User Reviews (377)

Add a Review

  • The Hand are going to destroy New York. It's not clear exactly what they are after. Something that is unmistakable, however, is that they need to be stopped. And it will definitely require four (preferably reluctant) heroes. The ones the budget will allow for.

    This is the Netflix version of the first Avengers movie. In some ways it is superior. This includes the supporting cast showing up and being given things to do. There are even connections made. The story is more interesting and fleshed out. Now, aspects in which it is inferior include smaller stakes, less name recognition. So it boils down to the money and general expectation. This really delivered everything that I hoped it would.

    With eight episodes instead of the usual 13, this is the tightest of its kin, of everything leading up to it. The story starts right away and keeps moving throughout. This is never slow or rushed. We yet again get a mystery and they continue to master the drip feed of information. They wisely don't give in to the urge to have everyone get together right away. Instead, they encounter each other, and the idea to form a team comes up very organically. Since all of them are used to going at it alone, they take some convincing. Each comes across what's going on in a way that fits what they've been doing.

    The action is quite fun. In order to make it a challenge that requires multiple good guys, this features all Five Fingers. I've seen some say "I got tired of all the ninja punching", and for sure, there is a lot of it. Personally, I loved every second. No one is nerfed. Everyone uses their skills and abilities well. It's great to see so much use of the Iron Fist, not to mention how many times the user is called out. Too little super jumping. Good use of the enhanced strength: hitting people really hard, smacking them with heavy objects, throwing them into heavy stuff, folding metal like it's tin foil.

    I felt like there was a proper sense of threat. No one ever felt truly safe. That might sound ridiculous considering how much some of them can take without getting knocked down. Trust me, everyone in this has some weaknesses, something that can be used to defeat them.

    Perhaps the best part of this is the character interactions, and note that every major one has an arc. For the similarities between them, there are definitely some huge differences as well - level of experience, goal, who they usually face and how they handle them. Not a single note rings false. Not a single one of them just disappears into the background, as is the case with every single X-Men movie other than New Mutants. Keeping in mind that I do love those first two movies, and respect a lot of things about the sequels. And obviously Logan and the two Deadpool movies are amazing.

    Jessica Jones still does not want to be considered a hero. Despite Malcolm's best efforts, she refuses to take new cases. She even covered the "Alias Investigations" sign on the door. When she begrudgingly agrees to look into a man who's disappeared, with his wife and daughter not knowing where or why, she ends up Involved. And at that point she can't let it go without resolving it.

    Luke Cage is released from prison thanks to some excellent legal work by Foggy. He has coffee with Claire, who is surprisingly not as big of a part of having them all meet as theorized. It is suggested that maybe he could be the new Pop's, he's not sure. He does agree to talk to the last surviving brother of Candace. When he is unable to convince the kid, Cole, out of the shady things he feels he needs to do for money, he decides to follow him. This helps him uncover some of what is happening.

    Danny Rand and Colleen have been traveling the globe to fight the war, and are told to return to NY. Since I was worried that their inconsistent writing would follow them over here from the solo show, I was very relieved when that turned out not to be the case. Don't get me wrong. He can still be ridiculously frustrating, making obvious mistakes. At least he doesn't jump back and forth between what his stance is, leaving it almost impossible to keep up.

    Matt Murdock has not put on the cowl since hanging it up. When he helps people now, it is only as a lawyer. One of his first scenes has him talk to a child who will be disabled for an uncertain amount of time - possibly indefinitely. He tells him the most important thing is how he deals with this. To not give up. It is exactly the kind of thing that he can comment on. He is the only of the 4 to insist on a secret identity, which does cause some trust issues.

    So this has to follow shows with very different tones. The use of color helps define whose world we're in, and later, shows their world's merging. Whether it's a cool icy blue, urban yellow, green, or red, you can immediately tell who you're with. When they all get together at a Chinese restaurant, the neon sign outside features all of those hues. It is true that this struggles with finding a balance between the fantasy of the billionaire, and the street level of the rest.

    Ultimately, I understand why some people were disappointed by what they got here. I'm not going to claim that they are wrong for their opinion, or that their expectations were unrealistic. I tried to address some of their criticisms here, and make my case for why I think it is great.

