House of R - ‘Hawkeye’ Finale Analysis. Plus, Director Rhys Thomas on Kingpin and More
Episode Date: December 24, 2021Hello, sweetie! Mallory Rubin and Joanna Robinson are sliding onto the ice to dive deep into the sixth and final episode of this ‘Hawkeye’ season, breaking down our titular heroes’ partnership, ...a certain crime boss’s MCU arrival, Yelena’s instant icon status, and more. Then, ‘Hawkeye’ EP and director Rhys Thomas returns to chat with Joanna about the finale’s mysteries, unanswered questions, and more. Hosts: Mallory Rubin and Joanna Robinson Producer: Steve Ahlman Social: Jomi Adeniran Additional Production: TD St. Matthew-Daniel and Arjuna Ramgopal Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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When I was younger, aliens invaded.
I was alone and I was terrified.
But then I saw you fighting aliens with a stick and a stick.
string. That's how you jump from that building even though you can't fly, even though you don't have
superpowers. And I thought, if he could do that, then I didn't have to be scared. You showed me that
being a hero isn't just for people who can fly or shoot lasers out of their hands. It's for anyone
who is brave enough to do what's right no matter the cost. And welcome into the Ringerverse
here on the Ringer Podcast Network. I'm Mallory Rubin.
And it is my absolute pleasure to invite you not only to Rockefeller Center,
but to join us on the Ringers Nexus podcast feed for all things fandom.
Joining me today.
Now that she's finished shrinking down more track suits for Rocky the Owls,
evening snack, much to Steve's delight.
It is my house of our working title.
Go host, Ringer Senior Staff Writer, Joanna Robinson, Joe.
Hello, partner.
Oh, howdy, partner.
Oh, my goodness.
Joanna, a few programming reminders before we dive into the robust and very full podcast quiver here today.
The holidays are here, but the Ringerverse is not going anywhere.
Not only are we here with you today, folks, to talk about the Hawkeye season finale.
we did such a long podcast that we're putting it out in two parts.
Oh, boy.
We're here today with our finale analysis and a wonderful interview that Joanna will tell you about right now.
Executive producer and director, Reese Thomas, who joined us at the beginning of the season
to talk about as much as he could at the beginning of the season without spoiling anything,
is now back to freely talk about everything that he can now talk about.
But there's still, it's still marble.
There's still things he can't talk about.
But we're going to talk about trick arrows that might have been.
We're going to talk about our people dead are alive.
We got all kinds of stuff to chat to Reese about.
And he was so generous with his time.
So you got a nice long chat with him after our finale analysis.
Amazing.
And then come back to the feed for part two of our Hawkeye finale chat,
which will be a season awards discussion.
We're going to hand out some sweetie superlatives.
Shouts to Jack.
Hi, sweetie.
We'll be answering your mailbag questions.
And Ben Lindberg, our resident Star Wars scholar,
will be joining us for a few minutes of Boba Fett primer talk,
what you need to watch, what you need to read to get ready for the book of Boba Fett,
which is mere days away.
That's not all, though.
next week, you can hear some Matrix talk.
The Matrix Resurrections pod will be dropping on Monday on the Ring Reverse.
That's a House of Midnight team up.
Joe, Van, and Charles plugged in for that one.
That film is on HBO Max.
You can stream it at home and then listen.
And then Boba arrives, as just mentioned.
So we've got the Midnight Boys, Van and Charles,
PooPew, dropping their instant reaction of Boba thoughts next Wednesday.
And then Joe and I will be back with our deep dive on Boba on Friday.
So you just spent the holidays with Hawkeye and the MCU.
And now you get to spend them with us.
Okay.
And I just got, I just got to say really quickly, Ben did such a good job of getting me excited and ready for Boba.
And you're going to want to get ready to.
You're going to want to get on our level.
Do all the homework.
You're going to want to hear what Ben has to say about it.
So the, this.
I can't wait for Boba.
I'm so excited.
This episode, excited to talk about Hawkeye.
Next episode, Hawkeye, Boba, combo.
transitioning into Star Wars.
It tis a season.
What a time.
What a time here on the Ring of Verse.
How can you follow all that, Joe?
How?
Well.
You can follow all of it by following the pod on Spotify or wherever you get your podcast.
And of course, by following our social feeds, the Ringer Versus on Twitter,
the Ringer Versus on Instagram, the Ringer versus on Facebook.
The ringer versus everywhere.
Okay.
Spoiler warning.
We are going to talk about everything that happened in the Hawkeye family.
So this is Christmas. We are also going to be talking across these two episodes about the Hawkeye
season as a whole. We're going to dabble a little bit in some Netflix Marvel talk. We're talking
about the entire MCU run to date. We're talking about Marvel Comics canon. All of it. Okay.
So proceed with caution on the spoiler front. More caution certainly than young Armand the seventh did
when he dared to engage Jack Duquesne in a conversation about one day inheriting his wine collection.
Do you remember when you podcasted in the Hamptons, Joe?
Everybody does.
Everybody does.
Everybody does.
All right.
Let's pod.
Let's talk about the Hawkeye finale.
Joe, overall impressions of the finale and the season.
Give us the snapshot before we delve further into these specific character arcs and resolutions.
I think if this finale had been a slam dunk,
you know, I would feel overwhelmingly positive about the season.
I feel mixed about the finale.
And so I think that tilts it towards like a mixed positive score for the season as a whole.
There's so much that I loved.
There's stuff in this finale that I loved.
But there's some wobbliness in the ending here that, you know, makes the whole thing feel a little more wobbly than it did.
How about you, Mel?
Yeah, I'm also mixed on the finale.
I enjoyed some of it quite a bit and then did not feel as fulfilled and satisfied by other parts of it.
I would almost like divide it into halves.
I think the first 25, 26 minutes, I was enjoying.
Fun vibes, good energy, quirky moments, just enough heart.
Felt like it had that real action adventure, street level holiday romp, spirit, preserved.
A label maker?
We got the label.
You got a love a live maker, yeah.
All of that was wonderful.
I think in the back half, when and we'll obviously run through, you know, all of the characters and the pairings and the groupings more, more specifically in a few minutes here, the resolution of certain character arcs and the overall then way that we assess kind of the pacing and balance of the elements in the season based on where we netted out.
And also, you know, what we might anticipate about what we could see in the future and other MCU installments.
the second half of the finale
and that resolution
left me wanting in some spots.
Overall, my mixed
response to the finale
does not really
change how I feel
about the season.
I mean, of course,
the finale is a part
of how you view the season
and certainly my
like adoration for the Loki
finale is part of why
I loved that show so much.
But overall,
I really enjoyed Hawkeye.
I had a great time
the past five weeks.
Me too.
right time with these six episodes. I think that at the most fundamental level, the show
achieved its mission of establishing Kate Bishop as Hawkeye and as a foundational part of what
the MCU will be moving forward. I had an absolutely wonderful time with Elena and Jack and
lucky. I liked the contained time frame. I liked the street level, like more intimate feel. There was
a lot about it that I really, really loved. And I think that there are a lot of things about it that
actually feel like successful templates for Disney Plus shows moving forward. I think that the
questions about the finale and more broadly the dreaded Marvel finale discourse is, of course,
worth talking about for a second because this is not the first time that that has been a
fairly widespread conversation point in the wake of a phase four television show. And,
And I'm curious, and of course that this, the Marvel finale problem,
discourse predates Disney Plus or these television shows or phase four.
I do think there's something to the fact that this feels maybe a little more pronounced or lasting in the television shows than it does in the movies.
And part of that is just structure, right?
Van and Charles talked about this a bit on Midnight Boys.
If something about the conclusion of a movie doesn't work for you as well as the first couple acts in the movie, you're still leaving it contained two to,
and a half hour, one sitting, one viewing experience, probably feeling like you had a lot of fun.
Yeah. Over five, six, however many weeks, the hype and the buildup and the fan anticipation and
conversation around the finale is, I think is inevitably, and I don't necessarily even think this is a bad
thing. I think this is just reality is going to foster a little bit more of the possibility
of a letdown, because we all spend so much time talking about what we're expecting and then saying,
oh, we either saw this coming or we didn't. It didn't live up to our theater.
etc., etc., etc.
For me personally, and I recognize that this is not necessarily everybody's take,
I am willing to take that in the trade-off of having those prior handful of weeks together
talking about and sharing it, because I think that the shows have just been broadly
such a delight in that respect.
It is such a fun and fulfilling way to, as a Marvel and nerd culture community,
spend a lot of time and energy and heart
with the characters we're interested in getting to know better
and with our own ideas and sense of possibility.
So I've really loved the Disney Plus show Phase 4 experience to date.
I'm really excited for more.
I'm excited for more Star Wars shows as well.
It's not been perfect.
But what is?
You know?
Other than Loki.
Yeah, no.
It's...
Exactly.
I think Jomey raised this point on Midnight Boys, and you alluded to it just now, which is this idea that Marvel's finale problem is the same conversation as Marvel's third act problem, which is something we've been talking about in the films for a long time.
And the question is, what do you want at the end of a Marvel story?
Do you want a actiony spectacle, or do you want some sort of emotional catharsis?
the best of Marvel somehow manages to do both.
I would put like, Winter Soldier is my favorite example of that,
but also Endgame or without any spoilers,
No Way Home, I think actually really delivered on a lot of emotional beats
wrapped up in this final fight.
But when you have a fight that feels just more about the moves
and the CGI and all that sort of stuff,
and that's where, I mean, like, we talked about this a little bit
before we started recording this podcast.
But like the Wanda Vision finale,
I didn't love it.
But when I think about it and truths
to just remember the things that I liked about it,
I get really emotional thinking about Wanda
and Vision and their final moments together.
And that emotional stuff
and that finale really lands for me
the way that the battle in the sky doesn't land for me.
Balkan Winter Soldier,
I actually don't have anything other than like
the barbecue at the end
when Bucky goes to like hang out
with Sam and his family.
family, like, that I like, and everything else in that finale feels pretty janky to me.
And then the Loki finale, you know, I'm not as high, high, high on Loki as you are,
but we both love that finale.
And it's not just because Jonathan Majors comes in and does whatever he does with He Remains,
is because in that final fight, it's Sylvie and Loki sort of fighting through all their baggage.
Like, that's what that fight is about.
You know what I mean?
And so I think they try to do this in the Hawkeye finale.
But honestly, I think the major issue in the Hawkeye finale is that there's just too many emotional equations that they're trying to balance where you're trying to give us Yelena and Clint and Eleanor and Kate and Maya and Kazi and Maya and Kingpin and all, like balance all of that to be home in time for Christmas.
And I just think that that's like too many things to try to do, too many trick arrows on the quiver.
You know what I mean?
And I think there's a lot that I did, as I completely agree with you, there's just like a lot to love in this finale, especially in the first half of it.
But you and I talked about this last week where we were a little worried that adding Kingpin into the mix might distract from the Eleanor and Kate resolution, which is something we were really invested in seeing, you know.
Yeah, I mean, I found the Eleanor resolution, I think the least satisfying of anything in the show.
It was my concern as excited as I was for Kingpin's arrival.
And as glad as I am that Kingpin is here,
that Vincent's Donofrio is reprising the role.
That tradeoff, which we will talk about more as we go through Eleanor and Kingpin,
we're obviously going to talk about, you know, Kingpin a lot over the course of the episode.
It just felt like one that was too easy to anticipate going wrong.
And whether it's putting fewer pieces on the board in the first place or making the board a little bit bigger
so that there are a couple more episodes or longer runways.
And like on the one hand, I think that the middle episodes of the season,
which were so tight and actually quite brisk,
felt like perfect episodes.
So I don't, I'm glad that we got them in that form.
And I don't necessarily want to mess with that calibration or how I'm not making the show.
So it's not my decision to mess with it.
I wouldn't want to marvel to mess with the calibration of that.
But at the end of the day, as like fun as it is to see Ivan and Thomas in the
tracksuits and the trust of brovans and everything, like,
as thrilling as it is for Vincent Sinofrio's Kingpin to be back in.
I mean, Yelina was like one of the absolute highlights of the show to me, and I probably wouldn't
have, I probably wouldn't trade Yelina's role in the show for, for anything, actually, but you
start adding, adding, adding, Kazi's history with Maya and the, the backstory that is fueling
their interactions in the present, all of that. There's, the bond that are two primary heroes share
with each other with Clinton and Keat and their evolutionist partners. As you noted, the NAP
the Natt backstory with both Clint and Yelena
and what that leads to in the resolution there,
that's just a lot.
And so too many things are going to end up
like there's just not enough oxygen
to fuel all of those fires effectively.
And so the Eleanor thing just ends up like not,
not, I think just not delivering.
And that was one of the letdowns of the finale
and something that we actually,
I think you needed to see that pan out more fully
because like Kate's relationship with not only
literally Eleanor, but the idea of family and choice is so paramount inside of the show.
I feel like that should have been a...
It's not that the men and I boys were talking about this about how they would never send their mom to jail.
I don't know if my mom murdered someone.
I might, but like...
But it still needs to be...
Is this what heroes do arrest their mothers on Christmas is a hysterical?
It still needs to be a harder choice that we see Kate Grapple with.
I feel like.
We need to feel the weight of that choice much more than we do.
And Haley is a tremendous act.
In the lead up of her making it end to see the fallout of having made it.
Exactly.
And Haley is a tremendous actress, obviously.
But like, so I'm not faulting the performance.
I'm just faulting the lack of space for something that big.
Because it feels like the transformative growing up moment for her as character.
Totally agree.
I totally agree.
I think that the stinger feels emblematic of,
the areas where the finale
fell short ultimately.
And this is nothing against the stinger itself
or the delight of the fully realized
Save the City, Rogers the musical number.
But we leave this show,
whether it's what we're just talking about
with Eleanor, everything that we'll break down
with Kingpin and what the future might hold there.
Laura and the Agent 19 reveal
and the watch and how much more we're left
wanting with that.
On and on the list goes of possible Stinger candidates that actually are deeply connected
to the heart of the story and central core plot.
