Clark Gregg as Agent Phil Coulson on Marvel's Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D. |
This piece contains spoilers for The Avengers (2012) and Marvel's Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D.
Despite Joss Whedon’s near-legendary status among his
legions of fans, his television shows have long felt like underdog projects. While
this fact has probably contributed to the good will he continues to inspire, it
has also meant that has shows have had contested and limited lifespans. (Firefly famously never finished its
short first season, and Dollhouse
fought for practically every episode it aired during its two seasons on Fox.)
With last summer’s blockbuster showing for the Whedon written and directed Marvel’s The Avengers, that all
changed: the beloved cult icon became Hollywood’s golden boy. (It is tempting
to compare this transformation to the comparable moment when Evil Dead’s Sam Raimi became Spider-Man’s
Sam Raimi, but that is a story for
another time.) For better or for worse, 1.5 billion in worldwide box office is
always going to bring more schlep into the room than the adoration of the ComicCon
community.
Co-created by Joss
Whedon, Jed Whedon, and Maurissa Tancharoen, ABC’s Marvel's Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D. is set in the aftermath of The Avengers, specifically its closing,
climactic “Battle of New York”. Because of the publicity – and extensive
property damage – of that failed alien invasion, S.H.I.E.L.D. is entering a new
era of increased activity and public scrutiny.
Times are a-changing and Agent Phil Coulson (Clark Gregg, reprising his film role)
is putting together a new (non-super) team to reflect that new normal: a hand-picked
but not quite combat ready team, with more snark and smarts than field skills.
When I first heard of the series, it was thrilling to
imagine Joss returning to television, even in co-creator/exec producer mode. (His
Avengers success seemed to make any
new television venture extremely unlikely.) But with the burden of that film
franchise behind the project, it was also just as easy to imagine the show
collapsing under its own weight (or its title), Whedons or no Whedons. Frankly,
as the high profile spin-off of the third most profitable movie of all time, Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D. didn’t have to
be good to be popular. But right off the bat, this show promises to be more
than a tie-in product for the multibillion-dollar franchise: it looks and sounds like
a Whedon series.
Producers Maurissa Tancharoen, Jed & Joss Whedon and Jeff Bell |
Before the pilot aired, Agent Coulson’s involvement was potentially
the most promising and the most frustrating feature of the series. It seemed
transparently opportunistic to bring along a breakout character from the film,
but – spoiler! – Coulson’s powerful death
scene in the film seemed an nonnegotiable obstacle. Kudos to the series for
those hints in the first two episodes that imply that they’ve brought Coulson –
and Gregg – back in a way that doesn’t undermine one of the film’s most effective
and affecting scenes. ("Tahiti is a magical place” indeed. That
tantalizing little mystery has already begun to productively bounce around in
my brain.) Whedon’s famous penchant for killing off main characters also comes
with a “No Take Backs” policy, and I would have been disappointed if it had gone any other way.
Coulson’s character came to television with a nicely
established on-screen persona and (however his posthumous existence gets
explained) he’s clearly a strong anchor for this team: slight in stature but
supremely confident, an understated super spy with a flat affect that seems
permanently slightly amused. He’s a bit of an S.O.B. (and presumptuous
patriarch to a much younger team), but still a leader par excellence. And, as
the second episode demonstrates, Gregg looks pretty awesome firing a gun.
Ming-Na Wen as Agent Melinda May, aka 'The Calvary' |
Unlike DC, Marvel – on screen and
in the comics – is always more happy to use real places and cities. Tony Stark
ended up in Afganistan and not Bialya, and here it's New York City and Peru,
and not Star City, Blüdhaven, or South Rhelasia. The realistic geography has always come with
more realistic politics – flying cars notwithstanding – and I’m hoping the
storylines will follow suit. Skye’s suspicion of the secret government agency
which covers up alien incursions “for our own good” has a ripped-from-the-headlines, post-Julian
Assange/Edward Snowden/Anonymous vibe, and could serve as a legitimate
springboard to push character development and tell fascinating and relevant
stories.
S.H.I.E.L.D. has been part of the
Marvel universe since the 60s (that long history is the only justification for
its still-too-fascist “American Eagle spreading its wings” logo) and, as Marvel’s
primary superhero-friendly spy agency and counter-terrorism unit, its history overlaps
with the majority of the major Marvel plotlines. The burden of this vast and
complicated history would probably be too much for any television series to
inherit. Fortunately, continuity-wise, the series is clearly set in the
so-called “Marvel Cinematic Universe” that began with Iron Man and The Incredible
Hulk in 2008, reached an apex with the release The Avengers last summer, and continues well into the future with
planned sequels for Captain America
and The Avengers coming out in 2014
and 2015 respectively. That is probably more than enough continuity for Jed and
Marissa to handle!
Still, I should confess that my
enjoyment of the Marvel-branded films has been intermittent (I count myself a
fan only of the first Iron Man, Thor, and The Avengers.) Still, this new continuity harkened a new era of
Marvel adaptations (2003 alone had two very different, unrelated films: a near-unwatchable Ben Affleck Daredevil
adaptation and Ang Lee’s under-appreciated The
Hulk), and the ambition alone is worth celebrating, especially as Marvel
enters the well-publicized “Phase Two” of the film series.
Clark Gregg, Brett Dalton, and Chloe Bennet |
What I felt was missing from the big screen treatment Joss
gave the Avengers storyline last
summer is precisely what television does best: patient storytelling, more
rounded out characterization, and moments of genuine emotional contact between
characters. (Ironically, The Avengers
didn’t pack as much of a Whedonesque punch as last summer’s other superhero film, Marc Webb’s surprisingly effective and nuanced The Amazing Spider-Man, with which
Joss of course had no involvement.) It might be an odd point in this era of underwhelming
teen-fare like Twilight, Hunger Games, and The Mortal Instruments, but I rather regretted the general lack of
younger characters in The Avengers,
especially with Whedon at the wheel. That is more than rectified in this
series, with Clark and Wen effectively babysitting a team of cleverer-than-thou
fast-talking, faster-thinking 20-somethings. And while that might bode poorly
for a series with any other pedigree, here it feels just right.
The pilot worked well – both in narrowing in the plot from
the epic motion picture storyline and in introducing our new cast of characters.
But the true test of a series is how it holds up week after week. The second
episode aired this past Tuesday, and continued the genesis story of our team nicely.
However for me the true test of a new television show is always the third
episode, when stage-setting and the excitement of the new turns into business
as usual. Whether or not the show fully exploits its Marvel universe tie-ins, Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D. is already well
on its way to standing its own ground. Wholly on its own, it is a rather enjoyable,
jazzy mix of Alias-style ass-kicking,
snappy dialogue, and a charismatic cast. In that vein, Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D. strikes me as the best of all possible worlds: a
project with real weight behind it (perhaps this
one will make it to a third full season?), but small (and quiet) enough for the
personalities of its creators and actors to shine through.
Marvel's Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D. airs on Tuesday nights, on Fox (in the U.S.) and on CTV (in Canada).
Marvel's Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D. airs on Tuesday nights, on Fox (in the U.S.) and on CTV (in Canada).
– Mark Clamen is a writer, critic, film programmer and lifelong television enthusiast. He lives in Toronto, where he often lectures on television, film, and popular culture.
No comments:
Post a Comment