    This features some moderate to strong language, bloody gory violence including detached limbs, and brief sexual content. I recommend this to any fan of comic books. 8/10.
  • kosmasp10 September 2020
    8/10
    Order
    So you can google this, but in case you haven't here is what you should watch before seeing this, in the order I write them:
    • Daredevil S1
    • Jessica Jones S1
    • Daredevil S2
    • Luke Cage S1
    • Iron Fist S1


    If you watch those, you are fully informed about what is going on with every superhero and can fully enjoy the limited series as they call it that is Defenders. Now I have some issues with some character moments (Jessica Jones trying to convince us she doesn't care about other humans, when her first season was running on that premise, which made her look a bit weak to be honest, but more on that on her own show), but overall, this is just a lot of fun, with things happeninng that do have impact for the future. It is a bit of shame Netflix cancelled the shows, but it made it possible for me to finally say, hey let's binge those. Defenders may be stand alone and I would not have minded another reunion, but as it is, production values are high, effects are great and the fact it is only 8 episodes (the other shows ran for 13 episodes), makes it short and sweet and a lot of fun to watch. Especially with having some prior knowledge for the characters involved.
  • ...and I don't get it.

    Certainly not a big budget, heavy on the special effect blockbuster like the Avengers, but then again it wasn't supposed to be.

    On the good side:

    Excellent choreography of the fight scenes. Not quite up to the Daredevil series, but definitely well above average.

    Cinematography and use of color well done.

    Well acted by all 4 of the lead characters and excellent work by the supporting cast. Personally thought the actors had a decent chemistry.

    Plot...not overly original but not bad.

    Writing...again not overly original, but gives a workable vehicle for the actors.

    The not so good:

    CGI...not much here...the glowing fist doesn't see too impressive.

    Directing and especially the pacing could have been better.

    Overall:

    I found this to be a highly watchable show, though well short of great. While I found Luke Cage and Iron Fist series heavily mired in mediocrity, this one holds its own in my opinion.
  • Warning: Spoilers
    Oh boy....I was so looking forward to this and, unfortunately was disappointed.

    'The Hand' are the most boring group of Super Villains ever, nothing about them seems intimidating. And the 'Black Sky'? Yawnnnnn...

    Sigourney Weaver and Rosario Dawson; both wonderful actresses, are completely wasted in this.

    The plot was dull, something could have been done with an earthquake- like event but like everything else was a huge letdown.

    The actors do the best they can with mediocre material but two characters are just plain annoying: Danny Rand and Misty. Every time either of those two come on screen I want to fast forward; they're both in constant serious/panic mode but neither actor's performance made me care about them.

    And the 'Iron Fist'? Worst. Superpower. Ever.

    Jessica Jones rolled her eyes throughout the entire 8 episodes and I have to say I agree with her.
  • Rob133130 September 2022
    As a huge fan of Marvel I'm a little biased because I pretty much like everything they put out. My bias aside, The Defenders is a pretty good show. If you don't believe me just read through the reviews here and look at the ratings. Even the critics loved this show. It's definitely not as good as the characters original shows but it's still worth watching. This wanted to be like Avengers where they take a bunch of Superheroes from their core shows/movies and bring them all together for one amazing team up. This is not the Avengers. All four of these heroes (Daredevil, Luke Cage, Jessica Jones and Iron Fist) are used to working as individuals but quickly realize that won't work this time and have to have to come together and team up to save New York City. The show starts a little slow but after the four heroes finally come together the show finally picks up and becomes a lot of fun. It blends the best of the four shows into one and makes it pretty enjoyable. This is a must watch for any fan of the MCU.
  • First of all, the cinematography is extremely bad. Throughout the season, it looks like there is zero effort to the make visual appealing, as if characters and camera are placed randomly, with no regard to the composition of a scene. Episode 8, the culmination of the whole show is terribly lit, oftentimes with just one or two lights THAT ARE VISIBLE ON SCREEN. As a result, the whole show looks lazy. It's hard to believe that Netflix was able to make Daredevil look simple yet elegant and screw up so badly for Defenders.

