black Panther, is doing a good job with strong black women. Lynn in particular.. seems like she knew what ANissa was trying to tell her over the phone...if she could have, she would have stopped the fight, knowing why.