Television Review: The Defenders (2017)

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(source:  imdb.com)

After three years, it has become increasingly apparent that Marvel Comics’ ambitious attempt to replicate the commercial triumph of its film universe by repeating the narrative and structural formula on Netflix’s small screens has ultimately failed to achieve similar success. Truth be told, Marvel and Netflix struck gold three times over—with Daredevil, Jessica Jones, and Luke Cage—series that impressed audiences with their quality and exceptional diversity of characters, style, and atmosphere. The fourth series, Iron Fist, by contrast, drew fierce criticism and raised concerns that Netflix and Marvel had lost their “mojo,” with each subsequent release seemingly growing worse.

This issue is far more pronounced on television than in cinema, precisely because the television audience—accustomed to a far broader and higher-quality range of alternative content—is far more discerning than the teenage demographic, for whom it is considerably easier to slot in two or three hours of CGI-heavy superhero escapades once every few months. Thus, the fifth series, intended to unite the four previously introduced heroes for the first time, was met with intense scrutiny.

The Defenders was conceived as a miniseries—a kind of “special” event meant to serve as the television equivalent of The Avengers, which brought together far more iconic figures like Iron Man, Hulk, and Thor. The plot weaves together seemingly unrelated events culminating in a New York earthquake that, while causing minimal damage, is mysteriously covered up by city authorities. Danny Rand (Finn Jones), a billionaire, former Buddhist monk, and martial arts master, suspects the clandestine and immensely powerful criminal organisation known as The Hand—his mortal enemy—is responsible. Luke Cage (Mike Colter), fresh out of prison in Harlem, investigates a string of local youths exploited by a shadowy criminal syndicate. The alcoholic private investigator Jessica Jones (Krysten Ritter) is hired to uncover a missing husband’s explosive plot tied to underground construction beneath New York. Into their investigation steps Matt Murdock (Charlie Cox), a blind lawyer juggling his legal career with his nocturnal vigilante activities on the streets of New York. Meanwhile, The Hand falls under the control of Alexandra (Sigourney Weaver), an exceptionally sophisticated businesswoman diagnosed with a terminal illness. Her crowning ambition is the “Black Sky” project, helmed by Elektra Natchios (Élodie Yung), Murdock’s former lover and martial arts prodigy, resurrected by The Hand to serve as their secret weapon after her fatal demise.

For fans of the earlier series, The Defenders delivers exactly what they expected or enjoyed: familiar allies, the same gritty aesthetic, and unflinching violence. Much of the action unfolds at night, the dialogue remains unusually coarse by television standards, and the brutality is explicit, including graphic depictions of cold-weapon trauma to the human body. However, viewers will soon realise there is little new here. The antagonists’ convoluted conspiracy—revealed late to have surprisingly human motivations—fails to evoke the same menace as in prior series. The sole fresh element is Alexandra, masterfully portrayed by Sigourney Weaver, who elevates a thinly written character through sheer presence.

Marvel’s far greater challenge lies in the unsustainable pace of churning out new series every few months, straining both creative and financial resources. Unavoidable comparisons to the opulent cinematic universe underscore the Defenders’ comparatively bleak, prosaic reality. Instead of grand daylight battles, the heroes grapple with villains in dimly lit tunnels or windowless rooms, often wielding knives in sequences that—particularly when poorly edited—become bewilderingly chaotic. Nowhere is this more evident than in the finale, where what should have been an apocalyptic underground showdown feels cheap and anticlimactic, undermined further by a perfunctory cliffhanger.

The creators of what was once hailed as television’s most dynamic franchise must now confront reality. Without recalibrating their approach, the future for these heroes looks decidedly grim.

RATING: 5/10 (++)

(Note: The text in the original Croatian version is available here.)

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1 comments
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I am tired to watch same narrative over and over again. I am sure the world did not end its creative and the super heroes movies can do so much better. Let's see if maybe somebody will come with something to surprise the movies and tv addicts like me/us in the future.