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“Moon Knight” Review – Genre-Bending MCU Series Introduces a Volatile, Fascinating Antihero

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“Moon Knight” Review - The Disney+ Genre-Bending MCU Series Introduces a Volatile, Fascinating Antihero

This spoiler-free “Moon Knight” review is based on the first three episodes.

The marketing behind the latest Marvel series arriving on Disney+ has promised an atypical, genre-bending introduction to a new superhero entering the MCU. It certainly helps that, outside of the comic realm, Moon Knight remains a lesser-known character, therefore a mystery. The talent behind the camera further supports the genre boast, with “The Exorcist” TV Series’ Jeremy Slater as “Moon Knight” creator and indie horror wunderkinds Justin Benson and Aaron Moorhead helming part of this six-episode limited series. While “Moon Knight” doesn’t deviate too far from the MCU mold, so far, it does live up to its genre-bending promise with a heady dive into Egyptian mythology and action-adventure storytelling.

Director Mohamed Diab jumpstarts the limited series with a rousing premiere episode that hits the ground running for poor Steven Grant (Oscar Isaac). He’s a meek museum gift shop employee who discovers another personality’s presence once blackout time jumps put him in dangerous situations. As if struggling to navigate dissociative identity disorder, or discern dream from reality, wasn’t jarring enough, he realizes his alternate persona, Marc Spector, is a merc with enemies. Both get thrust into a complex mystery involving ancient Egyptian gods, and they’ll need to rely on moon god Khonshu to survive it.

Moon Knight review tv

The first episode uses Steven Grant’s perspective to plunge viewers into the deep end. Action sequences, a jarring loss of self-control, and the introduction of the central antagonist, a charismatic but forebodingly powerful cult leader, Arthur Harrow (Ethan Hawke), make for a zippy entry point. The subsequent two episodes slow things down dramatically to unfurl dense mythology and put Steven/Marc properly on an adventure quest loosely reminiscent of The Mummy in terms of tone, scale, and, occasionally, horror.

“Moon Knight” is at its most compelling when focused solely on the inner battle for control between personalities. Steven and Marc couldn’t be further apart in morals or demeanors, with contradicting motivations that make dealing with swarming enemies or Khonshu’s directives difficult. The friction between them is engaging and even funny, particularly in how they channel the moon god’s gifts. The way the narrative toggles between them leads to atypical scenarios and situations. The mythology also adds visual and narrative interest to a lesser extent, explicitly pertaining to Khonshu.

Moon Knight review

Beyond that, “Moon Knight” falls into more familiar patterns of an emerging hero or antihero. Hawke makes unique choices that add gravitas to Arthur Harrow, but his motivations feel right out of the MCU villain-writing playbook. That lessens the impact. The front half of “Moon Knight” indicates that it may be destined to take the same narrative path as many MCU heroes before, one of an unwitting character thrust into a role they didn’t ask for while trying to navigate the newly gifted supernatural powers.

Much like the intersection of Steven and Marc, “Moon Knight” could go either way. There are enough genre-bending elements to give it unconventional style and tension, centered around a deeply, morally conflicted character that immediately hooks you. There’s still so much of Khonshu’s realm yet to be discovered, which also presents exciting genre potential. How Steven/Marc’s story comes together will ultimately reveal the answer to whether this is another familiar MCU hero’s journey or the start of a fascinating, more personal exploration of genres and cultures within the superhero framework. For now, it’s refreshingly free from all MCU context and existing storylines, making for an easy watch without needing to brush up on homework first. At least one thing is clear so far; the volatile Moon Knight character makes for a welcome change of pace.

“Moon Knight” premieres on Disney+ on March 20, with new episodes airing weekly.

Horror journalist, RT Top Critic, and Critics Choice Association member. Has appeared on PBS series' Monstrum, served on the SXSW Midnighter shorts jury, and moderated horror panels for WonderCon, SeriesFest, and Popcorn Frights Film Fest.

