Tuesday, 26 April 2016

S.H.I.E.L.D., The Singularity - April 26

And so, ‘The Singularity’ was aired. What can be said about it? Alisha, the redhead from Li Shi, finally gets to shine – she has been on and off since the finale of S2, and apparently she has become evil once more – or maybe the Hive have brainwashed her into doing this – whatever. The point is that the Hive is not Grant Ward, all Ward haters are wrong, and one has to give the actors their due: their job was done marvellously! The writers, on the other hand…

Well, to be more precise, the cast – it just cannot get itself together: Elena and Joey are absent altogether, Lincoln is absent from the second half of the episode and Mack is playing a background character, period. How did he defeat James?

…James, apparently, is the new Hellfire. Ok, no, just no. Hellfire – back in the comics – was the first love of Daisy, who betrayed her and the rest of the Secret Warriors to Hydra, so Fury killed him (without anyone knowing, for Daisy’s sake) on the sly – wait. Doesn’t this sound like Ward, especially in S1?

Yes, much more so than some Li Shi reject, who lives in either Australia or in South Dakota, (it depends on which episode you are watching). Yes, the comics and MCU are two very different…universes, but still, if the movies are borrowing from the comics, surely some similarities must be made in plot, aside from everything else? Instead, all goes helter-skelter, and we do not even know how his battle with Mack had went. Yes, some cut-outs must be made, but they should not diminish the plot SO much.

Speaking of the plot… ‘The Singularity’ introduces Dr. Radcliff, who isn’t Hydra or S.H.I.E.L.D., just some sort of an alien fan, who either is going to die by the end of S3, or he will be the next super-villain, for Hydra has fallen.

Yes, that is right, Hydra has fallen. The Hell? Coulson is correct to feel dissatisfied by Talbot’s achievement: Captain America: Civil War movie is coming to the screens on May 6, and its villains include baron Zemo and Crossbones. Baron Zemo is a complex figure; actually, there are several baron Zemos’ in the comics, so it is for the best to wait for the movie to be aired to learn which one is appearing in it, but Crossbones? He is Brock Rumlow, who was Hydra back in Captain America: The Winter Soldier film, so either MCU is taking a lot of liberties with the Marvel canon (the odds are that the fans are going to hate that), or Hydra is not as dead as Coulson and Talbot and the others think.

So: liberties with characters, liberties with canon, possibly forced interaction with ‘the rest’ of the MCU – Kree are coming, so Guardians of the Galaxy, anyone – (the sort of forced interaction that went down like a lead balloon in the S3 premiere, BTW) and the issue with the InHumans: there almost aren’t any.

No, seriously, the MCU is having problems with InHumans in general – their own film was cancelled for the moment – and AoS has problems depicting them on screen. Most of the time it were just Lincoln and Daisy, with Joey starring on occasion and Slingshot appearing in just two episodes for the moment. Now there are Alisha and James, plus Hive, (he is not Grant), and Daisy and Lincoln…who appeared in just the first half of ‘The Singularity’. For some reason, MCU has problems in depicting them, in finding actors to play them, so yeah, it is a mystery.

Of course, it does not mean that MCU is having problems, unlike AoS. Agent Carter preformed wonderfully on its second season, Hunter and Morse’s appearance on their own show is now a guarantee (and people will watch it, at least at first, to see where they are going), and a lot hinges on the upcoming Captain movie. This is not AoS, this is the big leagues. Of course, ‘Dawn of Justice’ of DCEU was something of a flop, so perhaps Cap and Tony can do better? There are some concerns, especially about Pepper not appearing in the film, (which does suck), but maybe Tony can team up with Maria Hill? Either way, it this movie flops, then AoS will have new problems, much bigger and badder ones than they do now…


Thus, let us wait and see how the Captain movie goes first, before making any bets regarding AoS. Until next time!

