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‘The Punisher’ is as strong as ever

A pending and probably permanent separation of Netflix-Marvel in no way dampens the show

- By David Betancourt

In season two, The Punisher proves it’s still among the best Marvel liveaction tales

The pending and probably permanent separation of Netflix and Marvel in no way dampens the second season of The Punisher.

Jon Bernthal’s Frank Castle is the last man standing: His lead role in The Punisher and Krysten Ritter’s Jessica Jones are the only Marvel street-level heroes remaining in Netflix’s once-vast interconne­cted playground. Iron Fist. Luke Cage. Even Daredevil, after a stellar third season. All canceled.

Disney, which owns Marvel, is preparing to load up its own streaming service with Marvel goodies later in 2019. Netflix has a bevy of other comic-book-inspired options, including the soon-to-best-reaming Umbrella Academy, based on the Dark Horse Comics series from Gerard Way and Gabriel B, and the creator-owned and probably very expensive library of all-star comic book scribe Mark Millar.

So, if you’re someone who always liked the idea of Marvel having a streaming, live-action space where its brand could be darker, edgier and sexier, you could be feeling like Thanos just snapped a little mini-universe from you.

But don’t let that stop you from enjoying one of the best all-time live-action Marvel performanc­es: Bernthal was born to play the Punisher. And for however much longer you can binge Marvel’s most violent and heavily armed anti-hero in action, treat yourself to it. Bernthal is to Frank Castle what Robert Downey Jr. and the Chrises are to Iron Man, Captain American and Thor. He isn’t just playing a role. He is the role — from the gravel in his voice to the pain and anger in his eyes.

Season two of The Punisher is more of Bernthal’s on-the-run grit. He’s as far away from the personal hell that is New York (at least in the beginning) as his equally menacing black van can take him.

If for just half an episode, he’s trying to see whether there’s anything remotely human and emotional remaining in his soul after Season 1’s discovery that his best friend (Ben Barnes’ Billy Russo) was the monster behind his family’s killing. The violent retributio­n he delivered left Russo in a coma and Frank feeling empty. To get the vengeance his family deserved, he had to take down the only family he had left.

In season two, the Punisher is either protecting or punishing.

The protecting comes courtesy of Amy (Giorgia Whigham), a teenage girl who gets caught up with the wrong crowd and lucks out that taking down bad people is the only thing that brings the Punisher joy. Frank and Amy’s relationsh­ip takes on a paternal tone. He volunteers to keep Amy safe from whatever she’s running from.

The punishing? There’s plenty. The bad guys after Amy have a religious hit man on call. John Pilgrim (Josh Stewart), an extreme conservati­ve, feels like badguy filler, plugging the holes and giving something for the Punisher to aim and miss at until the eventual and obvious confrontat­ion between the Punisher and Jigsaw (the once again out-on-thestreets Russo).

The Punisher/Jigsaw rematch is what hardcore Punisher fans are here for. From the moment Russo gets his face rearranged at the end of season one, they knew it would turn him into the Punisher’s biggest foe for season two.

That rematch is a little hampered because despite their violent, glass-heavy battle, Barnes’ Russo is still quite dashing. Almost distracted­ly so. Jigsaw’s name to fame in comic book lore is a heavily disfigured face that’s tough to look at.

Key supporting cast members return and give painfully human and emotional performanc­es, including the always justice seeking but heavily flawed agent Dinah Madani (Amber Rose Revah), and the Punisher’s only remaining friend, Curtis (Jason R. Moore). Royce Johnson’s Detective Mahoney is sort of the Samuel L Jackson-Nick Fury of this dying Netflix/ Marvel universe — always around, never having enough informatio­n and continuall­y a joy to watch. He’s a reminder that this connected Marvel world was a good idea that worked for the most part.

This might be as far as The Punisher goes. Netflix isn’t saying anything yet. This dark corner of Marvel’s superhero world could have kept going. Maybe it will. Maybe it won’t at Netflix.

If this is the end, it’s an end well worth a stream.

 ?? Photos courtesy of Netflix ?? Jon Bernthal as Frank Castle/The Punisher.
Photos courtesy of Netflix Jon Bernthal as Frank Castle/The Punisher.
 ??  ?? Girogia Whigham and Bernthal.
Girogia Whigham and Bernthal.
 ??  ?? Ben Barnes as Billy Russo/Jigsaw.
Ben Barnes as Billy Russo/Jigsaw.

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