Tag: inhumans

  • Anson Mount Joins ‘Star Trek: Discovery’ as Captain Pike

    Anson Mount“Hell on Wheels” star Star Trek: Discovery” as a well-known Enterprise captain: Christopher Pike.

    Season 1 ended with the Discovery received an emergency distress call from a nearby Federation ship. The ship turns out to be the USS Enterprise under Pike’s command, according to Variety.

    But despite having the original, iconic “Star Trek” ship appear, the focus will remain on the Discovery, says executive producer Alex Kurtzman.

    “The show is called ‘Discovery.’ It’s not ‘Enterprise,’” Kurtzman told Variety. “So yes, the Enterprise will play a part of Season 2 but it will absolutely not overshadow Discovery. And I think with Enterprise’s arrival in the finale we recognize that the audience has a lot of questions about our synchronicity with the original series, which really means our synchronicity with canon.”

    Jeffrey Hunter played Captain Pike in the original, unused “Star Trek” series: The footage was later used in the two-part episode “The Menagerie,” in which Sean Kenney played the older, wheelchair-bound Pike. Bruce Greenwood played Pike in 2009 “Star Trek” reboot and “Star Trek Into Darkness.”

    Mount currently stars in “Marvel’s Inhumans,” as Black Bolt. It hasn’t officially been canceled yet by ABC, but this casting seems to confirm the show’s demise.

    [Via Variety]

  • Here’s How ‘Marvel’s Inhumans’ Went From TV Show to IMAX Event

    “This is the show when I was growing up that I wished was on TV,” muses Marvel Television head, onetime comic book writer and longtime comics reader Marvel’s Inhumans,” the latest TV version of one of the company’s longest-running group of characters.

    The Royal Family of the Inhumans –- an offshoot of the human race that have been genetically modified to each possess incredible powers eons ago by the advanced alien race known as the Kree — have been part of the Marvel Universe for over 50 years. They made their collective comic book debut in a 1965 issue of The Fantastic Four, the creative brainchildren of the two most legendary Marvel pillars, writer/editor Stan Lee and artist Jack Kirby.

    Always ahead of his time, Kirby in particular did some of his most innovative and imaginative character designs while dreaming up the family: Black Bolt, the Inhumans’ leader who can level a mountain with a single whisper; Medusa, who has complete control of her incredibly strong hair; her younger sister Crystal, who can control the four elements; Triton, the green-scaled amphibian; Gorgon, who seismically stomps with powerful hooves for feet; Karnak, the martial artist with the ability to detect flaws in anything; Crystal’s colossal, teleporting bulldog Lockjaw; and their recurring adversary, Black Bolt’s devious, completely human brother Maximus.

    Briefly planned as one of Marvel Studios’ blockbuster big-screen outings and set to be released in 2019, the “Inhumans” property was ultimately claimed by Marvel’s TV division, developed by writer-producer Iron Fist” to television) and is now set to premiere its eight-episode season on Sept. 29. But “Inhumans” still has a life in movie theaters ahead of it: the first two episodes were shot in the epic IMAX format and will be playing on screens across the country Sept. 1.
    While Loeb doesn’t necessarily think that the Inhumans were a better fit TV, he says he felt that “it was something that we could tell a compelling story about [on television] because it was a story about a family. We never really approached it as something that was going to be spectacle first and family second… This was an opportunity for us to be able to tell a story about people, even if those people were royals and that lived on the moon and that had a voice that could level a city.”

    While priding Marvel’s TV division for finding ways to keep its super characters grounded and relatable, Loeb leapt at the opportunity to blow the series up big at IMAX’s suggestion.

    “I’ve been looking for that television show that really captured the way that what Kirby drew could not be contained within a page of comics. It always felt like the borders were not big enough and that he was always reaching out beyond,” he says. “When we partnered with IMAX, the idea of being able to do something that was that big — that you were going to be able to travel in to space, in to the moon, in to the city — and be able to meet these people, and to see that kind of scope, that was very exciting to me.”

