[6.9/10] Whether you enjoyed this episode, and really, this whole team-up season, basically comes down to one question: did you like the back half of Daredevil’s Season 2? If so, if you were engaged by the Matt Murdock vs. mystical ninjas storyline, and more to the point, the tortured romance between him and Elektra, then “The Defenders” and The Defenders should be the peak of something grand and enjoyable. If, like me, you found both to be tiresome and tedious, then the way that this finale, as the culmination of four separate shows, doubled down on both those elements, makes it a disappointing conclusion to both The Defenders and this phase of the Netflix universe.
Let’s be frank here, Elektra’s been a pretty middling-to-awful addition to Daredevil’s world from the beginning. Anchoring so much of the team-up series on her was a gamble, and when she could be an essentially silent badass, one who had history with Matt that complicated things, it was fine. But now that she’s back to monologuing, trading reheated Batman-Catwoman barbs with Daredevil, and taking up all the oxygen in the room, we’re back to this being the pits in the pit.
It’s not like this is a surprise. Lord knows that the thread of Matt’s feelings of Elektra has been followed throughout The Defneders. But it’s still a disappointment that the story of these four heroes joining forces basically comes down to Matt and Elektra hashing out their stock tortured romance with painful, facepalm-inducing dialogue. This series could have been so much more, and about so much more, than Matt’s relationship with his ex-girlfriend, and instead it devolves into poorly-written, fatalistic crud.
Still, while that’s a big piece of the puzzle, it shouldn’t obscure all the things that the Defenders finale does right. For one thing, despite the disappointing outing in the prior episode, we get a pretty damn good fight here. Long takes have been a trademark of the Marvel Netflix shows for a while, and while it seemed a bit overly choreographed, the camera swirling around the room, flitting around the action as each of heroes kicks some ass, was a truly satisfying moment that circles back (nigh-literally) to the famous shot from The Avengers. Everyone knew this series was going to have to end up with a big team up battle, and while it’s mostly empty calories, The Defenders delivers.
Heck, even the four-on-one battle with Elektra worked pretty damn well. There’s some of the same quick cuts and people being shrouded in darkness, but it did sell Elektra as a threat to even four people with superpowers, and helped build her up as a villain physically even if the show couldn’t quite do that emotionally.
On top of that, the show even gave the secondary characters a nice rumble of their own! I’d be lying if I said I was super excited to see Bakuto back and spouting his typical bad guy banalities again, but I really appreciated that they gave Colleen in particular a chance to be a part of the fight in some way, and even get a bit of closure on her arc from Iron Fist. I’m glad Claire was there, though frankly it made little sense that she got involved in the physical clash, but I suppose as the link between these shows she needed to be a part of the major proceedings. And even Misty got a badass moment, one of the few good guys to pay a real price for all these threats.
(As an aside, I wasn’t expecting it to happen, but I would have absolutely fistpumped if when Colleen was talking to Misty about Danny’s “connections” in the hospital, she had beckoned in Fitz and Simmons to rig up an arm like Coulson’s for her.)
But at the end of the day, the major plot points of the finale are simply uninspiring. The reveal that there’s dragon bones in the ground beneath Manhattan is fine I guess, but the whole mining operation from The Hand mixed with Elektra comes off like a standard villain plot, replete with Gao and others spouting even more hoary old villain lines. Using the bomb to bring everything down creates a nice ticking clock for the episode, but otherwise just feels like a way to add more explosions and cheap high drama to the finale.
What’s worse is that much of the climax of the story and the tone of the aftermath centers on the obvious fake out that Matt Murdock died in that explosion. Maybe I’ve just watched too many superhero shows to fall for this type of thing, but it feels insulting to play up the overwhelming tragic air of this event when you just know that they’re going to undo it within five minutes, in a franchise where at least four people have already come back from the dead. We never saw a body which, in TV land, means he’s not dead, and it makes the emotional material that comes afterward seem built on an obvious lie (particularly with Karen’s “it doesn’t feel like this is over” nonsense at the church).
It’s a shame, because there’s a lot of good work being done with everyone picking up the pieces after all the excitement. (And before it for that matter, with Karen and Trish making for a great pairing in a well-acted scene that makes each understand their relation to their hero of choice a little more understandable. There’s a lot of core problems with The Defenders, but the show at least has the decency to tie off all its loose ends and character arcs.
