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Predicting What Movies Will Fill Marvel’s New Release Dates

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After the shock announcement from Marvel Studios that they were moving Avengers: Infinity War up to April 27th in the USA, Disney just kept on going with the bombshells and gave fans another six release dates for future films, in addition to the three dates in 2020.  They also adjusted their August 2020 date forward a week.

Obviously, the first question on everyone’s mind is what exactly will fill those spots.  Whereas Marvel provided a full slate for Phase Three before Phase Two ever ended.  This time around, Marvel is playing their cards close to the chest.  This way they don’t have to change plans down the road.  Also, there is the fear that some of the title announcements might actually ruin some surprises to come.  In the meantime, let’s do some speculating on what could come.

May 1, 2020-Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 3 

This one feels like it has already been officially announced.  James Gunn has said that the third volume in his series will come out in 2020, so it has to be one of Marvel’s three dates.  The timing would also be very similar to the gap between Volume 1 and Volume 2 of the series.  Those films came out three years apart, in 2014 and 2017, so three years later, in 2020, makes perfect sense.  The May slot also tends to be the spot for Marvel’s biggest money makers and at this point Guardians of the Galaxy is one of the more bankable properties they have.  While the property may still feel like the new kid on the block to long-time fans, it will be the oldest Marvel property without a third film (save Hulk which obviously has other issues involved).

Another reason to believe that this film would be next is that it is the furthest along at this point.  Gunn has been working on the script for some time, having a draft finished last autumn.  Most of the cast is obviously already in place.  It’s also the only film that Marvel Studios has officially announced post-Avengers 4.  Rumors are that filming will start early in 2019, which would be roughly the same time-table as May-released Vol. 2.  (Sony’s Spider-Man: Homecoming 2 is also official with a July 2019 release.)  If another film is going to take this place, it will have to rush to make up lost time.

So we can expect this movie in May 2020.  The bigger question will be what the plot will involve.  Adam Warlock was teased in the post-credit scenes of Vol. 2.  Gunn has backed away from that character, however, in the time since.  Check out our list of characters we’d like to see added to the third adventure from the Guardians of the Galaxy.

July 31 2020-Black Widow 

This is the altered date in the announcement.  The time slot feels like a good space for a more experimental property.  Marvel released Guardians of the Galaxy in early August.  Ant-Man came in July.  Even D.C. used August to launch their least traditional property, Suicide Squad.  Then again, it may be that Disney is starting to eye these end of summer dates in the hope that the lack of August competition will give films longer legs.  Regardless, Black Widow feels like the right fit.

A couple of things argue for this film coming in July 2020.  First of all, it is the next most developed film in the MCU.  Trade reports say that Marvel has a screenwriter tapped for the project.  No other film in the MCU technically has anyone on board for any role.  Also, Scarlett Johansson has been in the MCU a long time.  While she’s patiently waited for her chance at a solo property, she won’t wait forever.  Her contract also has to be close to the end if not all finished up.  One would think the window for this project will be relatively small as the first generation of Avengers slowly opts (or ages) out.  Johansson is younger than many of her co-stars, but will she want to stay in the MCU forever?

Fans have debated vigorously what they want to see out of a Black Widow film.  Some are convinced that a flashback film is the way to go, with a history of her famous “red ledger.”  Others want to see a lighter, spy adventure.  Regardless of how they do it, fans should get it relatively soon.

November 6, 2020-Doctor Strange 2 

At this point, Doctor Strange‘s sequel will be the next most pressing project for Marvel.  This date would be almost exactly four years from the first film’s release.  That’s a long time between movies, even if the Sorcerer Supreme is in Thor: RagnarokAvengers: Infinity War, and Avengers 4 in the meantime.  The longest gap between Marvel movies for a franchise right now stands at about four years between Thor: The Dark World and Thor: Ragnarok.  Three years is far more typical, but Benedict Cumberbatch is also a busy man.