Tuesday, 19 April 2016

S.H.I.E.L.D., The Team - April 19

And so, lo and behold – the revenge of Grant Ward from beyond the grave, bitches! Coulson had killed him – and Hive took over from where he had left off and delivered in style. Last episode, he had Guyerra beat the shite out of everyone, including Mack and May and Coulson; in this episode, he uses Daisy/Skye to do the same thing to S.H.I.E.L.D. Go Hive! The next promo shows him alongside Daisy, while Lincoln is intent on getting her back, so odds are that within the last four episodes of S3 Lincoln will do this – just in time. He has already showed quite a bit of character growth, staying with S.H.I.E.L.D. (though he had zapped the shite out of Coulson, so the two of them may be good because of that too) despite Daisy’s seductions, and-

Moreover, the problem is not that the writers (or so some people think) are trying to assassinate Grant’s character, or to make him into someone like Killgrave from JJ…well, actually, that is the problem. They are unoriginal and are constantly rehashing the material from the first two seasons – anyone who had seen the last few episodes of S1 in particular will recognize the parallels (and John Garrett is laughing his ass off in Hell as he is enjoying the view of Daisy quaking S.H.I.E.L.D.’s HQ from his personal rack or cauldron of tar or whatever), but it doesn’t mean that they’ll enjoy it. They just may want original material, not more rehash of the same old. (Including the Clairvoyance/the sight of the future bit after 2-3 seasons it is getting old, if AoS will return for a 4th season they will have to come with something original…hopefully).

On the other hand…there is little to no other hand. The show is still limited by the matters of cast (and cash): yes, the Secret Warriors kick ass, but, apparently, their tenure as regulars on the show is still not established: Joey wants officially out of it all, and Elena has her own doubts. Malick, speaking of outs, is dead at last, so Coulson had just shot his mouth to the deceased head of Hydra for nothing.

Well, maybe not for ‘nothing’ – maybe Malick had told him about Hive, something important (and how does Coulson know about Hive to begin with? Randolph from 3x02?), but he was the head of Hydra: WTF Coulson trusted him in the first place? The man believes anyone, it seems, except for Grant Ward – at least he has manned up enough to admit that Hive is the one enemy we had made, but he still gives speeches, like the one that he had given to Daisy in the last quarter of this episode…only Daisy was under Hive’s ‘sway’ this entire time, Coulson’s speech was wasted, just as his time with Malick had been, most likely: here he was, trying to trick Malick into selling Hive out for revenge – and along comes Daisy and kills Malick dead. And then she also blows him up to confuse her teammates, S.H.I.E.L.D. and Secret Warriors. Coulson and his people seem to be reminiscent of Kerensky and his failed democratic regime in the pre-U.S.S.R. Russia.

To elaborate, after the Romanov royal family had resigned from their rule (no, seriously, this is what they have done) and before the Bolsheviks had seized power, the Russian elite, aristocracy and intelligentsia tried to establish a democratic government in Russia. The result was not unlike what happed about 70 years later, during the Perestroika and Yeltsin’s regime: anarchy, but for a shorter chronological period. That democratic regime in Russia lasted for a very short chronological period, and it remains a sign of incompetence, political and otherwise, in the Russian culture to this day. S.H.I.E.L.D., in ‘The Team’ and ‘Spacetime’ seems to have become just as incompetent, with its members liable to turn upon each other easily: the InHuman Secret Warriors may be infected by Hive, according to a Hydra head? Let us hide it from them, make it an unnecessary mess, and turn upon them – with sleeping gas and whatnot. Great teamwork, DC; I hope that Hive beats the shite out of you in Grant’s body the next time you meet.

So: S.H.I.E.L.D.’s feud with Hive (in Grant’s body) seems to be reaching its’ peak, and right now the agents appear to be incompetent hypocrites, and with 4 episodes to go, it gives plenty of time for the writers and similar staff to further assassinate their characters. I can hardly wait. Not.

Sunja

A skinwalker sorcerer with a particular bloodline:

Sunja
Fanglord sorcerer 1
LN Medium humanoid (human, shapechange, skinwalker)
Init +2; Senses Perception +3, See in Darkness
DEFENSE
AC 12, touch 12, flat-footed 10 (+2 Dex)
hp 8 (1d6+2)
Fort +3, Ref +2, Will +3
OFFENSE
Speed 40 ft.
Melee quarterstaff +0 (1d6) or
Melee bite +0 (1d6) and
Melee 2 claws (1d4)
Ranged dart +2 (1d4)
Spell-Like Ability
       1/day - jump
Sorcerer Spells Known (CL 1st; concentration +4)
1st (4/day)—color spray (DC 14), magic missile
0 (at will)—daze (DC 13), detect magic, ray of frost, read magic
Bloodline div
STATISTICS
Str 10, Dex 12, Con 13, Int 12, Wis 10, Cha 17 (19)
Base Atk +0; CMB +0; CMD 12
Skills Acrobatics +2, Bluff +7 (9), Intimidate +7 (9), Knowledge (planes) +5, Perception +5, Sense Motive +1, Spellcraft +5
Languages Common, Draconic
SQ bloodline arcana (+1 DC for spells that deal damage to more than 1 creature in an affected area), change shape, spoiling touch (DC 13)
Combat Gear potion of cure light wounds, scrolls of disguise self (2), scrolls of shield (2), wand of sleep (11 charges), alchemist's fire (2); Other Gear darts (5), quarterstaff, 33 gp


