The Marvel Cinematic Universe's 8 Best TV Episodes – Page 3 of 8 – We Got This Covered - Part 3
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The Marvel Cinematic Universe’s 8 Best TV Episodes

After rewriting the landscape of cinema with their trend-setting shared universe of movies, Marvel managed to repeat that same success on the small screen by creating several shows that share a separate, if tangentially related, continuity. More importantly, they're all darn good TV.
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7) Daredevil – Daredevil

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One of the many great things about the first season of Daredevil was that it used the fact that it was made for Netflix to its advantage. Instead of having episodic plots, it was one big, protracted superhero origin story. As such, the season finale had all the stakes of the third act of a comic book movie. And thankfully, less city-wide destruction and weird portals in the sky.

Firstly, it shows Matt Murdock finally get out of his black outfit and properly become Daredevil, as he dons the classic red suit (even if it did need re-designing for season two). More importantly, it gives us the big showdown between Matt and Fisk – in both a dramatic and physical sense. After a season of ambiguous morals from both, it packs a real punch to see each character assuming the identity of how the world sees them: hero and villain.

6) AKA WWJD? – Jessica Jones

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Jessica Jones had a tough job creating just as fascinating a hero/villain rivalry as Daredevil and Fisk, but it managed it in Krysten Ritter’s troubled private eye and her mind-controlling stalker Kilgrave. One of the very best episodes that showcased this was episode eight, as the pair are forced to live together.

For the first time in the show, we get a fuller picture of Kilgrave beyond just being the spectre of Jessica’s nightmares and a scarily-powerful monster. Through the look at his childhood and his apparent love for Jessica, it’s clear that he’s not really evil. He’s just a child who never learnt you can’t always have it your way (because he actually can).

Nonetheless, the episode doesn’t completely neuter Kilgrave. His warped declaration of affection – moving into her childhood home – is a clever metaphor for how he has corrupted every aspect of her life with his emotional and physical abuse.


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Christian Bone
Editor and Writer
Christian Bone is a Staff Writer/Editor at We Got This Covered. Since graduating with a Creative Writing degree from the University of Winchester, he has been cluttering up the internet with his thoughts on movies and TV for over a decade. The MCU is his comfort place but, if you asked him, he'd probably say his favorite superhero film is The Incredibles.