DigificWriter
Superhero
- Joined
- May 4, 2002
- Messages
- 7,692
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- 31
Don't get me wrong; I like the MCU. It just doesn't feel to me like anything is truly gained by the show being set in that universe.
It just so cool knowing that Matt Murdock is on the streets while Spidey is swinging through buildings, and the Avengers are in the Tower or off fighting a global threat. That's what makes the MCU so interesting.
^ Other than an offhand mention in Episode 1, I haven't noticed any real connection between The Avengers and this show.
Who said there was a need... If daredevil was to make an appearance in a future movie with the mcu cast, im pretty sure the violence would go from realistic to toned down, because thats what its like in the movies.
The different tones dont bother me personally at all. I loved daredevil, it was brilliant. My little brother assumed as it was in the mcu, the violence would be at the same level, but it wasnt, so he stopped watching, that is all.
(I was only reffering to the violence when i said tone, i didnt mean the storyline etc... I wasnt really clear)
I don't have a problem with it existing in that universe, I just don't want anything forced on the show by Marvel that aren't part of the wishes of the show-runners.
They have Agents of Shield for that.
Besides getting into the DD comics now, especially the Bendis run, DD really does operate mostly like he's in his own universe. Very street and gritty.
What, exactly, is 'so cool' about Daredevil being part of the MCU if the series doesn't tangibly benefit in any way from being part of that universe?
Personally, I think that if you're going to make something part of a shared universe, said thing needs to benefit in some way from being part of said universe, and, at least in the episodes I've watched thus far, I'm not seeing anything that would strike me as being of tangible benefit for the series.
I guess what I'm saying, when you get right down to it, is that, as of now, I'm not really seeing the point of making the series part of the MCU and would really like to (see the point of doing so).
I'd love Gladiator to appear some more. But, leaving him aside:
To me, Ann Nocenti created the best B-Villains (Miller elevated some previous ones to A-Villains, but didn't really create many new characters except the Hand, Brubaker also elevated a few, but they are corny ones like the Matador. I'd argue Bendis did the opposite and actually brought down some characters while making fun of others without elevating them). I suspect the season is crowded enough that any ones used will just be In Name Only as Easter Eggs to the fan (like the Masked Marauder in season one), but Bullet would be easy enough to adapt as a big strong guy and you have Ammo and the Wildboys as gang members. Moving away from early Nocenti, you could go with Shotgun as a guy who really loves military tech (and could sort of be an anti-Punisher in the military aspect of the story). Another example (one invented by Miller) would be Nuke. I'd prefer to save him for a Born Again adaptation, but he could be similar to Shotgun.
Bendis's run is kind of anti-superhero in philosophy and is not entirely indicative of Daredevil as a whole. Even then, there's a crossover with Black Widow, who was a long-time girlfriend of Matt Murdock.
The defining author for Daredevil is Frank Miller. He did keep crossovers relatively light - with the exception of the most obvious example: The Kingpin. Without borrowing from Spider-Man, we wouldn't have Wilson Fisk on Daredevil. Likewise, he used the Punisher. Daredevil wasn't confined to Daredevil characters. Finally, read Born Again. There's a crossover with the Avengers from Matt's perspective that I think is very important (and an extended crossover with Captain America).
So even the runs that moved away from crossovers benefited from them (and none ever treated themselves as just in their own universe). On top of that, there are writers like Ann Nocenti, D.G. Chichester, Karl Kesel, Andy Diggle, and Mark Waid who made it clear Daredevil is not a character alone in his own world.