    It doesn't help that the production value is extremely low. There is no attention to detail and sets are badly designed. Or is there any thought process in set designs at all. Jessica was googling on ADOBE FLASH. Simple but unforgivable mistakes like this really marks down the quality of the show. Interior design for major fight scenes are crude and uninteresting.

    Camera work and editing looks interesting for episode 1. It's all downhill from there. There is way too much spinning around characters, and shooting at extremely low angles up at characters, making them look powerful. But the technique is cheesy af, extremely so when it's used a hundred times per episode.

    Technically, Defenders doesn't have the most basic production quality. In terms of story telling, it's not the best either.

    It's hard to imagine how an 8 episode show with 4 protagonists can possibly drag, but the writers managed to do so. There are too many standing-talking scenes that yield little progress or character development. Plot wise, it is simple, straight forward, and predictable.

    What I loved about Daredevil and Jessica Jones is the depth of character. The scene in Daredevil where Matt holds a balloon alone in his empty apartment is one of my favorite scenes in TV. It effectively shows the loneliness and conflict Matt feels. Karen, Foggy, Trish, Jessica are developed to be extremely complicated persons in their own shows. But in Defenders, there are not one scene that has sufficient emotional depth. That's why the characters feel like shells of themselves. We see what they do and accept it because that's what they would do, as they continue to be what they were in their own shows. But within Defenders, they have no arc or innate incentive .

    Defenders is disappointing and only a shadow of what Jessica Jones and Daredevil is. It has no depth and low production quality just makes it unwatchable at times. What a wasted opportunity!
  • While not as good as the original shows, The Defenders is still a pretty good superhero show that brings all of the Netflix Marvel heroes together in one show (except The Punisher). I have to admit that it wasn't as good as I hoped for a crossover, because most of the original shows were so amazing, but it's still a pretty good show that's absolutely worth watching!
  • Warning: Spoilers
    First of all let's agree on something: I don't like the way that some people evaluate the series, someone gave it 10 because they grab the four stars together, another one gave it 3 due to of-course the "outstanding" acting of Finn Jones, between these unwise evaluations here what could been better:

    1 - What goes wrong always end wrong. The first and biggest wrong foot step was Finn Jones in the shoes of Danny Rand, it can't be, it just can't, he wasn't up to it. That said, along with the bad writing that made the show in the bottom of the four shows "Dare/Jessica/Luke", we had the first flaw in The Defenders.

    2 - Daredevil is no longer our Daredevil, the one we knew in his own fabulous show was darker, wiser, calmer and smarter than this copy. In The Defenders we saw another Daredevil, with a bad nerve and more good looking than Danny, just that and nothing more.

    3 - You don't link all the four worlds of them with this silly and very direct way, I mean how the hell you just grab every one and put them in a police station to make sure they will remain safe from the Hand, an organization that _ according to the plot _ have the resources to shape the world, any one did see how ridicules this is?

    4 - Basic Rule: if you can eliminate a character from any series without any bad consequences for the viewers then you this character is an invisible liability.

    5 - those weren't the most evil empire's leaders, no depth and no darkness at all in them. Reference: Vincent D'Onofrio

    6 - Who should we blame for all the evil? no not the Hand, THE WRITERS, The script was lazy, not a smart one, perfunctory.

    I really hope they correct this mess in S2, and lets start with make the series a real dark series with enough intelligent plot.
  • The fruits of Netflix's four Marvel series' come together quite nicely in this fun, playful team-up series that takes the Defenders name and makes a pretty engaging team out of it. It's a bit daft sometimes, particularly with the whole Elektra revivification arc, but it's enjoyable seeing the various heroes interact and the 8 episodes give it a lean structure and a nice pace. It does a decent job redeeming Iron Fist after his underwhelming first season. He's more likable and exciting here. Gives me hope that his second season might be worth watching.
  • jhnykaza23 August 2017
    It's unfortunate that most people who go through the trouble of writing IMDb reviews are pretentious, pompous, and hopelessly opinionated. As an effort to offset their negativity and wannabe film buff nonsense, I thought I'd chip in. I took some film classes in college, so I'm not totally ignorant when it comes to filmmaking, but I'm by no means an expert. I'll skip my criticisms altogether and just say that it's not a perfect show. Having said that, I thoroughly enjoyed it. It was engaging, suspenseful and fun. The music, setting, acting, cinematography, etc was all pretty solid. It's a superhero show, folks...no one should expect something that rises to the level of 'high art.' There have been only 2 exceptions to that rule that I can think of: the dark knight and legion. Go into this expecting to redefine your view of the universe, and you'll undoubtedly be disappointed. Go into it expecting to be ENTERTAINED and not much else and you should be happy. Also, if you're the type that enjoys poking holes in plots and spotting every error possible, you might have issues....but really, people....it's NOT BASED ON A TRUE STORY. Fiction and especially comic books have the luxury of telling stories unencumbered by facts. They're more like modern day Aesop's fables (which have many plot points that don't make sense btw).

