This week's Agent Carter moves right along, as it brings back a fan-favorite character, resurrects a dead one we all knew was alive, and references a couple of real-life Hollywood personalities.
I was glad to see the return of Howard Stark, even if it was for just one episode. He definitely livens up the show. He's an interesting character— he's rude, vain, egotistic and a shameless womanizer. He's also a certified genius, and quite a progressive thinker too (as demonstrated in this episode when he drops everything to help Dr. Wilkes). The character shouldn't work, but somehow he does. Kudos to actor Dominic Cooper for making him such a likable asshole.
Right now there are actually two Howard Starks running around the Marvel Cinematic Universe. Dominic Cooper plays the younger Howard Stark, while John Slattery plays the older version. Besides looking absolutely nothing alike, the two actors couldn't be more different. Cooper plays Stark as fun-loving bad boy, while Stattery's version is all business, which I'm sure is confusing to casual viewers. Marvel really needs to pick a Stark and stick with him, and I vote for Cooper. How hard could it be to age him up a bit when they need the older version?
Cooper is obviously channeling Robert Downey Jr.'s performance of Tony Stark here, giving the two characters a familial link. It's an odd situation— Tony Stark's character was established in the movies first, so his father Howard is following in his footsteps, instead of the other way around.
I was glad to see the return of Howard Stark, even if it was for just one episode. He definitely livens up the show. He's an interesting character— he's rude, vain, egotistic and a shameless womanizer. He's also a certified genius, and quite a progressive thinker too (as demonstrated in this episode when he drops everything to help Dr. Wilkes). The character shouldn't work, but somehow he does. Kudos to actor Dominic Cooper for making him such a likable asshole.
Right now there are actually two Howard Starks running around the Marvel Cinematic Universe. Dominic Cooper plays the younger Howard Stark, while John Slattery plays the older version. Besides looking absolutely nothing alike, the two actors couldn't be more different. Cooper plays Stark as fun-loving bad boy, while Stattery's version is all business, which I'm sure is confusing to casual viewers. Marvel really needs to pick a Stark and stick with him, and I vote for Cooper. How hard could it be to age him up a bit when they need the older version?
Cooper is obviously channeling Robert Downey Jr.'s performance of Tony Stark here, giving the two characters a familial link. It's an odd situation— Tony Stark's character was established in the movies first, so his father Howard is following in his footsteps, instead of the other way around.
SPOILERS!
The Plot:
Peggy
and Chief Sousa search the late Dr. Jason Wilkes apartment, and find
evidence suggesting he was a communist. Peggy believes Isodyne planted
to evidence to discredit Wilkes. Peggy returns to the SSR office, where
she's surprised to see Chief Thompson has flown in from New York. He
tries to get Peggy to sign a report stating that Wilkes was a commie,
but she refuses. He signs his name to it instead, and Peggy leaves in a
huff.
Peggy
and Jarvis visit Howard Stark's movie studio, where he's filming a
movie based on the Kid Colt comic book. Peggy shows Stark the Zero
Matter film, and he's both intrigued and terrified by the substance's
potential uses. While looking through Wilkes' papers, Stark finds a pin
like the one the Council Of Nine were all wearing last week. He
identifies it as an Arena Club pin. Peggy wants to plant bugs inside the
club, but Stark tells her it's a men's only establishment.
Stark
comes up with a plan. He pretends to join the Arena Club, then says
it's too stuffy and brings in a bevy of buxom young women-- including
Peggy. During all the commotion she sneaks into the rear of the Club,
planting bugs here and there. She finds the Council Of Nine's chamber
and plants a bug inside, but it shorts out. Oddly enough she also finds a
copy of tomorrow's newspaper, complete with a headline saying a
prominent senator is resigning in disgrace. Apparently the Council not
only controls the news, but the elections as well.
Back
at the office, Thompson watches the Zero Matter film. When he's done,
FBI Agent Vernon shows up. He says WIlkes stole a weapon before he was
killed, and if Thompson has any info on the incident, it's his duty to
hand it over. Vernon says Thompson "will know it when he sees it." Peggy
returns to the office and tells Thompson about the Council's prophetic
newspaper. He refuses to believe her and they argue. He orders her to
return to New York. On her way out, she notices items on her desk
floating in mid-air.
Fearing
she's been contaminated by Zero Matter, Peggy goes to Stark, who says
there's a disruption in the gravity field around her. He mixes up a
chemical that can makes invisible wavelengths visible. He sprays the mix
in front of Peggy, and Wilkes appears. Comic book science! It seems the
Zero Matter explosion didn't kill him, but made him intangible. He's
been following Peggy around (!), trying to make her notice him. Wilkes
tells Peggy that Whitney Frost caused the Zero Matter explosion when she
tried to steal it. Stark vows to cure Wilkes.
