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Marvel’s Long And Confusing Path To Figuring Out Television


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As pointed out by ScreenCrush, these shows share a commonality; each one so far has actively dealt with characters who are wrestling with alternate versions of themselves. Vision battles his synthetic doppelganger, Sam rejects the Captain America mantle only to have it given to some bozo, and Loki is tasked with hunting another timeline's Loki "variant." For these themes to emerge via television makes sense because, in many ways, Marvel has been struggling with its own identity crisis in what has, historically, been their hardest format to crack.

It wasn't so long ago that Marvel made its triumphant debut in the world of streaming television, beginning with Daredevil, which was not only good enough to make us all forget about the days of Ben Affleck brawling with whatever the hell Colin Farrell was doing. It also seemed to take place within the MCU, even referencing Captain America and the events of The Avengers.

That's because it was all part of a massive 2013 deal between Marvel and Netflix, back before Disney+ was just a glint in the eye of Walt's frozen head. Netflix wouldn't just be the home of Daredevil, but a whole cadre of Marvel TV heroes, whose admittedly smaller-scaled world would exist in parallel to their movie counterparts. Following Daredevil was the excellent Jessica Jones, originally developed as an ABC project, which also introduced the character of Luke Cage and set up his own solo series. Following what had worked in the movies, these individual shows ultimately collided in a superhero team-up: The Defenders.

But despite its initial popularity, Marvel's Netflix-verse was soon under fire with the release of Iron Fist. The story of a white dude who travels to Asia and becomes a martial arts master may have been of its pop-cultural time when the comic came out in the '70s, but in 2017 many fans saw it as a failing on the show's part not to rectify a cringey origin story by casting an Asian American actor in the role. If this wasn't damning enough, in 2020, Daredevil actor Peter Shinkoda alleged that the architect of the Netflix-verse, Jeph Loeb, told his writers that "Nobody cares about Chinese people and Asian people."


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source https://earn8online.com/index.php/299860/marvels-long-and-confusing-path-to-figuring-out-television/

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