CBR has posted the titles for all thirteen episodes, which are all taken from songs by Gang Starr.
I'm not familiar with Gang Starr and I'm not clear on what a couple of the titles mean.
What do DWYCK and You Know My Steez mean?
CBR has posted the titles for all thirteen episodes, which are all taken from songs by Gang Starr.
I'm not familiar with Gang Starr and I'm not clear on what a couple of the titles mean.
What do DWYCK and You Know My Steez mean?
I like these Netflix shows, but I really don't see the point of saying they're in the MCU. You may as well just say Annie Hall or the Blair Witch or Fawlty Towers or Hannah Montana take place in the MCU too. They never reference each other but who cares
Based on one of the spoiler free reviews, I'm just shocked that
It has a lot of scenes filmed in the daylight. Daredevil and Jessica Jones looked like they were filmed by mole people when it comes to how much both shows hate the light and only used it when basically forced to by the story, so having a character who isn't allergic to sunlight is a welcome change.
Despite that, I doubt I'll watch any of it. Marvel's Netflix shows in general act more like the DCEU (being literally and figuratively dark) and Fox's X-Men (very obviously ashamed of the comic book source material) combined then they do the MCU (without the entertaining heroes and stories of most of the X-Men movies). If I want dull and grim superheroes I'll watch a DC movie, and if I want an entertaining movie that really wishes it wasn't a superhero movie I'll rewatch an X-Men movie. The Nolan-esque "grounded" hero approach that the Marvel Netflix shows take has just worn me out. I hated it when he did it, and they took his approach and somehow did it worse. Maybe someday the Marvel movie people will get control of the Netflix shows and drag them out of the dark pit of Nolan Grimness they're stuck in. Until then, I'll stick with the real MCU, the one that doesn't come off as written by people who hate comics and love grim, depressing stories.
Marvel's Netflix shows aren't the only "dark and grim" material it has released. I'm watching "Captain America: The Winter Soldier", one of the grimmest stories in the MCU. In fact, the Captain America movies tend to end on a less than happy note.
The fact that JJ and DD live in a world where there are 'supers' *is* referenced though. They frequently mention the alien attack on NY (it's basically the '9/11' of the Marvel timeline), JJ gets screwed over by a couple that hates supers, etc.I like these Netflix shows, but I really don't see the point of saying they're in the MCU. You may as well just say Annie Hall or the Blair Witch or Fawlty Towers or Hannah Montana take place in the MCU too. They never reference each other but who cares
So do any of the comics versions of the characters in the series other than Luke have powers?
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