Peggy
visits Whitney Frost, and accuses her of trying to steal the Zero
Matter. She denies it of course, and later forces her husband, Calvin
Chadwick, to eliminate Peggy. Chadwick sends an assassin named Hunt to
kill Peggy, but she ends up kicking his ass and sending him running. The
next day Thompson hands the Zero Matter film over to Vernon, claiming
he didn't watch it. Vernon takes Thompson to the Arena Club, and
introduces him to Chadwick. He notices a newspaper with the exact
headline Peggy warned him about. Whoops!
Stark
heads to Peru to consult with an expert on Wilkes' condition. Sousa
tells Peggy he did some digging, and discovered a woman named Agnes
Cully, who invented some sort of wartime technology. Cully's stage name
is-- Whitney Frost. Peggy realizes Frost is the brains of the entire
Isodyne operation.
Whitney
Frost sits in her dressing room, worrying over the crack in her
forehead caused by the Zero Matter explosion. Her director comes in,
sees the crack and asks what's going on. Suddenly a mass of Zero Matter
erupts from Frost's hands, absorbing the director. Frost notices the
crack on her forehead is now bigger.
Thoughts:
•
Ever since he was introduced, Howard Stark has been the Marvel
Cinematic Universe's equivalent of Howard Hughes. Nowhere was that more
evident than in this episode, in which Stark not only owns his own movie
studio, but is directing a film as well.
In
addition to being an aviator, engineer and inventor, the real life
Howard Hughes owned RKO Studios (as well as their theaters and radio
network) and began overseeing all the company's films. He eventually
sold the studio to the General Tire and Rubber Company, but retained
ownership of all films made under his watch.
•
When Peggy visits Stark's studio, he's filming a Kid Colt movie. Kid
Colt was an early Marvel Comics character. Unfortunately his first
appearance was in 1948, a year after this episode was set. Whoops!
When
Peggy sees what Stark is filming, she says, "A movie based on a comic
book? Sounds like a dreadful idea!" Meta Humor Alert!
I guess Peggy must not go to the movies much, or she'd know that the idea of a comic book movie wasn't new. The Captain Marvel serial premiered in 1941, and there was a Batman one in 1943. I suppose we could cut Peggy some slack here, as Fawcett and DC characters probably don't exist in the Marvel Cinematic Universe.
• When Stark offers Peggy a role as a "sassy beer wench" in his movie, she says, "I'd rather be the cowboy!"
I'll bet you anything this is referring to Hayley Atwell's comment about Doctor Who last year. When asked in an interview if she'd ever consider playing the Doctor's companion, she replied, "I'd rather be the Doctor!"
I guess Peggy must not go to the movies much, or she'd know that the idea of a comic book movie wasn't new. The Captain Marvel serial premiered in 1941, and there was a Batman one in 1943. I suppose we could cut Peggy some slack here, as Fawcett and DC characters probably don't exist in the Marvel Cinematic Universe.
• When Stark offers Peggy a role as a "sassy beer wench" in his movie, she says, "I'd rather be the cowboy!"
I'll bet you anything this is referring to Hayley Atwell's comment about Doctor Who last year. When asked in an interview if she'd ever consider playing the Doctor's companion, she replied, "I'd rather be the Doctor!"
• When Stark comments on how white Jarvis is, he claims he's 1/16th Turkish.
•
Last week when Chief Thomspon tried to interrogate Dottie Underwood,
she overturned a table, pinned him to the floor and darned near crushed
his neck with it. This week Peggy makes a comment about Thompson's
disastrous encounter with Dottie. How'd she know about that? She was on
her way to LA when that happened.
Maybe she heard the office gossip about the incident?
• In the first episode, we saw Peggy entering the SSR's west coast division. It's inside a small-time talent agency, accessible behind a wall of fake filing cabinets.
So when FBI Agent Vernon visited Thompson at the SSR in this episode, does that mean he had to go through the talent agency and file cabinet covers too?
• In the first episode, we saw Peggy entering the SSR's west coast division. It's inside a small-time talent agency, accessible behind a wall of fake filing cabinets.
So when FBI Agent Vernon visited Thompson at the SSR in this episode, does that mean he had to go through the talent agency and file cabinet covers too?
• Howard Stark meets a member of the Arena Club and says, "Let's do lunch." Did people really say that in 1947? I'm betting not.
•
The Arena Club has a strict "No Women Allowed" rule. Stark brazenly
flaunts this policy by bringing in a carload of young starlets.