    Buck says he enjoyed his learning curve with the characters as he attempted to marry their epic mythology and outsized abilities to recognizable, familial stories. “I was not that familiar with the Inhumans, so once I began to take on this project, I started from the very beginning,” he says. “What was fun about them was just that they are such fun characters, and that they are a family. Rather then dealing with one superhero, we’re dealing with a whole family within a race of people who all have a gift.”

    Buck found taking on a clan of powered characters a distinctly different challenge than his experience on the single, powered one-lead “Iron Fist” — but there was a certain common Marvel quality to both series.

    “‘Inhumans’ is such a much more fantastical show, but at the same time, what was so important about ‘Iron Fist’ was just as important about this show: Make sure — as crazy as some of the stuff is — that all our characters feel real. That their actions are relatable, and genuine, and grounded. That the things they want are things that everyone can relate to. So they can have crazy, wild super powers, but underneath it all — they’re not so different from the rest of us.”

    “In every good TV show, the protagonist has an internal journey that matches the show’s external journey,” says Anson Mount, who plays Black Bolt. “He’s a leader who’s mistaken his need to be calculated and secretive with [emotions]. And he doesn’t realize that’s a mistake yet. You can’t lead people by holding back the emotional part of yourself or any part of yourself, because — as a king — your identity is the state.”

    Serinda Swan said she relished the notion of diving into Medusa’s comic book history as she prepared to take on the role.

    “I got my assistant, and I’m like, ‘Get everything you can! Everything Inhumans and everything Marvel you possibly can!’” she laughs. “She’s existed long before I have, and I think it’s important that you go back and you take a look. But one of the things that Scott Buck had told us was: ‘Please don’t tie yourself to what you’ve read.’ Not because we don’t want to do it justice, but because we’re not showing every single side.”

    “Normally with television, you have to force yourself to think small; it’s going to go on a screen,” says Buck. “Especially these days when so many people are watching something on just a small cell phone. Where as this, we were pushing to think big. Not just in terms of image, but in terms of character, of the world we were creating. It was just a fun challenge to go the opposite direction you might normally go for a TV show.”

    ‘Marvel’s Inhumans’ hits IMAX theaters Friday.

  • New ‘Marvel’s Inhumans’ Trailer Reveals Major Medusa Twist

    Someone is having a bad hair day.

    The newest trailer for ABC’s new superhero show “Marvel’s Inhumans” mostly features footage we’ve seen before, as Maximus (“Game of Thrones” actor Iwan Rheon) pulls a coup on his king brother, Black Bolt (Anson Mount). Queen Medusa (Serinda Swan) isn’t about to let that happen without a fight, but a revealing snippet at the end of the trailer shows that she may not be able to do much about it … because her hair is gone!

    The Inhumans are a race of alien-human hybrids who unlock their powers in a process called Terrigenesis. Medusa’s powers flow from her long, red locks, but she still looks pretty tough with the buzzcut. This could be the show’s way of saving some of the CGI effects budget, since animating that hair can’t be cheap. Still, it’ll be interesting to see how the character remains in play without her powers.

    “Marvel’s Inhumans” premieres Sept. 29 on ABC.

  • Iwan Rheon Says Maximus Is No Ramsey Bolton on ‘Marvel’s Inhumans’

    BUILD Series Event - LondonHis days as the enthusiastically monstrous Ramsay Bolton may be over, but Marvel’s Inhumans.”

    As Maximus, the member of the Inhuman Royal Family residing in their hidden, moon-based kingdom of Attilan whose terrigenesis transformation left him devoid of special abilities and utterly human, Rheon is taking on a decidedly more sympathetic role, but an adversarial one nonetheless: Maximus has begun to challenge the reign of the Inhumans monarch, his brother Black Bolt, and sown the seeds of revolution.

    It’s another pot-stirring turn for the Welsh actor after his stint as the “Game of Thrones” baddie fans loved to despise, and one that Rheon told Moviefone and a small gathering of press at the ABC’s press tour for Television Critics Association felt dramatically different enough to lure him into a new series in a television universe where viewer passions run similarly high.

    What’s been the best part, for you, of joining the Marvel Universe?