    Enjoy it for what it is: Good entertainment.
  • Warning: Spoilers
    And here we are. A new Marvel series. But we could say that this one is 4 in 1. Here the paths of Daredevil, Jessica Jones, Lucas Cage and Iron Fist cross and go beyond. The center of the story is Iron Fist and it's the other characters that move around him until they get together.

    The series keeps the spirit of its four predecessors, meaning that the main characters are people with special gifts/power that want to be normal, they are not the typical superheroes with their special outfit that wants to save the world. They are just people who want to keep going with their normal lives. To point out that only 1 put of 4 is wearing a superhero outfit, the other three they don't care and don't want anything to do with it, they even make fun of Daredevil's one.

    On one side are these four people. On the other side, we have Sigourney bad-ass Weaver. She is really mean in her role as the main antagonist of our so-called heroes. She doesn't have any special power, but still, she can face the four of them together without messing her hair up. The only thing I have against her, is that she should have more screen time. Really a pity.

    As for the plot; itself is a bit slow and at some point, you might ask yourself, who are the bad guys in here? And what do they want to do? Maybe one problem is that the season is only 8 episodes long and they show-runners want to add everything possible from the other four shows, including all these secondary characters who will make you feel lost because you won't be able to place them properly on their respective backgrounds; and if you'd like to, you would have to watch 5 different seasons, but by the time you finish The Defenders you won't feel eager at all to do so.

    Although that from these 4 series I have only had the opportunity to watch the Jessica Jones one, I would say that it is safe to say that The Defenders is better than Lucas Cage and Iron Fist (after checking the critics reviews, that's it). But sorry, Jessica Jones is still my favourite of the whole lot. As per Daredevil, it is probably at the same level as The Defenders, specially taking into consideration that a character from that series is one of the main characters in this one.

    In a bigger picture the series is good, mainly because you just want to watch how these different characters come together in the main story. But once they are together, it feels like the story slows down and then at the end we are running to catch it up and we face a bit of a cliché ending. Still, worth your time.
  • The eventual union of the Marvel Netflix series, as Daredevil, Jessica Jones, Luke Cage, Iron Fist and all their key characters come together to continue the fight against The Hand. With such a limited series, and no suggestion of a second season, meeting one another as an entire group probably could have been hurried up, as a few episodes flitting between each individual (intersecting) arc have to be gotten through before The Defenders are established in any way.

    Taking aspects from each individual series, the atmosphere is most closely related to Daredevil and Iron Fist, not as gripping as Daredevil, but thankfully not as irritating as Iron Fist. Luke Cage's societal flaws theme isn't replicated, as the character is placed very much into a more fantasy, super-hero based plot. Fight choreography is also far from Jessica Jones', fortunately she doesn't catch a fist and get pushed back once, and instead ninja's and acrobatic fighters are back to create more spark in the fight scenes.

    The wider roster of characters interlink well when needed, although are largely kept to their own groups. Colleen takes a much more prominent role, akin to Claire, and sadly has her super-counterpart's irritating traits imposed on her. Those who disliked these characters will continue to do so, but at least throughout the series some chemistry is built between the group. Additional castings add to the flavour, Weaver an excellent choice, as are the extra members of the hand.

