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
Avis à la une
Krysten Ritter (Jesse's girlfriend from season 2 of Breaking Bad) plays the lead. It's great to see a Female Marvel lead, and she delivers a wonderfully understated performance. The show starts off as a gritty detective show with dry humour and not much of Tennant. However, as the show goes along, it evolves into something much cooler. It gets darker but also funnier, and Tennant's involvement becomes larger.
In conclusion, Jessica Jones is a very binge-able show with a memorable villain and a great lead that doesn't need much prior knowledge despite tying into the Marvel universe. In my opinion, it's even better than Daredevil.
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.
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.
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Détails
- Durée
- 56min
- Couleur
- Mixage
- Rapport de forme
- 16:9 HD