laxu
Rock Star
- Messages
- 7,874
That's pretty much most Marvel comics out there. Only the villains are allowed to kill, and the heroes only kill if there is no other way. Well, excluding Wolverine, he'll just rip through a bunch of dudes and nobody tells him to stop.I forgot to talk about the one thing that most drove me up thewall in Daredevil:
OK, I get that these superhero vehicles are going to require a certain suspension of disbelief. I'm not going try to weigh science against a blind man seeing and basically automatically knowing everything because he's really good at martial arts. It's fantasy. No problem. BUT...
This theme they take on over halfway through the series, after we've watched this dude inflict the most insane levels of uncontrolled violence on countless bad guys, where suddenly his defining characteristic is that he can't kill anyone, is just insane. And then it comes up as a plot device every other sentence. I've seen this guy kick people off roofs etc etc etc etc - a thousand faces of death - but now his hands are tied, he has his metaphorical kryptonite, in his unwillingness to kill. I'm like, "Dude, were you checking pulses before?"
I mean there are plot holes, and then there are plot avalanches.
But everyone else who just got their face done in enough to put them in a wheelchair is "Eh, that guy is probably fine and not suffering from massive brain damage!"
I was quite fond of the original Daredevil TV series but it might be one of those things that is best watched on a weekly basis rather than binge-watched. Born Again felt like everyone was going through the motions and they don't quite know where they want to go with it.