One MCU backstory point I caught was Will asking if SHIELD was a real thing from his 2001 reference date.
Which never made any sense, because the Triskelion was already under construction in 1989. What, did the public just think it was the new post office?
One little grip I had, and I consider this s knit pic, was that Simmons' PTSD seemed a bit overdone considering what she actually went through.
Others have said this already, but I think it bears repeating that what Simmons went through was extraordinarily traumatic even if she managed to find some equilibrium on Planet Hell. Comparing this to people who live in a war zone is fairly accurate -- there may be an equilibrium, but you're living in constant fear of imminent death. Finding some comfort from a relationship does not negate this trauma.
So, she gave it up that fast? Can't recall the hours when she met Will, but seems like things awfully fast once the message in a bottle trick failed. Seemed a bit out of character, but perhaps we don't really know this girl.
For the record, here is a brief timeline (taken from
the MCU Wiki) of "4,722 Hours"'s key emotional moments:
3.29 Days: Jemma realizes she needs to find food and water to survive
4.13 Days: Jemma is climbing the ridge and suffers the first sandstorm; two hours later, she discovers the pond and has her first drink of water on Planet Hell. A few hours later, she is attacked by the tentacle creature; after holding the severed limb of the creature for two hours, she gives in to hunger and eats it.
20.5 Days: Jemma grows hungry enough that she decides to hunt the tentacle creature; this is apparently her first full meal since arriving
31.33 Days: Jemma falls into Will's trap. Nine hours later, Jemma is awake and encounters Will for the first time.
32.63 Days: Will realizes Jemma is real.
34.33 Days: Jemma introduces herself to Will.
35.05 Days: Jemma escapes from captivity, but is then rescued by Will from the Monster. Total time spent in captivity by Will: 4 days.
62.08 Days (2 Months): Jemma shows Will the video of Fitz.
125.42 (4.18 Months): Jemma goes to the "No-Fly Zone" and encounters the Monster. She observes the stars and develops a hypothesis for how to predict the next portal opening.
148.96 Days (4.96 Months): Jemma and Will are unable to reach the portal due to the presence of a previously-nonexistent canyon, and their attempt to send a "message in a bottle" fails. Jemma loses hope of ever leaving Planet Hell; Will comforts her and the two become intimate.
196.66 Days (6.55 Months): Jemma and Will plan to see the only sunrise on Planet Hell for 18 years. Two hours later, Jemma is rescued by Fitz.
So, Jemma spent six and a half months on an alien planet, suffering from constant malnutrition, living in constant fear of death. She only became intimate with Will after losing all hope that there was any way off of Planet Hell (and, by inference, of being with Fitz again), and this did not happen until she had been stranded for damn near 5 months. She was intimate with Will for 47.7 days, or about a month and a half, after having known him for almost 4 months beforehand.
So, in other words, Jemma displayed extraordinary endurance and resilience in a deadly alien environment, and was very reluctant to begin a relationship with Will while she still held out any hope of returning home.
But, considering the comments that were made about a 'small group' that convinced NASA the monolith was the affordable future of space travel, I rather suspect that the modern equivalent of those groups actually was responsible for Will's mission in the first place, which certainly makes you wonder why they're so intent on making human sacrifices to this monster.
I did find myself wondering if this "small group" might not have been Hydra.
Eh, I thought this was the worst episode of AoS since early season 1. A 45 minute episode with 15 minutes of plot stretched along the entire runtime, and fairly mediocre plot at that.
I didn't think it was that bad, but I was expecting there to be a twist or maybe some kind of explanation in the last 10 minutes or so... instead there wasn't. It was like, they kiss, which everyone saw coming 50 lightyears away, then she gets rescued leaving him behind (which we already knew,) the end.
I felt like it needed a bit more oomf
I have the same reaction that I had to Sicario, okay but without moving the story arc I have no wish to watch a second time as I have most episodes after The Winter Soldier. After The Martian Simmons survival story was just okay but nothing special.
You're looking at it the wrong way. "4,722 Hours" isn't about how Jemma survived, per se. The plot is not the story. "4,722 Hours" is about how Jemma Simmons is, at her core: Her history, how she constructs her self-identity, and about her relationship with Fitz as seen through her eyes. The story isn't "How did Jemma survive?," the story is, "How does Jemma construct herself and her relationships?"