And I think that the choice, the charm of the musical number aside to not actually spend
a touch more time there setting up how some of these key plot questions could be
answered in the future strikes me as emblematic of.
the way and the back half of the finale
at the very end there, those
arcs fizzled a little bit.
Let me suggest like one tiny tweak.
One, you know,
Friday morning quarterbacking
suggestion for this, which is like,
why not put
Maya and
Kingpin in a
post-credit sting?
Like, airlift that
encounter out of the episode and just
make it the sting. I guess timeline
we're already at the Barton Farm and his
Christmas.
so to zoom back to the night of maybe doesn't make sense.
But it's just like that feels like a perfect,
is he dead kind of stinger?
You know what I mean?
I don't know.
Anyway, point,
I think the real issue here,
as we know that Marvel and Disney
have decided to push back a bunch of their shows,
release date-wise.
So I don't, I think they don't know what they're pitching to yet.
You know, because like, Wanda Vision pitches to,
the marvels, which is a movie we're not going to see forever.
You know what I mean?
Like there are things like I think they don't want to, you know, pitch to or sting to
something when they feel less certain about when that thing might crop up.
If that's true, I think that's a very astute observation.
And if that's true, then it actually makes me, because I think like, I don't even
want to use the word concern.
It feels too heavy.
Again, I thought Hawkeye was a blast.
Yeah.
But that would, if that's true, that would fuel.
any ember of concern that I do have coming out of this because when so much of the function
of each project is not only to tell a contained story, but also to backdoor pilot X number
of other projects, it's important to actually know what those projects are going to be or how
those connections are going to fan out. Of course, like, I understand that there are so many moving
parts and so much like intricate calculus that keeps the Marvel machine spinning eternally,
generating all of these movies and shows and things that we love to consume and talk about all the time.
But why, I mean, with King Panda in particular, I think we can, you know, we'll talk about the possibilities of
how that might play out in Echo's spinoff. And so that one feels a little bit different because we do know
we're getting an Echo show. But Laura and The Watch, everything else, like, are these things going
to come back into play or are they just little contained winks and nods? I think it's important in order
to tell a cohesive story that does.
effectively not only function in a vacuum in the moment, but set the stage for what's to come
to know at least a little bit what the intention on the what's to come front is.
So, you know, I'm not a studio head.
There are some realities there that I don't have to take into account.
But the balance of that equation, I both agree and disagree.
The way in which I think Marvel does succeed is the way in which they're very flexible and
responsive to how people are feeling about certain stories.
So, like, the best example I think is Catherine Hahn as Agatha Harkness in Wanda Vision, where talking to Catherine Hahn at the end of that season, and I really believe this was the case of the time, she's like, basically they put her on ice at the end of that season, right?
They put Agatha Harkness on ice at the end of Wanda Vision.
And it's like, if we want to use her again, we can.
But for right now, she's, you know, Apple S saved into this spot over here.
And if we want to use her again, we can.
And then she's a runaway.
break out, hit from the show, nominated for an Emmy, all this sort of stuff, then they announce
House of Harkness, which is not something that I think they were absolutely planning to do if that
character hadn't been such a huge hit. So it's that flexibility of like, will Taylor our plan
to the entrance of the audience? Like, the way in which Yelena has been such a hit, both in Black Widow
and this show, I feel like, is just going to make Marvel interested to use her more and more and more,
you know, that they're responsive to what people like.
The idea of maybe we'll see Kate and Elena again together soon
because they're so electric on screen together,
like all that sort of stuff.
So I like that about them.
But I agree with you,
and this is a problem that goes all the way back to Age of Ultron,
when you get too tied up in launching the next thing,
you know what I mean?
Like Age of Ultron launches a Thor story that we don't really fully quite get
with our Ragnarok because they wisely,
we're like, maybe we shouldn't do that.
Chris Hemser's like, I don't really want to do that.
And they're like, great, we'll just reboot this character essentially.
You know, and so I think that it's a balancing act that sometimes Marvel weighs too heavily the seeds that they're planting for the future.
I think I'm just agreeing with you.
You know, that's all.
I'll continue to trust in Figey.
I mean, hope it all works out, okay.
We have so many shows and movies.
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All right, let's dive into the characters from the finale a bit more, Joe.
Let's start before we get to Eleanor, before we get to Kingpin,
before we get to Maya, Lara, et cetera.
Start with our Hawkeyes.
We got two of them now.
Clinton, Kate, partners, found family.
How you feeling about our duo?
I will say that's something I loved about the, you know,
before the Rogers, the musical reprise was the way the title car.
ended the series.
I thought that was really brilliant.
Steve Rogers doesn't get to give Kate the Hawkeye moniker in the MTCU the way that he goes in the comics.
I thought he might fly down from the moon, you know?
Where Steve?
Hashtag wear Steve.
Anyway, it's beautiful see Kate and Clint working together.
You know, love to see them in their matching outfits, all that sort of stuff.
They had that real, without the sexual.
tension, Ray and Kylo
lightsaber fight in the Last Jedi
moment, sort of when they go slow-mo with their
bows together.
But, and I love
all that stuff. And I love, I mean, you know,
I think you predicted this, but this idea
that like Kate is saving her,
I saw you in the Battle of New York anecdote for the finale,
felt really strong. And I
just love the
healing and instruction that they can
offer each other.
Again, I think I could have used
even a little bit more space for that.
finale, but I love the vibe and I think it was a really tricky thing to do a tricky prompt
that they set for themselves to like get us to care about Renner, get us to care about Clint,
and make these two personalities mesh together, which I think they really landed.
How about you?
You know, it's not going to surprise you to hear that seeing Clint and Kate holding hands
and hearing Clint tell Kate that he's proud of her
and seeing Kate and Lucky
head to the Barton Farm for the holidays.
Our guy Lucky has his name.
Kate has her moniker.
It hit Joe.
Yeah, he didn't get you.
Pulls eye right in the heart.
I loved it.
I loved it.
Of course, I would have taken more time
with the two of them as well.
I think that some of the things
I would have liked more time
with are specific to actually
each of their individual arcs.
I felt that their shared arc
and this building toward a fully realized partnership was well done and really satisfying.
And I think that, you know, to your point about how they're helping each other, like, that was,
that was really well done. And that's obviously, you know, so fundamental to the fraction
comic run, the idea that Kate is like constantly the one who's rescuing or assisting or bailing out.
Clint, and I think that, you know, there are moments where they're doing something new and sharing something new together, or Clint is letting Kate into his life and into the fray a little bit more, you know, crafting the trick arrows together and that kind of sequence of like not only the invention and necessity of being a person in this universe who is not superpowered and has to find your way. Like, you have to figure out how to do this and how to fight and how to make it work for you. Like I really liked that stuff.
But just the fact that they were doing it together on the heels of him, like, mere episodes ago,
there's no more of this stuff, you know, okay, let's go make it together.
Well, if we need more of it, we'll figure out a way how the outfits, the new out, the matching outfits,
like the LARPA hive just to show it up strong here.
Home for the holidays, the naming sequence.
It's not just Clint imparting wisdom to Kate.
She is helping him grow and open up.
and make changes and adjustments and look inward.
And that's something that he's doing on his own with everything with Natasha and
Ronan, which we'll talk about more.
But they are helping each other learn and mature and grow.
And that's obviously the key to any true partnership.
In terms of a couple of the moments where I think these themes came to the fore most,
most potently, I was struck by, I'm curious if you agree, the moment where a
Clint says, you know, you don't have to do this.
This is before the party, before the holiday gathering, which, as you noted, literally scheduled on Christmas Eve, obscene.
Eleanor.
Social faux pa.
What are you doing, Eleanor?
Come on.
The true supervillain act from Eleanor Bishop.
But he says it's always inconvenient.
It's lonely.
You will get hurt.
Heroes have to make some tough decisions.
So if you're going to do this, I just want to know you're ready.
It was a subtle shift and a subtle evolution, but it felt to me a little bit different from his other speeches to Kate throughout the season where in this moment he wasn't trying to talk her out of something or point out something that she was too young and inexperienced to understand.
He was genuinely from a place of like mutual respect and investment in each other, preparing her for what awaited and making sure that she had what she needed.
and was ready to take that next step.
So that stood out to me.
I think, and I know that they were really concerned
with making sure that Kate didn't seem like too reckless
or too brady or too immature or, you know,
all this sort of stuff that we were like rooting for her the whole time.
And there are just moments, little moments, like the earnestness
with which she's making the labels.
And when she asks him about something and he's like too dangerous,
and she's like, okay, too dangerous.
You know what I mean?
Like it just like there's just like these beats that Haley played so well.
that I just really loved.
And yeah, the, the, so great, so great.
If I had a knit to pick, and you know I often do.
Pull on one of the threads in the new outfits.
That's what I was going to say.
I would like, I would like a moratorium for a little bit on Hero gets their outfit in the finale of the Marvel Disney Plus show.
Because this is a third time we've got.
And I don't think there's.
one in Loki.
So yeah,
this is the third time
we've gotten,
Hero gets their new outfit
in the finale of the show.
And like,
then it just starts to feel like
paid by numbers.
Do you know what I mean?
If you keep getting that over and over again,
as much as I liked.
We were always going to get the payoff
on Kate's recurring branding issues.
When would you prefer that the new outfits
came into play earlier in the season?
Not at all.
You want to see them out there
and just the full purple sweatpants
and sweatshirts,
the crew neck.
The crew neck.
on the ice.
I mean, I think
again, like,
I don't make television,
so it's silly to say this.
But like, yeah,
penult to an episode,
Kate has the outfit on.
She's like,
come on, Clint grumpily is like,
I'm not going to wear this.
You know, we never saw him say,
like, I'm not going to wear it.
Well, he did, sort of, in concept.
Anyway, I did love her
amid the horror of what is unfolding.
The revelations about her mother,
the imminent threat of mortal
peril her gasp of sheer jubilation when she saw that he wore it.
Not only that, her like, her like, tearaway dress moment with Elena where it's like,
did you plan that?
Yes, no, yes.
Like, yeah.
Unbelievable.
She had to, you know, mock up a, I don't know when she found the time, but somewhere
between labeling the arrows and curling her hair, she found time to construct a tearaway
dress worthy of Rupal's drag race so that she could reveal another fit underneath.
Speaking of outer layers in that particular moment, not to get ahead to Yelina, but just
while we're on in here.
Strong, strong, strong, strong.
Connor Roy, no, you will not take my outerwear at this party energy from Yelena Bolova and
I am here for it.
Oh my God, but like not even Kettle Loi would try to take that coat off of Yelena.
It's a beautiful coat versus what.
Connor was wearing at the party.
Anyway, succession spoilers, I suppose.
Incredible stuff.
On the Battle of New York, Kate origin story with Clint reveal that you mentioned.
Again, it won't surprise you to hear that I found that very heartwarming and moving.
The entire quote was lovely, not only because of what it meant for Kate to share that with Clint, what it meant for
Clint to hear it, what it means for both of their arcs and their shared arc together,
but also I think because what it taps into, this just quintessential fantasy story idea
that anybody can be a hero. So, you know, when Kate says, but then I saw you fighting
aliens with a stick and a string, this is like genius and important to be able to tap into
something that comic book readers,
MCU viewers, for years,
this is one of the things that people mock about Hawkeye, right?
The idea of the guy is just standing there
with a stick and a string could be an Avenger.
But this is important to turn that around
and take something that could be fodder
for making someone the butt of a joke
and elevated to the thing that we respect
and admire about their impulse to try, right?
I saw you jump from that building
even though you can't fly.
Kate continues, even though you don't have superpowers.
And I thought if he could do that,
that I didn't have to be scared.
You show me that being a hero
isn't just for people
who can fly or shoot lasers
out of their hands
is for anyone who's brave enough
to do what's right
no matter the cost.
I'm ready.
I love this for so many reasons, Joe.
The show's mission statement, right?
In many ways.
Establish Kate,
but also invest us in Hawkeye
as a character,
both Hawkeyes,
but the idea of Hawkeye almost.
The idea of being brave enough
to make that choice,
that connects to Yelena,
and the conversation with Yelena and Clint about Natasha and Choice.
It connects to Maya and Kazi and Maya saying if you're just brave enough to choose, right?
And again, that like that elemental fantasy idea, you know, it makes me think of, of course, many, many, many, many stories.
But it makes me think of Lord of the Rings.
Never heard of it.
Ever heard of it?
Ever heard of it?
We can talk about Sam?
I mean, there are a million.
There are a million things from the movies.
and the books alike that we could mention.
I mean, Frodo, Sam, all of it, right?
I always have loved that Elrond line from fellowship,
yet such is off to the course of deeds
that move the wheels of the world.
Small hands do them because they must
while the eyes of the great are elsewhere.
Like, this is why we love these stories.
This is why we invest so deeply in these characters.
I was so glad we got this moment.
I just got emotional, like, a year in advance,
thinking about covering Lord of the Rings with you.
It's going to be so good.
God. I mean, maybe we can get like Kleenex or something to sponsor Rigurverse for that run.
I'm just going to be sobbing the entire time.
Yeah, but I think it's so interesting because, you know, the whole like foggy rehab plan that we talk about a lot in terms of like turning weaknesses into strengths.
It's interesting because when you think about Ultron, this goes back to the conversation I had with Matt Fraction before the season began where we were talking about how Clint is used in Ultron.
and I was like, it feels like it's counter a bit.
I meant more plot-wise, but to give him a family, felt counter a bit to where he is in the comic infractions.
Like, no, I really love Hawkeye and Ultron because the whole point of Ultron, movie that I, Joanna Robinson, do not love.
But, like, the whole point of Ultron is, like, a celebration of Clint's normalcy and a celebration of the fact that, like, Clint gets up and,
runs back into the fight, even though he doesn't have superpowers.
And so I think Ultron as a story overall maybe didn't like fully successfully land, but
that's the intention.
That's what we didn't want it to do with that story, is celebrate the ordinariness of
the bravery of the ordinary man fighting against gods and monsters.
