Friday, April 2, 2021

The Falcon and the Winter Soldier: Power Broker Review

TFATWS "Power Broker"
The show gets a shot in the arm with the reintroduction of Daniel Bruhl's Helmut Zemo, whose status as an excellent villain is enhanced by his appearance here. The episode as a whole thrillingly engages with the canvas of the MCU, making for the show's best installment yet, though it's a couple of those very connections to the wider universe that prove puzzling.

John Walker is largely on the backburner this episode, but his outburst at the man at the Flag Smashers safe house highlights just how ridiculous the "costumed superhero" bit can be, especially when it's the wrong person in the costume. A sentiment, no doubt, Zemo would agree with. Zemo's anti-superhero ideology is drilled down on, establishing his motivation with laser precision. Zemo is integrated into Sam and Bucky's dynamic seamlessly, making for a great third wheel - not least during Marvin Gaye banter.

Henry Jackman again trots out his discordant Zemo theme. We also see "action Zemo" for the first time, and he gets his purple mask from the comics. Speaking of that, it is also revealed that Zemo is a Baron and part of a rich family. I get it, this brings the character closer to the comic villain Baron Zemo. But it doesn't fit with the Zemo of Captain America: Civil War. This level of resources devalues the presentation of his character in that movie as an obsessed ex-soldier. The Civil War Zemo simply works less well as the scion of an affluent family. It's another example of the MCU TV shows shunting characters closer to their comic incarnations, at the expense of the previous movies. I can live with all this, but it's not my absolute favorite trend.

Writer Derek Kolstad navigates a web of a lot of characters for Sam, Bucky, and Zemo to chase the trails of. There's even a John Wick moment when assassins are simultaneously alerted to bounties on their heads - appropriate because Kolstad is the creator of that film series.

The episode also brings back Sharon Carter, reinvented as... a tortured action hero! Sharon is given a lot of room to exercise her action chops, in notably brutal (for the MCU) fashion. She's still a fugitive, hiding out on Madripoor. I really don't understand why all of Steve Rogers' renegade team from Civil War was pardoned, but not her. Maybe it's because she was a CIA (and S.H.I.E.L.D.) agent?

Speaking of Civil War, there's even a "move your seat up" callback, which strikes me as gilding the lily. And more dramatically, Ayo (Florence Kasumba) of the Dora Milaje is on the scene, ready to avenge Zemo's murder of King T'Chaka! It's flourishes like that, plus the dynamic characterization of Zemo, and muscular action, that mark "Power Broker" as a standout episode. 8/10.

Stray observations:

- Bucky makes the distinction that he is not an Avenger while Sam is. Quite so, going by official team rosters and so forth. Of course, Bucky became an honorary Avenger during the Battle of Earth when Steve Rogers called out "Avengers, assemble."

- Zemo mentions that Sokovia is all but erased from the map. Notably, Wanda never updated us on this, but she had a lot on her plate, and Sokovian geopolitics never came up.

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