    Iwan Rheon: I think every young boy wants to be in the superhero show, so it’s lovely to join it. Even though I don’t actually have a superpower in the show, it’s cool just to be part of the Marvel Cinematic Universe — they make such amazing stuff and it’s great just to be a part of it.

    You’re going from one rabid TV fan base to another. What’s it like to work on shows when people are that invested?

    I approach every character as an individual. I don’t really think about what it is, or what it’s in. It’s more about who’s the person I’m supposed to be portraying, so to me it’s the same and I’m just trying to do the best job I can in playing a character. That’s it for me?

    What was it that hooked you about Maximus?

    Initially, I was a bit unsure whether I wanted to do it, because it seemed like maybe I was going to do the same thing again — which I’m not interested in at all. But [executive producers] Jeph Loeb and Scott Buck spoke to me, they said, “Listen, this guy is different. He’s not vicious. He’s not a psychopath. He wants to change things. He’s a revolutionary. He is a politician who has a really strong idea of how to change the world.” I guess those were the right things to say to me.

    And it looks like he’s one corner of a bit of an emotional triangle between Black Bolt and Medusa. What was fun about seeing that side of him?

    He is vulnerable. He has empathy for people. Ramsay doesn’t — or didn’t, I should say. I think it’s quite a touching story, the fact that Maximus and Medusa were best friends and then as soon as Genesis happened and it rendered him a human without anything, she kind of ditched him and went off with his brother. Which is kind of harsh, really. I think everyone could empathize with that.

    And that’s why he’s saying that to her in the scene, “Don’t you remember how much fun we had? And how is your life now, where everything has to be so serious?” And I guess if you ask Kate Middleton the same question she might have a similar answer. It’s quite a touching side to him and it shows his humanity — not “inhumanity.”

    Was there anything you saw in the comic book source material you wanted to bring to your performance?

    For me, creating the character, the source material wasn’t very useful because he’s, like, “Maximus the Mad.” There were certain elements of it and things I read that I was like, “Oh, okay,” but the source material gave me more of an idea of who these Inhumans are: what it means to be in this society; how they view everything; how they’ve just tried to ostracize themselves away from society — from the world, really — from humanity. So I think that’s what it gave me, the idea. And it was quite difficult to comprehend and to believe, but that’s kind of what it was.

    How would you describe his story arc over the first eight episodes?

    Wonderful. I think he has to make some very big decisions and he starts to feel the weight of those decisions. And that affects him.

    How long were you unemployed before you got this job? A minute?

    More than a minute! Between finishing “Game of Thrones” and starting [this] I did another job, I did a series called “Riviera” in between, and a film, but it wasn’t that long. It’s like a bit of time. I’m at a stage in my career where I have to be a bit more careful as to what I take because I don’t want to be typecast — it sounds odd now. But that’s why I took Maximus, because I didn’t think it was anywhere near the same character. But it wasn’t that long.

    I’m sure you got offered a series of bad dudes after playing Ramsay so well. But what was the fun with that first bad dude you played?

    I think the fun thing about Ramsay was that he was so happy doing what he was doing. He enjoyed himself. Not every villain is like that. In the audition, that was the note that David [Benioff] and Dan [Weiss] gave me, which was, “Find the joy. He loves this.” And that was like, “Oh right!” And that was the key for me.

    Obviously, there were certain scenes which I dreaded and I never wanted to do, as a human being with real morals, but Ramsay couldn’t give a f*ck and he just does what he wants.

    By way of career experiences, where does “Game of Thrones” fall?

    It changed my life, I think. I wouldn’t’ be here right now, talking to you. It’s really changed my life. It’s such a huge show. And the character seemed to strike such an important chord, in that people really f*cking hate him — and it’s great! And they enjoy hating him, which is even better. So I feel really privileged to have been a part of such an amazing show, and it is probably the greatest show of all time.

    Do people come up to you and express those feelings?

    Yeah! They come up and go, “Ooohhh — you’re horrible,” and it takes them about five seconds to realize I’m nothing like the character. But that’s how it is. And the fact that people have responded so well is humbling because it really means I did my job well and that’s what I aimed to do.