And I think this series puts a really nice underline on that concept.
She says it overtly, you know, which you don't always need the point set overtly, but when it's phrased so well, a stick and a string.
So good.
It's really good.
Just the delivery of that was perfect.
Really good stuff, yeah.
Man, I have always loved that Laura Clint moment in Ultron.
Also not my favorite movie, but when they talk about, oh, you don't think they need me.
And she says, no, I think they do.
And that's even scarier.
And then that, you know, logline of the fraction run that we've mentioned so many times, like, this is what he's doing when he's not being an Avenger.
Obviously, here they are doing avenging type of work, but still, understanding their lives and the people who they spend their lives with is the key to really investing fully in who they are.
We'll talk more about Clint and the Ronan and Natasha reflections and what closure.
we did or didn't get there.
When we get to Clinton, Yelena in a little bit,
let's hit that there.
But before we move on to Eleanor,
on the Clint-Kate front,
what do you think the future holds here?
What do you want the future to hold here?
Does it feel like Clint is retiring and hanging it up?
You know, we talked a lot at the beginning
about how we thought this would function as a backward-looking farewell
to this era of Clint as Hawkeye
and a onboarding in hello for Kate Bishop as Hawkeye.
I think it was definitely the latter.
I don't know if it was the former.
It doesn't feel like Clint's going anywhere.
You smartly observed a few weeks ago that that was seeming less and less likely to be the case.
What's your read on it at the end?
Well, I think also, like, because I think I did ask Fraction if this was a passing of the Torch story,
and he said a sharing of the Torch story.
And I actually think this was Fraction's idea, so I don't want to, like, take credit for it.
But I like the idea, again, I think Marvel, the MCU is going to be flexible on this point.
And, like, given that people have responded positively to this show, I think speaks better to Clint's chances of being involved in, like, a future movie.
Do you know what I mean?
Versus, like, they could just put him on the Barton farm.
If this show didn't land, he's just on the farm, and that's fine.
Happily ever after for Clint as a dad on farm.
But the show landed well, and Jerry Runner probably wants to work.
And so, you know, they could incorporate him in the future.
As for Kate, I would be obsessed with the idea.
of a Hawkeye Season 2
that's Kate's adventures in California
as they play out in the Fraction comic.
So like, you know, Kate
Kate wants to get away from New York.
With a lot of the Barton.
She's gone to the Barton Farm.
But like, she's going to stay at the Barton Farm?
No, she's there for Christmas.
Then what she got, like, she should go to California
and live in an airstream on the beach
and solve crimes.
And West Coast Avenge,
if that's what ends up happening.
So, yeah, that,
That's the future that I want.
And then obviously, like everyone else in the entire planet with a pulse, I want more Kate and Elena.
Like, Kate and Elena all day every day.
It's not a matter of wanting.
It's a need.
It's a need.
It's a deep, sincere, shared need.
We need young Avengers.
I know Jomey's here for the Young Avengers push.
We need a new Hawkeye, new Black Widow.
standalone story, whether that's a show or a movie, whether it's a TikTok, you know,
you're bringing me into the TikTok of it all. I want it all. I want it everywhere and I want
it constantly. They are the best. I love that you mentioned. Yeah, I started sending Mallory
TikTok links last night. So I will slowly bring her into the fold. But yeah, yeah. I mean, and I,
I want to stay street level, right? Like that's, that's where I, you know,
they can fight aliens and monsters if they want to, but I like the idea, like, give me a heist.
A pot of macaroni and cheese and saraccha is just out of reach.
Yeah.
Give me a heist show or like an enemy, you know, like the thing that, the thing that makes their dynamic so fun in this show is that they're fighting while sparking.
You know what I mean?
Like that they're, and that's, you know, that's what we love about Sylvie and Loki.
That's what we love about like Loki and everyone, Loki and Thor, you know, whatever is this idea of like we're on the opposite side of something.
But we like each other so much that when we're fighting, we're not really trying to hurt each other.
Stop making me like you.
I'm sorry.
I can't help it.
You know what I mean?
A wonderful moment.
No truer words, Florence Pugh, then sorry, I can't help it.
Like, that she walks down a building.
That was good.
That was good.
Just saying bye and then literally walking down the side of a skyscraper.
And then Kate does the most insane thing that anyone has ever done.
I feel like there should be some ankle and leg damage, some lower limb damage for Kate Nishup
after that.
That was a hard landing.
The death.
Like the physics of that made no sense to me.
Like use a crappling hook arrow, my pal and I can get on board.
But this whole, let me wrap a wire around this wire and that somehow.
How about the airbag arrow?
now pushing the landing.
I do appreciate that I love the, this is supposed to be scary.
Like that's a, that was a great, great line, great line.
And again, like, you're a person, right?
As a person, as a human being, not a god, not a superpowered being.
You can't fly.
You can't, you can't wrap a string around another string and then throw yourself off
a building and be fine.
It's not going to work.
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Hey, Jack, I thought you were in jail. I was until your father bailed me out.
Mom said I was going to get your wine collection.
What? You're not old enough to appreciate my wife.
wine collection.
Well, I will be someday.
The problem is it will have peaked by then.
Not if you go back to jail, it won't.
Do you remember when you peed in your pants in the Hamptons?
I do.
Everybody does.
Speaking of Kate.
Yeah.
We'll spend a couple minutes here on Kate and Eleanor.
Of course, our guy, Jack.
Speaking of icons.
Party God.
Jack Duquesne.
Wearing a sword to a party.
Come on.
What an absolute lord.
Legend.
We talked in our,
opening big picture thoughts about Eleanor, but let's just dive in a little more specifically
for a couple minutes. What fell flat here? From the jump in the opening scene between Kingpin
and Eleanor to the ultimate exchange between Eleanor and Kate to Kate sending her own mother to
jail. Was it that there wasn't enough story to tell regarding Eleanor and her role in all of this?
Or more likely, and I think we agree here, was there just not enough room to tell that story effectively?
Like, was this always the intention to have it resolve this way? I think that if Kingpin was going to be,
I keep thinking about the balance with Kingpin and how we talked a couple weeks ago about, like, the risk of
introducing him early.
The balance between He Who Remains and Loki and Sylvie in the finale, as you noted, is just pitch perfect.
So if there wasn't enough room here to satisfyingly conclude the Eleanor Arc when she and her relationship with Kate was one of the primary areas of interest and examination of the entire season.
Again, as happy as I am that we got Kingpin, I would have almost rather waited and just introduced Kingpin in the Stinger, like not had him in the episode at all so that there was really enough time.
for the Kate and Eleanor sequences to play out.
Or if this was going to be the structure of the finale,
and you mentioned this a few weeks ago, right, as usual,
don't make the fact that Eleanor is a villain
and is embroiled in crime syndicates in the New York mob,
a mystery that you have to reveal.
Just tell us that.
And let us see who her character is
and what choices she is making and why.
Kate can find that out later, but we as the audience should have had more time to really see how that worked.
Like, ultimately, do we understand at the end of this really what Eleanor's role is?
We know that she was paying off her husband Derek's debt to Kingpin.
That's how this all started, right?
We can deduce in hindsight, obviously, that this is what Armand was referencing.
We learned that she killed Armand.
Tough thing to learn about your mother.
And then I guess grabbed the butterscotch and brought it to Jack.
Pretty weird.
He just had it from other visits.
Yeah.
I feel like he's just constantly stuffing his pockets with butterscotch.
I like to think that she brought it as like a souvenir from her crime scene.
That's my head canon on this at least.
That's her like, her like Dexter, uh, serial killer souvenir.
Okay.
She framed Jack seemingly gladly and without much hesitation, even though they also seem to be,
he's like a child.
He's like the emotional maturity of a, of a, like, puppy.
She's like, no problem.
I love him so much.
Here's the main problem.
We already discussed this with Kate.
I think it's the same problem, which is that the choices are too quick and too easy, made off screen.
And when that happens, like the finale opens with Eleanor has already decided.
I'm not conflicted about, you know, what's going on.
I'm just, I'm going to quit.
No conflict.
My daughter's too close.
She's in danger.
I'm done.
I'm out.
And so then...
Can I quickly say?
Yeah.
That the payoff of her quitting and Kingman saying and the bishop woman, she thinks that she can quit her job as if she works for Goldman Sachs, tremendous.
The bishop woman was quite a repeated phrase in this episode.
But when the decisions are that quick, they feel small.
You know what I mean?
And we want these decisions to feel big and tough.
And so we would like to see these characters and an excellent actress like Vera Vermiga grapple with this.
Rather than just show up her decision made, she's not wearing red anymore because she's made her decision and she's quit the company, you know.
What's interesting, I mean, you'll hear in our conversation with Reese Thomas at the end of this episode that they initially had a different plan or how they were going to introduce King Penn.
Like Burton Bert and Bertie, the directors of the previous episode, talked about working with Vincent Donofrio as if they worked with him, not snapped a photo of him that was his reveal at the end of the episode.
So there was initially more there.
And we've talked off pod about the dissonance between Eleanor walking into this very fancy, beautiful New York building and then the office that they're ultimately sitting in, which looks like it could be in the back of the car dealership or something.
like that. I thought that was a flashback at first to
their origin story together.
And then as soon as they start talking, you realize that's not true.
Yeah. So something just feels
cobbled together somehow
and sort of remixed in a way that
deprives us
of maybe just more time
understanding Eleanor's
psychology and all this. But for her
to like, for her to be so
invested in this world that she is willing to
murder Simon Callow,
a treasured actor of the British stage
and screen Simon Gallo murdered
stabbed too
that's an intimate way to kill someone
a stabbing man who puts his initials
on his own butterscotches
she killed him and then she's like I'm done
I'm out no stress
no worries
what do you think she was doing for Kingpin
like obviously with Sloan Limited
and Bishop Security is she using Bishop Security's
tech and reach to feed
him Intel? Well, as we observed in like the first or second episode, the tracksuits say,
like, we've got eyes everywhere, bro. You know what I mean? So like Bishop Security is obviously
like something Kingpin in the tracksuits can use to spy on anyway. As we noted, Kate is able to
track Clint just by typing his cell phone number into something. You know what I mean?
I think we can deduce like that stuff. I wish we better understood her role, though, like their
relationship. And we hear her call, we hear her call him a monster when she's talking to Kate.
and we can glean how she feels about all of this.
And ultimately that, you know, Kate is her priority,
no matter what she had emphasized over the course of the season.
And our question was whether that would prove to be true
in this moment or truth.
And it did.
Yeah, what's her conflict?
Yeah, exactly.
Like what just what all of that has looked like?
What has she done actively versus kind of passively endorsing or facilitating?
What is the day to day?
What is the exact hierarchy and dynamic in that syndicate and her role?
I mean, maybe we'll get those answers in time.
but I wanted to get them here,
and I wanted Kate to get them here too.
I,
one thing I did enjoy,
even in this condensed exchange,
where, again,
can't say it enough.
Kate has her own mother arrested
and sent to prison.
On Chris's Eve.
I liked when,
I liked that Eleanor,
one of the ways in which she was aligned with Kingpin
and opposed,
more crucially really,
to Clint,
is that she just keeps underestimating Kate,
as she has throughout the entire season.
You know, one of the through lines was us hearing her say time and time again.
Like, you're not a superhero.
She's not a superhero.
And so when she says here,
I know what it's like to have nothing and you can't handle it.
And Kate says, how do you know what I can handle?
First of all, it's a pretty good question.
But Eleanor's response is really telling because she says,
because I know you and I know that you think you can live your life without consequence,
just like your father.
but someone has to clean things up,
someone has to take responsibility.
And there's truth fueling that,
but the irony is that Eleanor is ultimately touting something
that she is failing to deliver on,
the idea of consequence and responsibility
in your family dynamic and in your own life, right?
And again, the fact that she is underestimating,
the person who she not only claims,
but genuinely seems to prize and love most in the world,
is one of the ways in which she has really
failed, like really failed to truly understand this person right across from her and what is
important to that person and why. And I think that that's like a rich idea that it would have been,
it would have been interesting to see them explore more. And it's such an interesting, like the
promise of that character and her choices is so interesting. We get it seated. First of all,
again, Vera Farminga, tremendous actress, but it's seated in right from the jump, her talking
about how she wasn't born rich, like, you know, that like her feelings about how her,
husband has handled things, all of that sort of stuff is, and like the decision she's, the moral
compromises she is going to make to protect Kate. All of that is interesting. We just didn't get to
see any of it. You know what I mean? We didn't get to see like the choice, the, again, if we had
known from the start, then we would have seen that murder and we would have seen, hopefully her first
murder, I'm hoping. And we would have seen. No chance. Well, we would have seen that it would have
seen that it was like a tough decision.
Killing Armond, hiring an assassin to kill Clint, framing your own fiance.
That's an unfortunate arrangement.
Yeah, fair enough.
Fair enough.
She sold her soul up the river a long time ago.
Fair enough.
Anyway, I just, I think we both agree that just like with Eleanor, there's so much
possibility here and rich potential, a great actress, a great premise, and then just
sort of fumble the bag at the end.
Yeah.
And we spend a lot of time talking about how, you know, Eleanor would have this big choice
to make.
this whole internal life and secret life that she has
versus the family member. Ultimately, it was Kate,
you know, she did make that choice,
but then Kate had to make that choice too.
And again, in terms of the kind of rushed way that this specifically played out,
you think of something like the call from the detective,
you know, at the beginning of the season that Kate receives.
And it's like, well, what is going to ultimately happen here?
And the way that it connects at the end is just,
guess she called Detective Cottle back and he came and arrested her mom.
That's the resolution there.
Yeah, that feels like one of the biggest drop threat.
to me because it just felt like we introduced a character.
Again, it's like a little bit of a comic book Easter egg to like name that character
after a character that's in the comics, but ultimately it just felt like something that
was put in there and dropped.
Can I call Jomey and Steve in for a second to settle a bet for us?
Jome and Steve?
You guys there?
You're listening?
On House of Midnight, right?
Yeah.
Made a bet about whether or not Eleanor would see some action in this finale.