If
women aren't allowed inside the Arena Club, why does the maitre d have a
"Code Pink" to deal with them? No one would come up with a code for a situation before it arises. Obviously women have crashed the
place before.
And I doubt people said "Code 'Blank" in 1947 either.
• When Peggy's
planting bugs in the Arena Club, she sneaks into the Council Of Nine's
secret board room. She plants a bug under their table, but it begins
emitting feedback so she destroys it. Just then a security guard
enters, suspicious. She messes with one of the bugs, exposing its wires
and jamming a fake flower from her dress into it, before placing it
under the table.
At
first I thought she was trying to start a small fire to create a
distraction, so she could escape the board room unnoticed. But there was
never any smoke or flame, and she escaped just fine. So what the heck
was
the deal with the hacked bug? It feels like a scene or two missing here.
You'd also think a top notch spy like Peggy would have taken one of the "tomorrow's newspapers" as evidence.
•
When Peggy infiltrates the Council Of Nine's boardroom, she finds a
copy of tomorrow's paper, implying the group is rigging the upcoming
election. The paper is dated Wednesday, July 16, 1947. That date really
did fall on a Wednesday! Kudos to the prop man for getting that detail
right!
• I told you Dr. Wilkes wasn't dead!
• Last week I said I thought
Jason Wilkes might turn out to be Marvel Comics character Shroud. Well, I
was way off base there.
Turns out there was a very obscure Marvel character named Professor Jason Wilkes. He appeared in Tales Of Suspense in 1962 (about a year before the Marvel Comics Universe started up).
Turns out there was a very obscure Marvel character named Professor Jason Wilkes. He appeared in Tales Of Suspense in 1962 (about a year before the Marvel Comics Universe started up).
Comic
book Wilkes was a scientist who was contacted by the commies to invent
an invisibility ray for them. He does so, and tests it on himself.
Unfortunately he not only becomes invisible, but intangible as well, and
has no way to turn on the "antidote" ray.
•
Also last week I said that since this was a comic book show, I wished
they'd add more fantastical elements to it, like ray guns or jetpacks.
Well, be careful what you wish for. This week's episode featured pseudo
science that would make Ed Wood look away in embarrassment! None of it
makes a lick of sense.
First
of all, Wilkes is invisible and intangible. Peggy sticks her hand
through his shoulder, and at one point Stark walks right through him.
Yet somehow he's still alive, and has been able to breathe for several
days. Shouldn't he have suffocated within minutes of the Zero Matter
explosion, as the air leaked out of his insubstantial lungs?
Stark
then gives us a lecture on how movie film is created and developed, and
whips up a photochemical potion that makes Wilkes visible again, but
not solid. Then just to prove that they hate us, the writers say Wilkes
can't speak, because his vocal chords are immaterial and can't vibrate
the air. So Stark sprays his potion into Wilkes throat, and viola! He
can speak. So the potion makes him visible but not material, but it can
make his vocal chords solid enough to allow him to speak.
Um... I'm not even sure how to respond to that.
And
I'm still not sure what was up with the items floating above Peggy's
desk and around her body. Stark says a disruption in her gravity field
is causing the items to float, but that doesn't make any sense. Was that
Wilkes moving things around, trying to get her attention? If so, he
shouldn't be able to handle any objects, since he's intangible and his
hands would go right through them.
•
Stark sends Jarvis out to pick up scientific components, and then says
to buy him some Velveeta while he's out. I checked, and Velveeta really
was around in 1947. It was invented way back in 1923.
•
After Mr. Hunt attacks Peggy, Stark increases the security around his
mansion. Unfortunately this consists of a very unintimidating alarm with
Jarvis' voice. When Jarvis hears this, he says he has no desire to
spend eternity as a disembodied voice. Another Meta Humor Alert!
•
Near the end of the episode, Howard Stark flies off to Peru to meet
with Professor Abner Brody (and to get back to AMC to film Preacher). I
wonder if that was an obscure Indiana Jones reference? Indy regularly
visited countries like Peru, his mentor was Abner Ravenwood, and his
museum curator friend was Marcus Brody. I don't know if that's what they
had in mind, but it all fits.
•
Sousa tells Peggy that Whitney Frost's real name is Agnes Cully, and
she invented some sort of wartime code breaking machine. This is
obviously a reference to real life actress Hedy Lamarr, who, along with
George Antheil, invented a way to used frequency hopping to control
torpedoes in WWII.
•
Obviously Whitney Frost is on track to become Marvel villain Madame
Masque. But the comic version of Masque had no actual superpowers. She
was just a skilled fighter and spy. She for damn sure couldn't absorb
people into her own body! Obviously this version of Madame Masque is
moving in a different direction.
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