That means that Jessica Jones has her moment of starting to feel better, to where she can clear the sign at her office again. It means that Foggy can get The Defenders and their hangers on off the hook with police, and share a nice moment with Claire where he comes to terms with his role in Matt’s “death.” It means that Luke and Jessica can have a moment to get where they’re good after everything that happened between them. It means that Iron Fist can take Daredevil’s instruction to protect his city to heart and loom on the rooftops as Matt once did.
It goes on for a little long, but the finale gets credit for treating these characters’ stories as if they matter, even after the city-threatening threat is neutralized. Centering the whole thing on the relationship between Elektra and Matt, a boring set of Hand villains, and a cheap death fake out takes a lot of the wind out of The Defenders sails (not to mention the heaps of cringe-worthy dialogue), but you can tell the showrunners and writers care about the stories and emotional arcs of The Defenders and their allies, and that goes a long way.
Unfortunately, it’s not enough to fully redeem this miscalibrated finale for a miscalibrated mini-series. The prospect of teaming up these four characters who were established independently and letting them loose together in a shared conflict was an exciting one. When The Defenders stuck with that idea, giving us interesting pairings and moments for the good guys to clash and take comfort in one another, it paid dividends.
When it rehashed threats and characters from the individual shows that weren’t all that interesting the first time, it felt like a waste of everyone’s time. It’s a very watchable eight episodes, that ends with a watchable finale, but never quite hits the heights it should have been able to reach for such a momentous, nearly unprecedented type of storytelling on television.
[SCREAMS FOR 10 LIFETIMES STRAIGHT] MY HEART IS EXPLODING OH MY GOD. EIGHT EPISODES ARE NOT ENOUGH.
I NEED to know how he got out of that hole right now, holy shit. I mean it's crazy to be worried about Matt knowing noway in hell they'd kill him off, but I still was affected? And his supposed "death" was really sad? I mean that scene of Karen and Foggy waiting for him to walk through the door and then realizing he wasn't broke my heart. I nearly clawed my eyes out waiting for the scene where they show his face again, because I don't think I could've taken the season being over before we see him very well. And I hope I'm right in this but if he, a mortal, made it out alive then for sure it was thanks to Elektra and she is alive too. I choose to believe this and no fact will change my mind. Still, this is the worst cliffhanger in the history of ever. I can't wait a year or two to see more of this. And Maggie? His mother? Oh my god, give me season 3 now. My opinion may be biased thanks the amount of Matt and Elektra we got in this episode, but I think it was the best written one on the season, as it should be. The finale did not disappoint. God, so much shit went down in it but somehow all I care about right now is Matt and Elektra. I've said this before and I'll say it again, Charlie and Elodie have INSANELY good chemistry, like that shit with them was tragic. I really really really hope she will be a part of Season 3. Even if as the main villain. I don't care. I just hope this wasn't the end of Elektra.
Just a few trailing thoughts after letting the finale sink in a bit...
I have to wonder if there's anything odd to "dying" within the ancient skeleton of a dragon, in the very place from which The Hand had intended to harvest "the substance", that we'll see affecting the path and nature of the somehow-rescued Devil of Hell's Kitchen when we see him next...
And who thinks that we'll see not only Matt coming back in whatever crazy way just happened, but probably Elektra and/or Gao, as well?
Did we just see a set-up pointing toward the Daughters of the Dragon coming soon? (Arm? Pfft. We can rebuild her. We have the technology... Danny's hospital resources, a little Stark tech... yeeaaah. Actually, it'd be pretty wild for Misty to get her bionic prosthetic arm and then sometime later happen to run into Deathlok— what? oh, what was I saying... right. Okay.)
At the end, Danny, crouching kinda-sorta Daredevil-like atop that building, watching, listening, or whatever he thought he was doing... Kind of a wonderful tribute to the fallen, even if there's no way Danny could be doing (or even really understand) what Matt did when he stood like that, listening to the beats and arrhythmias and myocardial infarctions of his city... but he's there, trying to honor and fulfill, somehow... Just don't fall off that ledge, kid, okay?
I didn't expect much when I started this show. It unexpectedly hyped me up, but the finale let me down. It's ok as a conclusion I guess. But the climax has been botched.
Not a fan of the building bombing. And I've never liked the countdown scenes with unrealistic timing for cheap thrills.
There are way too many mistakes on this.
First they just put all the explosives in the same place ?