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Books

‘Dead But Dreaming of Electric Sheep’ Book Review: Paul Tremblay’s Primal Scream Against the AI Push

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Dead But Dreaming of Electric Sheep Review

Read enough Paul Tremblay novels and one word comes to dominate your thinking around his fiction: “Daring.”

Whether he’s playing with traditional novelistic forms, holding conversations with characters across time, or pushing his stories to their bleakest and strangest possible conclusions (if they have concrete conclusions at all, Tremblay is a daring novelist, never playing it safe for his audience or himself. The author of A Head Full of Ghosts, Horror Movie, and more is always pushing for something in his fiction, digging into the core of an issue until he finds its bloody, beating heart. 

Dead But Dreaming of Electric Sheep, Tremblay’s latest novel, is no different. From the title alone you might surmise certain things about the narrative, from its Philip K. Dick influence to its sci-fi-horror premise, and you’d be right. But Tremblay always pushes beyond those initial assumptions, and here we get not just a gripping sci-fi-horror showcase, but something much stranger and more profound: An exploration of what it means to be human, fragile bodies and all, in the age of AI. 

Julia, Tremblay’s protagonist, is in a strange place when the novel begins. A former gaming streamer who’s retreated from her digital spotlight, she’s in search of a new direction in life, and she finds one in the last place she might expect. Julia’s mother, who runs a California tech behemoth, has a job offer for her daughter, an unprecedented one. It seems that the company has introduced proprietary new technology into the body of a brain-dead man, and now they need to see what this tech can do. Julia’s job? Using her gaming skills to take this human vegetable (Julia calls him “Bernie” because of Weekend at Bernie’s) from one side of the country to another, using a stealthy controller purpose-built for the experience. 

This is a wonderfully ghoulish premise on which to build a novel, and Tremblay makes full use of its nightmare fuel. As Julia comes to grips with the implications of what she’s about to do, and what she might discover while doing it, the author punctuates her journey with trips into the mad mindscape of Bernie himself, a dark reflection of our own world populated with half-remembered moments and images and hallucinations. As simple exercises in writing craft, they recall Philip K. Dick at his best, building the same sense of overwhelm and wonder so present in his work, but Tremblay’s after something else as well, and it’s purpose-built for this moment. 

The novel builds deliberate juxtapositions with Bernie’s half-remembered life and Julia’s ongoing one, sending them barreling at each other from opposite ends of consciousness. Julia’s brain functions as only her brain can, a mass of pop culture references and dreams and memories she both cherishes and would rather forget. Bernie’s world is one of shadows, but also one of constantly shifting perspective, as the tech in his head remakes him. He’s not just a passenger in his own body, but an unwilling participant in a Frankenstein-ing of human and machine. It’s not the first time an author has attempted such a thing, but through Tremblay’s evocative, visceral prose, it’s one of the most effective, and it hits on something vital that Tremblay says in a way that only he can. 

Dead But Dreaming of Electric Sheep is a thumping sci-fi yarn, a journey into new frontiers through untested technology with vast implications for the future of the world, and if Tremblay had only explored that genre, he’d have done well. When the horror elements creep in, though, Tremblay’s work raises endless questions over what exactly we are sacrificing when we let machines get so close not just to our flesh, but to our consciousness, even when, medically speaking, that consciousness is gone.

Tremblay breaks this sacrifice down in terrifying detail, sometimes quite literally breaking down the basic flow of prose in Bernie’s head until he’s been hijacked by words and phrases and shapes that he doesn’t understand. Along the way, Tremblay gets almost metafictional with his probing of this hybrid consciousness, asking us to question not just where the story will go, but who gets to be in control when the narrative becomes a runaway train. 

All of this makes Dead But Dreaming of Electric Sheep the most ambitious book of Paul Tremblay’s career, which is really saying something. His daring, his boldness, and his ability to mine the unspeakable are on full display, and they work together to deliver one of the year’s most unnerving genre books.

Tremblay’s at the peak of his powers with this one. 

Dead But Dreaming of Electric Sheep hits shelves on June 30. 

4.5 out of 5 skulls

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