taggit Summary
When HBO announced Joss Whedon‘s new TV show The Nevers in 2018, Whedon had recently completed Justice League for HBO’s parent company Warner Bros., and he was accused of emotional abuse and unprofessional behavior by his ex-wife Kai Cole. The show also introduces far too many characters at once, some of whom are stock Whedon tropes: a cartoonishly perky scientist (Penance Adair, played by Ann Skelly), a victimized teenager who “speaks in tongues” and therefore can’t communicate (Myrtle, played by Viola Prettejohn), and an unforgivably corny Victorian madwoman (Maladie, played by Amy Manson). Whedon built a career on his feminist brand, but the empowering themes of Buffy—and the beloved characters therein—were never as explicitly political as The Nevers. Even if you don’t know or care about Whedon’s behind-the-scenes scandals, The Nevers just isn’t the A-list drama that HBO paid for in 2018.