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The superhero genre took a wild beating last week with Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice. Not only did the film undo the freshness injected into the genre by Deadpool a month ago but it also reminded us once again that bigger budgets don’t necessarily mean better quality.
The main selling point of Batman v Superman was that the two iconic superheroes would punch each other in the face. Here’s the problem - the audience already knew that they would become friends later, so the conflict between them needed to be really solid.
In Daredevil S2 we get three full episodes of the ideological conflict between Daredevil and The Punisher. The former, like Batman, does not like to kill people while the latter would drive every ounce of ammunition into anyone he doesn’t like. You get genuine, nuanced and richly detailed (and also fun) back and forth between The Punisher and Daredevil yammering at each other, sometimes violently defending their respective stand. And to top it all there’s one moment when Daredevil even contemplates going to the other side, acknowledging that some people deserve to die.
One might argue that Marvel and Netflix had ten episodes so it was easier to make this conflict nuanced, but then Batman Begins quite beautifully established the ideological conflict between Ra’s Al Ghul and Wayne in one movie.
While some people might watch modern superhero movies for social commentary or philosophical fluff, most people watch them for the awesome action. When you promise Batman and Superman hitting each other, one expects some real satisfying Pacific Rim levels of fun.
Daredevil S2 took action to another level. If you liked the one-take hallway fight scene in S1, the fight choreography in S2 is that scene on hard steroids. And pretty much every episode has such a scene. Moreover, there is beautiful detailing in the way the three superheroes in Daredevil fight. The Punisher is a wild animal with guns who would tear things apart, Elektra has a series of quick moves that first mobilizes the enemy and then takes them down, and Daredevil has now become a sleek fighting machine much like a Ninja. The scene where The Punisher rips through the inmates in the prison is far more fun than anything in BvS.
With Marvel delivering ‘funny’ Avengers movies BvS needed to be different than the Avengers in style and tone, and the filmmakers attempted this by making the film look dour and depressing, without a shred of humour.
It’s kind of ironic that Marvel themselves tried and achieved something genuinely different in their own show. Daredevil S2 raises the gore in unexpected ways - there is some imagery that would make you flinch. But the best scenes are the ones where violence erupts when you least expect it. Case in point, a scene where Matt Murdock visits The Kingpin in prison and gets his face hammered on the table.
But it’s not just the violence – the world of Daredevil has adults talking, doing smart things that adults would do, reacting to situations how adults would.
One of the most cringe-inducing moments of BvS was when Louis Lane walks into Batman and Superman fighting and tells the former about the latter’s mom. Apart from that scene, the main function of Lane was to either be saved repeatedly by Superman or be a really terrible journalist.
Contrast this with Elodie Yung as Elektra who:
So even if Deborah Ann Woll’s
character conveniently shifts from a lawyer intern to a full-time reporter
without having any experience, it’s easy to forgive because you get Elektra
kicking copious ass. With Jessica Jones and now Elektra, Marvel are serious
about rendering superlative female characters that don’t exist only for the
cleavage and ass shots and be saved by the hero.
The weakest part of Daredevil S2 was the fact that there wasn’t a real ‘main villain’ like in S1, and yet that aspect worked better than what we got in BvS.
In Daredevil S2 we got bits and spurts of a larger conspiracy involving the ninja assassins at play and there’s enough mysticism and tease (like the hole in the ground for instance) to make us wait for S3. It makes the franchise much smoother because Marvel has laid the groundwork for a much larger universe leading to the Avengers style Inhumans team up show.
(Mihir Fadnavis is not only a film critic and journalist but also a certified film geek who has consumed more movies than meals.)
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