It would seem the success of the first movie should mean that Scott Derrickson would return as a director.  A  couple of social media posts have hinted that he is returning, though nothing has been announced.  He clearly had some ideas in place for the first film that didn’t come to fruition, so he would already have some plans for this one.  The return of Baron Mordo would be an obvious plot element to pick up.  Also, Nightmare was floated as a villain the first time around.  He could be a great villain in a more horor based sequel, something that Derrickson should excel at.

May 7, 2021-Black Panther 2

Here are the things that we pretty safely know.  First of all, there will be a sequel to Black Panther.  Almost every MCU film received a second installment based on box office receipts.  With the King of Wakanda staring down a gigantic haul, including possibly the largest domestic take ever, there is essentially no way Marvel Studios would skip a sequel.  Furthermore, Marvel has tended to put their biggest box office draws on the May date.  And given how hot Black Panther is, one would think Kevin Feige will be eager to return the character to theaters ASAP.  If those three things are all true, then this date is the obvious candidate for the next Black Panther film.

Ryan Coogler did a fantastic job with the first one, so he should be back for the second.  The world of Wakanda feels so full and rich that a sequel could continue to explore the characters already in play.  Lupita Nyong’o’s Nakia has a villainous turn in the comic books which could make for an interesting story.  M’Baku also seems like he would not be immune from challenging T’Challa.  Fan favorite characters like Doctor Doom and Namor are other huge Marvel characters who could make great challengers to Black Panther in a sequel.

July 31, 2021-Spider-Man:Homecoming 3

Yes, that’s a lot of Spider-Man movies one after another.  And there is a growing queue of characters demanding some attention.  But Sony is going to drive the reality here.  Marvel Studios and Sony’s deal has been good for both companies, but ultimately their need for new movies is very different.  Marvel has a busy schedule they are trying to fit everything into.  Sony has essentially this character.  Even with Venom and Silver and Black in production, Peter Parker is the cash cow for essentially Sony’s entire studio.  The brain trust that has greenlit seven films in three franchises over a mere 17 years (including Homecoming‘s sequel) will certainly keep the gravy train going.  Marvel Studios will play along to keep the web-slinger around the MCU.

Given how little anyone knows about the second film in the franchise, the third is a total mystery.  Fans have been calling for Kraven the Hunter for some time.  Maybe Tom Holland‘s Spider-Man will have had enough time to mature into the dark “Kraven’s Last Hunt” story.  Also, if Venom takes off, it might be time to fold Tom Hardy into the MCU proper as well.  There’s just way too much narrative time between now and then.

November 5, 2021-Fantastic Four

Obviously, this prediction requires the Fox deal to go through the regulatory process in a timely and effective manner.  If that deal does get finalized in the general time frame Disney suggested, give or take 12 months, then the Fox characters will be in the Marvel Studios sand box by early 2019.  Two and a half years is plenty of time to produce a film for Marvel, particularly if Feige and crew are workshopping some ideas and casting options right now.  This limbo period may not allow direct work on a new film, but it seems unlikely that a few writers and producers have avoided shaping some thoughts.

But why would Fantastic Four be the first Fox property out of the shoot?  One would think that Marvel wants to fold these characters into their universe organically and carefully.  At no point in the MCU have they jumped haphazardly into characters.  They build the universe the right way.  Mutants are an obvious problem for the MCU.  Why would there suddenly be mutants when there haven’t been any in the first 13 years of films?  Also, X-Men fatigue is arguably higher from so many X-films over so many years.  Fantastic Four is a property with an origin that can more readily fit the existent universe.  Also, the table has been set for cosmic adventures already.  If this movie came in 2021 it would be six-plus years separated from the disastrous last attempt at a reboot, whereas X-Men would be at best three years removed.  Finally, the family vibe of Fantastic Four could be a great play in the November window.  Just imagine ads showing Richard and Sue cutting a turkey, encouraging families to spend Thanksgiving with Marvel’s first family.

