Tuesday, November 28, 2017

'The Punisher' Doesn't Knock It Out of the Park, but It Still Hits. Hard.

After getting introduced in Daredevil season 2, Frank Castle a.k.a. the Punisher stars in his own solo Netflix series.  And I found it partly good and partly disappointing.

The Punisher is quite a fascinating fictional character.  He’s an uber-badass.  He’s a non-powered individual existing in a world of superpowers, but not only has he held his own, he has made himself among the deadliest and most intimidating.  In his hands, guns become more terrifying and potent than superpowers.

He has a code of honor, occasionally teams up with good guys, and is often moved to stand up for the weak and oppressed.  But this does not necessarily make him one of the good guys.  He’s a psychopathic, cold-blooded mass murder.  Yes, he primarily targets bad guys.  But he’s a psychopathic, cold-blooded mass murderer nonetheless.  Thus, he has built a reputation of infamy that strikes fear in the hearts of criminals, something that most superheroes don’t elicit from them.

He finds a sick sense of fulfillment from what he does, but he doesn’t consider his vigilantism a righteous crusade.  He doesn’t make any justifications.  He acknowledges that he’s as bad as the criminals he kills, and also deserves to be punished – to be put to death – in the end.
These things about the character are reflected in his comics through perpetual display of over-the-top violence.  Oftentimes, the carnage he generates gets too extreme that it turns into a black comedy.  This is what the Punisher is all about – dark, cynical, and very violent, to the extent that it’s almost comical.

So after getting an origin arc out of the way in Daredevil season 2 – culminating in him finally wearing the iconic skull emblem on his chest – I was expecting that his solo series would now focus on him going on a murder-spree against terrorists, predators, serial killers, traffickers, mobsters, and other banes of society.  But this wasn’t the direction that the 13-episode debut season of The Punisher took.

Very early during the very first episode, after tracking down and killing the remaining gangsters involved in the death of his family, Frank Castle retires as the Punisher and takes on the identity of “Pete Castiglione.”  Heck, he even burns his vest that has the skull emblem on it.  At the very least, I assumed he was going to wear it all throughout the series, whenever he goes on a mission.  It would take until episode 11 before Frank wears his Punisher costume again.
Moreover, the storyline is once again tied up with Frank Castle’s past.  Instead of finally taking on bad guys completely unrelated to the death of his family, he’s once again all about seeking vengeance against people who had a hand on that tragedy.  Though it has a different approach, I found it somewhat stale.  Instead of having a character study of him being a vigilante, and exploring his thought process and his insane obsession of purging society of criminals,  it was like having another “origin arc” once again, when I thought that was already taken care of in Daredevil season two.  On top of this, it even offers somewhat of a “happy ending” for Frank Castle – an inkling of becoming reformed – which I felt was out-of-character (again, based on the comic book characterization).

There are a couple gratifying, brutal action scenes.  The best ones are when “Pete” wields a sledgehammer to take on a bunch of thugs, the Punisher sets a trap to an assault team in Micro’s hideout, and the final duel.   It gets graphic and gory.  But nowhere is it ever within the same hyper levels shown in the comics.  In a way, I understand this.  The Marvel Netflix shows have all been about having a “grounded and realistic” feel, and if The Punisher shows the same quantity and quality of stuff that the comics have in such a context, either it might have come off as if it’s celebrating violence or it might have come off as a cheap, hokey exploitation production.

Lastly, just like in Daredevil, Jon Bernthal’s portrayal of the character is great, though Tom Jane is still the best live-action Punisher in my book.  I also liked Ben Barnes’ performance and character.  As for the rest of the cast, the acting from everyone is mostly strong.
In the end, I really would have preferred if it had been more faithful to the comics in its tone, execution, and characterization.  But I nonetheless find the show’s take worthwhile.   The action may have been toned down, but it was the cost it paid for having a more thoughtful drama with themes that are different from the comics.  In this sense, this show is a fresh interpretation of the character and his mythos.  The story is gripping, and it has several notable moments.

Ignoring the comicbook source material, this is an objectively well-made show.  I would welcome another season.

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