It just flows well as a story like DD1 did. There's a lot of talking but it all serves the narrative. It all drives the story. I find the subject matter more interesting, topical, and important than DD so that's what separates the two in my mind.
It's strange: the criticisms for this show are completely ranging and I think most of them miss the target (half-way pun intended). I've read it's too violent. I've read there's too much exposition and not enough action. I've read it's a gun-nut show. I've read it's too liberal. I've read it's too soon to have a show like this after so many brutal, horrific shootings in the US. My argument is this is a show we desperately need. It's nuanced, it delves into veteran life, it's a gray area. Not everything is an easy answer and this is a topic most people won't touch in the US. The way we treat our veterans is shameful. Hopefully this show helps shed some perspective on that.
I am not finished with it yet, but thus far I agree with this assessment. It lays out the problem of guns in this country the way it truly is where there really isn't a perfect answer. Then you have all the entertainment critics (most of which are liberal in this country), thinking it didn't do enough to take a stand against gun violence. Then the conservative critics probably think it was a show saying we need to get all guns off the street. It essentially explains the current gun situation in the way it actually is instead of taking a vehement stand one way or the other. Heaven forbid a show works in reality and doesn't pontificate.
Heaven forbid there's two sides to an argument. The Twitter era has really hurt society in that respect. Everything is a quick, gut reaction instead of a thorough and thoughtful conversation. I won't ruin the line, but there's a line that a Senator in this show uses that really is an excellent tool for gun law legislation. Besides, I think keying in on the gun debate is a disservice to the tremendous work they do showing veteran lives after service. Bernthal (Punisher actor) talked about how hard he worked with military members to make sure he understood their path so he could represent it.
I’m 7 episodes in, and this is my only problem with the show so far. Too much talking and angst... not enough Punisher being Punisher. That said, it’s my only criticism. This show is pretty fantastic. I put it just behind DD season 1.
Honestly though, after The Defenders, I don't mind a bit of talking. It seemed like Defenders was just meaningless scenes to set up generic punching scenes.
I just think not all exposition is created equal. There's not many moments in this show that I lose interest. Keep going though and things will 100% pay off. The final three-four episodes are my favorite Marvel product maybe ever. For instance, I love Mindhunters which is basically all exposition, but it's all interesting.
I’ve read it before, but yesterday I read a few more quotes that the Marvel world post Avengers 4 will be very different. I like the idea a lot, I like that all the movies they’ve done are actually part of one big universe and leading to something big, and then something new. It would get old if they kept this same thing going forever, and obviously the actors can’t play these specific characters forever either. It will be cool when Avengers 4 is over to sit down and watch all the movies in order starting with like Iron Man. Sure it would take weeks, but it would be quite a ride.
I have so many to catch up on, but the last one I saw seemed a little corny. Too many silly jokes. Hulk acting like an immature idiot I didn’t care for so much That was my lasting impression. I barely remember what the movie is about now. Thor lost an eye. Silly jokes. Would not pay to see again.
Thor 3? That's literally the last one to have come out. You have no catching up to do if you've watched up until that point. I can understand not liking Thor 3 honestly, it was pretty silly. I loved the visuals though and Evangeline LIly (The Wasp actress) has said after Avengers 4, they're going to start leaning more into the colorful spectrum.
In this movie? It looks like Vision is in serious trouble. I think Spider-Man likely ends up seriously injured, but not dead (he's got another solo coming out). After Avengers 4 ends though I think Cap and Scarlet Witch are dead for sure. Basically any actor that wants out is being given a shot to leave here.
I'm not sure this was posted anywhere in this thread, but this was a very interesting breakdown of Marvel's color palette. The guy in the video isn't talking about the quality of the movies, just the color grading.
I've seen this, yeah. This was before Guardians 2 and Thor 3 though which are definitely exploring a more interesting color palette. I like it. I think it adds some life to the films. It doesn't have to be campy, but the color variation helps keep things interesting.
I've missed several before that but I do confuse between DC and Marvel. I've probably missed more DC than anything.