I do think it was contrived that they paired up - maybe if it'd been clear Simmons had given up hope of rescue in some way.
... there literally was a scene with her saying to Will, "You're right. There is no hope on this planet." I don't what more they could have done to establish that she had given up hope.
And I don't think it was contrived. I mean, realistically, if you have two heterosexual people of compatible age stranded together for more than half a year, then it's almost inevitable that they will develop feelings for each other and become intimate. Human beings need to love and relationships. It's part of our psychology.
It's never been apparent, though, that she felt the same way about Fitz as he did about her I suppose.
She was wasting battery power on her phone just to pull up a picture of Fitz she could say goodnight to. She was addressing all of her notes to Fitz. She was fantasizing about what Fitz would do at the restaurant. Will told her multiple times that "Fitz" was her favorite word and that he seemed like more than a best friend to him. Jemma never became intimate with him until she concluded that she was never going to see home -- and therefore Fitz -- again, and she immediately assumed it was Fitz and ran to him when she saw the flare.
And, of course, last season, she freaked out after seeing that Hunter almost lost Bobbi and immediately ran to Fitz before telling him that maybe there was something to talk about with regards to him revealing he was in love with her.
They have made it very clear that Jemma has feelings for Fitz, too.
Still, if time had been running faster on the other side of the portal and something like 5 years had gone by I would have bought it more. That'd be long enough to pair them up somewhat naturally and short enough that they wouldn't have to age the actress or have her scientific skills degrade through lack of use.
Five years without practice would be a very serious degredation in skills.
Further, I think you are underestimating how the stress of constant trauma can drive people together.
^When you have only one person and some murderous kelp for company, a desolate landscape and no sun, 6 months may as well be five years.
Yep!
Also keep in mind that Simmons was on her own for the first month or so and didn't become intimate until something like four and a half month later when she was at a particularly low point and needed someone.
Well, I think the argument is - if it were Fitz, would he have 'needed someone'?
Anyone trying to survive on Planet Hell would have needed someone. Human beings need love.
The grand arc in that it is all connected is what moves the MCU as a whole forward. Any individual episode or movie is only as strong as it relates to the franchise as a whole.
No. Works of art are not justified by other works of art; they are justified by themselves.
Iron Man is not a good movie because of a short scene teasing the idea of the Avengers; it is a good movie because of the quality of the story and acting.
Iron Man 2 does an awful lot to tie into other aspects of the Marvel Cinematic Universe, but it's still thoroughly mediocre.
"4,722 Hours" is a great episode because it brings us on an emotional journey with Jemma and helps us understand what kind of character she is outside of her normal relationships. As far as I'm concerned, the season's plot arcs can go fuck themselves if they get in the way of an episode like this.
^^ Say what?
Why are you determined that Gemma did something wrong? She was trapped with this guy, possibly forever, and stressed out to the max. They were both nice people and they bonded, ultimately having sex. There's nothing more normal than that.
Had it been the sex, I would have totally got it. But it seemed that, in a relative short time, she had not only gotten over Fitz, but fell had over heals in love this Will.
Again, Jemma knew Will for almost four months before becoming intimate with him. She did this only after she had lost all hope of escaping Planet Hell. And she immediately thought (and ran to) Fitz when she saw the flare -- so she obviously was not over Fitz.
Was she in love with Will, too? Probably. Would that love survive back on Earth? We don't know. The human heart can love multiple people, but some relationships can only work in some circumstances.
But Jemma took a very long time to fall for Will, and she never lost her love for Fitz in the process.
I dunno.... I felt slightly disappointed that the whole big reason for her to go back is some guy she met.
Right, because it's not like she'd want to rescue an innocent man or something.
Although on second thought, if it were just about rescuing someone in need, why would she have kept quiet about it? Why not immediately tell the others that there was still someone back there? So maybe she feels guilty about her tryst with him, which would indicate she still has feelings for Fitz.
And for that matter, she may feel as though she abandoned Will... and on some level, she may feel as though she abandoned Will
for Fitz. And, of course, she heard a gunshot but does not know if Will survived. She's probably got a lot of contradictory emotions going on, and it probably took her some time to process anything.
Remember how Will thought that she was imaginary in the beginning, maybe Jemma thought that he was imaginary in the end?
Also a possibility!