February 18, 2022-Nova

This is the big speculation in the predictions.  Marvel Studios has shown that they want to continue to introduce new franchises.  They also have been working to bring more broadly representative characters to the screen, such as Black Panther and Captain Marvel.    (Interestingly, both of those films have had a February/March release.)  Finally, it appears that the studio wants to expand the cosmic side more as well.  Sam Alexander’s Nova is a perfect fit for all these concerns.  Giving fans a Latino lead character would potentially make a similar splash as Black Panther or Disney’s Coco.  Comic fans have also been asking for Nova from a pure comics perspective for a long time.

May 6, 2022-X-Men

The X-Men are coming.  The history, popularity, and significance of the property demand that Marvel Studios use the new IP available to them.  Anything earlier than this date seems unlikely with the reigns of the property in Fox hands for another year or so.  But this release date sort of demands a big team movie.  It comes three years after the last Avengers film and probably two years after the last Guardians of the Galaxy film.  While another assembling of the Avengers might be appealing, an X-Men film will keep things fresh.  This release date would also create a somewhat similar time gap between X-Men: Dark Phoenix and this reboot to Amazing Spider-Man 2 and Spider-Man: Homecoming.

July 29, 2022-Captain Marvel 2

Unless Captain Marvel is a total flop, it should get a sequel.  And the likelihood of a flop seems low given Marvel Studios track record.  Also, the pent-up demand for the character and for a solo female hero in the MCU is high.  When an actress of Brie Larson‘s pedigree signed onto such an important role in the comics, it seemed like she was part of a master plan to rejuvenate the star power of the universe.  Larson, Boseman, and Cumberbatch feel like a new triumvirate to replace Evans, Hemsworth, and Downey Jr.  Moving the movie to a summer tentpole spot after it’s March debut would be a sensible thing for the MCU.

But what about…

The greatest weakness of this slate of films is all the things it leaves out.  James Gunn has put the seeds of a Ravagers movie in place.  Could it come out before 2022, particularly if Gunn is involved in it?  With Sylvester Stalone as a star, can they wait much longer?  What about new films for some classic MCU characters, even if they are legacy versions?  Surely a Bucky or Falcon Cap movie is a possibility or Tessa Thompson taking over for Thor?  Ant-Man and the Wasp is a property without a third film lined up in this rundown, wouldn’t Marvel finish out a trilogy for their microscopic hero?  There’s no Avengers film here?!  And what about other team possibilities like the Ultimates or Champions?  Speaking of which, when might Ms. Marvel or Miles Morales show up?  And that says nothing of the half-dozen projects being worked on by Fox right now that will be in Disney’s lap soon enough.  Simply put, as insane as it might sound to say that nine films aren’t enough, they really aren’t.  Hopefully, the backlog will be helped by some high quality direct to streaming movies on Disney’s new service or by an announcement that these dates don’t include X-titles or something.  Until then, we eagerly wait to see what Feige has cooked up for us.

 

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Punisher Season Two Carefully Balances Frank’s Humanity, but Struggles With Dual Conflicts

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On January 18,  The Punisher will be back on Netflix, with Jon Bernthal returning to keep the character alive on a platform where Marvel shows have been producing great quality, but still haven’t been able to survive. Fans were first introduced the the character in Daredevil season two, where fans learned the backstory of Frank Castle, a veteran and father, who’s family was killed in front of him after returning from war. When Castle returned to Netflix for his stand-alone series, we got a slightly altered background story, focusing on his war buddy, Billy Russo, played by Ben Barnes, as a force behind the killing of Frank’s family that day by the carousel.

Season two of The Punisher has some strong moments, particularly in the beginning. While season one hinted that Castle’s fighting days may be over, as he took the identity of Pete Castiglione and sat in on some group therapy, season two shows that Pete is just as much of a fighter as Frank.

The first three episodes are the best of the season. These could stand-alone as a new series about Pete living in the Midwest trying to carry on with a normal life, but his protective instinct pulls him into trouble. Unfortunately, the show moves Frank to more familiar territory, and after that move the show struggles to find balance. The storyline focused around a gang of religious extremists intent to kill Frank and the young woman he’s protecting never finds familiar territory with the second story, where Billy Russo re-emerges as a threat to New York.

