Dr. Evil
Eternal
- Joined
- Nov 28, 2002
- Messages
- 58,381
- Reaction score
- 4,818
- Points
- 103
Who might they be?
Someone mentioned Jessica Jones and another mentioned Jessica Drew
Who might they be?
You get these rumors from where?Some rumors have Skye being well.....a familiar name (or two) in the Comics that is associated with the group.
You get these rumors from where?
And Skye doesn't strike me as Spider-Woman. Maybe she could pass for a younger Jessica Jones...especially the Ultimate Marvel version.
Daisy Johnson is the Director of SHIELD in the comics right now, and she's also Fury's hand-picked successor. She's 19 years old, so Skye is not that hard to buy.
Um, a universe with aliens, gods of all faiths, super soldiers, Nazi's, Mutants, Inhumans, Cosmic Cubes, naked silver guys on surfboards, demons, alternate universes, etc, and Daisy is hard to buy, really? Also, these same bosses are the morons who put Norman Osborn in charge of National Security, nothing they do is a surprise to me. Also, its not unheard of for real life intelligence agencies recruit people fresh out of college, so again, Skye is not hard to buy.As I said in another thread, Daisy Johnson being Director of SHIELD is hard to buy. It's ridiculous. Fury answers to others even in the comics, so how would he get any group of rational adults to accept a teenager as director of a massive multinational spy organization? In the MCU his superiors would have his head for even suggesting it.
As a director? Not hard to buy? What's this going to turn in to? A Disney Channel teenie show? Oh wait ABC and Marvel are Disney.
Um, a universe with aliens, gods of all faiths, super soldiers, Nazi's, Mutants, Inhumans, Cosmic Cubes, naked silver guys on surfboards, demons, alternate universes, etc, and Daisy is hard to buy, really? Also, these same bosses are the morons who put Norman Osborn in charge of National Security, nothing they do is a surprise to me. Also, its not unheard of for real life intelligence agencies recruit people fresh out of college, so again, Skye is not hard to buy.
The pilot was pretty unimpressive. It's exactly the kind of safe, middle of the road fare I expect from network television. If it had no ties to The Avengers (an association they're not above referencing as often as possible it seems), then it would have never been on my radar to begin with, and I imagine critics and commenters would have been much more harsh on it.
Having said that, I didn't think it was offensively bad or anything, it was even mildly entertaining in spots. For now I'm going to give it the benefit of the doubt and watch two or three more episodes to give it a fair chance.
I accidentally voted 4, but I meant 5.
I think perhaps the extremly high expectation have ruined some of the perception on the pilot episode. Was it perfect? No, but I think as an introductionary episode it has done its job. The most important thing is to set up the new characters and leave enough bread crumbs to make us want to see the next episode, which I think it succeed. I do think that Whedon should have let Agent Coulson uncovers a secret and nameless organization that seems to have a conspiracy behind some of the mysteries, so we can have a big plotline that runs through the season and each episode adds some intrigue to the whole thing, which is resolved(?) in the grand finale. However, I think the series will get better as it goes on, and let's remember that most of the Whedon's shows get stronger as they progress; I don't remember either Buffy or Angel hit a grand slam in their pilot episodes, either.