    That’s what every actor should be trying to do, is to play their character truthfully. It doesn’t matter when he’s ugly, you have to play it truthfully and that, I think, is what people respond to, because they see the lack of vanity and people are insecure about stuff, and I think that shows in that character — he doesn’t care. And I went there and I did it.

  • Lockjaw Steals the First Trailer for ‘Marvel’s Inhumans’

    ABC just shared “Marvel’s Inhumans,” leaving fans obsessed with 1) that wig, 2) Ramsay Bolton redux, and 2) Lockjaw the adorable not-quite bulldog.

    The trailer hints to Iwan Rheon maybe not leaving his villain past behind him in “Game of Thrones,” with his character Maximus giving off mini Marvel Ramsay Bolton vibes. (At least it looks like he finally got himself a throne.) Others are still frustrated with the wig for Serina Swan’s Medusa. And then there’s Lockjaw, created with CGI for the show, a giant teleporting canine companion for Isabelle Cornish’s Crystal, Medusa’s sister.

    Here’s ABC’s synopsis for the series:

    “The Inhumans, a race of superhumans with diverse and singularly unique powers, were first introduced in Marvel Comics by Stan Lee and Jack Kirby in 1965. Since that time, they have grown in prominence and become some of the most popular and iconic characters in the Marvel Universe.

    ‘Marvel’s Inhumans’ explores the never-before-told epic adventure of the royal family including Black Bolt, the enigmatic, commanding King of the Inhumans, with a voice so powerful that the slightest whisper can destroy a city. After the Royal Family of Inhumans is splintered by a military coup, they barely escape to Hawaii where they are greeted with surprising interactions with the lush world and humanity around them. Now they must find a way to reunite with each other and return to their home before their way of life is destroyed forever.”

    “Inhumans” will have a two-hour premiere, with back-to-back episodes, on Friday, September 29 from 8 to 10 p.m. on ABC. A version of the first two episodes will also be shown around the world in IMAX theaters for a two-week period, starting September 1.

    Want more stuff like this? Like us on Facebook.

  • ABC Releases ‘Marvel’s Inhumans’ Poster & Premiere Details

    MARVEL'S INHUMANS - ABC's "Marvel's Inhumans" stars Eme Ikwuakor as Gorgon, Ken Leung as Karnak, Anson Mount as Black Bolt, Serinda Swan as Medusa, Isabelle Cornish as Crystal and Iwan Rheon as Maximus. (ABC/Michael Muller)ABC is going big for the premiere of “Marvel’s Inhumans.”

    The network just announced the series will hold its two-hour premiere, featuring back-to-back episodes, on Friday, September 29 from 8 to 10 p.m. on ABC. In a bold move to promote the comic book adaptation, a version of the first two episodes will be shown around the world in IMAX theaters for a two-week period, starting September 1.

    Here’s the synopsis from ABC:

    “The Inhumans, a race of superhumans with diverse and singularly unique powers, were first introduced in Marvel Comics by Stan Lee and Jack Kirby in 1965. Since that time, they have grown in prominence and become some of the most popular and iconic characters in the Marvel Universe.

    ‘Marvel’s Inhumans’ explores the never-before-told epic adventure of the royal family including Black Bolt, the enigmatic, commanding King of the Inhumans, with a voice so powerful that the slightest whisper can destroy a city. After the Royal Family of Inhumans is splintered by a military coup, they barely escape to Hawaii where they are greeted with surprising interactions with the lush world and humanity around them. Now they must find a way to reunite with each other and return to their home before their way of life is destroyed forever.”

    The series stars Anson Mount as Black Bolt, Iwan Rheon as Maximus, Serinda Swan as Medusa, Eme Ikwuakor as Gorgon, Isabelle Cornish as Crystal, Ken Leung as Karnak, Ellen Woglom as “an undisclosed character,” Sonya Balmores as Auran, and Mike Moh as Triton.