And my question is, just driving a car into Kingpin count as Eleanor getting in on the action in the finale?
Wow.
Jomi and Steve.
I would say yes.
I would also say yes.
Was it getting in on the action or was it would we see her fight?
I guess either way, driving a car into some way.
I would say that's pretty actionable.
It's a pretty rude thing to do.
Driving someone into a storefront is probably, you know.
Action items for her drive car into.
kingpin. Can I just say I don't have the exact tweet or phrasing here, but one of the mailback questions
that we got was like, in essence, I'm paraphrasing. I've seen every fast in the furious movie and I don't
understand how Eleanor could have gotten behind the wheel of that car, turned it on, turned the
headlights on, and driven it into them without anyone realizing she was doing that. It's probably a
Tesla that's like dead silent in under certain speeds. Oh, I mean, you know, an Audi. You know, an audio.
You know, those electric cars, they don't make noise.
They add them in the movies.
You know what I'm saying?
So for this one, we're silent.
Even if it's a silenality, she had to re-angle the car too.
Like, I didn't pay attention to that.
It requires some maneuvering.
Until I saw that tweet.
And then when I re-watched it again, I was like, oh, yeah, she had to back that thing up and re-angle it.
I mean.
Do you really want to see Eleanor Bishop, like, do a three-point turn?
I want to see her parallel part.
She could probably do it in a second.
Yeah.
When we say we want more time with the characters, Jomi, that's what we mean.
We want to see her.
Give us all of it.
I want to see her like flip open a lever in the front console and then hit that knocks in order to like drive right into.
Did she crawl into the front seat?
Did she get out and get back in?
You know, I have so many questions.
So many questions.
Anyway, the point is, the real point is the real point is that Joe won the best.
Yeah.
This is why I don't gamble.
While we're talking about Eleanor and Kate, any Jack thoughts that you want to share beyond this is one of the most instantly iconic and beloved performances that any of us can remember.
There are some people in the finale where I might argue, did we really need them in the finale?
Jack is absolutely not on that list because in theory he could have just gone to jail and that's the end of Jack because he's not really like essential to plot, but he's essential to a plot of my heart.
Yes.
A man who would wear a sword on his hip.
Incredible stuff.
To a Christmas Eve party.
As Clint noted, quite a flex.
Yeah.
I mean, I feel like they felt like they needed to explain it.
I'm here to tell you I didn't need that conversation between Kate and Clint about why he was wearing a sword.
I was like, sure.
Great.
I really enjoyed everything from Jack in this episode.
I loved him fighting with Armand.
The seventh, I was disturbed, but riveted watching him just spring into action and start slicing off limbs and slicing open torsos.
Couldn't wait to get into the thick of it there.
The LARPR exchange, the leisure activity reply, instantly shoots up the power rankings as one of my favorite MC moments.
That was so funny.
When he said he thought he was missing something, I mean, all of it was just a delight.
Do you have any laments at all that we didn't get a more comics, accurate swordsman story here or zero at all?
Because Tony Dalton was just so charming in this role.
I wouldn't have it any other way.
I agree.
It was wonderful.
Perfection.
Perfection.
I mean, and it's just, there's just so many characters in the show, be it Jack or Kazi
who are about to talk about or grills or whoever that are just sort of like in-name
comic book characters, but not really those comic book characters at all.
And so that's, you know, I mean, it speaks to the, like, MCU often does sideways
adaptations of comic books, but this is, you know, it sort of speaks to this question of like,
can we spoil a Marvel TV show by talking about the comics?
And I think the answer is no, because we don't know if they're going to straight adapt or not, you know?
We did not know heading into Hawkeye that we would get a moment where Jack Duquesne popped onto the screen and said,
in response to hearing Kate say, Jack, hello, sweetie.
I mean, what did it occur in a moment?
Hello, sweetie.
The best.
An Avenger.
has taken an outsized interest in our operations.
And the bishopwoman,
she thinks that she can quit her job
as if she works for Goldman Sachs.
What will we do about it?
All right, Kingpin time.
We chatted already today quite a bit
about how he was deployed in the episode,
the amount of time we saw him in the finale.
Before we talk about the variant possibility
and, of course, whether or not he is actually dead
or still alive,
broadly, looking back now that you've seen the finale,
how do you feel about the way that this was hinted at
and the way that it was teased and introduced across the season,
processing this still?
So I have a couple of thoughts and feelings.
Something that our producer TD said in our Slack chat immediately after watching the episode,
no spoilers for No Way Home.
But he said the way in which No Way Home treated some character,
You know, there's like villains we've seen before in that movie.
Characters we've seen before.
In other words, like, made us really excited for these old characters, again, that the opposite felt true for the return of Dinoffrio's Kingpin in this.
And I have to agree with TV on that front.
And like, Van and Charles and Jomey and Steve were talking about this on Midnight Boys as well.
But like, Vincent Dadafrio's Kingpin is for me, I agree with Van, like top, top tier.
Yeah, he's awesome.
Marvel villain.
Yeah.
Love him in the Daredevil series, season one and season two, season three.
And I just did not enjoy whatever this was.
A big Donofria fan in general, watch a law and law and order criminal intent.
You know, like, I'm here for it.
But, like, I just, I didn't like it from the, I mean, we could talk about.
What didn't you enjoy about it?
Run us through it.
first of all, the outfit, and I know that it's a comic book reference.
Yes, amazing Spider-Man Family Business, 2013 comic with the Hawaiian shirt right on the cover.
Amazing.
What a look.
What a fit.
Drip King.
It did not.
Drip King.
It did not look stylish and cool the way that, like, his outfits in, in Daredevil looked like
classy and stylish and cool.
And like the hat, especially, the hat is like a real no for.
me. And then, I don't know. I mean, I think Donofrio was a tremendous actor who makes unusual choices,
and nothing here felt like deeper than skin surface level for me. The Maya stuff, the Eleanor stuff,
it all just felt like anyone could have done that. And I'm like, I'm not, I'm not feeling the
profundity of this character that I really, really have enjoyed the past. And so I almost wish
they had none of him at all
if they were going to do him like this.
That's sort of how I feel.
How do you feel?
Interesting.
I enjoyed, I enjoyed seeing him.
Despite all of my critiques of the balance of the episode,
he's also, his performance as Kingpin in Daredevil is also one of my favorites.
I just thought he was sensational.
And so I think I'm just so excited that he's back.
I have some questions about the tease-out nature of the reveal.
Like, in the moment when we got the chief.
pinch and everything and then all of these little hints that followed. It was thrilling, but then
when it actually happens, I mean, starting with the screenshot at the end of episode five,
but then everything here, I wished that we hadn't had quite as many breadcrumbs along the way.
Like I tried to like wrap my mind around how I had thought about this as it was going.
And I think I was like, okay, the kingpin hawk eye reveal is going to be like a great.
not a shower, you know, we're going to build toward this thing. And then it's like,
that just didn't quite feel exactly right at the end. But I did like the emotion, the severity and
ferocity. You know, we get these lines in like the exchange with Kazi about reminding people that
this is his city, but then you get the like kind of quivering voice in his exchange with Maya.
And, you know, I am, I liked the Hawaiian.
shirt in the outfit. I'm happy to disagree about him. I thought it was a, much like Jack showing
up to the party with the sword, a great flex and quite a choice. And I think one of the things I liked
about it, in line with some of the other just displays of his like strength, the all of these different
little connections and nods to, you know, the rendering in the comics, because also, of course,
because it's literally the same performer.
We have all of this connection to Daredevil.
And then there are connections to Daredevil, too,
something like the arrow not piercing his chest,
and he's pulling it out.
I'm just like, oh, right.
We understand how this armor,
this body armor is stitched into what he wears
or, you know, Kate using the cuff link
to set off the too dangerous arrow explosion.
There's like a great payoff there
because of the recurring presence of,
his father's cufflings and then, you know,
just switching to Vanessa cufflings in the Daredevil series.
So most of my laments about the Kingpin stuff in the finale
are the time it took away from other plot lines and characters
and the way it threw off the balance
and just wishing that maybe we had waited to have,
like, the Maya Kingpin showdown
until the Echo series and less about the substance of the thing itself.
I don't necessarily, I guess, this might be part of it.
It's a little bit of an amoral.
I don't mind that it felt a little bit different because, for one, I think I just expect
the Disney Plus MCU stuff to feel different from the Netflix stuff.
Like it almost has to, right?
Yeah.
And so I think I was just maybe ready for that or bracing for it.
And then you're going to be able to tease something here in a second.
This question that has been kind of like sparking a lot of discussion on Twitter and among
the fans of, well, is this the Netflix kingpin or could it be a variant?
I think is a fun thing to talk about for a minute.
Do you have any breadcrumbs?
Do you have any cheek pinches or screenshots of your own here, Joe?
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Pony on up to the bar and look at this very fuzzy screenshot I have of,
Reese Thomas will talk about this.
I feel like confident that people will have a definitive answer before this podcast episode is done.
I will say that.
I love it.
I love it.
I think another issue I'm having is like there's, it's tied to the watch thing, which we'll get to.
But there's so much lead-up of, like, Clint's relationship with King.
And I'm happy that Kate's the one who fights him.
I have no issue with that.
He obviously has, like, history with Maya.
But the fact that he and Clint never share screen time, despite all that build-up to whatever their past interactions have been.
Definitely agree with this.
Bizarre to me.
And, again, we'll talk about the watch thing.
But, like, I also like to think about these series as, like, it should be rewarding if you've seen the other.
things, but not essential to understanding the thing.
You know what I mean?
So if people haven't watched Daredevil on Netflix, so they don't know about the body armor,
and they don't know about the cufflinks, and they don't know about Wilson Fisk at all,
it felt a little too dependent on that background for a character being ported into a new universe.
You know what I mean?
Yeah.
What did you think on that front specifically about the way that his strength,
and his abilities in many respects, physically, as a tactician, as an intimidator, the way that
all of that played out in the episode. I mean, we see him rip a car door off with his bare hands,
right? That was like an amazing chilling moment.
But then he shoots the second arrow.
Then he comes to the, he pops in the frame.
You love a head. What's happening here? I do love to see. You are a scholar when it comes to
all things heads, whether it is wigs.
or hats or braids.
The second arrow.
I will take Kingfine's dumb hat if it means I get Yelina's braid.
That's fine.
That's an equation I get that one.
Life is full of compromises.
Wonderful.
So the first arrow hits him in the chest, he yanks it out.
No problem.
Unfazed, right?
Like being pricked by a toothpick, not even.
The second arrow, he grabs the cable arrows.
He's like using it to hurl and whip Kate around.
That was scary.
Throwing Kate all over the place.
Again, you know, to go back to Daredevil.
well, we've seen him, like hoist Matt Murdoch across an apartment,
survives getting hit by a car.
We already talked about the car and how fast could it be going from that distance,
etc.
Still, completely fine after getting hit by a car and rammed through a FAA Schwartz.
A F.A. Schwartz, yeah. Toistro window.
Back in the toy store. Yeah.
Survives the exploding too dangerous arrow with like a little bit of soot on him
and a touch of a limp,
but basically no damage beyond that.
So what did you think overall about the way his power,
his strength was rendered here in terms of the information that we bring,
as you said,
not only from the Netflix show,
but the comics,
Spiderverse,
all the other places that we've seen this character.
I thought like power,
like,
first of all,
there was that whole rumor that they were going to make him,
like larger than life.
And I'm glad that they didn't.
And I mean,
Vincent D'Ofrio is still like a big guy,
still like huge,
intimidating presence.
I need to rewatch the dirt.
And my need,
I mean,
I have the pleasure of getting to rewatch
the Daredevil seasons
because I love seasons.
Well,
I love,
I loved all of Daredevil actually
because I'm a big electric fan.
Anyway, point being,
uh,
he seemed a little bit more ungainly
in this thing.
Not that he was ever graceful.
He's always supposed to be like broodish in his strength.
There's something like a little ungainly about Vincent Afrio, but you're right.
It was so scary.
Like watching Kate be like flung around, you know, and like, and the pleasure of like watching
her best him.
Like that was really fun.
But there's other stuff like him snapping the arrows in half and saying mind your own
business, right?
And I'm like, please write Vincent Afrio better lines than that.
That's how I feel about that, you know?
Can I share something with you?
Adam said to me after we watched the episode.
Yes.
Because this connects to how Kingpin's abilities were rendered in this episode.
Adam is a huge comics nerd.
You know, watched Daredevil, has read comics for years.
He's very familiar with Kingpin.
And he turned to me and was completely serious when he said this.
And I asked him if I could show this on the podcast.
He said that I could.
And I thought of this last night when I was listening to Midnight Boys.
and they issued the midnight ban on mutant talk
and then immediately broke it,
which was one of my favorite midnight boys moments of all time.
I loved it.
Incredible.
Adam said,
I wonder if they're going to use Kingpin
to introduce the mutants.
Now, Kingpin is not a mutant,
and Adam knows that.
But he does not possess the mutant gene,
but he genuinely thought that the strength was so notable,
that the fact that he incurred no injuries was so notable
that there was a chance they could make a choice like this.
I obviously do not agree that that is how it will play out,
but I thought that was interesting just in terms of the caliber
of what we saw from the character.
But that's what I think is a little sloppy because, like, you, okay,
in the ring of our slack immediately after we watched this episode,
we were all like, dead, dead, and Mallory immediately was like,
absolutely not dead, right?
Oh, 100% not dead.
Yeah, definitely not dead.
Yeah.
And, like, of course, if you don't see the body hit the floor,
Reese, Reese Thomas in our interview says he has his own metric for how you know someone's dead.
But like, for me, it's if you don't see the body hit the floor, you always have to question, is this person alive or not.
The camera tilt up is obviously trying to make us question.
But my reasoning as to why he had to be dead is like you can't hit someone with a car and then explode an arrow and then shoot them and have them be fine after all of those.
Now, fine, your mileage may vary.
We can talk about that.
But like, I feel like you can't have three fake.
out deaths on one character in the span of 15 minutes.