    The progression into the actual storyline means the series finishes a lot stronger than it starts. The major group fight scenes are impressive, witty one-liners are bounced around, and the more grounded characters level out those more mystic. Daredevil again pulls everything together and is the character that makes the series worthwhile. Not as good as his standalone series, but enough of a showing to continue an excellent arc.
  • ruhsa27 January 2018
    Enjoy it for what it is: Good entertainment. I thoroughly enjoyed it. It was engaging, suspenseful and fun. The music, setting, acting, cinematography, etc was all pretty solid. It's a superhero show, folks...no one should expect something that rises to the level of 'high art.There are good parts in this series for sure. But this show did not fulfill its potential. The story is generic and much simpler than Daredevil .The actors are mostly good, but their characters don't really evolve. They just go through the action like they are doing the dishes. just i think it was some problems in this series like:

    1/ What goes wrong always end wrong. The first and biggest wrong foot step was Finn Jones in the shoes of Danny Rand, it can't be, it just can't, he wasn't up to it. That said, along with the bad writing that made the show in the bottom of the four shows "Dare/Jessica/Luke", we had the first flaw in The Defenders.

    2/ Daredevil is no longer our Daredevil, the one we knew in his own fabulous show was darker, wiser, calmer and smarter than this copy. In The Defenders we saw another Daredevil, with a bad nerve and more good looking than Danny, just that and nothing more.

    Overall it's definitely still watchable , and a good TV superheros series .
  • Everything about this mash-up feels rushed, the heroes themselves are pale shadows of themselves(except Iron fist, he's equally bad in this as he is in his own series), the villains are 2-dimensional uncomplicated stereotypes, writing/cinematography and production value in general seems to have been compromised because of time restraint.

    Instead of cherry picking the best parts of all shows the creators of this debacle read the description on the back cover of the DVDs and conceived a poor 80s-esque action flick that they stretched out for 8 episodes.

    Why don't they take away anything from their own achievements? Daredevil; The amazing fight scenes, overall dark tones, well-rounded villain. Luke Cage; Atmosphere, Soundtrack, Luke Cage style berzerking. Jessica Jones; Mental Struggle, looming but ever present villain. Iron Fist; *Blank* (They took to much from Iron fist actually.)

    When you give a great recipe to a sub-par chef on a time-limit the yield is not gonna be fantastic. Give the reins over to someone with a deeper understanding of your already set-up framework.

    For the love of god just turn this bad streak around, no more Iron-fist casting or Defenders writing.
  • Warning: Spoilers
    Your favourite Netflix Marvel heroes are teaming up, this is going to be epic! - Me a few years ago...

    However, after watching all 8 episodes in one day, I feel underwhelmed from every aspect of the show. Daredevil is still my favourite show from the Netflix Marvel universe and this does not compare to how much I enjoyed that show. I was expecting The Defenders to be just as good or even better than Daredevil but it is not.

    1. The action scenes weren't as good, the edits were too chaotic and some of the fights felt too long for the sake of being too long.

    2. The acting wasn't as good as Daredevil because there is such a big cast, there is obviously going to be some characters who are poorly acted. I didn't like Colleen Wing & Murakami.

    3. Music was not very memorable. The theme was good, but in the final fight, the music used was really wrong (They used an upbeat soundtrack when they were almost certainly going to die if not for plot armour).

    4. Finally, the plot was very vague. They kept saying New York would fall...like how? Unless the viewers or the characters know what exactly that means, it doesn't really present a sense of urgency.

    Okay some parts that I liked: 1. The dinner scene was pretty enjoyable. Superhero banter almost never gets old.

    2. Stick and his badassery.

    3. Everyone's reaction to Dany saying hes the "IMMORTIAL IRON FIST" :DDD I think that's it. Disappointing show but worth a watch if you just like superhero assemblies.
  • Lejink13 March 2020
    I have obviously come late to this one-off Marvel series combining its four then-active solo heroes in one big arcing storyline. Moreover I haven't yet watched the Luke Cage or Iron Fist series so these characters, back stories and supporting characters weren't known to me apart from remembering Luke Cage as a brief boyfriend of Jessica Jones series 1. I have however watched all three series each of Daredevil and Jessica Jones and was attracted by this mega-crossover to see how these very individual characters could possibly be combined.

    After watching all 8 episodes I'm bound to say it was all done well. My two pre-watched faves combined well, Matt Murdock's passion for his city of New York and ever-present humanity contrasted well with JJ's cynicism and selfishness. The Iron Fist character escaped me a little but I enjoyed getting better acquainted with Luke Cage after he left JJ series one early for his own show.