    Here’s the new poster, and some previous art from ABC:

    MARVEL'S INHUMANS - “Marvel’s Inhumans” will premiere a version of the first two episodes in IMAX theatres for a two-week period beginning September 1st. ABC will then air the entirety of the series on the network, with additional exclusive content that can only been seen on ABC. “Marvel’s Inhumans” will premiere on ABC on Friday, September 29th at 8:00-10:00pm ET/PT. (ABC)

    “Marvel’s Inhumans” will air Friday nights at 9 p.m. (after the two-hour premiere) following the new season of “Once Upon a Time.”

    Want more stuff like this? Like us on Facebook.

  • ‘Lost’ Alum Henry Ian Cusick Reveals Who He’s Playing on Marvel’s ‘Inhumans’

    Henry Ian CusickLost” and council member Marcus Kane on “The 100,” revealed who he’ll be playing on Marvel’s new show, “Inhumans.”

    Talking to CinemaBlend, Cusick said, “I play a geneticist and his name is Dr. Evan Declan and he’s human. I think that says quite a lot already, if you know the comics, you know where the Inhumans are coming from, so that’s pretty much my character.”

    That actually doesn’t tell us much, since his character isn’t in the comic books. Will he be the one responsible for the genetic experiments that led to the Inhumans? Or could he be helping them find a cure?

    We’ll find out when the show premieres. First the two-episode “special event” will screen in IMAX on September 1, and then the series will air on ABC Friday nights this fall.

    “Hell on Wheels” star Anson Mount will be playing Black Bolt, the ruler of the Inhumans and Iwan Rheon (Ramsay Bolton on “Game of Thrones”) will be playing villainous Maximus. Serinda Swan is Medusa, Black Bolt’s wife and Queen of Attilan; Ken Leung (another “Lost” alum) will play Karnak, Black Bolt’s cousin and closest adviser; and Mike Moh (Ryu in the “Street Fighter” series) is Triton, Black Bolt’s cousin who can live underwater.

    Rounding out the Inhumans: Eme Ikwuakor as Gorgon; Isabelle Cornish as Medusa’s element-controlling sister Crystal; and Sonya Balmores as Auran, the Head of the Royal Guards.

  • ABC Fall Schedule: ‘Once Upon a Time,’ ‘Shark Tank’ Switch Nights

    ONCE UPON A TIME - "The Final Battle Part 1 & 2" - Henry awakens to a cursed Storybrooke and discovers Emma has been in the mental hospital, and the Black Fairy is the new mayor. Henry attempts to help Emma regain her memory while Gold tries to find out what has really happened to Belle. Meanwhile, Snow, Charming, Regina, Zelena and Hook are trapped in a crumbling Fairy Tale Land and desperately try to figure out a way to be reunited with Emma and Henry, on season finale of "Once Upon a Time," SUNDAY, MAY 14 (8:00-10:00 p.m. EDT), on The ABC Television Network. (ABC/Jack Rowand)COLIN O'DONOGHUE, JENNIFER MORRISON#FairytaleFridays, anyone?

    ABC unveiled its fall TV schedule today, and the network is rearranging a lot of its programming pieces. The biggest change is the move of “Once Upon a Time” to Friday nights, with “Shark Tank” heading to Sundays. And “Black-ish” is leaving its spot behind “Modern Family” on Wednesdays to anchor a Tuesday night comedy block.

    The network’s five new series include Marvel’s “Inhumans,” scheduled behind “Once Upon a Time” on Fridays. Meanwhile, “Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D.” is missing from Tuesday nights, replaced by “The Gospel of Kevin.”