Counterpoint, do we see him survive the arrows and the car and the explosion to ready as
for the fact that he will be able to survive this gunshot wound?
Possibly.
Possibly.
I think that I feel certain, absolutely certain that he is alive for a few different reasons.
one, as many, many, many people on this very podcast feed and the internet at large have mentioned in the last couple days since the episode has aired, a very similar series of events plays out in the comics in 98's Daredevil 15, where Maya, after learning the truth about what happened to her father confronts Kingpin, holds the gun up to his face.
It is clear that the trigger has been pulled, but you don't immediately see the results, and then you learn later in an ensuing past.
that he has lost his sight, which ends up being a temporary circumstance, but he is not dead.
So I think something similar feels likely here.
And that again, maybe something like, even though those are different comics issues and different
years and periods of the canon, something like the choice to put him in the family business
outfit, it's like a little, hey, we're looking to what happened in the comics here in a few
different respects to kind of prime us for that, right?
Yeah.
No, and I mean, I think Jomey is the one who dropped that panel.
into the slack like night of,
like to let us know
that this is a comic reference,
but there is,
and then I rewatched the scene
just because like,
because as I think TD pointed out,
like there's a,
you hear the shot and then you hear a thud.
Right.
So it's like,
I thought it was two gunshots at first,
but it's clearly subtitle
this gunshot singular
and you see one flash of light.
So yeah,
I think that second sound is the body hitting, right?
So I rewatched to listen to the thud.
You can drop
and still be alive.
That's all true.
But in that rewatch that night of, I noticed that he says, like, family doesn't always see eye to eye.
And if, like, that's the whole thing about, like, him being blinded.
I don't know.
I mean, fine, sure, fine.
Death doesn't matter.
Death is a construct.
I don't know.
I think that it's unfortunate that maybe the thing people are talking about after this episode is whether Kingpin's dead instead of how we might see Kingpin used in the MC moving forward.
I just feel so sure that this is a fakeout.
Like, we're getting an echo spin-off, right?
I mean, the fact that that show exists,
and I'm going to say one thing here,
we're barely going to talk about Spider-Man,
No Way Home, because we recognize that that's not something
you can watch at home.
If you haven't seen it at the theater, we don't want to spoil it.
I'm going to say one thing here.
So hit the fast-forward button twice.
This will only last 30 seconds, I promise.
Go.
Matt Murdoch being introduced to the MCU in Spider-Man,
And like the daredevil asance is upon us.
These characters are here, right?
So Wilson Fisk will be a part of the MSC moving forward.
It would just be absurd to introduce him just for this and to not use him.
I think that would be a massive, massive fuck you to fans who have been waiting for this for so long.
I just cannot believe that would happen.
So fresh off succession, I am out of the...
Is he alive or as he did?
Right.
Discourse game.
However, I'm absolutely sure you're right.
I'm sure you're right.
I still think, I think it would be wild to kill him after teasing him and, you know, all the stuff, all the promise of other things to come.
I also just think it's wild to run him over the car and blow him up and shoot him all in the same episode and for how that, like, none of that to, it's anyway, we can roll on from here.
It's fine.
I'm not, I'm not a huge fan of this.
Maya.
Maya.
How excited are you for the standalone Echo Show based on,
everything we got from Maya and Hawkeye.
And,
relatedly,
after the just surging highs
of episode three,
I mean, we first see,
see Maya at the end of episode two,
but episode three is really our true introduction.
And we talked at length here on this very podcast
about how much we enjoyed it.
Did you feel after that
like Maya was used in the show
in the best possible way?
Or did you feel at all
that they were holding back
because of what needs
to be saved ultimately
for the spinoff show?
Let me zoom back
to Kingpin plus Maya
for a second and say,
I think this is the same problem
as we were discussing
with Kate setting your mom to jail
or Eleanor's decision
to get out of the family business
or whatever it is.
Maya's decision
to shoot Kingpin,
maybe not kill him,
but shoot him.
Again, that's a decision
we didn't get to see
her really grapple with.
We didn't get to see
her really process her affection for this man who helped raise her.
And the decision, she had already decided to pull the trigger when she got there.
You know what I mean?
And so the fact that we don't get to spend time in that decision for her, again,
just doesn't make it feel as weighty as I want it to feel.
Follow question for you.
If you were to head to 30 Rock, possibly maim, crime boss or knife.
I know what you're going to ask.
I'm excited.
Your lover question mark?
I don't know.
We'll talk about that.
Do you first flat iron your hair?
And secondly, how bold is your lip color that you apply when you head out the door?
Oh, boy.
I mean, she looked great.
She looked great.
She looked fabulous.
It makes sense for everyone else to be gussied up, but then I'm like, why did Maya get gussied?
The best theory we have is that, you know, if she's trying to entice,
Kazi to go with her, that she wants to, like, look her best as she does this.
But again, this whole, like, Kasey Maya romance question mark feels, if that's indeed what it was,
felt unexplored.
And then there's another element, which is Kasi's line where he says, like, it was just to be mine,
it was never supposed to be yours, felt kind of tied to that conversation they had in episode
four, I think it was, when he was like, Hayes, the boss wouldn't like you running after
the Ronan and she's like, who's in charge here, me or you? And there's this little moment with
Kazi, like, seems resentful of the fact that she was, you know, put in charge after her father died.
So if there's, like, ambition for Kazi and a war inside himself of his own ambition and
his genuine, I believe, affection for Maya. And a direct hand in what unfolded with William.
This is such rich, good stuff with, like, good performers that we care about.
save it for the show.
Save it for the show about her.
Do the hints and the little teases of this history
and this long, you know, prolonged past with these characters
just make you more excited for the show?
Or are you left here feeling like,
okay, we just didn't get this in the way that we needed to here?
I mean, I don't think those things are mutually exclusive, I guess,
because the, after episodes,
three, you know, I'm like, a lococox, Maya.
Like, this is just so tremendously good and compelling that I cannot wait to spend more
time with this character.
And I leave the show feeling exactly the same way.
I am so excited for the Echo Show and really, really, really eager to learn more about Maya
and watch this next phase of her journey.
And hopefully also within that get a lot of flashbacks and more time with William and in the
past.
But I think that what you're saying about the, like, show don't tell almost aspect of the Maya Kingpin, Maya Kazi outcomes in the finale is something that I felt as well because, you know, you hear Kingpin tell Maya that he loves her.
And she says, you know, she replies in kind, but we know ultimately what choice she is making, right?
And so the thing we're left wondering is like, how sincere is this for him?
But then when you hear his voice kind of quivering as he's saying to Kazi that she has turned on them, it's like I did get the sense that the affection that he feels for her is sincere. But also there's a threat because this is in this laundry list of threats to his empire, right? So how much of this is this unmooring feeling of everything crumbling and this need to put the what's the word for wheels and motion?
Butchruses.
Oh, buttresses.
Put the buttresses in place again.
And how much of it is the real feeling of like a letdown and a sense of despair about their relationship.
Similarly with Maya and Kazi, you know, that I don't want to kill you.
I want to leave this behind together.
I'm so eager.
I wish we had gotten it more here, but I remain so eager to learn more about their time together.
We see Kazi in these family photos.
We saw young Kazi.
in the flashback.
We know how long
these people have been
in each other's lives
but like you said,
what is exactly
the nature of their relationship?
And I think any number
of answers there
would be really interesting, right?
But I wish we had gotten more of it.
I look forward to getting more of it
in the future.
I wish we had gotten it more here
and I think both of those things
can be true at once.
Yeah, I mean,
I am still excited for an Echo series.
I still think Alaka Cox
is like an entire star.
I think she's incredible.
I think I was more excited
after episode three.
I'm still excited.
But I think, I honestly think, if they had given us Echo in episode three, and maybe that's it,
like, I still would have been so amped for an Echo show and leave this Kazi and Kingpin stuff and the Revelation about her father and leave all of that for her own show.
Like I, you know, but I don't know what they have planned for her show.
They, you know, I should trust in Marvel probably.
And like, we don't know what extensions of the, of the Kingpin mythos might show up in that show.
there might be like a ton of really cool fun stuff that there are planning to do there.
But like this feels like the big story for her.
And I think it should have been centered, not peripheral.
She doesn't even, as one of our listeners pointed out,
she doesn't even interact with the hot guys at all in the finale.
And so it just feels peripheral somehow.
Shout out to my guy, Kazi, really quickly, for catching an arrow.
Ridiculous.
This is my quarter flipping.
the cause arrow catch ridiculous he's not loki who we've previously seen catch a clint arrow and by the way
that was clint's design to ensnare loki in his own hubris catching it thinking he had bested clinton
then it explodes in his face causey should not be able to catch that arrow i do i did enjoy the
before the catch the payoff of the talk of you know splitting the splitting the arrow which he does
in that moment that was fun um kazi here's uh here's what i'm going to say i think kazi's alive speaking of
who might be alive still.
I certainly we saw him, you know, suffer a wound.
But I believe that he will return in the Echo series.
Certainly possible that we could just see him in flashbacks.
That would be fun too.
But to the point about the Maya kingpin of it all and how that could play out in the future,
I think that when Kazi says, you know, leave Maya, he's coming for you.
Obviously, we then do see them interact after that.
But still, that feels like the promise of what the plot engine of the show will be.
And then I think, you know, hearing Kazi say, like, I can't walk in both worlds calling back to the William Maya, just beautiful touching sequence in episode three. You have to learn to jump between two worlds. Like that continued mission statement of who Maya is, who Echo is and, you know, we'll become. Even just something like the hand on the cheek, you know, it makes you think of William and the palm print on Maya's face too. So there was, there's, I just, I just, Maya's just such a.
interesting character and the performance is so good.
Again, I could have had six hours
just of that, but we will one day.
There's a lot of dead not dead characters
in this episode, but let me just say of all of them.
Like, I think you and I would both agree
that Kasi, too hot to die.
Too hot to die.
Just looks great. Bring it back.
You know, really rocking that neck tat.
Yelena.
Speaking of too hot to die,
Yelena Bolova.
Yelina and Clint.
Yelina and Kate.
Florence Pugh's Yelena Bolova, just astonishing.
A highlight from the second she appeared, a highlight every second thereafter.
Scene Steeler ate the macaroni and almost ate everybody's lunch, honestly, because she was that good.
I mean, just flawless.
I love her.
I am so, so, so excited to see Yelena more and to see Yelena and Kate together more across the rest of Phase 4 and beyond in the MCU.
what an absolute joy of a performance this is.
The Mid-N-N-E boys were talking about, like, you know,
who, like, best character introduction of Phase 4, et cetera,
and, like, you know, putting Yelena at the top of the list.
I think she has to be at the top of most people's lists.
But I would put Kate up there with her.
Like, I think this introduction of Kate Bishop is so strong,
and the two of them together is just freaking all I want to watch.
It's magical.
They don't have superpowers, but this is magical.
It really is.
It's great.
Let's talk about Yelina and Kate.
for another second here before we hit Yelina and Clint.
Like, is there anything we want to add here?
We already talked about the kind of shows we want to see them in.
Is there anything else that you want to discuss?
There's a lot of decent action in this finale.
A lot of stunt coordination.
But Yelina and Kate's stunt doubles fight through the office.
This is great stuff.
Just, you know, put those two women in wigs and move the camera back.
And I thought that was great.
Them fighting through the offices was like a real hot.
Like the whole episode could have been like die hard, but it's Kate and Yelena.
Like Nakatoma Plaza, Nakatomi Plaza.
So yeah.
I don't know.
I don't have anything profound to say here because I just think no wrong choices.
What do you think of Vann's idea from Midnight Boys about Yelena carrying on Kate's training from here and teaching her some of those black widows?
skills. Sure. Great.
Would watch. Come to California. Come out to the coast.
I have a few laughs.
Like that like Kate, you know, and like,
Yelina's got that whole like love of America I'm just discovering, you know, like
cross-country road trip, Kate and Yelina.
I would watch them do, literally, file their taxes.
Me too. I would watch it.
So, yeah. Yes.
How about Yelina and Clint?
did that showdown on the ice live up to the expectations that you had about this inevitable looming
confrontation not only looming over the series in the course of this series but since the
valulina black widow stinger how'd you feel about the whistle how'd you feel about the whistle maw
liked the whistle i know you did i mean i liked it i know i will i will say i agree van and charles talked
about this. Like, I agree that while the whistle serves the function of kind of hitting pause,
right? And everyone catches their breath and can think a little bit more clearly and talk.
And Clint can kind of make his breakthrough in that moment and it serves that function. And also,
it just shows Yelena that Clint is somebody who knew Nat this deeply and understood these really
intimate truths about her life. Like, all of that tracks make sense. It doesn't necessarily mean
that he couldn't have still been responsible for her death or that
that specific aspect would have changed in Yelena's mind.
I think that's a very fair point.
But because of the way that Natasha has been ever present
for both of those characters in this series,
I thought ultimately that like the little moment
where the whistle just crystallizes and solidifies
their respective ties to her and their roots with her,
it's especially in an episode this packed,
it actually worked as effective shorthand for me
in a way that some of the other stuff that felt hurried didn't.
And in terms of their actual conversations
and the substance of what they were saying,
like I thought a lot of that was from Yelena's perspective.
I have some questions about Clint and like,
what level of grappling he and the other characters
ultimately did with the things that he has done.
I think with Natasha and Clint's history with Natasha,
that was actually well handled.
Because in the process of trying to convince Yelena,
he ultimately is convincing himself as well
when he says things like,
she made a choice.
I couldn't stop her, right?
And, you know,
we're going to have to find a way to live with that.
He's talking to himself just as much
as he's talking to Yelena.
And so I really liked that.
Just as I loved the moment
when on the heels of the whistle,
Yelena realizes that Nat has talked
to Clinton about her and says,
what did she say?
And I thought that was just so sweet and touching
because she just misses this person so much
and it also ports us back to those moments in Black Widow before their reconciliation,
where we saw how wounded Yelena was to think that maybe she didn't mean as much to Natasha as
Natasha meant to her, that, you know, bullshit, you just didn't want your baby sister to tag along
while you saved the world with the cool kids idea, right?
