Après la fin tragique de sa brève carrière de super-héros, Jessica Jones tente de reconstruire sa vie en tant qu'enquêteur privé, s'occupant de cas impliquant des personnes dotées de capacit... Tout lireAprès la fin tragique de sa brève carrière de super-héros, Jessica Jones tente de reconstruire sa vie en tant qu'enquêteur privé, s'occupant de cas impliquant des personnes dotées de capacités remarquables à New York.Après la fin tragique de sa brève carrière de super-héros, Jessica Jones tente de reconstruire sa vie en tant qu'enquêteur privé, s'occupant de cas impliquant des personnes dotées de capacités remarquables à New York.
- Récompensé par 1 Primetime Emmy
- 12 victoires et 27 nominations au total
Résumé
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One thing i am a little tired of from these shows though, is the tendency to make the so called hero run around and protect the villains. That is so annoying. This weird philosophy they have that if you kill bad people you become a bad person yourself should be buried.
Jessica Jones tells the story of a retired superhero, a woman who tried to help and failed. Jessica is a broken character; she suffers from PTSD, has nightmares and constant flashbacks and drinks a lot. She's an incredibly compelling protagonist; flawed but strong, broken but fighting, sad but with a sarcastic edge that makes her funny and easy to love.
The show isn't afraid to explore dark themes of sexual assault, rape and abortion and it does so with taste. The victims are not shown being raped; the viewer is just expected to believe them without titillating rape scenes to prove the facts.
As a survivor herself, Jessica shows both the signs of her trauma and the will to fight back. Women in Jessica Jones suffer, they fail, but they fight.
Unlike Daredevil's Kingpin, Killgrave is a threat from the first episode which results is better pacing (Daredevil took 4 episodes to find its feet in my opinion). Because of Jessica's PTSD, you constantly feel his shadow and the tension is constant. The show doesn't waste time with an origin story or training sequences; it takes you straight into the action and doesn't let you go.
A definite success for Marvel.
Jessica Jones (Kristen Ritter) is a Private Investigator, a functioning alcoholic and a misanthrope. She's also, thanks to some illegal experimentation, unworldly strong, resilient and tough. She struggles with the responsibility that comes with being "powerered" and is haunted by death of her family, which occurred in a traffic accident years prior.
The first season of Jessica Jones was excellent. Mostly because, unlike some other seasons of both this show, and the others in the extended universe, it had an excellent and charismatic villain in David Tennent's Kilgrave. Without having the same levels of action set pieces, this first season still is as good as anything that "Daredevil" or "Punisher" could produce. The season also introduced us to Luke Cage, which then spun into his own series and Mike Coulters chemistry with Ritter is excellent.
Unfortunately, unlike "Daredevil", there was a pronounced drop off in quality for the second season, and that run had a dull villain from Jessica's past played by Janet McTeer. Drifting away from the private eye type story and into more soap elements didn't help this run either. We also started to spend even more time with the shows supporting characters, such as Jeri Hogarth played by Carrie-Anne Moss. Though she was great, the show feels watered down when we're spending time with these characters and it's not related directly to what's happening to Jessica. The second and third seasons also suffer from the "Netflix" problem of making 13 episodes, when you have enough story for 8, so plot points are hit over and over again.
The third season is better though. Jessica is back with a case to solve involving a Serial Killer played by Jeremy Bobb. There's more action and intrigue, although it still doesn't match the heights of the first season. It would be easy to see why their hearts wouldn't be in this run, as the cancellations were announced long before this was released.
Overall, I feel like the first season of this is "must see" but the remaining two aren't essential. The show isn't as consistent as "Daredevil" but is generally a cut above "Iron Fist" and "Luke Cage".
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesJessica throwing a man through the Alias sign in the beginning of the pilot episode, A.K.A. Ladies Night (2015), is shot for shot from the first panel of the "Alias" comics. This is how the audience is introduced to Jessica Jones both in the comics and in live-action.
- Citations
Jeri Hogarth: You're coming across as paranoid.
Jessica Jones: Everyone keeps saying that. It must be a conspiracy.
- Crédits fousThe opening credits are a blurred sequence (from Jessica's point of view) of neighborhoods with silhouetted characters carrying out private activities.
Meilleurs choix
- How many seasons does Jessica Jones have?Alimenté par Alexa
- Will there be season 4 and when will it be on Netflix?
- There is mention of many sex scenes of different degrees, and the rating is TV-MA, so how can this possibly be on Disney+?
Détails
- Durée56 minutes
- Couleur
- Mixage
- Rapport de forme
- 16:9 HD