    Here is ABC’s fall schedule:

    MONDAY
    8 p.m. Dancing With the Stars
    10 p.m. The Good Doctor (new)

    TUESDAY
    8 p.m. The Middle
    8:30 p.m. Fresh off the Boat
    9 p.m. black-ish
    9:30 p.m. The Mayor (new)
    10 p.m. The Gospel of Kevin (new)

    WEDNESDAY
    8 p.m. The Goldbergs
    8:30 p.m. Speechless
    9 p.m. Modern Family
    9:30 p.m. American Housewife
    10 p.m. Designated Survivor

    THURSDAY
    8 p.m. Grey’s Anatomy
    9 p.m. Scandal
    10 p.m. How to Get Away With Murder

    FRIDAY
    8 p.m. Once Upon a Time
    9 p.m. Marvel’s Inhumans (New)
    10 p.m. 20/20

    SUNDAY
    8 p.m. To Tell the Truth
    9 p.m. Shark Tank
    10 p.m. Ten Days in the Valley (new)

  • ‘Game of Thrones’ Alum Iwan Rheon Joins ‘Marvel’s Inhumans’ Series

    HBO's Post Emmy Awards Reception - ArrivalsFormer “Game of Thrones” star Iwan Rheon is moving from one massively popular property to another, with the actor set to join the ensemble of Marvel’s upcoming “Inhumans” TV series.

    Marvel announced the casting on Tuesday, revealing that the onetime Ramsay Bolton would be playing a character named Maximus on the show, which follows the adventures of a group of superhumans with unique powers. The series stars an Inhuman named Black Bolt and fellow members of his royal family, and Rheon will directly butt heads with the hero.

    Here’s Marvel’s official description of the character:

    Maximus is a clever and charming Inhuman that is fiercely devoted to the people of Attilan, especially his brother, the King – although he harbors an intense desire to wear the crown himself.

    That description should certainly sound familiar to “Game of Thrones” fans, since Ramsay could charm the ladies one minute then gleefully torture his people the next, all while desperately seeking the approval of his powerful father. And according to producers, Rheon’s proven skill at playing such a divisive figure was part of the inspiration for bringing him on board.

    “Iwan’s ability to be charming, roguish, and still completely unexpectedly dangerous were all the different sides we needed to bring the character to life,” said Jeph Loeb, head of Marvel Television and executive producer, in a statement.

    “Maximus is a complex character. Likable, charming, tragic and villainous all in the same moment, and I’m very excited to have someone of Iwan’s considerable talent,” added Scott Buck, executive producer and showrunner, in another statement.

    “Marvel’s Inhumans” is set for a limited run on ABC this fall. Its first two episodes will debut in Imax in September.

    [via: Marvel.com]

  • ‘Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D.’: Clark Gregg Is ‘Nervous Just Talking About’ a Coulson & May Romance

    Clark Gregg and Ming-Na Wen in Marvel's AGENTS OF SHIELDIt’s looking like the action may about to get even hotter for “Marvel’s Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D.’s” perpetually under-fire operative Phil Coulson — or make that steamier.

    Coulson and his longtime colleague and increasingly close friend Melinda May have, of course, been through a multitude of Marvel Cinematic Universe wringers over three and half seasons, and in recent weeks it looks like the two espionage veterans may be inching closer to pushing their relationship beyond its professional boundaries.

    It’s a dicey proposition for the heroic agents, not to mention the show — despite a very vocal fan contingent that’s long been rooting for a Coulson-May hookup; as the show launches its new midseason “LMD” storyline on Jan. 10, even star Clark Gregg admits to Moviefone that he’s feeling his own set of stomach-fluttering butterflies at the prospect, even given his potent chemistry with co-star Ming-Na Wen — especially since May’s been replaced with an A.I. duplicate.

    Moviefone: How do you think the “Philinda” fans, the Coulson-May ‘shippers, are going to feel about the latest turn the show is going to take? It’s partly a dream come true, and partly not exactly what they’ve been crossing their fingers for, as it’s not necessarily a given that’s it’s the real May he’s getting closer with.

    Clark Gregg: Yes, one of the things that goes on in television and in our universe now is our fans are very active. They make it known which romances they’re interested in, which they’re less interested in. Certainly, there have been very vocal supporters of what you call the Philinda relationship. I think in different moments, it’s certainly something that has to have popped into the head of both Phil and Melinda.

    I love the difficulty of it. I love how dangerous it is because this is a job where family relationships really are not possible in the normal sense. These people become family. She is so much more to him than a coworker. I think there’s a reason that they’ve been working together for more than 20 years, off and on, without crossing that line, because it’s a dangerous line to cross as everyone knows. Certainly, with the passing of Andrew Garner, her ex, and some of the business she did about that, something is different now, and that possibility is being explored.

