The Goldfish Problem
- El episodio se transmitió el 30 mar 2022
- B
- 47min
CALIFICACIÓN DE IMDb
8.1/10
29 k
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Ver Ethan Hawke Inspired by Paul Schrader for Grim Opening Ritual of "Moon Knight"
Steven Grant se entera de que puede ser un superhéroe, pero también puede compartir el cuerpo con un mercenario despiadado.Steven Grant se entera de que puede ser un superhéroe, pero también puede compartir el cuerpo con un mercenario despiadado.Steven Grant se entera de que puede ser un superhéroe, pero también puede compartir el cuerpo con un mercenario despiadado.
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Opiniones destacadas
I like it. Great episode. Not cliche or repetitve like Hawkeye.
So there was one small plot hole to this otherwise great start. How on earth could you wake up in the morning thinking it was friday and somehow make it to dinner still thinking it was friday. He works at museum so how the heck did he make it all day...its small but still noticable.
So there was one small plot hole to this otherwise great start. How on earth could you wake up in the morning thinking it was friday and somehow make it to dinner still thinking it was friday. He works at museum so how the heck did he make it all day...its small but still noticable.
The show kicks off with things that make you question whats going on. It continues to do the same throughout the whole episode and thats what a pilot should be: establish the characters and their personalities and hint at the story to come over the next few episodes without being slow or overly convoluted. Even skipping the action scenes and just showing the results of the action was a smart move to add to the mystery of what Moon Knight is capable off whilst seeing it from Steven's eyes. It adds to that mystery of whats to come.
The acting here is great but at the moment Oscar Isaac's British accent is hit and miss but otherwise its great.
It seems to be a bit more brutal than the other marvel shows but from this pilot it shows to be one of the stronger marvel shows. In MCU shows they tend to reveal any connections early on to establish its place in the timeline but I couldn't find any connections in this pilot bar one obscure one: did they reference Claire Temple? I appreciate establishing the show on its own and not making big connections to the films at the moment. Let's see what the next eps hold.
Overall the pilot shows a promising potential of whats to come.
P. S. Any shot with a reflective surface like a mirror, puddle or just glass were crafted beautifully.
The acting here is great but at the moment Oscar Isaac's British accent is hit and miss but otherwise its great.
It seems to be a bit more brutal than the other marvel shows but from this pilot it shows to be one of the stronger marvel shows. In MCU shows they tend to reveal any connections early on to establish its place in the timeline but I couldn't find any connections in this pilot bar one obscure one: did they reference Claire Temple? I appreciate establishing the show on its own and not making big connections to the films at the moment. Let's see what the next eps hold.
Overall the pilot shows a promising potential of whats to come.
P. S. Any shot with a reflective surface like a mirror, puddle or just glass were crafted beautifully.
I found this to be a really solid pilot episode, probably one of Marvel's better ones.
We meet a new character to the MCU canon and learn just enough to want to keep watching. It is a very twisty forty-something minutes of television compared to most of Marvel's other stuff so maybe some who want everything explained precisely out-rifht won't get in to it... I thought it was fairly easy to follow. I've wanted to see Moon Knight on screen for a good while and Oscar Isaac's acting, along with the directing and visual flair, was more than enough to get me into it.
I did notice some pretty weak effects a few times. I'm not sure what that's all about. Other than that, I throughly enjoyed it and I already love the main character.
We meet a new character to the MCU canon and learn just enough to want to keep watching. It is a very twisty forty-something minutes of television compared to most of Marvel's other stuff so maybe some who want everything explained precisely out-rifht won't get in to it... I thought it was fairly easy to follow. I've wanted to see Moon Knight on screen for a good while and Oscar Isaac's acting, along with the directing and visual flair, was more than enough to get me into it.
I did notice some pretty weak effects a few times. I'm not sure what that's all about. Other than that, I throughly enjoyed it and I already love the main character.
This was a really nice introduction to the world, or should I say the mind of Steven Grant.
We get a look inside this poor guy's daily life and what his job is and what he does. And Oscar does a great job portraying him.
I also liked that we're introduced to the villain this soon and we already know what he does, what his powers are and what his motivation and goal really is. Some might not like that they just threw us all these revelations, but I like that it's not one of those "let's not even show the villain and what he does for 2 minutes and we don't reveal what he really wants until the last episode" kind of storytelling.
And I also liked that we already get a Marc's Moon Knight reveal and action and that he's already Moon Knight and that they didn't delay the reveal till future episodes.
And obviously, it's not like they've shown us everything about these characters and there's no more mystery to them. We still don't really know Marc, Moon Knight and Arthur.
All in all, it's a really good introduction that sets up our protagonist(s), the villain, and the main conflict, with a great performance by Oscar Isaac and good cinematography and scenery and decent CGI, and I'm really looking forward to the upcoming episodes.
We get a look inside this poor guy's daily life and what his job is and what he does. And Oscar does a great job portraying him.
I also liked that we're introduced to the villain this soon and we already know what he does, what his powers are and what his motivation and goal really is. Some might not like that they just threw us all these revelations, but I like that it's not one of those "let's not even show the villain and what he does for 2 minutes and we don't reveal what he really wants until the last episode" kind of storytelling.
And I also liked that we already get a Marc's Moon Knight reveal and action and that he's already Moon Knight and that they didn't delay the reveal till future episodes.
And obviously, it's not like they've shown us everything about these characters and there's no more mystery to them. We still don't really know Marc, Moon Knight and Arthur.
All in all, it's a really good introduction that sets up our protagonist(s), the villain, and the main conflict, with a great performance by Oscar Isaac and good cinematography and scenery and decent CGI, and I'm really looking forward to the upcoming episodes.
This is a great way to start a show, i wanted to keep going the second the episode ended. This show looks to have a really interesting mystery throwing the viewer right into the action of the show. Oscar Isaac shines and Ethan Hwake does a great job playing a really ominous villain I can't wait for more. The cinematography was top tier on level with eternals at points, the directing was brilliant as was the script.
¿Sabías que…?
- TriviaIn one scene, Steven Grant passes by a QR code on a museum wall. The QR code actually works and when scanned, it redirects to a page on the official Marvel website where it's possible to read a free digital copy of "Werewolf By Night #32", originally published in 1975, where Moon Knight made his Marvel Comics debut. After the following episodes were released, the QR code redirected to the comics related to the latest episode.
- ErroresRunning late for work, Steven notices and starts chasing down the double-decker bus that he's trying to catch. When he tries to get the driver's attention by waving frantically, he's using his right arm, but the scene then cuts to him now using his left arm and there is a travel mug in his right hand that wasn't there previously.
- Créditos curiososAt the director's credits, the moon is seen shining over London.
- ConexionesFeatured in Chris Stuckmann Movie Reviews: Moon Knight - Episode 1 Review (2022)
- Bandas sonorasEvery Grain of Sand
Written and Performed by Bob Dylan
Courtesy of Columbia Records
By arrangement with Sony Music Entertainment
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Detalles
- Tiempo de ejecución
- 47min
- Color
- Mezcla de sonido
- Relación de aspecto
- 16:9 HD
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