Tuesday, October 02, 2018

The woman who just wouldn’t quit Part 3

Jessica Jones Season 2
Netflix
2018




I know it’s been a few months since the second season of Netflix’s Marvel series “Jessica Jones” dropped, but my wife and I just finished watching it. We have a 7-year-old daughter, and sadly, most television and streaming programs these days are not created with a family audience in mind. I’m not personally opposed to anything in this series, mind you. I honestly feel that “Jessica Jones” is my favorite and consistently the best of the Marvel Netflix street-level heroes series of shows. “Daredevil” and its offshoot, “The Punisher,” were also excellent programs. While I had trouble getting into “Iron Fist” and “Luke Cage,” “The Defenders,” which brought all four of the main characters together, was also good. “Jessica Jones” is my favorite, though. It’s just that some of the scenes and topics in the show are not suitable for my elementary-age child to watch while we’re eating dinner.

I’ve previously read and enjoyed much of Jessica’s brief history in the print comics, and you can read my thoughts about her two main series here and here. Hence this being “Part 3” when the previous two posts had nothing to do with this character. (Also as a side note: I re-read the issues in question before writing those posts back in 2013. I liked them so much upon re-reading them, that I sought out the debut hardcover of Alias, so I have now read those first nine issues of Jessica’s debut.)

The first season of Netflix’s version of Jessica Jones started in a familiar place for readers of the comics. Much of her past was explored by making Kilgrave — alias the Purple Man and amazingly, creepily portrayed by David Tennant in the show — the main villain of the season. Jessica herself is portrayed by Krysten Ritter as a no-nonsense, boozing, jaded private detective who cares more than she initially lets on. The show also includes Malcolm, played by Eka Darville, a young wannabe assistant to Jessica. In the show, Malcolm is also a former victim of Kilgrave’s.

Several other characters make it into Netflix's "Jessica Jones" from a variety of Marvel Comics sources. Claire Temple, alias the Night Nurse and portrayed by Rosario Dawson, is most closely associated with Luke Cage in the comics, but she was one of the earliest unifying members of all of the Netflix shows’ casts. Jeryn Hogarth is a character most closely associated with Iron Fist in the comics. A male attorney in print, Jeryn “Jeri” Hogarth is a female attorney in the Netflix Marvel universe and is played by Carrie-Anne Moss. Actor Mike Colter first brings Luke Cage to life in the first season of “Jessica Jones,” too.

But the most important transplant for the Netflix version of Jessica Jones is Patricia “Patsy” Walker, played in the show by Rachael Taylor. In the comics, Patsy Walker was the co-star of a teen romance/comedy title in the 1940s and 1950s. She was re-invented as a superhero named Hellcat in the mid-1970s. The Netflix show works Patricia “Trish” Walker in as Jessica’s sister after Jessica survives the crash that kills her biological family and is adopted by the Walker family. Trish was a child television star best known for a sitcom called “It’s Patsy” in the Netflix continuity, but she begins her transformation into the eventual Hellcat during the second season of “Jessica Jones.”

All of these nods to past Marvel continuity are a great bonus for a longtime fan such as myself. But the producers behind “Jessica Jones” do a fantastic job of keeping those things as Easter eggs for the longtime fans while not confusing fans new to the Netflix series. They tell you everything you need to know about each person to follow along. I know this because my wife watched both seasons of the show with me, and she not only doesn’t know all the comic book ties, but doesn’t really care. She doesn’t want to have to do homework (or listen to me explain everything ad nauseam) to follow a television show. She was not only fine simply watching what was presented, but she also enjoyed “Jessica Jones” more than the other Netflix Marvel programs.

So the show is accessible to non-comics fans. It also holds surprises for longtime comics fans. The Netflix series does not feel it has to follow the character’s history from the books to the letter. Starting off with Kilgrave was a smart decision because it is a compelling story and gets to the heart of the character of Jessica Jones. Attaching all of the other ancillary characters from other books was the first departure and has offered up a number of story directions different from the comics history of the character, for instance. I don’t believe any kind of foster family was ever introduced for Jessica’s backstory in the comics, for instance. Not only adding a foster family, but adding one with its own heroic history, opened up a number of possibilities. The second season of “Jessica Jones” further opens up the title character’s history by suggesting the possibility that Jessica is no longer the sole survivor of the car crash she believes claimed the lives of her biological family.

Netflix’s “Jessica Jones” is smartly written, wonderfully acted and well worth checking out if you enjoy a good drama. The other shows will allow you to learn more about the shared universe, if you enjoy this show, but it is not necessary to watch all the shows to understand any one. Give Jessica a try; she’s just conquered another medium, so she remains the woman who just won't quit!

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