Secret Invasion (Marvel Disney+ Series)

Phroobar

Well-Known Member
The original comic book story was very different. Of course, it doesn't make any sense either. Too bad they can't use all of these characters in this show.

After the Kree–Skrull War[8] the Earth superheroes Iron Man, Mister Fantastic, Namor, Black Bolt, Professor Charles Xavier and Doctor Strange join as a group called the Illuminati to secretly confront the Skrulls. They attack the Skrull Empire, and warn that any future invasion attempts of Earth would mean further reprisals; however, they are all captured and intensely studied before escaping.[9]

An eventual successor to the Skrull throne, Princess Veranke, claims that a prophecy foretold the annihilation of the Skrull homeworld. The current Emperor, Dorrek, exiles her to a prison world for inciting religious extremism. After the destruction of the Skrull Throneworld by the cosmic entity Galactus,[10] Veranke becomes Empress by lineage, and guides an invasion of Earth, armed with the knowledge of superhumans gained from having studied the Illuminati. The Skrulls capture several superhumans and infiltrate Earth's defenses, with Veranke herself posing as heroine Spider-Woman.[11] Veranke is inconvenienced when there is a breakout of supervillains at the Raft prison, which forces her to join the New Avengers team.[4]

After the Civil War, Elektra, the leader of the ninja group the Hand, is revealed to be a Skrull named Pagon after dying in battle with the New Avengers.[12] Veranke takes the corpse to Tony Stark (who, at the time, led the pro-registration Mighty Avengers) to sow distrust among the superhero community. She joins the Mighty Avengers, claiming it will throw the Skrulls off balance. Posing as agents of spy organization S.H.I.E.L.D., the Skrulls attempt to mine the metal vibranium in the Savage Land and battle the New Avengers before being killed.[13] The Illuminati battle an impostor posing as Black Bolt and two new Super-Skrulls, possessing all-new powers.[14]

The Skrull invasion destabilizes the superhuman community as:

  1. Simultaneous strikes disable the S.H.I.E.L.D. Helicarrier and orbiting base The Peak.
  2. A breakout is instigated at the supervillain holding facility the Raft.
  3. The Baxter Building (headquarters of the Fantastic Four) is transported to the Negative Zone.
  4. Thunderbolt Mountain (headquarters of the Thunderbolts) is attacked.
Additionally, the Avengers are attacked by Skrulls posing as heroes in the Savage Land, and Reed Richards is wounded by the Skrull Criti Noll (who was posing as Henry Pym) seconds after determining a way to identify the shape shifters.

After several battles between Earth's heroes and the Skrulls in Manhattan and the Savage Land, Mr. Fantastic manages to develop a device that can detect the aliens. Criminal kingpin the Hood aids the heroes, deciding "no more Earth is bad for business." Veranke regroups with her forces in New York City in a final battle against the combined Avengers, now aided by Nick Fury and his new Commandos, Thor, Daredevil, Ka-Zar, and super teams such as the Young Avengers and the Thunderbolts.

Veranke is wounded by the Avenger Hawkeye. Criti Noll activates a booby trap placed on the heroine Wasp, although the blast is contained by Thor at the cost of her life. Veranke is then shot and killed by Norman Osborn (using a weapon he created with intelligence stolen from Deadpool).[15] The last remnants of the Skrull armada are destroyed, with Iron Man locating the missing heroes. S.H.I.E.L.D. is dissolved by executive order of the President of the United States while a last Skrull (posing as the Avengers' butler Edwin Jarvis) flees with the child of hero Jessica Jones and Luke Cage. This Skrull is killed by Bullseye shortly after returning the child. Norman Osborn is placed in charge of S.H.I.E.L.D's replacement, H.A.M.M.E.R., and forms a secret group consisting of himself, Emma Frost, Namor, Doctor Doom, The Hood and Loki which commences the "Dark Reign" storyline.[16][17]
 

Vegas Disney Fan

Well-Known Member
Yikes.

My first reaction is MCU fatigue but I think it’s even bigger than that, I think we’re overwhelmed with options now and it’s hard to keep up with what’s being released.

I’ve enjoyed the first 2 episodes but there’s so much content now if something doesn’t stand out above the crowd it’s easy to miss it.
 

Phroobar

Well-Known Member
My first reaction is MCU fatigue but I think it’s even bigger than that, I think we’re overwhelmed with options now and it’s hard to keep up with what’s being released.

