"No bad deed goes unpunished": the grim trailer of the TV series "Echoes" was released
Marvel Studios has unveiled the first trailer for the series "Echoes", which will be about the deaf superheroine Maya Lopez.
For the first time the audience saw Maya in the series "Hawkeye". In the story, the girl is haunted by Kingpin (Vincent D'Onofrio), who raised and educated her, before Maya decided to leave her past life behind. Now Lopez must return home and face her own legacy.
"Echoes" is the first Marvel series on the Disney+ platform to receive a high TV-MA age rating (meaning the project contains graphic violence or sex scenes and can only be watched by viewers 17 and older).
Director and executive producer Sydney Freeland commented at a recent press screening: "People on our show, they bleed, they die, they get killed, and there are real consequences". She also added that she looked to Marvel's previous highly rated series, "Marvel's Daredevil" and "Marvel's The Punisher", for story and visual inspiration.
All five episodes of "Echoes" will premiere on January 10.
Discuss this news
Allegedly, this is pejorative, because that's what wives used to be called, according to the professions of their husbands
If people have nothing to do, let them add suffixes and endings indicating gender everywhere. Just be glad that you are not busy with nonsense.
It's important that the story itself is done well, and Marvel has had big problems with this in recent years.
On the other hand, perhaps this is the least anticipated series of all the current Marvel, maybe it will benefit.
The trailer itself looks quite good, although the crooked choreography is very noticeable in close-up. And a new level of cruelty \ violence is being tested for Disney projects, which, if successful, can help other Persians who do not work in the PG-13 rating. True, I do not believe in success, but on the other hand, it will be difficult to fall below Secret Invasion.
you underestimate their power!
Disney has been successfully killing off their major franchises for the last few years. And if there is nothing left to hook in their large-scale MCU, go back to the street-level heroes and tell stories about people with abilities, and not some empty global threat and rays in the sky, they can still hold \ attract an audience, imo.
For example, this year the Korean TV series "Moving" was released, also based on comics and the author was the screenwriter of the adaptation. The most expensive series by Korean standards, but Disney does not invest in marketing for a global audience at all, as a result, it did not make a noise. And a very high-quality project came out, especially against the background of Disney-Marvel. And that's exactly the story about people who have some abilities, the emphasis is still on humanity, parents' motivations to protect their children, etc. It will remind many of NBC's Heroes (before they rolled down), only he is still in the Korean sandbox.
Music, atmosphere, dialogues, character growth, the characters themselves... there's everything Marvel has problems with right now. It was glued to the screen throughout its entire length. Maybe someone else will come in here.
And violence does not guarantee quality, on the contrary, it is a great reason to fuck up the series if the violence is unreasonable, but for show.
P/S: Namely, this series is very difficult to somehow pull out because of the main character. The very concept of the hero is a garbage dump. And "the actress" who plays her. Or rather, it's not even an "actress" about a way to assemble an agenda combo. We consider: Indian, deaf, missing one leg. But even that wouldn't matter if she could play, but she CAN'T. It should be a scripted masterpiece and exceptional supporting actors + an antagonist (so far only he inspires hope).