Daredevil's third and final season on Netflix did a great job of presenting Bullseye. His action scenes were great, and I felt that his marksmanship skills were showcased very well. I do wish that he had worn his own costume, but between it being an origin story for him, and his using the Daredevil outfit, there really wasn't an opportunity to do so. His final scene had a hint of a costume, but alas season four was not meant to be.
Smile for the birdie, Bullseye! Next!
ReplyDeleteBullseye is lucky. If his opponent had been Van-Zee disguised as the Kandorian Nightwing, but with a Lobo-style attitude...well, let's just say that he would've been one French-fried bastiche.
ReplyDelete@Carycomic: hey! That gives me an idea. Captain America and the Kryptonian Nightwing vs. Lobo being mind-controlled by the Red Skull!
ReplyDeleteI read somewhere that (the Golden Age) Dick Grayson's original Robin costume was designed to dare criminals to shoot at him, because he could always avoid their bullets somehow. Accurate or not, that report got me to thinking that maybe he does have a super-power, in the form of super-dodging. With that perspective, this match-up of super-accuracy versus super-dodging would be an interesting one -- a variation on the irresistible force meeting the immovable object.
ReplyDeleteGiven that this is what's on the cover, though, I doubt that Nightwing defeating Bullseye would be the end of the tale; at the latest, it ends the first act.
I, too, would love to see the Netflix version of Bullseye in a variation of his comics costume, but for that to happen the PTB at Marvel (and Disney) would have to come around to allowing those iterations of the characters to rejoin the MCU, and nobody I've heard from think that that's likely to happen. I think that that's a pity, since Charlie Cox pretty much became the definitive Daredevil (and Mike Colter was almost as good as Luke Cage). Given the mid-credits scene in Spider-Man: Far From Home, a supporting role for Matt Murdock would seem appropriate for the third film.
Back to the cover: I only just noticed, as I was finishing the preceding paragraph, how the colors of these two characters' costumes match up almost perfectly. Was this coincidental, or deliberate? Was any color-adjustment done? Either way, it looks great.
Coincidental, but I do usualy tweak hue, brightness and contrast to make images go together better visually.
ReplyDeleteWell, ain't that a kick in the head!
ReplyDeleteHappy horses' birthday to all horses celebrating today.
ReplyDeleteWhich brings me to a suggestion. Ross, would you considering matching Winged Victory (the Shining Knight's horse) with his namesake in Astro City?
Bob Greenwade said...
ReplyDelete"I read somewhere that (the Golden Age) Dick Grayson's original Robin costume was designed to dare criminals to shoot at him,"
Wasn't that just a Dark Age deconstruction of the 'Kid Sidekick' concept? "He's there in that bright costume to draw fire away from the Batman."