HomeNewsTrendsEntertainmentMarvel's Echo: Bloodiest MCU series offers rare light at the end of the superhero tunnel

Marvel's Echo: Bloodiest MCU series offers rare light at the end of the superhero tunnel

Echo is Marvel’s bloodiest but also (thankfully) its least ‘super’ show. It’s possibly what makes it refreshing and daring.

January 14, 2024 / 19:37 IST
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Echo follows Maya Lopez, played by the delightful Alaqua Cox. (Screen grab/YouTube/Marvel Entertainment)
Echo follows Maya Lopez, played by Alaqua Cox. (Screen grab/YouTube/Marvel Entertainment)

In the third episode of Marvel’s Echo (Disney+Hotstar), a black-and-white throwback to early 1800s shows an indigenous woman’s uphill battle to be accepted as one of the ‘light-horsemen’. “To give life means nothing if I cannot protect it,” the woman seems to say through placards that take you back to the silent era of filmmaking. The sequence foreshadows the coming-of-age nature of this grisly and violent show and the ceilings that have to be broken within margins as well. It is in essence a homecoming for a woman who finds heroism not through vain, CGI-fuelled superpowers but through a sense of belonging. Made under the Marvel Spotlight banner, a new arm of the struggling superhero assembly line, Echo is the least super of all of Marvel’s streaming shows, but it is bloody, gnarly and maybe the most watchable of the lot. If nothing else, it is evidence there is life still in the MCU.

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Echo follows Maya Lopez, played by the delightful Alaqua Cox, we were first introduced to in the somewhat salvageable Hawkeye. Lopez had last fired a bullet into the head of her criminal guardian figure, Kingpin, played menacingly by Vincent D’Onfrio. We begin in the aftermath of the altercation where Kingpin having survived, pursues an on-the-run Lopez. There isn’t as much a cat and mouse chase as it is a standoff between territorial tendencies. Kingpin raised Lopez in his image and in a Thanos kind of way, sees her as the inheritor of his legacy. Lopez, however, thanks to her moment of enlightenment, decides to return to her hometown in Oklahama. It’s here that the show really digs its feet, inhales a bit of folklore and lets out a cautioned squeak of hope.

Firstly, Echo is possibly the bloodiest Marvel has ever been. You see bones crack, blood spilled and bodies deformed in a manner that you haven’t seen in any of the studio’s films or shows. The new banner has been launched to make stories independent of the larger cinematic universe we are familiar with, and it seems to have liberated creators of that templated spiel about capes, crusaders and goofy bad guys. For once, a Marvel series feels lean, untouched by gimmicky CGI, flattery and cosmic escapism. It’s dark, painful, violent, has the husky tone of a noir and feels like something that could happen next door. Moreover, it is driven by a largely indigenous cast and takes its history and authenticity seriously enough to look like something out of real life as opposed to a studio lot.