The Hamilton Spectator

Luke Cage, season 2, is bloated and dishevelle­d

- VERNE GAY

WHAT IT’S ABOUT: A Harlem celebrity, Luke Cage (Mike Colter) can stop bullets but he still can’t quite make a decent living.

His pal D.W. (Jeremiah Craft), who’s not above exploiting him, wants to market the fame, but Luke is reluctant. But when a particular­ly nefarious newcomer to Harlem — John McIver, a.k.a. Bushmaster (Mustafa Shakir) — threatens his life and the city he loves, Luke’s open to new income opportunit­ies, if only to help defeat him.

Claire Temple (Rosario Dawson) and Misty Knight (Simone Missick) are back to help the man they love (if only they knew how). Meanwhile, Mariah Dillard (Alfre Woodard) and her sidekick “Shades” (Theo Rossi) are about to meet their match, and that’s not just Luke.

MY SAY: Go ahead: You try to produce 13 hours of superhero television without tying yourself into a knot along with the hapless viewer who’s along for the ride.

You try to figure out what to do with Bushmaster and Misty and Claire and especially Mariah — who morphs from evil to good, then back to evil again, with various shades of depravity.

You, too, would eventually put in a call to Danny “Iron Fist” Rand (Finn Jones) because — well, just because.

There are 13 hours to fill, and not nearly enough story, or at least coherent story, to fill them. Danny might at least help. Might. (But, actually, not.)

It’s always easy to tell when a series starts to vamp to fill time. Cameos are called in, and they arrived here almost immediatel­y.

Todd Bowles, head coach of the real-life Jets, did one in the second episode that managed to accomplish nothing more than confirm that Luke had superpower­s.

A reasonable coach, particular­ly the one running the Jets, would have drafted him on the spot. But because Luke never leaves Harlem — or Bowles doesn’t know a sure bet when he sees one — that wasn’t going to happen either.

And so, the second season of “Luke Cage” thus rose and ultimately fell: Too much canvas with wild splashes of paint deployed to fill it.

Compared with the first, the second is a disappoint­ment, but far from a failure. Best experience­d in small bites, “Luke’s” second is also filled with plenty of memorable performanc­es — and a soundtrack that’s a sonic wonder.

The second also features one of the last performanc­es by Reg E. Cathey, who died in February at the age of 59. (The second season is dedicated to him).

He plays Luke’s estranged father, Rev. James Lucas, a minister who initially fulminates against Luke before his flock — “One man cannot do it by himself, no matter how good and how strong, and believe me, Luke Cage is nothing but a man ...” — but ultimately patches up their difference­s.

Season 2 of “Luke Cage” is now streaming on Netflix.

 ?? DAVID LEE THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Mike Colter in a scene from "Luke Cage.” The second season is streming on Netflix.
DAVID LEE THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Mike Colter in a scene from "Luke Cage.” The second season is streming on Netflix.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada