9/27/13
View Logs: Agents of SHIELD, "Pilot"
Well, it's me, Newt.
Remember me? I said I'd be doing guest posts on Agents of SHIELD?
Anyway, There's a little phrase that I went back and forth over whether or not I should use it when posting these View Logs.
Remember me? I said I'd be doing guest posts on Agents of SHIELD?
Anyway, There's a little phrase that I went back and forth over whether or not I should use it when posting these View Logs.
"In the comics"
I firmly believe that this show must work on its own merits.
...
...but I still think that the over 60 years of publication
history is important to at least touch upon.
Besides, we've got the Artsy Core him?/her?/it?self for the non-comic
reader's perspective.
Still, I'll keep in mind that not everyone will know
everything I know about the comic history.
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Yes, there were Agents, and they were of SHIELD. The title is accurate. |
I went back and forth on whether or not to do my regular linear recaps, like on my own blog, but I eventually decided that I wouldn’t. Sorry if I disappointed anyone. But I can type almost 3,000 words on a half-hour show, and AoS is twice that. Sorry if this seems a little disjointed as a result of this new format for me. I’m writing this View Log with the assumption that you’ve actually seen the episode, or at least read a synopsis. I’ll go over plot points linearly, but don’t expect a full recap.
In fact, go watch the pilot.
I’ll wait.
…
No, really, I’ll wait.
…
…
Seriously, waiting on you.
…
Okay, fine, you probably just skipped all that anyway.
Let’s begin.
I appreciate a renewed focus on the plights of the little
people on the ground, rather than the "gods and monsters" flying
around in the skies. In fact, that's a
huge part of the story. It's an
interesting thing to explore, and explored it is. Quite well, in fact. We see that life does indeed go on for the
people left below. Some embrace the new
status quo, some fear it, others simply go about the 9-to-5.
"Yeah, the boss says that Chitauri invasion isn't
listed as a valid excuse for getting off work, so he's treating it as a sick
day, but I can't let it happen again."
In fact, I wouldn't be surprised if one of the characters
actually had that exact thing happen to them, as you'll see, but we’ll get
there.
The show presents a post-invasion world in a compromised
way. By that, I mean it's generally less
used to the weirdness of the Marvels, but not as hostile as the "real
world" is usually shown to be.
The theme song is like the Avengers theme if it tried to
hide from us. Fits the show well.
The little references to the Marvel Cinematic Universe
really make this world seem huge, populated, and real. The world seems tangible and... well, real. The people inhabiting this world add to that,
as well. I've always thought that
characterization was Whedon's greatest strength, and you know what? I haven't changed my mind. The scene with the truth serum cracked me up.
Now, in my first post, I was wrong about Coulson. Instead of the role of the protagonist, he's
instead Da Chief, taking more of a "Nick Fury" role.
Look, I'm sorry, but there are spoilers ahead for The Avengers.
Coulson was stabbed through the back by Loki and he died. Well, we think....
I'm wondering what actually happened to Coulson. Where did his mind, spirit, soul, whatever go
after his death? What did he see beyond
the mortal coil? Did he really die? My theory is that he's an LMD. A "Life Model Decoy." In the comics, LMD's are perfect robot
duplicates that can be used as decoys. I
think Coulson's one, mainly because of this exchange.
"He doesn't know, does he?"
"He can never know."
"He can never know."
And now, let’s discuss “The Hooded Hero."
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Wrong. |
Also known as “Not-Luke-Cage-But-Pretty-Much-Just-Luke-Cage.”
I mean, he’s black, he’s superstrong, he has job issues…
what's stopping him from becoming a guy who saves people for a living?
A "Hero For Hire," if you will.
Skye: "With
great power comes... a ton of weird crap that you are not prepared to deal
with."
Good point, he should probably change his name to an
alias. How about, “Luke Cage/Power Man,
Hero for Hire”?
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I mean, come on, look at the similarities. |
But no, he’s really “Mike Perterson.”
Wait… Mike Peterson? The guy who hung out with Slapstick?
