Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Sunday’s episode of Showtime’s “Ray Donovan” is a love letter to Las Vegas.

Netflix’s Marvel mash-up ‘The Defenders’ proves worth the wait

- Contact Christophe­r Lawrence at clawrence@reviewjour­nal.com or 702-380-4567. Follow @life_ onthecouch on Twitter.

THEY say you’ll never forget your first time.

I know I won’t, largely because Sigourney Weaver was in the room.

As a huge nerd, I’d been longing to get inside Hall H during ComicCon for years. Heck, during my first trip to downtown San Diego, I pressed my nose up against the convention center’s windows under the large “H” sign just to see what I could see. (Not much, it turns out.)

I finally made it into the cavernous exhibition space for last month’s panel for “The Defenders” (Friday, Netflix), the eight-part “Avengers”-style team-up of the casts of “Daredevil,” “Jessica Jones,” “Luke Cage” and “Iron Fist,” all of which Netflix bought sight unseen from Marvel in an unpreceden­ted five-series deal.

Like those shows, with the possible exception of “Iron Fist,” the disorienti­ngly large Hall H did not disappoint.

To put this into proper context, millions of pop-culture freaks from around the world attempt to buy Comic-Con badges. Roughly 130,000 can attend each of the festival’s four days. And Hall H, the largest venue available, holds only 6,500.

Even if you couldn’t make it inside for the panel, it was hard to miss “The Defenders” during ComicCon. Huge posters for the series covered parts of the Hilton Gaslamp Quarter across the street from the convention center. The hotel hosted The Netflix Experience, which included costumes from the series and plenty of free swag for those who endured the hourslong lines.

I randomly ran into the show’s stars downtown before the panel, but that turned out to be a smaller accomplish­ment than I’d thought. Fans could stand in another line for a chance at an autograph session, but all they really needed to do to meet the actors was turn up for a Marvel event outside The Netflix Experience dressed as one of the show’s characters. And “The Defenders” just may offer the simplest cosplay of all.

Daredevil costumes can get pretty elaborate, but if you go as his alter ego, blind attorney Matt Murdock, just throw on a suit and some sunglasses; if you really want to splurge, buy a cane. Jessica Jones requires little more than jeans, a leather jacket and a gray infinity scarf. All you really need to be Luke Cage is a hoodie, although it helps to have his bodybuilde­r’s physique. As for Iron Fist, aka Danny Rand, you could wear literally anything. The man has no discernibl­e look beyond blond curly hair.

That simplicity is a big part of the shows’ appeal. They’re just regular men and a woman working without fanfare to keep New York’s Hell’s Kitchen and Harlem neighborho­ods safe. Regular for superheroe­s, anyway. Matt has extraordin­ary hearing and touch to compensate for his radioactiv­itycaused blindness. Luke’s skin is impenetrab­le. Danny has a powerful glowy hand. And Jessica has super strength and, considerin­g how much she drinks, a liver as invulnerab­le as Luke.

As for the panel, after a few questions for the returning cast members and the introducti­on of Weaver as their nemesis, Netflix surprised the audience by showing the first episode of “The Defenders” in its entirety.

When we first see them, Matt (Charlie Cox) has boxed up his Daredevil costume and given up fighting in the streets for fighting for the little guy in the courtroom. Jessica (Krysten Ritter) is still recovering from the effects of her show’s first-season finale and hasn’t returned to her detective work. Luke (Mike Colter) emerges from prison as the Hero of Harlem. And Danny (Finn Jones) is chasing the villainous organizati­on known as The Hand through Cambodia.

Inside Hall H, fans cheered wildly the first time characters, even minor ones, showed up on screen. You probably won’t have that same reaction at home, though, because “The Defenders” is more of a slow build. Unlike “The Avengers,” the series has eight episodes to fill, so it can afford to take its time by having the characters encounter each other sporadical­ly.

Luke and Jessica already know each other — intimately. But it’s a treat seeing the other personalit­ies, and their varying degrees of humor, play off each other. “God, you’re weird,” Jessica tells Matt at one point. (She isn’t wrong.)

By the time all four of them finally assemble in Episode 3, though, it proves more than worth the wait.

Just like Hall H did.

 ?? Sarah Shatz Netflix ?? From left, Krysten Ritter, Finn Jones, Charlie Cox and Mike Colter star in Marvel’s ‘The Defenders.’
Sarah Shatz Netflix From left, Krysten Ritter, Finn Jones, Charlie Cox and Mike Colter star in Marvel’s ‘The Defenders.’
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 ?? CHRISTOPHE­R LAWRENCE SHOW & TELEVISION ??
CHRISTOPHE­R LAWRENCE SHOW & TELEVISION
 ?? Eric Charbonnea­u ?? Finn Jones, Krysten Ritter, Mike Colter and Charlie Cox meet fans at The Netflix Experience at Comic-Con in San Diego.
Eric Charbonnea­u Finn Jones, Krysten Ritter, Mike Colter and Charlie Cox meet fans at The Netflix Experience at Comic-Con in San Diego.

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