Although if Jemma was mentally fine right up till the point she came back,
Neither of them were "mentally fine" even before they saw the flare.
what the #### was so traumatising about coming home?
Are you seriously asking what was traumatizing about being separated from the man she had come to love, who told her to save herself, after encountering the Monster they had been fearing for months, and then hearing a gunshot and not knowing if he had survived or possibly even killed himself? And all of this happening because you're running to a portal and trying to get rescued by the man you had loved before him?
'Cos that's a pretty traumatic experience, right there. On top of the constant trauma of living in an environment where you can only barely survive and are always in fear of attack from an unnamed monster.
How we found her in the crumbs of the monolith, she seemed to have been barking for weeks and mostly shut down, which is a narrative her story did not reflect.
There was no indication that she had been "barking for weeks and mostly shut down." She shut down when she returned to Earth.
Yes, if she was back to a position of rest and out of the shit, I would agree, but Will was still lost back there on Kree Space... "Oh God, you didn't save Will, we have to go back for Will!"
It was still all hands on deck because the trauma was still ongoing until Will will have been saved.
Unless "I've lost Will" is what broke her?
Which would seem to suggest "love" more than friendship.
I'm wondering if she's lying about what happened, if last week was just a cock and bull story, or if that's not Jemma?
I see the problem here. You're trying to ascribe rational logic to someone who's been emotionally and physically traumatised.
Yes! Thank you!
It's pretty unrealistic to expect someone suffering from sensory disorientation, malnutrition and PTSD to suddenly turn on a dime, psychologically speaking. Part of her clearly doesn't want to go anywhere near the place again, part of her probably hates the other part for being so selfish and part of her brain has probably just gone "NOPE!" in general and closed up shop until the universe starts making sense again.
Also, in fairness it's worth remembering that she didn't know for sure if Will even survived. Last she saw, he was going to try and slow down the dust storm monster known for fostering suicidal madness, mass graves and astronaut cosplay. It's fair to say that it took her a while to even begin to process what happened, let alone assemble a coherent enough thought on how to start to deal with what happen and how to deal with Fitz.
This.
Seriously though, if they do a "Simmons is impregnated with a half-skrull space baby" story I shall be most displeased.
This does raise the question of how Jemma would have avoided becoming pregnant if she spent a month and a half with Will after being away from any birth control medication for four months. Unless she has an IUD, in which case I suppose birth control would not be an issue.
(Alternately, it is also possible that Will and Jemma deliberately avoided vaginal intercourse in order to avoid the risk of pregnancy. They were always short on food; I imagine there really wasn't enough to raise a child.)
And I've always thought Fitz is like a brother to Simmons, in her mind. She loves him, but like a brother. He is so deep in the friend zone, no amount of gestures will find him out of it.
I think that this interpretation requires that you ignore a great deal of of Season Two, particularly from "S.O.S., Part II."
You know, at first, when they revealed the face of that gray-haired guy Strucker was talking to and treated it like some big surprise revelation (with a delayed reveal of his face accompanied by a dramatic music sting), I had no idea who it was. Then I remembered seeing Powers Boothe's name in the credits, which reminded me of a recent news item about Boothe reprising his role as a member of the World Security Council from The Avengers. So I guess we're supposed to be surprised that the Council had a high-ranking HYDRA infiltrator on it, but that's not too great a surprise, given that Robert Redford was one too.
I was more surprised that Boothe's character was still at large and apparently still rich and powerful. One would have thought that a Hydra infiltrator on the WSC would have been exposed during the uprising. But maybe Boothe's character had been booted from the WSC after order the nuclear strike on Manhattan? That might explain how he avoided being exposed as Hydra.
Fitz is a god-damned super-hero. You know how various creators will say stuff like, "Steve Rogers was Captain America before the serum. The serum just gave him muscles."? That's how I see Fitz. Against all odds, he's become the bravest, noblest, most loyal and heroic character on the show. I'd like to see Fitz try and lift Mjolnir.
He also tortured a prisoner, nearly to death. And may have deliberately plotted to pre-emptively kill half a dozen men in order to find the Hebrew manuscript he needed to rescue Jemma.
I think Fitz is a bit more psychologically complex than Steve Rogers. Steve is an aspirational figure -- he's the guy we would want to be if we could. Fitz is a bit closer to reality.