    The story involving an unholy alliance between the five leaders of the worldwide crime syndicate The Hand, yes they are known as the fingers, to capture Iron Fist and use his power to access some kind of resurrection substance for their own nefarious ends was incidental, I found, to the interplay among the four reluctant heroes and by extension their group of friends and contacts. Sure there were a lot of reasonably entertaining ninja-style fight scenes, too many of them though enacted in the dark, but like any crossover, the fun for we comic-lovers is in seeing, for example, Cage and Iron Fist start to bond after initially knocking heads together, Jones pricking Murdock's "Protect my city" seriousness with acerbic one liners ("Love the ears!" she asides to Daredevil, the only one of them to go full super-hero and don a costume, "They're horns" he peevishly counters) plus it was just cool to see all their significant others hanging out too, as ever on the sidelines.

    The big story, which principally revolved around a super-weapon known as The Black Sky, which turns out to be someone close to Matt, had enough twists and turns about it to keep me interested but it was incidental to just seeing the fab four gradually cohere into something capable of winning their fight to protect the Big Apple once again. Sigourney Weaver was the big surprise guest star as the head, or maybe that should be index-finger of The Hand and I also enjoyed seeing the return of the mystical Stick too.

    Shorter than the usual 13-part series of the individual shows and noticeably less heavy on the psychology as the action-ante was exponentially increased, this for me was an enjoyable detour from the sometimes drawn-out problems of the individual heroes and probably will lead me too back to the series I've missed on Luke Cage and Iron Fist.
  • tomobedlam19 August 2017
    20 minutes of plot stretched out to 8hrs.

    It succeeds in taking Iron fist, one of my favourite Marvel characters and cementing him as the most 2 dimensional and irritating characters ever. Can we just remove him please? It didn't redeem him from the cardboard cliché that he was in his own show.

    The fight scenes were repetitive and dull. It's been 18 years since the matrix, 35 since Enter the dragon. Why is the fighting so boring?

    Best thing about it was the punisher trailer at the end. Poor show.
  • Warning: Spoilers
    I have been following the Marvel Netflix series since the first season of Daredevil. Much like the first Avengers movie, The Defenders was built up as the culmination of all four series so far. While the end result was satisfying up to a point in that respect, it didn't come close to having near as much of an impact.

    One of many things that I liked about the individual shows was that they were never afraid to let you know you're not watching a show for kids. The exception to the rule so far was Iron Fist. Although IF was still enjoyable, they definitely lightened the tone. This trend continues with The Defenders. There is some adult content here and there but still quite tame compared to Daredevil, Jessica Jones and Luke Cage's first seasons.

    The action and fight scenes, while not boring, were at times quite short and didn't quite have the wow factor that we saw in the characters' individual tales. The hallway fight scene in Daredevil season 1 still reigns supreme as the most memorable out of the whole franchise so far.

    Also, I know this has more to do with rights, conflicting story lines and what not but are we really supposed to believe that such a huge threat to the entire city of New York goes unnoticed by anyone in the MCU? Not even by Tony Stark, Steve Rogers or Peter Parker, who are all natives? They have all but stopped referring to the "incident" in the Avengers. The only reference I caught was a newspaper article that was framed on the wall in the background. Look, we get it, OK? The movies and shows will never cross over, it's too difficult and blah blah blah but don't insult our intelligence by using a villain organization that threatens on such a large scale, if you can't have a cameo or even a mention of anyone else.

    This is not a surprise, as anyone who's seen the trailers or the casting list or read any articles leading up to the series knows, Elektra is back. While I did enjoy her turn in Daredevil, her arc in this series was largely disappointing and it ended on and even more disappointing note. Also, the weak link in the Defenders lineup is the same as the weak link in the solo shows, Iron Fist. However, it's still worth it, due to the other 3, particularly Jones and Cage.

    I don't want to spend the entire review criticizing the show, because as I said, it was still enjoyable. Seeing the group unite and fight together is cool in and of itself. They should have spent more time with them all together. There is too much discord going on once they all meet and it distracts from the real strong points of the show.