The young woman Frank is protecting is Amy Bendix, a new character brought to life by Giorgia Whigham. Amy joins the other strong women of the series (such as Dinah Madani and Karen Page in Season one) on a path to prove that beneath all of the violence, the Punisher himself is a decent human being.

And that conflict, the humanity of Frank and his ability to kill people without hesitation is a topic of discussion throughout the whole season. Characters confront their own anger, haunted by demons of their past, and try to decide if they can be the type of killer that Castle can be, without becoming the person that he is. At times, it is a bit too much of people staring at their own navels, talking to therapists, and drinking away their emotions. However, ever since The Punisher branched off on his own, the show has crammed it down the audience’s throat that the people on the show are real, and not to be looked at as killers with no chance at redemption. At times this is the show’s biggest flaw – it’s trying too hard to prove that Frank is, and is surrounded by, good people.

Could Billy Russo be one of those good people? As Billy recovers from his injuries incurred at Frank’s hands, his possibility for redemption becomes a major topic. Russo loses a part of himself when he recovers, but it isn’t his humanity. If anything, the character comes back as a more tender, loving person. His arc may have felt more fresh if we had more time between the story of a mentally unstable villain seeking his north star in Daredevil before watching Billy on his own journey of mental healing. However, the therapist that helps Billy find himself again serves as yet another woman around the men of the series that helps remind the audience, and the characters, of their humanity.

I struggle to find much to say about the new villains of the season, a group of religious extremists that want Amy and Frank dead. While the show presents these characters as mysterious villains, it was hard to find a reason to care about their stories, motives, and goals. Something never really clicked to make them more than a way to add material and complexity to a show that could have been exciting enough with the stories available in New York. But they give us Amy, who is a delight, even if her storyline falters.

One high spot in the series is an amazing soundtrack of heart-felt blues renditions of classic songs, woven into emotional moments along the way. Just as Luke Cage takes you to Harlem with it’s sound track, the tunes chosen for emotional moments in The Punisher feel like American simplicity. With acoustic guitars accompanying shoot-outs, it’s as American as the single-wide trailer where Frank and Amy live for much of the season.

If you are still holding out hope for cross-overs between the Netflix shows, you should realize by now that we likely aren’t going to see any title characters showing up without a little bit of hype before-hand. However, Frank does continue to live in a world where New York City only has one cop of note outside of Harlem, and that is the beloved Brett Mahoney, portrayed by Royce Johnson. Johnson comes close to stealing the show in this upcoming season, appearing frequently, with a personality created by being the one person in law enforcement that still cares to follow the rules.

On January 18, you may not want to cancel all plans to watch the series as fast as you can, but the beginning of the season is strong enough to pull you back in, even if you don’t remember many details from Season one. And if we never see more of Frank Castle and his own side of the Netflix MCU after this season, things are wrapped up nicely enough that we won’t be as angry as those that watched all of Iron Fist. 

 

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Runaways Season 2 Feels Like A Step Back

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Runaways Season 2 is an unusual show to review, in that it is not often a sophomore effort is the first to truly live out the premise of the show. With the so called Runaways staying at home for most of Season 1, the first go round with the teens served as a sort of extended pilot more than anything. The obvious confidence Hulu had in the property, with its almost assured second season, allowed Brian K Vaughn and team to do things in that first season that deepened the foundation of the characters and ultimately should pay off. None the less, Season 2 is the first time we’ve truly seen the teens on the run.

Early on, this new reality helps the show come to life. The obvious hazards of being on the streets, struggling for money and food, and trying to adjust to falling from the 1% to homelessness make for engaging drama in the beginning of the season. This setup gives the show an edge and sense of danger that was too often missing in the first season, filmed mostly in mansions. Sadly the premise is stripped away far too quickly as the characters move into digs that are comic accurate but which also blunt the point end of being a runaway in the first place.

