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| Trish (Rachael Taylor) and Jessica (Krysten Ritter), in one of their better sisterly moments, from Jessica Jones (Netflix). |
Two Marvel Comics-connected characters recently had their last seasons. Jessica Jones (Netflix) and Legion (FX). Official reason: cancellation. Real reason(s): Disney/Marvel is starting their own streaming service, and didn't want to invest any more money and time with adult-audience product involving minor characters in the Marvel Universe on competing networks.
If you haven't invested any time with either series, you should be in for a major treat. Both are challenging shows and defy any superhero stereotypes. No, it's not a Dark Knight treatment; it's good entertainment for adults with solid scripts and excellent performances from their acting ensembles. Jessica Jones is a crime noir series that has a female private eye who happens to have superpowers. Legion features a character loosely adjacent to the X-Men franchise, but no knowledge of any related lore is needed to view and enjoy the program.
One of my Netflix binge appointment series ended with Jessica Jones's last episode. For those not familiar or haven't been following the show lately, it ended with an appropriately bittersweet ending for the title character (played with a drunken snarl by Krysten Ritter), and nihilistic endings for her adopted mom (Rebecca De Mornay), former child star sister Trish (Rachael Taylor), and sleazy lawyer and sometimes employer Jeryn Hogarth (Carrie-Anne Moss). Don't journey into this program expecting any traditional happy endings, but if you are a viewer with a dark sense of humor, you'll be rewarded throughout its three seasons.
Jessica is a goth-dressing private eye who has superpowers of strength, leaping, and hardcore drinking (think a Maker's Mark a day). She deals with mundane cases, but also difficult cases that could threaten New York City as a whole. Season one involves a psychologically powerful villain Killgrave (a brilliant David Tennant about as far from Doctor Who as possible) who can get almost anyone to commit crimes for him, with Jessica being a notable exception. In season two, she uncovers a ring of human experimentation that includes a dangerous and unhinged killer with a troubling identity. Year three focuses on a Dexter-like serial killer (Jeremy Bobb) who doesn't have any noble vigilante angle for sympathy, and the rapidly disintegrating relationship Jessica has with Trish, once her best and possibly only good friend in her world.
If none of this sounds like superhero fodder, it isn't and doesn't play out like a hero plot either. Yes, Jessica generally prevails in the end and that's no plot spoiler for an adult viewer, but it comes at significant and painful costs for everyone. Still, if the ending wasn't satisfying on any level, you wouldn't see me recommending this series.
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| David (Dan Stevens) and Lenny (Aubrey Plaza) just hangin' out at the asylum in Legion (FX). |
About the only similarities Legion has with the aforementioned series is a three-season run and recent "cancellation." Take our protagonist David Haller (the versatile Dan Stevens). He is a suicidal young man whose latest attempt fatefully lands him in an asylum where David reunites with his best junkie friend Lenny (a shameless Aubrey Plaza). David also meets Sydney (Rachel Keller), who is also considered mentally disturbed, but it seems a lot more like she has powers that can endanger others, similar to David's profile. They quickly empathize with each other's plights and fall deeply in love. An asylum therapist (Jean Smart) seems benevolent enough, but what is up with the overbearing interrogator who could be FBI or CIA (Hamish Linklater)?
Of course, all is not as it seems, but it doesn't prepare you for the hallucinogenic experience of the series' remaining episodes. Think Twin Peaks meets The Prisoner meets the fourth wall breaking musical numbers in Paul Thomas Anderson films or American Horror Story. An example from the latter includes a deadly song duel of "Behind Blue Eyes" between a levitating David and his nemesis Farouk, the Shadow King (a suave and multi-lingual Navid Negabhan) in season two. By season three, David and Lenny are running their own flower child cult, trying to undo the damage they've done in the past through tripping into astral planes and time travel.
Legion is the creation of Noah Hawley, who also helms the daring but not-as-trippy television adaptation of Fargo. He stays away as far as possible from much of the Marvel back history until season three, where the father is revealed, and it shouldn't be a big surprise to comic book fans who it is. However, the fun is almost entirely and unabashedly in getting there, and unforgettable images and wonderfully warped covers of classic rock songs await attentive viewers. Those looking for something completely different, you have found your series.
Both are brief and satisfying enough as series to be binge-worthy. Legion will be on demand and on streaming services until the Great Mouse and Marvel decide to pluck it away. Same with Jessica Jones on Netflix. Enjoy the expansive possibilities that comic creations can inspire in well-crafted series.
Rating for both series: ***1/2 out of ****.







