Half my class is watching it now
and we was talking about it during their smoking outside a store and someone random came , and was like ooh with killgrave ?
“I mean, I try not to get ahead of myself and think about it too much, because it’s easy to get carried away and think about things. I already feel like I have more than my share, in a way, being on Netflix, being in the Marvel Universe, being in this show that has resonated so deeply with people. But of course, I mean, it would be amazing. I mean, it’s already a privilege to play a history that has so much lineage within the Marvel Universe. And to take it that one step further is something that, yeah, I’d love to get my teeth stuck into whatever happens to the character.”
I feel like it doesnt really need a second season honestly
Me too. I honestly doubt they can S1. But I hope they do the arc from the comics where Jessica Jones saves Spider-Woman from drugs which grants people mutations(or something along those lines)
"It's been really nice because also we're fans of Jessica Jones. It's this weird feeling of the first time I wrote dialogue for Jessica, I was typing in my office, and I go, like, 'This is thrilling. Is it right? It's like, is it my Jessica? Is it your Jessica? Is it the Jessica? Is it Kristen's Jessica? Is it Marvel's?'" he said. "The answer is yes, all of those, as the character grows and expands, but we couldn't possibly move forward without Mel and without Kristen and their incredible relationship and their friendship and their collaboration. We just feel like we're swimming in the same stream."
Melissa Rosenberg talks Season 2 of Jessica Jones:
Quote:
"She was kind of messed up even before Kilgrave came along," Rosenberg told Esquire, "and so in Season Two we can explore what's possible for her moving forward." And what's possible is not a miraculous recovery. Throughout Season One, Jessica's attempts to move on with her life were thwarted at every turn by a gleeful Kilgrave. But with him out of the picture, the cracks in her coping skills will become more apparent.
"I learned from working on Dexter that you can advance the character, but you never want to cure the character," Rosenberg said. "With Dexter, the moment he felt guilt or accepted that he was 'bad,' the show's over. He's no longer a sociopath. The equivalent for us would be if Jessica somehow recovered from the damage that had been done to her. People don't just heal, you don't go through that just to say, 'Oh, he got arrested, he's in jail, I'm OK now.'" Kilgrave's fate was a little more final than a jail sentence, but the same principle applies for Jessica. "That trauma is a huge part of who she is now."
the first 2 issues of Jessica's new solo comic book are good, I kinda hope they'll do something similar in season 2 since Dr Strange introduced the multiverse and magic to the MCU