And they broke through that in such a powerful way in that movie and to return to that idea
here, I really liked.
Clint grappling with the Rohn and stuff, I thought didn't happen quite as fulfillingly,
but I enjoyed the Natasha moment here.
What about you?
Okay.
So this is not a spoiler for No Way Home.
I'll just say this.
I think something that recurred in our discussion of No Way Home is that there are things that
didn't work like logically for me but worked emotionally for me.
And I think this is one of those moments where like, honestly, I think Yelena is too smart
and curious to have even like fallen for this whole like Clint killed Natasha thing without
interrogating it.
I agree with this.
I'm really, I'm really glad you just said this because especially on the heels of
Black Widow and breaking out of this, I mean, that was literal, right, mind control chemical subjugation,
but this phase of your life where you're letting somebody else use you as a weapon.
And especially in a show like this where we hear like Clint and Maya and other characters
engage with that idea of like somebody using you as a weapon, it does feel weird that Yelena is
in that phase of her life still.
Though again, I guess we get the moment where it's like Anna tells her, hey, people will pay you to do this stuff post-split.
I'm still really eager to learn more about the Val of it all and what the relationship here is.
If she's like, this is just a job for money, that's one thing.
But for her to be like, this is an emotional vengeance thing for me.
She is Val's World Word only, right, that Clint did this.
And then she finds out that, like, Eleanor hired her, you know, like, she is curious enough to poke into, on Kate's behalf, like, some of the, why have I been hired to do this?
But not curious enough to interrogate, is there, you know, is there something funky going on behind the scenes here, you know?
When she's running down the side of the building and she gets to the window where Clint is.
She pulls the trigger.
She takes it.
She doesn't ask him.
Yeah, exactly.
If that is a better shot, Clint Martin is dead before Yuley and Clint ever have a conversation about what happened.
Exactly.
Exactly.
That stuck out to me on rewatch, too, where I'm like, oh, she wasn't, like, he wasn't even going to get a chance to have this conversation with her if she had made that shot.
And so, so logically it doesn't make sense to me.
But when she says stuff like, you got so much time.
time with her. You know, like that, that really hit me, you know, and Florence Pugh is an incredible
actress. And Renner is really, you know, he was really good in that scene. And so, you know, emotionally
wears for me. Logically, it doesn't, it doesn't clear. But, um, but I'm okay with that.
Speaking of logic. Yeah. We have so much else to get to today, but we must spend one moment.
We must spend one moment. Actually, two moments because we're going to spend one moment and
Jomi's going to spend one moment. We must talk about the watch. And the ridiculous reveal here,
which was, I just, I mean, here's the only way I can wrap my head around this.
First of all, learning that the watch is Laura's and that Laura was Agent 19, that Laura is
mockingbird. All of that is like, fine, right? We and other people and many other people
spend a lot of time talking about that. But the watch was such a thing. And it was literally
just handed over as an afterthought in the final moments of the show.
And I genuinely can't tell if this is just there to wink at the fact to tell us that there's more backstory for Laura and Clint than what we knew to this point.
You know, that some of that comics canon is present here.
But are we going to see any of it?
I have no issue with making Laura Agent 19.
I think do we really need this acknowledgement of the fact that there is extra backstory?
If we're not actually going to see that backstory or see that part of her life,
like I can't totally shake the fact that they felt like a need to justify the fact that Clint has a wife and that a family and that this character exists,
which I just think is bizarre.
So my hope is that we will learn more about this in the future and that this is setting up Laura's involvement in some sort of shield.
adjacent or shield-related story in the future, whether it's secret invasion or something else.
Because I don't know, it's bizarre. I mean, like, I'm happy to have more excuses to watch Linda
Cardalini do things in the MCU. Like, that's obviously not the issue. But like, yeah, it does, it does feel
like this idea that we've talked out again and again with Laura Barton where we're like,
I don't, I hate the phrase like just a wife and mother. Like get get just out of that sentence.
You know what I mean? Like that's, you know, but also, this goes back to.
to what I was saying about Kingpin, where I just feel like
the fact that people are going to have to Google,
I mean, I had to Google, a lot of us Googled Agent 19.
I was like, I'm pretty sure Agent 19 is probably Mockingbird,
but let me just go ahead and Google Agent 19 Shield to find that out.
But think about people who like haven't even engaged in the Mockingbird
speculation at all who are just watching the show and they're like,
what is this, what the hell is, what does this mean?
So you need an explainer, you need some, you know, comicbook.com or whatever,
to write you an explainer about what the pay.
off of this watch that was like the McGuffin of most of the series means.
And we don't, and we still don't know why, you know, Kingpin was after it.
We don't know why that was a threat.
I asked Reese about this.
With much love, I'm so happy he talked to us.
He did not give me a satisfactory answer.
And so like, right.
Why were the tracksuits after this?
Why did Clint say on the rooftop when they were going into my assy parol?
Yeah, like that if this was found, like that the person we now know was
Laura would be imperiled in some way, like, what would the, how does, obviously, the watch
connects to her identity, but what does that mean? What are the stakes and costs of that?
And one of our listeners pointed out that, like, if Nat leaked all the shield documents
at the end of a Winter Soldier, like, in theory, Laura's identity would already be out there
unless it's, like, all part of that whole, like, Nick Fury off the books.
it off the books. And they do say in Ultron that it's specifically kept off of the books from
Shield. So I guess that's one possible explanation. But presumably her former identity as an agent
of Shield would be a part of that in some way, if not this new, you know, presumed like alias
and safe house life. And again, then there's the like, if you're really trying to stay off
the grid, then don't send the kids to a Broadway show with one of the most famous people in the world.
I just really weird. So why is her watching an Avengers compound? Like we have so many,
it's deeply unsatisfying to me.
Now I'd like to turn the mic over
to Adrian Pellicki's
number one fan
Jomey
Jome in general.
Jomey. How are you feeling?
Not great.
I feel sad in this Chili's tonight.
It's not fun.
It's not fun watching,
you know, spending seven years.
Seven, from 2013,
I was still in the high senior year
high school all the way to 2020, you know, living my life as an adult, but seven years
live tweeting this show, being with fans, and for Kevin Fagy to look me in the face and say,
it doesn't matter.
It's tough.
It's tough.
And I think, like, there's a part of it that, like, maybe Mockingbird is a moniker that's
passed on, like, 007, you know, because I assume she's been on that farm for a long time.
And sharing the moniker is a part of this very show in this very story.
Exactly.
So that would make sense.
Exactly.
So there's always a chance that, you know, AIDS of the Shield could come back.
But it's been a long time.
And we don't even get crumbs.
We get at daredevils out here living their best life with Kingpin in the show.
We have rumors of, you know, Kevin Faggie wants to bring some more of the Netflix people back.
But the OG is left stranded.
It's tough.
It's tough.
I don't know what else to tell you guys.
My heart hurts.
Sorry.
It's pain.
Show me.
I'm sorry.
I think it's really interesting in the same episode for the series to possibly embrace the Netflix continuity and reject the ABC continuity at the same time.
I don't know how interested people are in all the like process background stuff.
But like the relationship that Kevin Feige has to these TV shows that he wasn't in control of, the Netflix shows and the ABC shows.
Agent Carter and Agents of Shield is so complicated.
And I think a source of frustration for Kevin Feigey in terms of, like, he did not like this idea of this world that he was busy building, like, letting Jeff Loeb, who was running Marvel TV at the time, like play with his toys, play with Colson, etc.
So, like, initially, right, Agent's of Shield was running, right at the beginning was running in, like, lockstep continuity with the MCU.
like you had Nick Fury show up
Maria Hill, all that sort of stuff.
And then it quickly
diverged, right?
And that's because I just think Feigie, like,
did not want
a show that he wasn't in control of,
like swimming in the same pool as his character.
So it's so dicey and complicated.
I feel for you, Jomey, and I'm sorry.
The multiverse exists.
All you got to do is bring Colson in for a little bit.
Bring Daisy in for a little bit.
That's all I'm going to ask.
for. I don't need a whole
agent's a sword to still on the table, Kevin,
if you're listening. We will see Phil
Colson in the MCU again.
I need it. Absolutely.
And not him back in Tom D.A.'s Phil
calls. I want old Clark Gregg
showing up. Like, what's up guys?
You don't want the tint tin hair on
Colson that we got on Captain Marvel?
It's been crazy. We had this whole thing going on
but we need to talk about that. I'm back.
That's what the people need.
Amazing. Okay. So that's my
that's my watch stance. I'm not
I think we're aligned.
I think we're aligned.
Joe, take us into your interview with Reese.
Reese is so kind of joining the beginning of the season.
Come back again here when he can speak a bit more freely,
answered a lot of our burning questions,
a lot of stuff that we talked about.
I did a round of Are They Alive or Dead Roulette?
We talked about fan theories.
We talked about all kinds of stuff.
Plus, as I mentioned, all that trick arrow,
what might have been we get into.
So let's go now to our conversation with Reese Thomas.
Well, let me start with the question that I think is foremost in everyone's mind,
which is the decision to include Kingpin,
which I know you guys have talked about a little,
but I think the big question everyone's asking after the finale is,
are we meant to think of this as the same Kingpin
we've seen Vincent Donofrio play before on Netflix?
It's funny.
It's such a dangerous territory, I think, when I comment on anything beyond my show.
because I don't speak
with any authority
I think that Vincent
I felt like I saw something
that Vincent said it was the same character
look all I can say is
when I spoke to Vincent
about the character
and about
you know
how we handle him in the show
we were talking about him
as though it was the same character
that's that's just
that's a great answer
it was interesting
I was reading an interview with the
with the Birts
and they sort of talked about
working with him as if they had
filmed at least one scene with him
was there a version
like is that the case and was there a version
of the season where he cropped up
earlier than just here in the finale
no there was a version where he
cropped up differently at the end of
episode five which
is what they handled but
yeah we sort of made some
adjustments to sort of what that was
and so yeah I ended up changing but
yeah all right this is my
hopefully last potentially sticky kingpin question.
I don't think.
It's funny.
I'm used to it now.
It's it.
Ever,
ever a minefield.
Well,
so I'm going to issue just sort of like a blanket,
No Way Home,
spoiler warning for folks who might be listening and haven't seen that movie yet,
skip ahead a little bit.
But given the character who pops up in Spider-Rad No-A-Home,
was the timing of all of this sort of carefully coordinated
so that we would get Matt Murdoch and Spider-Man and Kingman here sort of back to back
and how tricky would a coordination like that be to pull off?
That, again, it's beyond my picker.
I think it probably was coordinated, but by powers,
all I knew was sort of what we needed to do in our show and sort of how.
But no, I think there were sort of bigger brains than mine above
that were working out how this would all unfold.
I haven't actually seen Spider-Man yet, so...
Did I just spoil Spider-Man?
No, I'm afraid.
Of course, no.
I've been getting hounded with questions as though I've, like, been in some sort of war room.
And so, yeah, I, unfortunately, the world gets spoiled for me now.
Well, let me ask you about something very specific to your show and take us to safer ground,
which is, you know, people are kind of losing their mind over the Kate and Yelena, Florence and Haley.
chemistry. Obviously,
both Haley
Steinfeld and Florence Pugh are the kind of actresses
who could have chemistry with, like, peeling
paint on a wall. They're incredibly
charismatic actresses.
Did you anticipate sort of
how delightful it would be
to put them together and how the fans
have reacted to the two of them together?
No, I mean, obviously,
yes, like you said, they're both
very charismatic actors, and so I think
you hope
that it's going to work out really well.
But no, then you see it happen.
And, you know, I knew coming into, you know,
doing that elevator scene and the fight,
you know, like I knew that sort of that moment
where they got to spend time together
was always going to be a fun part of that,
that whole sequence of things.
And but then, yeah, you get there and you do it.
And it's better than you, you know,
thought it was going to be.
And they were having fun.
And, yeah, so it's been great.
And it's cool just, again,
when you see fans take them under their wing as well,
that way.
It's really fun.
I would ask you about the difference between incorporating a character like Yelina, who both has previous history in the MCU and is pitching forward probably to something else in the MCU versus handling a character like, I don't know, possibly Kazi or someone like that who is very contained to the world of your show.
What are the conversations in terms of writing a character like that?
Do you have to have larger conversations around, I don't know, a piece on the chess board that's part of a bigger game than just your show?
No, I mean, again, like I said, I think I've said this before, they, I think for your own protection,
they silo you off a little bit in your own show, you know, which I think is helpful in that, you know,
I only, I basically, I only need to know, and I only know as much, sort of as my, as the characters
that I'm working with, no. And so, yeah, I saw, you know, I was, I was allowed to see a cut of Black Widow,
you know, quite early on in the process,
just to understand the character and who we were bringing in.
But in terms of sort of, again, like mapping, bigger plans and things,
they, yeah, they neatly kind of keep you away from that stuff.
It's, it's mommy and daddy speaking.
So you go, it's going to be in the room.
Well, yeah, no, I mean, I didn't, I was, I mean,
I certainly wasn't fishing for, like, what else is you only going to do,
spoilers?
And, you know, I was just wondering if the,
you know, if you write a line or have or do a thing,
do you need to check with the higher,
higher powers that be that this would feel in line with what she would do?
Do you know what I mean?
No, no, for sure.
It's, it's, um, it is.
It's like, and sometimes there might be a line that we're at, you know,
we're told dad or,
again, there was sometimes there was a line that may appear that someone had written
into that I would kind of be like,
ah, I don't know about that line.
Seems, you know, like, I don't know, it's, I don't feel a little weird, you know,
and then, yeah, sort of dummy me, I would find out that like,
oh, that's actually a reference to something that, you know,
you haven't seen yet, whatever it is.
And so, yeah, that definitely happens.
