Watched Eyes of Wakanda this weekend. On the whole, it was good, but certainly non-essential viewing.
- Episode 1 was very basic from a story/character perspective, though it provided an (likely necessary) introduction to the premise of the show in general. Cool action scenes, and surprisingly graphic for a story that I thought (due to the animated nature) would have leaned a bit more PG.
Given the existence of shows like
Harley Quinn and the animated tie-ins to
The Witcher, I think audiences today probably understand that animation can be just as graphically violent as anything in live-action. I mean, there was a fair amount of violence and death in
What If...?, and some pretty intense horror stuff in their zombie episode, so there's precedent within the MCU.
- Episode 2 had a bit of a cheesy setup, due to its status as an Iliad retelling and all the fake accents (IMHO, unneeded - it's not like the ancient Greeks would have had modern Greek accents).
Well, they wouldn't have been speaking English either, so the accent is an interpretation for the audience's benefit in the same way that the dialogue is. Same for the Wakandan accent, for that matter -- the accent they use surely wouldn't have existed thousands of years ago.
- However, on a character basis, it was far and away the most compelling of the four episodes, with a real downer, gut-punch of an ending which left me wishing that more stories ended this strongly. If only they were a gay couple, it would've been that much better.
I got kind of a vibe that they were, although the standard in Ancient Greece was that the acceptable(ish) kind of same-sex pairing was between an adult man and a moderately younger teen or young adult.
I do find it a bit surprising that they called Achilles's friend Memnon instead of Patroclus, although in the
Iliad, it was Patroclus who died and led to Achilles withdrawing from the war to sulk in his tent.
- Episode 3 is the one getting all the buzz, since we see an (early) Iron Fist. However, it's tonally quite different from the remainder of the show. No one dies, and it's almost comedic at points in its presentation. These sort of stylistic swerves are often appreciated in episodic shows, but in a four-episode miniseries, I'm not sure this was needed.
I feel just the opposite -- with fewer installments, it's even more important for each one to offer something different. I also liked this one because it actually showed us Wakanda, which the others only did briefly. Although we still didn't learn as much about the culture as I'd hoped.
- Episode 4 is pure fanwank, since unlike the others, it directly ties into things we've already seen in the MCU. I think it's fine, but much like the first episode, it really hinges on its action sequences. I do like the character arc that the young prince of Wakanda has to learn over the course of this episode, though with a 30-minute runtime (like all the episodes) there's not much space for him to do so.
I didn't really get what the pivotal event that changed history was until that closing shot tied it into the movie. I'm not quite sure the logic tracks there -- if it hadn't been that artifact, it would've probably been another one. Although maybe the implication is that it was the one vibranium artifact the War Dogs didn't recover, so it had to be that one.
In the end, I'm just left wanting more. I feel like "period piece MCU" is an area that we really haven't had a chance to explore much (outside of some of the What if...? alterworlds) and there was a lot of potential bringing in characters (the Eternals, Agatha, etc.) that could have been alive hundreds of years ago. This just gave us a tiny taste, and because there was barely a thematic link between the four (other than the whole War Dogs bringing back vibranium relics thing) so many more stories could've been ported in.
Good point. I was half-expecting an Eternal to show up in the Troy episode, or one of the Greek gods established as real in the Thor movies.
The show had a good opportunity to explore either MCU history or real-world non-Western history in interesting ways, but it barely touched on the history in favor of focusing on the character stories. Now, I do think stories should have a strong character focus, but it seems a waste to make a historical series if it's not going to focus on history too.