Asides

Something to watch tonight: Thursday 18 January

By January 18, 2024No Comments

Echo (Dayre, 2023-24)

Producing this news­let­ter every day – and check­ing to see wheth­er I am fairly shar­ing the spoils out among all the vari­ous free and paid ser­vices – prompts some self-examination.

I have reached an inter­est­ing con­clu­sion, and it is that my tele­vi­sion (seri­al storytelling) choices are gen­er­ally more con­ser­vat­ive than my film choices.

Partly, this is because my film choices are dic­tated much more by what is new and there­fore requires my pro­fes­sion­al atten­tion. TV is much more of a choice, and a choice that requires more nego­ti­ation with oth­er mem­bers of the household.

Regardless, look­ing back on what we have been watch­ing since the golden age of Better Call Saul etc. has been the kind of unchal­len­ging com­fort watch that tele­vi­sion was always known for. I fin­ish work at 10pm on a Friday night and we want to watch some­thing with high pro­duc­tion val­ues and not too much to think about. For the last few weeks that has been Monarch: Legacy of Monsters on AppleTV+.

I don’t tend to recom­mend these shows here because they don’t need my help. The pub­li­city machine will do its job and we hap­pily fall into line along with every­one else.

But, the cur­rent retali­ation against super­hero and com­ic book stor­ies com­bined with the fas­cin­at­ing and timely amp­li­fic­a­tion of indi­gen­ous stor­ies and storytellers – espe­cially Native American stor­ies – means that the new Disney series Echo is caught between these two con­flict­ing trends and may suf­fer as a result.

But we enjoyed it and want to encour­age you to give it a try.

It’s a follow-up to the 2021 show Hawkeye which fea­tured Alaqua Cox as a deaf (and also phys­ic­ally dis­abled) ant­ag­on­ist to the her­oes played by Jeremy Renner and Hailee Steinfeld.

Echo gives her a back story and a home­com­ing but it’s import­ant to note that you don’t need to have seen any of the oth­er Marvel shows to pick this story up. 

Cox is Maya Lopez, from the Choctaw nation who are now res­id­ent in Oklahoma (like the Navajo in Dark Winds and the Osage in Killers of the Flower Moon). Her moth­er is killed when she is still a child and her fath­er takes her to New York to be brought under the wing of gang­land boss Kingpin (Vincent d’Onofrio).

As an adult, she learns that Kingpin orches­trated the murder of her fath­er and in Echo she returns home to plot her revenge.

Why should you watch it?

  • Only five epis­odes – a bless­ing in this day and age.

  • Her super­powers are ulti­mately just the abil­ity to chan­nel the strength of her ancest­ors (which many indi­gen­ous people will tell you is par for the course rather than a super­power as such).

  • The show builds a world that is respect­ful of (and reli­ant upon) indi­gen­ous belief sys­tems, while remain­ing light­hearted about them at the same time.

  • There’s an excel­lent cliff­hangery con­clu­sion which, I guess, is a ver­sion of ‘be care­ful what you wish for’ or ‘every good deed has unin­ten­ded consequences’.

  • The music – i.e. the song choices, but I couldn’t find a Music Supervisor cred­it – is fantastic.

Echo is much more viol­ent than most Marvel or Disney+ shows. Definitely not for youngsters.


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Where to watch Echo

The con­tent below was ori­gin­ally paywalled.

Worldwide: Streaming on Disney+