Review by JC

Spawn

Season 1

Spawn is over the top. It mistakes nudity and blood and expletives to be mature, and comes off as all the more sophomoric for it. Spawn goes big in all things, good- the animation and some of the voice acting- and bad- in camera angles and in its depthless and monstrous villains. Its two biggest strengths that elevate it are the animation, in particular Spawn and his flowing and gorgeous cape, and the character himself.

Nothing will help you understand the appeal of Spawn better than this show, even if it doesn't make you a diehard fan. At the end of the season, he's called The Sad Man, and this could be an alternate title for the show. Spawn is allowed to be emotional, and yes, that includes anger... but it also involves grief, it allows empathy, it allows pain and love. Spawn is allowed to be pathetic- he'll wail in sorrow and scream in traumatic fear- but his pain isn't something to laugh at. You're meant to emphasize and feel for this broken, lost man, and there's something refreshing in that when dark heroes of his ilk like Batman are usually forced to be quiet, restrained, and stoic in their emotions.

Keith David is the show's MVP. The man brings Spawn to life and makes him feel like a person, not the poster child for 90's anti heroes. Every emotion is raw and lived in, and David pours his heart into the role. I didn't expect to ever be emotionally affected by the Spawn character, but David's performance in the final scene with the child of his wife is soft and tender in a way I never expected for the character, and Keith David is the glue that holds it together. He and the animation make this well worth a watch, 90s edge and all.

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@jc230 nice review! very well said

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