Since I
did a Top Five for female characters in Marvel’s film properties, it’s only
fair to do the same for their TV shows.
Some great characters to choose from here – with only a Top Five, there
are some excellent ones who don’t make this list, which, in my book, is a good
problem to have.
By the
way, Marvelous Wednesdays will no longer be a regular feature on the blog. Not that I won’t still talk about Marvel stuff
– obviously, I will – but I’ve talked
about enough Marvel stuff already
that I’m running out of things to write about on a weekly basis. Just like I phased out Buster Mondays but
still get in the occasional Buster Keaton fix, my MCU posts will now come on an
as-needed basis.
Melinda May (Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D.)
Oh, May –
she’s been there from Day One of Marvel’s TV adventures, making an unassuming
emergence onto the scene in Agents of
S.H.I.E.L.D., “just the pilot” for Coulson’s team until she inevitably
shows off her mad fighting skills. May
is reserved and highly professional, but she’s not the coldly-detached
super-agent some people think she is.
While she doesn’t mess around when it comes to her work, her team means
a lot to her and she will go to great lengths to protect them.
Jemma Simmons (Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D.)
Simmons
has developed and changed quite a bit since her initial introduction as an
endearing science whiz, and not all of that change has been positive, but I appreciate
the complexity and recognize that she doesn’t always have to be easy to
like. Still, Simmons is pretty
awesome. Straight-up genius, way tougher
than you’d imagine when you first look at her, and someone who’d do anything
for those she cares about. Her life with
S.H.I.E.L.D. has put her through the
ringer, but no matter how intense the danger or damage, she ultimately pulls
herself up and presses on.
Peggy Carter (Agent Carter)
Recent
additions to Marvel’s movies, like Thor: Ragnarok and Black Panther, meant
bumping fine characters like Peggy, Nebula, and Wanda from that list. Luckily, though, Peggy has a foot in both the
movie and the TV camps, so at least I can bring her around here. A smart, gutsy, capable woman forging her way
ahead in an era that doesn’t know what to make of women like her, Peggy is
awesome in Captain America and
spectacular in Agent Carter – she
knows her value, and I love her so much for that.
Jessica Jones (Jessica Jones)
This
one’s a no-brainer, of course. Peggy was
Marvel’s first woman with her name in the title, but Jessica was the first
superhero. Strong and determined but
very damaged, Jessica’s story is one of a young woman with powers struggling to
cope with her trauma. Thinking about it
now, her story is a little similar to Valkyrie’s, someone who’s tried to get
out of the game of being a hero and is drowning her painful memories in
alcohol, but the two characters both have their own distinct feel. I love rooting for Jessica: to let others help her, to work on healing
her scars, and to reclaim the agency that was taken from her.
Misty Knight (Luke Cage)
I debated
between quite a few characters for my final slot, but in the end, Misty takes
it for me. Like so many TV cops before
her, she struggles to work toward justice in a system that often seems rigged
against it, and she certainly has her temptations to bend it in her favor when
it won’t cooperate, but she recognizes those impulses in herself and usually
resists them. Additionally, the
superhero world was never meant to be her thing, but she works well within it,
being an ally to Luke on the force and fighting alongside the Defenders despite
having no powers of her own.
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