Then seeing the depth of the hole, the elevator would probably take more than 5 minutes, so even if there was no problem and if they didn't have to finish it by climbing, and didn't have to deal with the cops, timing does not work.
Matthew could not sense the depth of the hole, yet when at the bottom he could hear the beep ?
Luke saying "I'm not letting you do that"... and that's it they're out ?? What even was the point of having swat coming in then ?
Really too bad it turned into a big fight with goons instead of a cool one against the bosses. You barely see Gao, Murakami is useless. Even more with removing Bakuto to have him fight Colleen again. He had no reason to be there. And it was already unrealistic that she could beat it with what we knew the first time (just that he was her sensei and had a lot of knowledge of various martial arts), but knowing that he's an ex Kunlun that has been alive for millennia ? That's a joke. Same for the way he's playing nice with Claire in the middle of the fight instead of one shot killing her without blinking.
The fight part of Daredevil/Elektra is ok I guess. But the talk... As usual with this trope, we know since episode one that it will end like that, but her change of heart/attitude is entirely random and not based on anything that happens.
Interesting thing is that "the substance" is actually dragon bone marrow ? And that New York is holding up on these bones and will crumble if they are removed ?
Danny is all sulky that someone else got to be the hero.
Luke definitely works better with Jessica.
Review by Aniela KrajewskaVIP 8BlockedParentSpoilers2017-08-18T22:01:37Z— updated 2018-07-13T21:53:43Z
I... don't know where to start. Maybe like this: I want more. I know that if this season was 13 episodes instead of 8, the story would get unnecessarily dragged out and the Defenders probably wouldn't meet until episode 6. But maybe 10 eps? I just feel like it ended too quickly.
I knew, of course, that there was no way Matt was really dead. Daredevil is renewed for season 3. So his "death" shouldn't have had any emotional weight to it, right? Well, it did. I genuinely had tears in my eyes, which I guess is a sign that the showrunners did something right. Now I've only got one question: is Elektra alive? The whole season (which isn't saying much, 'cause I watched it in like 10 hours) I've been going back and forth between "she's getting a redemption arc" and "she's gonna die for sure". And honestly, the latter seemed way more plausible. She kind of got a redemption arc in Daredevil season 2, so another one didn't seem likely. And yet, I hoped. With all my might. Because Elektra may be problematic, but she's still an incredible, layered, multi-dimensional character. I wanted her to live so badly. I wanted her and Matt to get their happy ending. That would've been nice - a tragic OTP that you think are doomed defying the odds and driving off into the sunset. And now I'm furious because WE DON'T KNOW! WE DON'T KNOW IF SHE'S ALIVE OR NOT! We'll have to wait until like goddamn 2019 or late 2018 at best to find out! Who the fuck thought this would be a good idea? You know how many things could happen until 2019? I could die! I could die and never find out if Elektra made it! No, I'm not going to calm down! This shit is why I have anxiety!
I loved the scene where Jessica pulled the freaking elevator up. For some reason she didn't get to showcase her powers as much as the others, so it was a satisfying, triumphant moment for her and for me.
Jessica: "Maybe we can get coffee sometime."
Luke: Kill Bill sirens
Alias Investigations is in business again! Hell yeah! Now please, someone get Jessica into rehab STAT. Her liver must be begging for help at this point. Jessica's been through an unthinkable trauma, I get that, but drinking herself to death is not the solution.
Luke and Claire are together and happy! Yay! They're so cute. I hope they have some peace for a while.
Danny's still spitting out philosophical bullshit like he didn't throw a tantrum for no reason two episodes ago. Fucking idiot.
I'm sad for Gao. I don't give a shit about the other four fingers (how stupid does that sound?), but she's been around since Daredevil season 1. Hats off to the OG badass. And double props for throwing Danny around a bit. If only she'd used slightly more force...
I honestly don't buy the whole "you wouldn't believe me if I told you" thing that they kept saying to Misty. They live in a world where Avengers are real, aliens invade the Earth on a regular basis and vigilantes pop up left and right. If I were a cop in the Marvel universe, I wouldn't blink at the notion of an ancient cult pursuing immortality. Still not as weird as Wanda Maximoff's powers or a dude turning green when he gets angry.
Final thoughts: fun show, pretty much exactly what I expected it to be, well-written, well-shot, some great cinematography, some awesome music, some really good fight choreography, decent villains (although they kind of wasted Sigourney Weaver, I feel like they could've done much more with Alexandra). Definitely hoping for more.