Luke Cage fits the overall Marvel trend of the TV
shows generally having better villains than the movies. Now, I wouldn’t put this show quite up there
with Jessica Jones or Agent Carter, since Diamondback doesn’t
really work for me, but fortunately, the show spreads the villain love between
a few different characters. Like his
cousin Mariah, Cottonmouth makes an excellent baddie, albeit for very different
reasons (some Cottonmouth-related spoilers.)
This is
the type of story that lends itself well to a suave crime lord, and Cottonmouth
fits the bill quite nicely. On the (very
ostensible) surface, he’s a wealthy club owner who oversees the happening
Harlem’s Paradise, the place to be
with live music to die for. However,
he’s so notorious that his position running a vast criminal enterprise isn’t
even an open secret. Everyone knows
exactly what sort of business he gets up to – from extortion to drugs to guns –
and he’s the type who manages to stay just
far enough out of the muck that the police can’t pin anything to him.
Cottonmouth
is all about power. He runs his
operation with icy determination, and everyone in his employ know they cross
him at their own risk. The “everybody
wants to be the king” speech in his office is a masterful bit of acting, and I
love how it’s filmed, with him delivering it straight into the camera where his
unseen lackey is tied up just offscreen.
His words are calm, eloquent, all business – and then he beats his
lackey so hard, the blood spatters onto his clothes. He means what he says, he can turn on a dime,
and he does not stand for anything
less than what he ordered.
And yet,
he has a pull that’s about more than just intimidation and power. Most people in Harlem live in fear of getting
on his bad side, but he’s so compelling, so charismatic, that he’s capable of
making them, for just a moment, almost forget that. When he speaks at Pop’s funeral, he suddenly
rallies the people, moving them with this words, and in that instant, they stop
being afraid.
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