And, you know, we have to be careful because, you know,
part of the way I like to work is, you know,
especially when you sort of, I think, balancing comedy and drama, you know,
and sort of trying to find that line is like, you know,
I like to, you know, you rehearse when you get there with the actors
and you've got the scenes and, you know, sometimes through that rehearsal process,
there are certain lines kind of come out weirdly.
They don't want, you know, if I land and you sort of start, like, massaging them and
rewriting them a little bit, which is something I'm used to doing.
And I think in this instance, I sort of had to be a little more sort of controlled in
doing that.
Not that I heavily rewrite anything that I ever do, but I just think sometimes you just
want to find a natural way to do it, but I was sort of reminded.
I remember early on I sort of did that because the scene was feeling a little bit like too
to written
and
and yeah, so I went in
and I worked with Jeremy and Haley and sort of
just brushed it out and then I was sort of told like, oh no,
you know, you need, they need to say this,
need to say that. You can't, you can't just pull these things
out. And so that, you know,
that was definitely a sort of a different side of the process
that I sort of, you know,
was not used to, but came to learn.
When you're talking about collaboration on this show,
another, I imagine collaborative
relationship is
between you and the VFX
department, especially in a in a in a big set piece like this with all the trick arrows. So I was wondering when you,
when you're doing something like that, when you're putting together this idea of of all these trick arrows,
is there a conversation where you come up with your dream list of trick arrows and the VFX department goes,
okay, that's cool. We can do these five? Or do you know, are there trick arrows that are taken off the table?
Oh no. That trick arrow conversation, that that was one that was literally, it was happening continually and
on the side. Like I would
sort of, again,
I have to fully credit,
I have to fully credit to
Greg Steele, who's our VFX
supervisor, who is a
just a wonderful
human being and so patient and
so creative too. And so
yeah, and we would be shooting something
else and he come over and be like, all right, I'm going to go over this
trick arrow. And sometimes
he'd have, you know, new ideas.
Like, what about this? And, you know,
and like the guy getting
his leg, like, frozen. That was
definitely that was a great idea. And, and so it was just being this constant back and forth.
I was like, what about this? And what about that? And a little bit of what was like early on
when I started it, I think my imagination was, I think I was thinking about it too realistically.
Like I was like, how would an hour do that? You know, and you sort of try and limit yourself to like
to kind of figure out. And again, that's the education that you go through coming into the MCU
is that their reality is different. And so, so yeah, they would come up with crazier, you know,
things and be like, wait, what? And how would that work? And they go like, well, just do this.
And it's like, I don't know how exactly it works, but it's like a bunch of little bees.
I remember there was an arrow that was going to be a bunch of little tiny like bees basically
was going to come out and sting everyone.
A beer. Yeah. And I was like, well, how? And I was saying, I was like, hang on, what are
they? And they're like, well, they're nano, they're nanobots that it's stocks. I'm like,
it was like, oh, okay. So it was this funny. Yeah. And then the previous team at third floor,
as well.
Like, I mean, that whole sequence of Rockfell Center was like a thing that we were working on for a long time, just keep going back.
Because, you know, I mean, I think the thing that I was always trying to just hone in on was, you know, was more like just the geography of like moving someone.
We have to get them from up there and they got to get down here.
And this is where and this and where is so and so?
It was more like an editorial thing in my brain.
Like, okay, where is he when this is happening?
Does he know that this is happening?
Do, you know, why would they go there?
But, you know, I'm constantly trying to figure out that logic.
And then the other layer within this fanciful trick arrow conversations on the side of like,
once they get the ice, we can just have fun.
It's just going to be, you know, some crazy things.
And yeah, and of course there was like a list, a much longer list and things to try.
And there's things that ended up on the editor room floor and things that there's some people were like, yeah,
I don't know how we do that one.
But they did a lot.
I mean, again, I remember that airbag one that sort of Kate's last arrow where they kind of
just that thing goes in your plates and plates.
I was like, I don't know, that would be really fun, like, little punctuation to the end.
And I was like, how do you do that?
And I remember the second unit were kind of like, all right, yeah, I think we know what you mean.
And again, you have to remember a lot of this is imagination at that point.
Like, it's like some of it we were going so fast that some of it had been previs.
And a lot of it hadn't because we were literally, we were, we were sort of shooting ahead of where the some of the previous guys could go.
So some of the eye string sequence, we were sort of creating it.
Like, we were just printing and shooting just this imaginary thing that we thought, okay, well, I think that's how it works.
And then they're going to go like that.
And so they would just go off and then, yeah, I'd look at the second unit footage and be like, okay, does it look like an airbag?
And we think so, maybe.
And they're just like, this is a bunch of guys just getting yanked up on the road.
They don't know what they're reacting to.
Yeah, it was pretty funny.
Well, since you brought up the logistics of who knows where who is at what given time, I wasn't going to ask these question because it seems a little nitpicky, but I'm going to now, now that you said, I'm going to ask.
you. Oh, this is where I got it wrong. Okay. No, no, no, you didn't get it wrong. My question is,
we have theories about this. My question is Yelena sort of runs down the side of the building,
and then she just kind of pieces out for a little while until it's her time to shine on the ice.
My co-host, Mallory, thinks that maybe Elena went to go get a snack because she is forever,
you know, she thought maybe street meat was on Yelena's agenda before she got to Clint.
Do you have any thoughts or feelings about where Yelena was in those minutes?
It's probably that. No, actually, this is something that I got hung up on, because, as
the same thing. She runs inside the building. And so I actually, and we shot it. I don't remember if we did
you or not. But no, I mean, what ostensibly she does is she goes, she doesn't know that Clems jumped
out the window. So she, so I had a, I definitely boarded it. I actually previous, I think,
where she goes back up the, she runs back inside the building, goes up and, and basically gets,
to the elevator right as, and finds the TSM guys up there, like all in various, you know,
they're all been destroyed and beaten up.
And, and they,
they come to the thing and she sees Clint in the tree
from the, from the window,
and is basically about to shoot him?
She has a shot on him and then the tree goes down.
So that was like a whole little sequence
that was in there.
And that I, again, I felt was important
because I also was like, well, where does she cover this whole time?
And they, you know, again,
Marvel who know their audiences and know,
know that maybe the pace of these sequences
maybe a little better than I.
They were just like, we don't need to explain that.
It's like they, and it was like a lot of extra stuff to happen.
Yeah, it's true.
Ultimately, once Clinton is in that tree, he needed to go down.
Okay, speaking of the tree,
first of all, I love the, I just read your interview on marble.com
where you're talking about how you filmed part of that
with like branches you took out of a dumpster after the fact.
Amazing.
But also, I have to ask on behalf of a,
our producer, Steve, who's on this call,
is the owl in the tree a reference to Rocky,
the owl that was rescued from the Rockville?
Very much so.
Yeah. How did that come together?
It was, no, it happened around the time
that we were sort of getting going,
and that story was there,
and so it was kind of like, oh, that's funny.
And secondarily to that,
my daughter's favorite little stuffed animal
is an owl that looks exactly like the owl
that ended up in the show as well.
So it was like a dual.
two-fold thing of like once the idea of the owl in the Christmas Street came up and then
and then I sort of told my daughter about it and then and I said well maybe we might put one in the
tree when Clint's in the tree and so then it kind of happened and it was silly and I kept it was like
oh no is it silly I said too much but you know and that's the tricky thing of the sequences is like
it's like you want the action but then I felt like I was always trying to find those moments that you could
kind of alleviate some of the drama a little bit and so the owl was like a
one of those things to put on the menu and it stayed.
I love that.
Speaking of animals in the show, I have to ask this on behalf of my co-host, Mallory,
which is, has lucky eaten anything other than pizza or any other junk food that we've seen
him consume on, like, is there a healthy kibble on the Barton farm?
Like, will he now get a well-rounded diet?
I think he's going to get a better diet.
Yeah, I think he's been, it's, yeah, Kate sort of, yeah, yet to learn how to take care of him
properly. And so, yeah, I think now that he's on the farm, there's, you know, he can run around
outside. There's better prospects for him, you know, regular meals. That's true. Things are
looking up. Um, yeah. On the, on the, on the, on the, on the, on the, on the, on the,
Farm beat. There's this, you know, there's this moment in, I think it's episode four when Clint
indicates that there's, like, real danger if Laura's watch is, is discovered? So what,
what risk does it pose for Laura if her identity becomes known? Is this like, is there someone
in particular after her? Is this something we will learn in the future? Like, what are we meant to
think about that specific danger with the watch? Yeah. I mean, I think it's, you know, it's, it's probably
for future time. I mean, again, it's another thing like the Ronan Institute that sort of connects
these other worlds to this, you know, ostensibly ordinary family that's trying to mind their own
business. Yeah, but again, in terms of what that means, where that goes, I can't speak for that.
Okay. There's two instances of Suka in the series, which is, you know, is a salty word in Russian.
And I'm wondering if there are there any rules about swears in foreign languages on Marvel Disney Plus show?
That's a really good question.
I guess I didn't worry about that.
I didn't question it.
That was actually something that Florence, you know, I think just knew from her character and from the movie.
And so it wasn't scripted that she, you know, she was just like, well, that's what I would say.
And so we did it.
And, you know, I take no responsibility to those moments.
It's just kind of like, all right, that feels right.
Let's just say it.
And someone else will worry about it and tell us that we could do that later down the line.
I love it.
As with any Marvel Disney Plus show, there were plenty of fan theories flying around.
It's like our favorite thing to do when we talk about Marvel TV.
Are you the kind of person who tracks that kind of thing at all?
And if so, were there any that, you know, you were.
particularly excited by or nervous about people going too far with or anything like that.
Interesting.
I mean, I generally try not to, I sort of learned early, like after the first episode of like,
okay, this is a wormhole if I follow all of this stuff.
Right, right.
Yeah, anyway, it's more, it's funny.
A lot of the theories were kind of, you know, yes, there was obviously, like the kingpin stuff
early on that some people, we know are immediately on it or something, you know,
And so you kind of worry that that kind of starts taking hold
and sort of is going to somehow spoil by the end of the show.
There's obviously, you know, hopes of other crossovers and things.
And that, yeah, I don't know, I feel like the main thing I learned was also just
that people weirdly, they get really mad.
Like they start an episode and they've got a specific thing in their minds
about what they think is supposed to happen.
and then when it doesn't happen, they get super mad about it,
as though, as though, like, we made a promise.
Right, right.
And which is, again, it's, it's, I get it.
I mean, TV shows functioned that way,
or film, movies function that way sometimes.
But it was, yes, it was kind of, it was a, it was a funny thing.
I mean, people obviously are very mad about Kingpin
and just sort of how that unfolded.
And, uh, it's just, it's, it's funny.
You're like, okay, you know.
What aspect do you feel like people are mad about in terms of Kingpin and how it unfolded?
Well, you know, we reveal him late in the show and then here's that dramatic scene with Maya and you don't know what happens.
You know, it's one of those off-camera moments that could mean anything, which, you know, to me, that's the fun way to do it.
But people got really upset because they're just like, what?
it was more they also
someone got mad about
they were just like
they were mad about how Kate
you know
they felt like she bested him
in the toy store
and they were just like
that wouldn't happen
no one's taking him down
you made him look like a punk
which is just
it's really funny
like an arrow
literally exploded in his face
and he got up
and walked away from it
so I think
I think he's doing fine
yeah
all right let me
let me do a quick segment
that I was going to save
to the end
but I'm going to do it for you right
which is, I'm going to call it,
are they a live roulette?
And it goes like this.
Okay.
Kingpin, question mark.
That's what you're saying?
Yes, question mark.
Yeah.
But it's exciting.
I mean, that's the thing.
It's exciting the possible.
That's what's wonderful about the MTCU.
It's a question mark and that's the best type of question mark.
Who knows?
Kazi.
I would, I'm going to say,
what's really funny is like,
Fra was constantly tracking in the drafts that would come out.
Like, am I alive or a dead?
Am I alive with it?
Because there were, I mean, you know, there was some of those lives,
someone who was dead.
He was just like, please.
And he was just like, until the day we shot that scene,
he was just like, I'm sorry, like, looks like you.
But no, I think he's, I think he's alive.
He thinks he's alive.
Okay.
I mean, again, we didn't see him.
As my daughter told me the other day, she said,
we were watching something else, and, you know,
someone was doing some play, and she's like, what's happening?
And I was like, I think he's dying.
And she said, no, he's not dying.
Do you know how I know?
Because he's not coughing.
They always cough when they die.
Okay. All right, the telltale cough.
All right.
We lost track of Ivan in the fight.
Is Ivan alive or dead?
I would say he got, yeah, he just got really badly injured.
He was on that, he was walking to that floor and Clint let off those explosives.
Yeah.
That would have been in that the, the Yelaina scene that I talked about, we would have paid him off that.
You've seen Ivan groaning on the floor or something like that.
Last would definitely not least, and this is my personal fan theory, Derek Bishop,
alive or dead?
That's a good one.
He's dead.
He's dead.
Okay.
I didn't see him cough.
I didn't see him cough because I wasn't sure.
But, okay.
He was coughing.
Yeah,
it was a long scene of him,
you know,
crushed under a taxi cab,
probably or something during the battlebook.
Coughing.
All right.
Do you have a favorite,
I know you said you weren't tracking
this stuff too closely,
but do you have a favorite Easter egg
or reference that you put in there
that people haven't noticed
that you're like,
why didn't they see that we did
this? I honestly don't have a good answer. There's probably something. There's definitely something.
Yeah, I guess I haven't been tracking it closely enough. I mean, again, there's like,
to me, a lot of the fun, well, here's one thing. I went down, it didn't make it in, so no one's
missing it. But I did go down a path of making, of trying to make winter friends from
Fraction Run. And so we actually started, we had some concepts at and I, and I, and I, and I,
worked on a script with Matt and we were going to do.
And it was just going to be, I wanted a moment where Lucky was watching it on TV
and just by himself and that no one else would see it except for Lucky.
But yes, we ended up sort of not going through with it.
But that was one that would have been a fun little really deep dive for anyone,
but of the fans of the comics.
I mean, that sounds amazing.
There's so much you have to pull off in this finale.
