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This show looks very fun.
If Agent Carter doesn't do well, maybe they'll simply cancel it and pull it from the network after 7 episodes.![]()
NEW YORK DAILY NEWSGosh, Marvels Agent Carter is a heck of a lot of fun, and if that statement feels a bit old-fashioned, well, it fits the sprightly period piece about a female secret agent fighting bad guys and sexism just after World War II.
Youd think Marvels new show for ABC, premiering Tuesday, was the sequel to The Interview, given how tough it was to track down the screener for the first episode. It wasnt on the ABC press site, and an e-mail to the networks PR department redirected me to Marvel itself, which granted me access to the first episode of the shows eight episodes, but only for 24 hours.
It was all as hush-hush as the plot for the shows premiere episode, which finds agent Peggy Carter (Hayley Atwell), twiddling her well-manicured thumbs after the war has ended and the men are home from the front, resuming the jobs they left to go fight for freedom. Peggy, who lost the love of her life in the war, works for the supersecret organization called the Strategic Scientific Reserve, but although shes a highly intelligent and capable agent, shes pretty much reduced to making coffee for the boys.
Peggy isnt about to be marginalized because of her gender and comes to the aid of an old pal rich, eccentric playboy Howard Stark (Dominic Cooper), an obvious stand-in for the real-life Howard Hughes. Stark is accused of selling arms to the enemy during the war. Did he do it knowingly? No, he answers. Well, then, did he do it unknowingly?
He wouldnt know, he cracks wise.
All kidding aside, Starks in trouble and needs Peggy to find out who the real traitors are. As far as her roommate knows, Peggy works at the phone company, but one night, Peggy dons a slinky gold lamé dress cut down to there, pops a Veronica Lake wig on her head and worms her way into the office of the suspected middleman, where she plants a wet one on his kisser, knocking him on his considerable assets because shes slapped a coat of Mickey Finn lipstick on before smacking him.
The show was created by Christopher Markus and Stephen McFeely and inspired by two Captain America films and a short film featuring Agent Carter. The films, and TV shows, are all interrelated, but can be enjoyed separately as well. For example, while I liked Marvels Agents of SHIELD well enough when it began, I got tired of it after a while because it became repetitive. I have a feeling Ill stick around longer with Carter, largely because of the nifty period details, the character development and the performances.
Atwell is terrific in the title role, as capable in the efficient, unflappable skin of Peggy as she is when pretending to be a blond American floozy in a gin joint. James DArcy is a model of amusing dry wit as Jarvis, Starks butler and his official liaison with Peggy. Jarvis believes in order above all things: Dinner at 7, Jack Benny on the radio at 8, to bed with his wife at 9. Cooper oozes 40s authenticity as Stark, to the point where youll almost believe youre watching a black-and-white period film instead of a full-color TV show.
The cast also includes Chad Michael Murray as an SSR agent with little apparent tolerance for skirts in the SSR, and Enver Gjokaj as a fellow agent who lost a leg in the war and gained a lot more tolerance than his male colleagues. James Landry Hébert plays evil to the hilt as an icy Green Suit.
Many of these characters relate to characters in other Marvel films and TV shows. Howard Stark, of course, is the father of Iron Mans Tony Stark, who was conceived by Stan Lee in the image of Howard Hughes.
Small world? Not really. Its a Marvel universe, and its growing.
Agent Peggy Carter is a marvelous addition to the cool women characters now prowling TV screens.
And Marvels Agent Carter is a strong second show from ABCs partnership with Marvel Comics.
Agent Carter feels quite different from the earlier Marvels Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D., and for the casual TV fan thats good. While the two shows are tied together, like everything in the complex Marvel universe, its easy to enjoy this show without knowing anything about the mythology.
Peggy Carter (Hayley Atwell) is a World War II secret agent hero who, in 1946, finds herself back under the infuriating thumb of snickering men like her boss Roger Dooley (Shea Whigham), who see women as file clerks.
This is a woman who worked with Captain America, however. Fell in love with him, in fact, and now aches because he went missing a year earlier.
So shes not about to sit in the office and file papers or her nails, not when she has a stronger right cross than Manny Pacquiao.
Her ticket back into the game is the brilliant inventor/hustler Howard Stark (Dominic Cooper), a reworked Howard Hughes. Stark puts her in partnership with his butler, the quirky and fascinating Jarvis (James DArcy).
The period writing is a delight, and if Agent Carter has some comic book rhythms, thats okay.
Theres plenty of action to go with snappy grownup dialogue, and Peggy is the kind of dame you wont be able to resist watching.
With the Cold War looming, Agent Carter gives it a hot start.