My general concern with this season, and the show in general, is that far too often it feels uncomfortable in its own skin. Some of the time it is a teen melodrama that is almost embarrassed of its super hero trappings. At other times its a super hero show that has long lulls where puberty seems the real villain, not the alien antagonist. Some fans will undoubtedly feel like the mix is just right, giving them just the right dose of each. And the source material, the modern classic comic series, is a bit like that as well. For me it just felt like both halves seem rushed in order to make sure that the other half isn’t underserved. As such the adolescent soap opera doesn’t have space to breath and the comic fight scenes feel far too short.

The challenge of a large cast is obvious in this show. Characters disappear for a few episodes at a time. That’s the nature of this beast. Generally, the show is at its most alive when the characters are all in one room, at least the six protagonists. The wit is fast paced and typically well timed by the actors. It can have an Alan Sorkin kind of electricity in the dialogue. But too often the characters are sent off on character development homework side missions, which don’t have the same energy. Chemistry is what makes and breaks this show and it is often a roller coaster entity in season 2. Some scenes are spectacular and others just lack punch.

The powers and special effects on the show also tend to get under served in production. For a group of kids constantly running head long into trouble, they seem to always leave their dinosaur at home. Maybe just once it would make sense to bring along his muscle, if only the show wasn’t hiding him away lest they over play their puppeteering skill or blow out the budget. One consistently wonders if the brief VFX scenes are due to the desires of the show runner, or a property that maybe is misplaced in TV financing world. Its not that anything looks bad, its just all very short. A mid-season climax point that is clearly meant to be a special effect bonanza ultimately feels like 25 actors looking at each other menacingly without enough things actually happening. In particular, the Runaways as a team don’t manage the kind of combinations and power complementation that makes a team up like the Avengers, Guardians of the Galaxy, or even Quake and Ghost Rider on Agents of SHIELD, so satisfactory.

A mention should quickly be made of the characters and their arcs. Nico is coming to grips both with her new relationship and the fact that she has replaced Alex as the de facto leader of the group. This weight is in fact heavy for her. Molly continues to grow out of adulthood and into a role with more agency. This leads to the kinds of mistakes all people make when maturing. Alex is sort of the outsider after falling out with Nico, so viewers get to see him connect with unlikely people in a new community. Chase is stripped of all the things that made him a hot shot. He’s struggling with a more domestic role and how to show sensitivity. Gert has some personal health issues that throw her off stride. And Karolina is trying to figure out who she really is. This leads her to seek answers in a really questionable place. The performances all have highs and lows, with Allegra Acosta’s Molly maybe being the most consistent character.

Generally the acting in this show gets a little cringe worthy at some times. The material leans so heavily into the world of melodrama its is kind of hard to take some lines and takes seriously. Did they really just say that? Somewhat paradoxically, the show really clicks on two ends of the spectrum. First of all, the relationships and the experiences of hurt ring true. When these characters are people first and superhero second, they tend to be believable. Secondly, some of the world building, particularly some later season flash back work, is interesting and engaging in part because it’s completely over the top. Its just the in between stuff that can be messy.

As a huge fan of Season 1, this second season does feel like a step back. One can see what the show runners are aiming for, but they just miss the execution. The pacing and storytelling are too muddled and ultimately it feels like that hurts the performances. Too many hand break turns are happening for any groove to occur in the show. Actors are trying to do legitimate human emotion on minute and then ten minutes later they’re in the midst of a monologue about cosmic pseudeoscience or engaged in hokey slow mo fights. A lot of good stuff is in this season, and the fans will probably still enjoy it, but the show needs to make more hard decisions about what it really is and what it really wants to be.

