Week of January 21, 2024:

Behold... The Inhumans (Inhumans s1 e1) released September 29, 2017 (where to watch)
Those Who Would Destroy Us (Inhumans s1 e2) released September 29, 2017
Scott Hardie | May 7, 2024

Behold… The Inhumans: It's hard for me to know what to make of this since I don't know the Inhumans very well and it feels like prejudging the series based on the first episode, but… yikes. This is not a promising premiere, and you can tell right away why this series only lasted eight episodes. It's about impossible and incredible things, and yet it's realized with a bland mediocrity by nearly every department. The writing desperately needs an outsider viewpoint, some ordinary human brought into this city of Attilan who can be our audience surrogate while we gradually absorb this information, because there's so much about this setting that is ridiculous and it needs to be handled delicately. And yet, all of that might not matter, depending on how much of the rest of the series unfolds in Hawaii. Maybe they should have skipped Attilan entirely and just started In medias res with the Inhumans already stranded on Oahu?

The series reveals very quickly at what level it's working, by helpfully clarifying "Hawaii" on the screen after already saying "The Island of Oahu" and showing us Hawaii from above. Not much is going to be asked of us, is it? The showrunner here, Scott Buck, was also the showrunner on Iron Fist, which feels ominous. It's revealing that the least off-putting character in this premiere is the one with no spoken dialogue.

So Daisy Johnson's actions in Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D.'s second season finale caused Triton's mission on Earth to find Inhumans, which is a nice acknowledgement of the shows' connection. But why keep that mission a secret? This caused needless tension.

I remember a critic once saying that "Inhumans might be Marvel's worst show, but it is definitely their ugliest." And I must concur that the TV version of Attilan is an eyesore, with its bland concrete surfaces everywhere. What's with the two white-robed figures who stare down at the TV in the royal command room, even in the middle of a gunfight? Why is NASA operating an expensive drone from inside a mostly empty warehouse with just a few desks and a big screen?

I already wrote what I know of the origin of this series. That Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D. spent so very long setting up Inhumans as Marvel's Next Big Thing, only for their starring series to be utterly terrible, is an embarrassment. I can see why Marvel Studios wants so little to do with this or the other shows made by Marvel Television. (2/10)

Those Who Would Destroy Us: Maximus appeals to Crystal for support. She answers, "Never. You make me sick. You're just a human." Ah, so she's racist, then. She doesn't hate him for any of the good reasons like murdering a council member or usurping the throne or lying to the people or keeping her prisoner or just being a creep, but because he doesn't have the right genes. That's not a good look, show. I'm really curious about the writing choices here, because Maximus does have powers of mind control in the comics, and the show made a deliberate choice to de-power him. I would assume that's to help justify his tension with everyone else and his not fitting in, but it also makes him naturally sympathetic because he's the underdog who the rest of the royal family pick on for biological differences beyond his control. And yet, none of his actions are remotely sympathetic; the scene in the last episode where he shaved Medusa as revenge for not sleeping with him pretty much shouted at the audience, "You're supposed to hate this guy." Thus, logic seems to follow that the show expects us to side naturally with the big powerful "normal" royal family against their scrawny little un-powered "different" underdog, not because of how any of them behave but because of who they innately are. And that's some disturbing master-race shit. Am I wrong?

I admire the show putting the Gorgon hoof costume in saltwater. I don't know how many copies they made for production, but that could not have been cheap. My sympathies to Eme Ikwuakor and anyone else who had to walk around in the sand in those hooves.

I wasn't going to say the obvious, but fine: It's welcome seeing Ken Leung back in the jungle in Hawaii. It brings back fond memories of Lost. I miss that show. It was messy and flawed, but a lot more entertaining than this.

So Crystal calling Medusa using Auran's com bracelet can be used to track Medusa's location, but Medusa calling Black Bolt using her own com bracelet cannot? Huh?

Black Bolt and Medusa come across poorly in their subplots. Did he think that he could walk out of a store without paying and assault a law enforcement officer without consequences, or are we supposed to think that because he's the king, he just gets away with that sort of thing and doesn't understand? She tries to fight Auran without her powers, manages to get the better of Auran, then pulls out the weapon she's had the whole time and stabs her, and then leaves her for dead, not knowing that Auran has the ability to heal herself? I don't know how to make sense of their choices, and I don't care. (3/10)


Scott Hardie | May 8, 2024

Upon hearing me describe these first two episodes as the worst Marvel show I've seen by a mile, Kelly wanted to sample it, and we wound up watching the entire two episodes again. She was bothered by more of the inherent logical problems than I was (why wouldn't a mute king be forced to abdicate? why wouldn't he just write things down? why does everyone keep trying to call him on the phone?), but she didn't mind the ugly production design like I did (I've always found Brutalism unsightly). We both appreciated the money spent on the series, like clearing city streets to film the arrest of Black Bolt, which most Marvel shows to date would not even attempt.

Brinaja's first vision of the future is "snakes holding Maximus against the wall," which the plot requires him not to recognize as Medusa's prehensile red hair. He does not recognize the very distinctive hair of his own queen? She is literally in the room with him when he has this vision.

When Gorgon says, "never approach downwind, dumbass," does he mean upwind?

I don't know yet how sincere Maximus is in his monologues about ending the caste system and building a more equitable society (I'm guessing not at all and the throne is his only goal), but everything he says is right on and the show is foolish to position him as the antagonist when he's speaking out against the right of people not to be forced to mine in the dark with bare hands merely because of their genetics. How in the world are we supposed to root for the Inhuman royal family to restore their leadership of such an atrocious society?


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