Two Marvel universe animated miniseries were released last year, which both skewed nerdier and more mature than Disney+'s usual animated offerings. Both run four episodes of roughly 30 minutes each, adding up to the length of two feature films.
"Eyes of Wakanda" explores concepts from "Black Panther," tracking the efforts of multiple Wakandans over the centuries retrieving artifacts and going on special missions around the globe. In the first episode, a former Dora Milaje travels to the Minoan Empire to retrieve a Wakandan agent who has gone rogue. The second is set during the Trojan War, the third in China in the 1400s, and the fourth gives us glimpses of Wakanda of the future. All the characters are new, and don't have obvious ties to the characters in "Black Panther," which means there's some time needed to adjust to the new reality of each episode.
The series is designed to be a showcase for black talent, with the episodes written by Geoffrey Thorne and Marc Bernardin, directed by Todd Harris and John Fang, and cast with an array of black actors including Steven Touissant and Anika Noni Rose. What stands out are the visuals, featuring a dynamic, impactful animation style that makes the action scenes look great. The production quality is strong the whole way through, but this is very much an anthology where the individual stories are designed to be self-contained and barely connected to each other, so "Eyes of Wakanda" ends up feeling very diverting but non-essential. I'd love to see some of the episodes expanded, especially the third where we get a crossover with a different part of the MCU, but getting "Eyes of Wakanda" made was surely difficult enough.
However, as unlikely as "Eyes of Wakanda" is, I'm downright baffled that "Marvel Zombies" exists. This is a spinoff of the "What If…?" episode that takes place in a dystopian version of Earth where much of the population and the superhero community have been zombified. It uses the same visual style and brings back many of the same characters. "Marvel Zombies" has a mature rating because there is violence galore and characters are constantly being killed left and right. We start out in the first episode with Kamala Khan (Iman Vellani), Riri Williams (Dominique Thorne), and Kate Bishop (Hailee Steinfeld) being gal-pal survivalists together in the remains of New York, who discover a mystery device inside a zombie, which might save the world. This kicks off a long, winding journey through different realms of the zombified MCU, picking up friends and allies and much more trouble along the way.
I appreciate that the status quo is constantly changing in "Marvel Zombies," so it's impossible to guess what's going to happen next. The stakes are also properly epic, as the miniseries builds to a big conclusion involving multiple big bads. However, I wouldn't recommend this to anyone but the most die-hard adult MCU fans. It takes a good amount of knowledge of the existing film continuity to keep all the various characters straight, and appreciate how they differ from their original versions. The inexpressive animation style is also not helpful in this regard. It took me a while to realize that John Walker (Wyatt Russell) had shown up in one of the episodes, and I spent a few minutes of the finale trying to work out who another character was (It was London Master (Daniel Swain) from the second "Doctor Strange" movie).
If you're confident in your nerd bona fides, however, and you like darkest timeline scenarios, "Marvel Zombies" can be a lot of fun. A surprising number of MCU actors were convinced to lend their voices to the project, and I like what the series does with some of them. A few of my favorites get great death scenes, and this is definitely the best use of Agent Woo (Randall Park) yet. There's a focus on "Shang-Chi" and "Black Widow" characters, which hints at when "Marvel Zombies" was written, but also some fun cameos from other shows. Also, we get an interesting version of Blade (Todd Williams) who provides hints at what his long-stalled feature was going to look like.
Marvel doesn't get this dark very often, so if "Marvel Zombies" sounds like it would appeal to you, enjoy it while you can.
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