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How Daredevil Season 3 Depicts the Fight Against Real and Present Fears

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Daredevil

(Content Warning: mass shooting tragedies in the United States; Spoiler Warning for Daredevil season 3)

Those living in the United States have gotten too accustomed to bad news. Every mass shooting, wildfire, and other various tragedies have become distilled to push notifications on phones and headlines on cable news. I’ve felt a certain guilt for an increasing indifference as the bad news has increased in volume, but I felt this even more so when the news finally reached me personally. The Tree of Life shooting in Pittsburgh set something off in me, as I went to school mere miles away from there, and I visited Squirrel Hill for leisure and errands regularly. I felt sorrowful and uneasy knowing that such a nefarious act was committed in an area I once considered to be practically my backyard.

It had an eerie and troubling effect on a piece of media that I treasured, as only a couple of weeks before this real-life tragedy, Netflix released season 3 of Daredevil, which prominently featured a chilling scene of a fatal attack on a place of worship.

What that television show did might not necessarily be bad taste, as it released before the real-life analogous event occurred—it isn’t the same situation where the Las Vegas shooting prevented the apparently-planned early release of The Punisher, or Paramount executives scurrying and attempting to release their Heathers television reboot in piecemeal, attempting to slip their tone-deaf program in-between real-life tragedies. Still, the proximity in date alone puts a shroud over Daredevil in my eyes, and a rewatch is impossible for me without associating it with the act of hate and domestic terrorism that happened in a city I love.

I eventually thought back to the words of Erik Oleson, the showrunner of Daredevil’s third season. I attended the Daredevil New York Comic-Con panel, where Oleson presented his thesis statement for season 3—it would be about “combating fear and the narcissistic tyrants that weaponize it.” The Tree of Life shooting is not the only recent news event that could be analogous to events in his show, and none of these were unfortunate coincidences—these were by the show’s design. Daredevil season 3 tapped into our real-life fears and anxieties, and like practically all superhero fiction, it presented a fantastical story where those fears were conquered.

To anyone at that NYCC panel with their finger on the pulse, it was obvious just what (or who) Oleson was referring to. Wilson Fisk, finally embracing the role and appearance of the Kingpin, is our narcissistic tyrant.

Daredevil

Marvel’s Daredevil

At its bare bones, Fisk’s plan to cultivate a culture of fear isn’t far from how real-life tyrants do so. Despite the general public knowledge of his misdeeds, even garnering chants of “Lock him up!” outside of his lavish New York penthouse, Kingpin is able to obtain the trust of the common citizens. Fisk’s apparent ace in the hole is a fake Daredevil, with a skilled FBI agent that Fisk himself corrupted donning the red horned costume. With this terrorizing Daredevil imposter, Fisk creates a new public enemy for all to fear, projecting an image of power and safety that only he could provide.

And the imposter in question, Agent Pointdexter, is a troubled man with psychopathic tendencies and a desire to learn about empathy. Found in a vulnerable position, Dex is manipulated and deceived to enact Fisk’s plan of wide-scale gaslighting. And as we find out later in the season, Fisk’s corruption and manipulation of institutions such as the FBI has reached an absurd point. No character in Daredevil season 3 can better personify this than Agent Ray Nadeem.

In a period of time where many in the public are less trustful of law enforcement officials and the institutions that enable and protect them, it may be harder to swallow more idealistic portrayals of them through fictional portrayals. Not everyone is Special Agent Dale Cooper from Twin Peaks or the lovable bunch in Brooklyn Nine-Nine. But there was something captivating about Nadeem’s own troubles and anxiety that brought him down to a more grounded level. His anxiety was economically-based, as a result of covering his sister-in-law’s health care coverage. Seeing a struggling, suburban Indian-American family just barely making it was instantly more tangible than the more lavish, romanticized views of such law enforcement officials on television.

I don’t believe that anyone in this season of television had it harder than Nadeem. He is torn between his duty to provide for his family, his own moral, ethical code, his loyalty to his agency, his friendship with Dex, his desperation to fight through the bureaucracy denying him a larger paycheck, and so many other forces that are in play. By the end of his plight, Nadeem leaves a mixed legacy. While he was complicit in many of Fisk’s crimes, he was also key to bringing the entire operation down. In a season where FBI agents are shown to be corrupt in a cartoonish fashion through a boardroom scene, Nadeem being the only one with an apparent conscience gives slight “not all cops” vibes, while at the same time being truly reflective of the hidden fears and anxieties even within the upper-middle class that can be exploited by bad actors.

