Brett Dalton and Jason O'Mara (foreground), with Elizabeth Henstridge and Clark Gregg (background) in a scene from the 4th season of Marvel's Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D. |
Every once in a while, I find myself
stopping in the middle of an episode of television and asking
(occasionally aloud): “Why am I still watching this?” It’s a
question that I’ve
wrestled with before on this site, and one that has sometimes nagged me throughout the run of Marvel’s Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D.,
which is in the final episodes of its fourth season on ABC.
Originally conceived as a spin-off of Marvel’s juggernaut superhero
franchise, the show boasted an impeccable lineage, as it was a
co-creation of Avengers director and Buffy the Vampire
Slayer creator Joss Whedon, his brother Jed, and his
sister-in-law Maurissa Tancharoen. The show also featured Clark
Gregg, rather implausibly reprising his role as Agent Phil Coulson,
who served as a liaison between his shadowy organization and its
super-powered allies and who appeared to have met an untimely fate in
the first Avengers movie.
When it premiered in 2013, S.H.I.E.L.D.
was the most anticipated new series of its season. It met with a fair
amount of critical acclaim and featured frequent tie-ins with the ongoing movie
franchise. I found it an enjoyable but somewhat disposable
entertainment: the early episodes felt cautious and non-essential,
with a case-of-the-week structure, an appealing but rather anonymous
cast, and an awkward need to serve a promotional role for whatever
major theatrical release Marvel’s movie arm was cooking up.
However, that latter function helped the show to make a startling
leap late in its first season, when S.H.I.E.L.D. was destroyed in the
course of the events depicted in the second Captain America film. The
development highlighted some of the show’s quieter achievements,
such its ability to build complex relationships among its various
characters, and the fallout from that series of episodes helped to
set in motion long-term conflicts that significantly raised the
stakes and my emotional investment in those characters.