I’ve enjoyed the first 2 episodes but there’s so much content now if something doesn’t stand out above the crowd it’s easy to miss it.
I think you hit it on the mark. Too much mediocre stuff. We are kind of finding it really doesn't matter anymore to keep up to date on the storyline.
 

MarvelCharacterNerd

Well-Known Member
I've enjoyed the show thus far (aside from the spoiler thing that happened in the first episode and the garbage opening credits). But I enjoyed Falcon & Winter Soldier and Andor a lot, too, and this reminds me of both.

That said, it has things going against it aside from a general super hero or MCU fatigue.

For some people because of the credits fiasco.

For some people because of the spoiler thing that happened in the first episode.

For some people because it's really late in the game to be doing a Nick Fury story and at times this is starting to feel like Old Man Fury.

For some people because this is a sequel to Captain Marvel and they may not have liked that movie.

I was also surprised that in spite of some very careful editing, this was the most violent level of fighting I've seen in Marvel since the Netflix shows. Less blood, but heavier brutality than I expected. Then again, I think the Netflix shows are way, way, WAY better than anything that's been done for Disney+. Just a matter of preference.
 

doctornick

Well-Known Member
I hope they are done with Fury in the MCU
I like Fury but he works much better as a complimentary character, not as a lead.

The premise of this show where he is unwilling to get actual super powered beings involved is pretty silly. Call up Dr Strange and see if he can cast a spell to force all the skrulls into their natural form.
 

MarvelCharacterNerd

Well-Known Member
I'll push through to the end, but I really don't like
how they've undone Nick (while simultaneously empowering a random Olivia Colman character who I don't care about even if the actress is great). And don't get me started on the mustache-twirling baddie that Rhodey suddenly became.

And has there EVER been anything in the entirety of the MCU (specifically - not counting the Netflix adjacent story stuff or Deadpool, etc.) with a bigger focus on guns and shooting people?

It just really feels wrong for the MCU.
 
Last edited:

BrianLo

Well-Known Member
For what it is worth Nielsen is reporting very similar premiere numbers to F&TWS, Hawkeye, Moon Knight, and She Hulk. I think Secret Invasion currently ranks about flat in the middle of Hawkeye and Moon Knight

Wanda-Vision and Loki both being the front-runners doing about 150-175% of the viewership and Ms. Marvel doing about 60%.

Of course we can see if it holds as most series do build their viewership. The buzz may be down, but I think the no one is watching narrative isn't true.
 

doctornick

Well-Known Member
I’m a bit surprised it’s not going over well, I love the build up, I’d put this up with Wandavision and Loki, way better than SheHulk, Ms Marvel, Hawkeye, and even F&WS for me.

I like that it has an old spy thriller feel to it.

It obviously depends on what things appeal to people, but this is in my bottom two of D+ MCU shows along with Falcon & the Winter Soldier. My current ratings are probably:

WandaVision
GOTG Holiday Special
Loki
Ms. Marvel
Werewolf by Night
Moon Knight
She-Hulk
Hawkeye
What If...?
Secret Invasion
Falcon & the Winter Soldier

I fully expect Echo to be terrible and at the bottom of the list. I have hopes for generally all the other planned series for D+ but I'd be lying if I didn't say that I find their TV shows to be uneven and missing out on their potential. I still firmly believe that a problem is not treating them like actual TV shows and having episodes being at least somewhat self contained rather than having series function like a 6 hour movie broken into somewhat arbitrary portions.

Edit: I added in the two holiday specials because I had forgotten about them but they were both great and deserve mention.
 
Last edited:

MagicHappens1971

Well-Known Member
I’m a bit surprised it’s not going over well, I love the build up, I’d put this up with Wandavision and Loki, way better than SheHulk, Ms Marvel, Hawkeye, and even F&WS for me.

I like that it has an old spy thriller feel to it.
I think it’s vibe is very different than anything else the MCU has done, the only thing I can think that would come close is The Winter Soldier.


My MCU TV Show Rankings are:
WandaVision
Ms. Marvel
Hawkeye
What If..?
Secret Invasion
She-Hulk
Falcon & The Winter Soldier
Moonknight

I’m excited for Daredevil but Echo is just something nobody asked for and it does not look like it’s gonna be good. As @doctornick said the shows can be rough and uneven at times as they are mostly 6 hour movies just broken up into pieces. I love spy/political thrillers but this show is just missing a little bit of the intensity of a political thriller.
 

Register on WDWMAGIC. This sidebar will go away, and you'll see fewer ads.

Back
Top Bottom