Daredevil

Marvel’s Daredevil

Let’s rewind back to the point in which the paths of Matt Murdock, Dex, and Nadeem all converged, in a manner orchestrated by Fisk. There was something powerful and fateful about the first meeting of the two “Daredevils”—halfway through the season, both characters have individually gone through radically different journeys of self-exploration, and the clash between the two was like a chemical explosion. While I reveled in the creativity of the choreography and the display of Dex’s ability when the New York Comic-Con showed off the Bulletin fight sequence, something seeped into my head on my repeat viewing weeks later.

I had a sinking feeling that the context of the scene, with Dex murdering New York Bulletin journalists, and the fight scene taking place in their office space, was meant to be a reference to another recent tragedy. It seemed to me at the time that this unsettling sequence was meant to mirror the real-life June 2018 shooting at the Capital Gazette building, home of publications The Capital and Maryland Gazette, where five employees were killed.

It was sometime before writing this piece that I did my due diligence and found that production of Daredevil season 3 ended earlier in June, a couple of weeks before the tragedy occurred. For the most part, similarities were mere coincidence. Still, anyone with their ear to the news in the United States knows fully well that this anti-journalist sentiment was alive and well before this attack. One of the more important pillars of our modern society is that of the journalist and the news publication, having the freedom to hold those in power accountable to the truth. Likewise, these Bulletin reporters, led by Karen Page, were working on a piece that would have shed some light to Wilson Fisk’s fragile situation. Fisk nailed two birds with one stone, dispatching of the opposition, while also creating his false public enemy.

As with the aforementioned church attack in the show, the timing between the show’s premiere date and real-life events yet again produced an unusual effect. Another pillar of our society, one based on worship and faith, was under attack by violent forces. While these fictional and real events have no direct relationship, this frightening sequence was certainly based on a real attitude of intolerance that has been pervasive for the longest time. The context and scenario are different from reality, but the imagery remains the same to recall such real-life fears and anxieties.

Daredevil

Marvel’s Daredevil

Our main characters of Matt Murdock, Foggy Nelson, and Karen Page eventually get to a point where they must decide how to solve this impossible dilemma. The idealistic Foggy still firmly believed in the United States justice system, while a weary Matt believes that his vigilantism is the only solution. In real life, the justice system has been exploited, abused, corrupted, and has overall acted as a counter in favor of bad actors—I remained unsure of which method the show was advocating for. In the end, it seemed to favor a one-two punch combination.

If anyone is looking towards fantasy for solutions to real-life problems, they will find themselves sorely mistaken. Our current problems with combating cynicism, authoritarianism, and other negative forces will not be solved by two macho guys mercilessly punching each other in the face. While nothing will convince me that all art and media isn’t political, I will concede that entertainment such as Daredevil is meant to be escapism. I would argue, however, that the concept of “escapism” is grossly understood.

Not all escapist fiction is meant to completely take you away from the clear and present societal and personal anxieties. Rather, much of it is meant to take you to a place where those fears and anxieties can be confronted and defeated in a fantastical way—maybe it’s with a sword and shield, super strength, or the ability to fly. This is the fantasy that superhero fiction is able to provide.

Daredevil season 3 will obviously not solve any of our real-life problems—but it demonstrates that something as fantastical as the MCU can be very powerful by recalling realistic imagery and sentiments. In a society where people are fearful to live their regular lives under the threat of violence, however real or false that threat may be, and with bad actors exploiting that very fear, we need a fantasy like Daredevil. Season 3 is all about how he earned the famous moniker “the Man Without Fear.”

Daredevil may not be able to save us in real life, but perhaps for some people, he could inspire them to be just as fearless.

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