Marvels first TV-series extension of its cinematic universe, Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D., has been a bit of a disappointment, with a strong pilot followed by a mediocre first season full of generic action-adventure stories and flat characters. While the second season has been an improvement, with a clearer direction and a better incorporation of superhero elements, the show still cant stand up to Marvels energetic, entertaining movies. Taking over for Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D. during its winter hiatus, Agent Carter still isnt as enjoyable as Marvels recent movies, but the first two episodes are promising, with far more style and wit than Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D. has shown in quite a while.
The title character is Peggy Carter (Hayley Atwell), a resourceful secret agent who was a major supporting character in 2011s Captain America: The First Avenger, and is a longtime Marvel Comics fixture. The show takes place soon after the events of The First Avenger, at the conclusion of World War II, when Peggy has joined the Strategic Scientific Reserve (SSR), the precursor to the modern Marvel S.H.I.E.L.D. agency. One of the best things about Agent Carter is that it returns to the stylish, retro world of the Marvel universe in the 1940s, which the movies left behind when they transported Captain America to the present day. The vintage fashions, music and set design look good even on a reduced TV budget, and the show plays with the time period cleverly. The second episode features a hokey Captain America radio drama woven through the main plot, and Peggy herself is subject to all the unfortunate period-accurate attitudes about working women.
Atwell is charming as the unflappable but lonely Peggy, who pines for the disappeared Captain America, and the supporting cast includes reliable players like Dollhouses Enver Gjokaj and Boardwalk Empires Shea Whigham as Peggys fellow agents. Casual viewers may be a little overwhelmed by the shows strong connections to Marvels movie and TV continuitythe first episode incorporates clips from The First Avenger, and the seasons main storyline is set into motion by Howard Stark (Dominic Cooper, reprising his role from The First Avenger), father of Tony Stark, aka Iron Man. But Marvel fans will be delighted by the way the show fills in gaps and expands on the cinematic world, and setting the show in the past means that it has entire decades of history to explore on its own. With only eight episodes in the first season, Agent Carter should hopefully be able to avoid the wheel-spinning and filler storylines that have plagued Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D., and maybe even prove that Marvel TV shows can take their place alongside Marvel movies.
Marvels synergistic efforts remain one of its assets, but transforming a supporting player in Captain America, played by Hayley Atwell, into the star of a limited ABC series was inordinately opportunistic even by its standards, and as it turns out, a pretty smart bet. Thats because the combination of the British actress and post-World War II setting make the Marvel-branded vehicle, Agent Carter, considerable fun, and in some ways more promising than the series its replacing, the uneven Agents of SHIELD. While theres no assurance this spinoff will have legs, the opening salvo is worthy of a hearty Hail, Carter.
I really cannot fathom why C4 didn't pick it up like AoS... It's effectively the same show. Ah well, less ratings for them. Thank god for the interweb eh...So odd that it's not being picked up in the UK when it's getting shown in India.
Yeah she's got a cameo in Ant-Man I believe, so flashbackComic Book Resources had an interview with Hayley Atwell and they said it will have ties to the Ant-Man movie. Not sure if she meant she will have an appearance in the Ant-man movie either through a Flashback or one of her at a very old age, or if something within the Agent Carter show will somehow connect to the Ant-Man movie. Link below.
http://www.comicbookresources.com/?page=article&id=58198
Surfer
'Agent Carter' to feature Captain America... sort of
By Natalie Abrams on Jan 5, 2015 at 12:30PM
Even though Marvels Agent Carter picks up after the events of Captain America: The First Avengerin which Steve Rogers (Chris Evans) crashes a plane full of nukes into the Arctic and ends up a capsicleCaptain Americas presence is still very much felt on ABCs midseason drama, thanks to a radio show within the series.
Drawing from the Golden Age of Radio, The Captain American Adventure Hour details Caps heroic adventures fighting Nazis and saving his dame, Betty Carver, a.k.a. Peggy Carter (Hayley Atwell).
Its the bane of Peggys existence because you have the Peggy character on the show, Betty Carver, and shes played by this actress who does a soft Marilyn Monroe voice and shes always in jeopardy, executive producer Michele Fazekas says. If someone has a radio on, youll sometimes hear it, and its like, Oh my God, can you please turn that off? Its just fun and a great little window into that time period.
Staying true to the era, the radio show includes old-timey dialogueIm going to make you see stars and stripes, Hitler!sound effects like punching a ham when Captain America takes a swing at someone or running a beer bottle along a xylophone for broken glass, and a very fitting narrator, Ralph Garman, whom Fazekas and fellow showrunner Tara Butters confess to being huge fans of. Los Angeles residents may best know the radio host from KROQs morning show Kevin and Bean, but you may also recognize him from Ted, A Million Ways to Die in the West, or as the former host of Foxs reality TV hoax series The Joe Schmo Show.