    In the end, I would recommend to anyone who watched the individual shows to watch this one. I just wouldn't expect to be blown away.
  • After reading some of the negative reviews, I am compelled to write in defense of this show and some of the others associated with The Defenders. It amazes me that some of you haters forget that this is escapism, not reality. So why are you so vehement about the actor portraying Danny Rand? I think he is doing a great job. He is showing us how serious Danny is about his destiny as the Iron Fist. So you want a more comic book version? Buy the comic or watch the cartoons. Actors can only do so much interpreting comic book heroes. One could argue that all of the Marvel efforts are pale in comparison to their comic book counter parts. I hope Netflix doesn't decide to end the series because so many of you are unable to distinguish between comics and reality. Why not try opening your horizon to different interpretations of these characters? You might enjoy yourself. I find all of the Marvel Universe to be a fun watch. It's pure escapism and to expect more is absurd.
  • Warning: Spoilers
    How many Netflix employees have to be subscribed here to rate this crap with 8 and above? This show lacks of everything. Stupid dialogues, boring fight scenes and logic holes over and over. The hand is just boring and acting weak. The 4 super heroes are far from super.

    Netflix lost their Mojo. This is a crap TV show which should have been a cheap summer blockbuster in cinemas.
  • It's finally here, the culmination of all the four MARVEL/Netflix shows, this was my most anticipated thing of this year, mostly because I love the comics of every character and I love for the most part their shows, but like I said, regardless of my hype and expectations, I always try to be cautious with that as well, I don't want them to get in the way of my enjoyment of the show. Out of the get go this is a really good show, 8 episodes was definitely the right amount for this season, also the acting for the most part is great, Cox, Ritter and Colter as Daredevil, Jessica Jones and Luke Cage were all great, as usual, Finn Jones also has improved a bit here over his performance in Iron Fist, my guess is because he had better material to work with, the cinematography is great and consistent to the rest of the series, one thing in particular I loved was the way they used colors, whenever a certain character is on-screen, the colors in the background are either red for Daredevil, purple for Jessica Jones, yellow for Luke Cage and green for Iron Fist and when they were together the colors would mix up and I loved it. The score by John Paesano is good (Though not as good as his score for Daredevil), the action scenes were for the most part good, but there were 2 particularly great action scenes, one in episode 3 and one in episode 8. Also, without getting in spoilers, the last 20 minutes of the season finale really excited me and I can't wait to see what they do with the things they set up. I would say that some minor details could have been improved here and there but overall, The Defenders gave me what I wanted and I feel for the most part very satisfied with the result, I can't wait to see the future of the other shows and to see what will happen when The Defenders season 2 arrives.
  • Marvel is embedded in my DNA (reading Marvel comics non stop for over 30 years) so I could not rate this lower than 7 for old times sake. However, this is a cheap cheap cheap production with very little creative effort.

    Everyone is doing the One on One "dance" (as expected in comics), and the entire series is focused strictly on martial arts (which is very cool) and nothing else.

    The "Superheros" and "Villains" talk a lot! And I mean A LOT! No other way to fill 8 episodes with what could be filmed in 2. I know comics are often described as soap operas, but this takes it to a whole new level.

    Very sad to see such an ambitious show end up like this. Well...lets see what else is on...(pushes button on remote)
  • What do you people expect? Grow up! Be thankful that there is an adaptation of this comic. What? not up to your standards? Who do you reviewers think you are? This is a COMIC BOOK ADAPTATION!!! Wake up! The acting is great. The fight scenes are great! Get off the high horse and be thankful that NETFLIX even made this show for you ungrateful fans. I'm so tired of people's ridiculous expectations! Be thankful for the opportunity to watch these shows. Do you know what fans had to watch when i was young? NOTHING!!! The Incredible Hulk and Wonder Woman circa 1970's. That's it... and by today's standards they are a joke. So don't tell us these shows suck... Because they don't. This is my opinion... What is yours?
  • I don't think most people realize, even to this day, just what an amazing feat Marvel pulled off when they released Avengers, and more recently Civil War. Pulling off successful ensemble team up's are a LOT harder than most people think and it was Marvel's choice to go with many individual films first before going with the team up films that made them so successful. It really allowed the team up films to jump right into the stories without any big character introductions or long exposition scenes to set up relationships or what was going on. Even the main antagonist for Avengers (Loki) was a character we already knew from Thor. Basically, Marvel really set things up perfectly with its motion pictures and in so doing really created the perfect blueprint for super hero films in general.