No, actually, he’s an original character who happens to share
his name with a minor supporting character for a Z-list hero. It’s not an uber-nerdy reference by Whedon.
Speaking of whom, my Whedon-Sense is tingling. Bad things are going to happen to
Coulson. Because that's what Joss Whedon
does. Heck, I've already written about his tendency to do that on my own blog.
And regarding the same character, no less!
I did appreciate the reference into the "Journey Into
Mystery" comic, which is notable for debuting Thor. I hope they throw a few more things like that
in the series, because they make me giggle.
Not that I giggle.
I don't giggle.
Why? What have you heard?
Not that I giggle.
I don't giggle.
Why? What have you heard?
There’s also an offhanded reference to “Project PEGASUS,”
which, in the comics, is a government-sponsored lab for studying cosmic energy
sources, and other whatnots. Hmmm....
The main bad-guy organization is some shadowy unknown force
called Centipede. Is it an upgrade of
Hydra, the villains from the Captain America film?
Speaking of Centipede, let’s talk about the plot of the
episode: Mike’s powers.
Mike's plot with his power-giving-not-quite-Blue Beetle’s-Scarab
reminds me of the comics, where there was a black market for MGH "Mutant
Growth Hormone" which gave superpowers to the powerless and enhanced the
powers of superhumans.
The device itself is comprised entirely of references to the rest of the Marvel Cinematic Universe: alien metal (Avengers), gamma radiation (Hulk), Extremis (Iron Man 3), Super Soldier Serum (Captain America); it's all of the origins wrapped up into one. Instant superhero. Mix it all together and hope that at least one works. But it ends in explosions, so Mike has to be put down. (See Iron Man 3.)
The device itself is comprised entirely of references to the rest of the Marvel Cinematic Universe: alien metal (Avengers), gamma radiation (Hulk), Extremis (Iron Man 3), Super Soldier Serum (Captain America); it's all of the origins wrapped up into one. Instant superhero. Mix it all together and hope that at least one works. But it ends in explosions, so Mike has to be put down. (See Iron Man 3.)
While I’m talking about the centipede-arm-thing, I have to
say that the CGI looks nice, about on par with Doctor Who (good Doctor Who), and they use it sparingly, which helps the whole thing feel
grounded in reality.
Agents Fitz and Simmons are adorable, by the way. I eagerly await the episode where something
bad happens to one of them, the other doesn't know how to react, but it all
works out. Unless it doesn't work
out. Curse you, Whedon....
Back to the plot, Mike Peterson can only be cured by putting
a bullet in his head, so they do. Somehow (I'm assuming with his new powers), Mike survives. Well, that's a
good way to make the "put a bullet in his head cure" work. Wait, Joss isn't taking this opportunity to kill a man when he's down? There must be plans for Mike....
So… at the end of the episode, we are quite possibly still
left with what is essentially Luke Cage.
Why not just make him Luke Cage?
Coulson has an awesome car, by the way. I knew that Coulson's car would be able to
fly at the end of the episode. Why? Because Back to the Future had a great
ending.
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Where we're going, we don't need... roads. |
You've got the theme going in your head now, don't you?
Final Thoughts
It wasn't spectacular, but it was quite solid, it was entertaining, and it kept me guessing. It got tense, it was funny, it was mysterious.
Also, here's my thoughts on the rest of the main cast, before I forget.
Agent Ward is a good leading man, I await his character arc.
Agent May is... there. Hope she gets character development.
Skye is bubbly without being annoying. Oh, Joss. Kaylee from Firefly, Armor from the X-Men comics, you just love you some energetic young ladies, don't you? I like Skye. Her past as a semi-anarchist will add a nice dynamic between her and the other team members.
Overall, Agents of SHIELD... is good.
And I'm excited to see what happens next week.
Clark Gregg himself left the hashtag #willblowminds.
Aw, yeah. See you then.
PS-
I recognized Mike's boss from cell phone and wood varnish commercials. Is that weird?
PS-
I recognized Mike's boss from cell phone and wood varnish commercials. Is that weird?