Tuesday, 12 April 2016

S.H.I.E.L.D., Paradise Lost - April 12

Once more, AoS continues to astonish – the show’s dynamic seems to be as tight as before, the show’s script seems to be as tight as before, the plot twists seem to be as tight as before, yet the show’s ratings keep falling. Dramatically. “Spacetime”, last week’s episode, had the lowest ratings yet, and this trend does not seem to be bucking.

Yes, all shows tend to have their ratings decrease – just look at ‘Blindspot’ for example. Actually, ‘Blindspot’ is particular: not only it had stolen Jamie Alexander from Marvel™ (she played lady Sif in AoS and ‘Thor’ movies of MCU), but it had stolen AoS’ ideas and depicts them right. A mystery, not unlike what the agents had undergone in S1? Check. A mystery girl, not unlike Skye/Daisy (especially in the first seasons)? Check. A very complicated relationship(s)? Check. A FitzSimmons-like tragic relationship? Check, and ‘Blindspot’ has all done it better, without resorting to too many plot twists, and no moral ambiguity, not like what AoS had done to Kara Palamas in S2. Put otherwise, ‘Blindspot’ treats its’ characters proper, while AoS does not. (Moreover, in one of the ‘Blindspot’ episodes, the show’s team investigates a death of some poor Latin-American woman named Palamas. Clearly, ‘Blindspot’ is in some polemics with AoS and does not even try to deny it too hard.)

Take a look at ‘Paradise Lost’, this week’s episode. (Who lost the paradise? Maybe Daisy and Lincoln, I do not know.) Plot twists abound – unnecessarily, too, as do unnecessary deaths. Hive is not Grant Ward, but Gideon Malick’s brother, who just looks like Grant, whenever he is not looking like his comic book self? Ok, possibly AoS could not afford to replace Brett with another actor. So why did Stephanie Malick had to die. She did not look much of a likable character, but she died because of empty drama… and to explain further, perhaps, why Hive is going to kill Malick? Maybe, but ever since the demise of S2, quite a few viewers have stopped watching AoS because of the unnecessary deaths that began at its finale, “S.O.S”, something that had been avoided in AoS S1, BTW.

Another sticky/sore point of AoS is the matter of team and trust. ‘Blindspot’ handles it quite well, without any moral limbo, (just look at Weller and Mayweather, for example); ‘Agent Carter’ did not have too many issues with it either; AoS tends to drive it constantly all over episodes and seasons – whom do you trust and why?

But then again, AoS tends NOT to come up with any original material any longer – tonight’s episode about brothers was SO adapted/taken forth from Grant’s conflict with Christian back in S2; Lincoln’s little revelation was not unlike what Grant could and would tell Daisy if he had been given the chance in the past – the hypocrisy and prejudice of the show’s script writers can be overwhelming. That said, they did rather ‘redeem’ themselves with Guyterra beat – single-handedly – the crap out of almost the entire AoS crew, including Coulson, May and Mackenzie, and captured them all for Hydra. Sieg Hail!

…And yes, Hydra is another problematic point. AoS crew cannot decide if it is supposed to be a Nazi death cult or not. Sometimes the emphasis is on the Nazi part, other time on the death part, etc. Again, quite a few of fans are not impressed with this indecisiveness on this hotly debated topic, and have stopped watching AoS for that reason too.

Now, this does not diminish the fact that the show does seem to get its continuity together, at last, but it may be too late - this is the second part of S3, not S1 or 2 – by now a core group of fans had been established, the viewers know what they view – or don’t view, if they don’t like AoS. Judging by the shrinking ratings of the show so far, it is becoming obvious where the majority lies.


Until next week, then!

Tuesday, 5 April 2016

S.H.I.E.L.D., Spacetime - April 5

Regrettably, no episode review this time due to unforeseen circumstances.