You've got so many resolutions that you have to sort of tick off here.
You've got the Cade and Eleanor confrontation, Maya with Kazi, Maya with Kingpin, Clinton, Kate, the watch of it all, everything like that.
You know, how do you make sure that you're giving the time that you want to give to all of these things in one episode where you're also toppling the 30 rock tree onto an ice rink and doing a lot.
It was hard.
It was hard.
It was really hard.
And I don't, you know, I don't know if we got it right, right.
It was.
It was the constant process of, you know, I mean, from the get-go, like we, this episode's
script went through many, many different iterations and, you know, where the focus would
kind of move.
And then, and then, you know, and then you go out and shoot it.
At a certain point, you have to shoot something and go out and shoot it.
And then, and then you're in your hand, in the hands of editorial then, like, okay,
let's try.
and again my hats off to Tim Roach my editor on that last episode because yeah cross-cutting
you know just figuring out that's what we really worked on was just like when these resolutions
happened and how do you you know essentially it's like yeah the audience needs to be tracking
everything they need to feel satisfied and again you know there's definitely like would I've
like you know more time with with you know elaine and Clint like even more like yeah probably like
it would have been, you know, like that was a beautiful scene.
And, um, the, you know, the Maya, the Kazi thing and that, like, we, it's like,
obviously their, their story's not at the full forefront of the, of the series, but you have
to close it somehow. So it was like kind of giving that just enough that, you know, it was,
no, it was really, it was, it was pretty hard. And we, I mean, yeah, it took quite a bit of time
to sort of massage it into place and, um, and yeah, rewriting scenes and, and, and we,
yeah, where, where people's emotions at at that point? Yeah, it was it, it was a,
It was a thing for sure.
I wanted to ask you about Echo, because I think it's interesting that she shows up in this finale.
First of all, she did her hair and put on a bold lip before she went down to 30 Rock.
Yeah, yeah.
She got ready for battle, right?
But she doesn't interact with either of the hot guys in this finale, and I think that's interesting.
How important in terms of sort of launching her story forward, because, you know, I know, I, I hear, I promise I was listening to you when you were like, we're allowed to do our own thing.
That's what we're doing here.
but we know that there's going to be an echo show, right?
So how important is it for her to be meaningfully involved in this finale
given that Marvel wants to sort of pitch her forward?
You know what I mean?
No, I think it's very important.
And here's a story that, you know, it was kind of,
there was an emotional core there.
And there's an emotional connection, obviously, for Clinton,
and, you know, that connection to his past and sort of, you know,
figuring that out.
And, you know, there was a moment.
we had a moment with
Clint and
Maya sort of exchanging a look
you know
that sort of was again kind of almost like
a nod of forgiveness sort of you know you could have
and maybe
a proof you know whatever
and you know which would have been nice
but again it felt like another resolution
you know it was almost just like
it was like too many characters having to acknowledge each other
and it just felt like a layer too far
But yeah, it's like, it was like, yes what you realize coming to five, he's like,
well, a lot of people are mad to clinch.
And somehow he's going to try and make it through.
And sort of, it's like he's making a list and checking it twice and sort of dealing with
it.
So, yeah.
So yes, I get that that connection didn't.
So it wasn't there.
But yes, she's also, I think what actually ended up happening by not doing that as well.
Yeah.
And then letting her go off to deal with Kingpings that she comes.
it's she's a thing her her independence as a character kind of I think emerges out of out of that more as well
it's like she's not she's not just need that that thing with Clint she's you know and I think that's
wonderful about the way that Alapa plays is that she has this kind of strength and this individuality
and that she's not like you know she's just like she stands her ground with all these guys she
spends her ground with king you know in a way and and there's a kind of a focus that that's really
interesting. I want to talk, I mean, this is
this show called Hawkeye, so I
want to make sure I would talk to you about Clint and
this, and their whole, like, season
journey, so let's start with Clint. Like, what do you feel
like is the
the most important lesson that he
learns in this season that takes
him from where he starts at the beginning of the season
to where he winds up at the end of the season?
Again, I think it's, it's an interesting one, because it's not
like an exact, you know, it's not like you start the show
with like, oh, it doesn't have to do this. It's
it's, it's, it's an emotional
you know, it is an emotional journey of closure and, I mean, it's not closure because it's not like
you can close the door on having been the Ronan, but I think again, to me, the way I always looked
at it was, I think I said this before, that I found it interesting that essentially it was about
this identity of Hawkeye, you know, that, that I think Clint, that was the identity that
other people maybe gave him, you know, that became a convenient calling card.
But yes, because of his background, because of what he then did is Ronan.
Coming into this show, I felt like, you know,
Quint, Hawkeye's kind of the last thing that he actually maybe has come to terms with.
Like he doesn't, he's like, he has almost like a fear that is he more, am I Hawkeye or am I Ronan?
Like, who is, who is the real Clint?
And what do I deserve to be?
And that discomfort with that sort of lack of self-worth, that that discomfort with the
the, you know, the fan fandom that Kate brings to him.
That was why I found interesting about the dynamic.
Like, she sees him as the thing that everybody thinks,
you know, like the heroic side, the poster on the wall version.
And he's a guy that's wrestling with like, that's not,
I don't deserve that.
And so kind of watching him come to terms with that
and sort of recognizing what it means through her eyes and helping her
and, you know, and the messiness of her life
and kind of helping her wrestle with that as well.
It's sort of, again, it's not like it's a neat resolution,
but it kind of, I don't know,
I think it's more of him getting comfortable with it.
Is that, you know, when you go back to the premiere,
there's that moment in the restaurant, you know,
where the waiter says like the meals on us,
thank you for saving our city,
and he's just extremely uncomfortable there.
Is that, is that that discomfort that you're talking about
with like being called the era?
me. And again, I'm not, you know, so I talked to Jeremy about this, but, and I don't know, again,
Jeremy's obviously got his own relationship with the character. But to me, when I started thinking
about this character, when I, early on, when I was even just kind of getting excited by the idea
of possibly being involved, and I started really taking a dive on the character, that was the
thing that felt like the hook was just that, you know, and I was identified in fraction as well.
It was just like that kind of, that guy that just doesn't feel like the person people say he is.
And, you know, he's like the, he's like the sort of old hometown, you know, quarterback that who's past is behind him, that, you know, people buy him drinks when he goes to the bar. But he feels worthless inside because he's not that guy, you know, that was what felt interesting to me.
What about Kate? I mean, I, you know, for me, my interpretation is that, you know, she gets to learn some harsher truths about what it is the cost of being a hero and, and, you know, especially like, you know, in the truth that she learns about her mom and stuff like that. But, you know, what do you see as Kate?
emotional arc, emotional journey
through the show.
I mean, it's, yeah, it's a, it's maturing.
I think it's, you know, that reality,
you know, she has a, there's a sort of recklessness
to her at the beginning, you know,
that she's, you know, that she's young and she's rich.
And that entitlement maybe that's there.
And, you know,
there's an assumption that way things are,
you know, go a certain way.
And, again, not that it's completely closed out.
It's not like she's the thing.
I was also wanted to be careful
that she'd come across as this spoiled kid that, you know, had no sense of the world,
like that there was a scrappiness to her.
But, yeah, it's kind of that transition from sort of, you know, the innocence of speculation
or the innocence of ambition, meeting, yeah, reality.
And, you know, I think, again, coming to see Clint, not as a superhero, but as a human,
as a real person,
that's kind of her journey.
And then, of course,
she comes to see her mother,
not just as her mother,
as a real person as well,
with her own messiness.
And so it's kind of a little bit,
again,
it is about, you know,
it's like that conversation,
episode two,
sort of about branding.
You know, it's a little bit like,
I think we all project versions of people.
And, you know,
and Kate has blinders at the beginning.
Like, she sees that argument with Armand,
between her mom and her mom,
mom and comes, she never, she never thinks for once that her mom might, there might be something
fishy, but it's like she immediately goes off on that track of following Armand. And then her prejudice
against Jack, because of his romantic involvement with her mom, it just brings everything's important.
She's just, she's just off on that track. And so I think, again, just learning to look at the
subtleties and to look at people, you know, sort of below that, that judgment is what I think is
an interesting journey that she goes on. I'm so glad you brought up, Jack. This is my last question
for you because he has emerged as like the mascot of this podcast.
We love Jack DeKine.
We love Tony Dalton.
My question, I guess, is that, you know, I had seen what Tony Dalton could do on Better Call
Saul, you know, I was already impressed with him.
This is a different flavor of that sort of similar charm but very scary stuff that he does
on Better Call Saul.
Did the character of Jack Toon, or the way that you thought about it?
how you might use him, change it all once you saw what Tony was doing with him?
Or were you just like, Tony nailed exactly what I wanted for this character.
This is what I always imagined, do you know?
No, what it was interesting is like when I came on, you know, they, they, so Jonathan and
those guys already had kind of a, you know, the Jack you came was going to be part of things.
And he was kind of written as this, this just eccentric kind of thought that was just sort of almost so,
he was just very like
detached from reality
in some ways
and so and it's like
I could understand
I sort of knew
what the comedic value of it was
but but you know
the same time is like
you know
if you need him to be a red herring
and you need him to be a believable
a fiance
to Eleanor
you know like it
sort of we need it's there
that we have to try and find
you know it's sort of ground all that stuff
and so yeah
so it's kind of trying to think of a person
that could kind of handle that, that you would project, again, you as a viewer would project
a certain, you know, you'd believe him as a bad guy, because if Kate seems a bad guy,
the audience needs to see him as a bad guy too. It can't just be clear that, because it
would just make Kate seem like an idiot.
Right, right, right. And so I have to credit two rights as Brian Gatewood and Alex Tanaka
with suggesting looking at Tony.
because, yeah, they were, they just, again, my eyes hadn't gone that yet.
And they were like, check them out.
Like, it's like, that's the, I think he's the guy.
Like, I think he could do it.
He's really funny and good.
And then, yeah, and then Tony came in and just, again, it's a weird character to try and land.
And he, it was funny.
Sometimes he'd look at me and just kind of go, like, is this really what I'm going?
Like, he would just kind of, again, he's just very funny because it's so open,
just doing whatever you tell him to do.
you and sometimes you could tell,
like I would ask him to do something crazy.
Like, you know, like the dialogue with the kid at the party
when he asked him if he says, you know,
he says, you know, I remember when you pee your pants
in the Hamptons or whatever, which was something I just threw out
as like, I was, essentially just went over,
I went, I went to Tony and I said, look,
you just need to really like kind of like just be childish
with this kid, like just embarrass him somehow.
And then I went to the kid and I told the kid,
you need to like try and whatever he says like just try and come back at him as well like
and then just kind of let them go at each other so Tony the pete your pants thing so anyway the thing
he always had fun with it and I enjoyed it was just this amusing thing where it was like okay we'll just
we're gonna go we're gonna go crazy and we'll go down the same with the blood on the tie at the end
was like a funny just because I remember the scene was just like explaining lapping and that
they were going to become friends and it just felt not like it felt jack would not sit and listen
to that to me I was like he's not he's not listening to what
popping is. And so, yeah, I was just like, just, I was like, just be absent mindedly that,
you know, looking at your time and then just, yeah, like, reveal it just, just, yeah,
balls. And because balls is something that I would frequently say as a, uh, expletive. And yeah,
he was great. I love Tony so much. He was, and he did such a great job. Again, it was a difficult
character. And he had so much fun with it. Well, thank you so much for the chat for coming at the beginning
and here at the end to talk to me about, about this show. Um, we've had so much fun with it.
living it. It's great. It all happened. It's true. Yeah, thanks so much and good luck. Are you,
I mean, you probably can't tell me if you have any other like Marvel plans of the future.
What's, can you tell me anything that's on your docket at all, Reese, that people can.
I mean, for my really super niche fans, I mean, my immediate plans are I'm going to go and do season
four documentary now. So that's that's for all for all five of you that will watch.
That's me.
Me.
Oh my God.
The company, the company album recording episode is one of the best things has ever happened.
So it's for me.
That felt it was funny.
We started talking about that like while I was sort of in the midst of this.
And it felt like such a fun, it's such a polar opposite to Marvel and a fun kind of place to go dip back into.
So luckily we managed to get the band back together.
And yeah, we're going to go do that.
All right.
Well, I will keep my.
I was peeled for documentary now and anything else you might have coming out. Thanks so much,
Reese. I really appreciate it. Awesome. Thank you. Thanks, guys. All right, now that Reese has pulled back
the curtain on some Hawkeye secrets. I mean, you'd think we'd be done talking about Hawkeye,
but oh, no, not us. You would be wrong. Not us. We went long. So you're getting a two-per.
Mel. Yes. What's happening next? So glad you asked. We will be returning to hand out.
Sweetie superlatives are 12 awards for this entire season of Hawkeye.
We will be diving in to the mailbag questions with Jomea Denneron.
And we will be leaning into the hype, putting on our take helmets,
arming ourselves in Bessar and lore to chat about the book of Boba Fett with Ben Lindberg
who will be sharing his recommendations for what to watch and read so that you are ready for
the Boba premiere next week.
Thank you.
To my partner, Joanna, always.
I just wanted to say that.
Thank you to Hawkeye E.P.
And director, Reese Thomas, for joining us today.
And of course, thank you to our kingpin of content, Steve Allman, for producing this episode.
Our LARP lords Arjuna, M. Gapal, and TD, St. Matthew Daniel,
for their additional production work on this episode.
And the meme swordsman himself,
Jomea Denneron, for his work on the social for this episode.
Remember to follow the Ring and Verse on Spotify
or wherever you get your podcasts.
Follow the Ringiverse across our social feeds.
Head back this weekend for our Hawkeye season review
and our Book of Boba Fett Primer.
Head back on Monday for the House of Midnight Matrix Resurrections Pod.
And head back on Wednesday and Friday
for the.
Midnight Boys and House of our Boba Premier pods.
It's a lot of content.
Busy time on the Ringerverse feed.
Happy holidays to everyone.
Happy holidays.
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