    So with all that being said, one would think that Marvel should have had the same success with The Defenders since each character has already had its own individual series before Defenders, but unfortunately Defenders had one thing going against it that wasn't present with the motion pictures, that being that the characters and the series in general were very unique and stylistically very different from one another, in just about every way possible. Even the cinematography style of the shows differed quite dramatically. So bringing these 4 charatcers and styles together into a single show was going to be very challenging, even more so than the ensemble films IMO.

    And for some strange reason, Marvel didn't take advantage of the advantages that having individual shows can give you like they did with Avengers and Civil War. Again, with Avengers we already knew most of the main players including the main antagonist and that really allowed Avengers to jump right into the main story and that gave the film just a stellar pace as again there was really no need for introductions or long exposition scenes explaining what was going on. The different pieces just came together perfectly. Yet with Defenders, Marvel largely keeps these characters separate from one another for a significant portion of the series. It isn't even really until half way through that the team really comes together. That causes a couple of problems. First and most importantly, the initial episodes have to jump back and forth between all of the various characters and the show really doesn't even feel like a team up show at this point. And 2nd, it makes the blending of the various styles of the shows that much more difficult since the first 4 episodes basically stick with the styles of the individual shows depending on what character your watching at any given time instead of creating a new style for this ensemble,

    What you ultimately wind up with is a series that really struggles in its first half of the season. Die hard super hero fans or huge fans of the individual series might not have too much a problem with this aspect of the show, but for the general population or for those that aren't die hard super hero fans....well, the first half of the Defenders will definitely be viewed by most as the weakest first half of all the shows released to date. Hopefully it doesn't stop too many people from finishing the show as once the team actually comes together, its a VASTLY more successful show. While the uniqueness of the individual shows makes it more difficult to make an ensemble, the uniqueness of the actual characters themselves makes for a very interesting team once it actually comes together.

    All in all, Defenders is still a good show and many Marvel/super hero fans in general will still wind up enjoying it. Unfortunately, its just not as good as it could have been as the first half of the show really struggles to find its feet and most importantly to mesh the various characters and styles into an individual show. Once it does tho, The Defenders shines just like everything else Marvel seems to touch these days. Its just a shame that it takes almost half the series to really reach that point.

    7/10
  • Warning: Spoilers
    I've watched all the Netflix Marvel shows, and this is bad... It is as slow and badly written as Iron Fist. Nothing happens, the whole 8 episodes spans over 2 or 3 days in real time, it's ridiculous. Villains come and go, don't make sense, the Hand feels more ridiculous now than ever because we've seen who's leading it... It's a succession of REALLY awful dialogues, cheesy line after cheesy line, and cheap fight scenes. Where is the Punisher fight scene ? The Daredevil corridor scene ? The Luke Cage invincible scene ? The Jessica Jones tortured manipulation ? There is 0 impact, it's so weak...

    To go into detail : Weaver's character is poorly written, never really developed. Elektra is what we expect, puppet at first then remembers Matthew. 0 originality. And no explanation as to how she can take down Luke Cage... Matthew can fight Elektra, but Luke Cage can't ? Give me a break... Rand is annoying and weak as hell (he needs an hour to recharge before giving ONE punch...), Daredevil faces the same old problems. Only Luke Cage saves a bit of the show, but Misty is still awful and clueless, Stick a parody of himself, Claire has nothing new to say... All the budget was spent to pay the actors, clearly neither the writers nor the stunt guys...

    Honestly, I thought 8 episodes was good. Afterall, we all said 11-13 episodes is way too long. But they managed to make us feel like the Defenders only needed 2 or 3 episodes to tell that awful story... The Hand tease, then leave, the Defenders hide, the Hand find them, they escape again etc... I mean Jessica Jones basically sums up the show herself in episode 7 "Oh my God, this is the dumbest...". Marvel can do no wrong ? Well that's two in a row...
An error has occured. Please try again.