    I think some of the moments that we’re not sure which Melinda we’re dealing with, that’s certainly a whole new part of the equation — but I think that there’s something going on in the actual Phil and the actual Melinda that is different. I don’t know. I have really passionate feelings, pro and con, you know what I mean? We’ve all been in a situation like this with a very close friend, I think, and boy, it makes me nervous just talking about it.

    Tell me about having those conversations with Ming to move this forward as you guys are figuring it out, developing that chemistry, and pushing it forward. What’s been fun about collaborating with her?

    There’s a lot of chemistry just to begin with.

    Ming kind of has that with everybody.

    I know. It’s true — she’s a chemistry-full person! There’s always been something there. It’s a little bit: these poor horses at some point should be let out of this barn before they kick the rest of the slats out. On the one hand, alright already! If it’s going to happen, let’s go! But nothing is that simple on this show.

    I’m excited to play out the various permutations you mentioned. I’m wary of talking about them because I don’t really know what’s going to happen. If it’s anything like the rest of the show for poor Coulson, it’s going to end up in heartbreak.

    Or another missing limb.

    Yeah.

    You mentioned that sense of family. At the close of the “Ghost Rider” arc, his S.H.I.E.L.D. “family” has reunited. It has to feel good for Coulson that his wayward children have come back into the fold. Tell me what that means to him and where that positions him going forward.

    He’s vastly relieved to have Daisy at least within sight of him on the base, but I think the idea that just because she’s moved home means that the damage is healed, and the guilt that she feels is healed, is naive. He’s too savvy. I think he knows that the person who comes back still is really hurting and not sure now to open up again. So it’s hard. It’s complex.

    As Coulson learns more about Director Mace, he’s an interesting character because we still don’t know which way the wind blows with him, necessarily. Tell me a little bit about where that’s going and what’s been fun about discovering that relationship for you.

    I love what the writers have done with the character Jeffrey Mace, the Patriot. We did not know what to make of him. He was very much someone we believed was thrust upon them. Later, we learn he’s an Inhuman, and that Coulson requested an Inhuman to be running S.H.I.E.L.D., which is a very smart move. It puts Coulson back in the field, which he likes, and someone else is running S.H.I.E.L.D. and making decisions that he doesn’t endorse quite often.

    I also love that they haven’t made him a villain, at least as far as I can tell. He’s a flawed person who happens to have powers, which is a smart, logical extension of this idea of Terrigenesis. Some people are going to be weird PR freaks who may not be necessarily the greatest leaders who suddenly have powers.

    What Jason [O’Mara] has done with him is so surprising and compelling that it’s really hard for Coulson to hate the guy. There is something about him that wants to do the right thing and, as Coulson knows, has been thrust to an impossible job.

    For you, what has been the creative thrill of this particular season, and as we move forward with Coulson now?

    There’s so much from the beginning, the reveal of HYDRA, the destruction of S.H.I.E.L.D., rebuilding S.H.I.E.L.D., the Sokovia Accords — I don’t know. I guess, to have the HYDRA plot, the Grant Ward plot, really played out so magnificently and finished to a certain extent, for now anyway, and to be playing with new things, LMDs, the magical elements of the Marvel Universe that are connected to “Doctor Strange.” That’s exciting.

    But I think our version of the Sokovia Accords, the way Inhumans are being treated as The Other, and registered, and treated as some kind of different species than the rest of us, though they didn’t change because of any choice they made, I don’t know, suddenly feels remarkably timely: I read about an idea of having a Muslim registry yesterday. I went, “Wow, OK.”

    We’ve heard that General Talbot is coming back, and I love the dynamic between Coulson and Talbot.

    Me too!

    What are you looking forward to? Do you want to see them butting heads? Do you want to see them on the same side and butting heads?

    Usually, they end up trying to do the same thing with such radically different styles that they end up at each other’s throats half of the time, but also, they’ve gradually built a lot of respect from when Talbot was first hunting us down.

    We all get happy when The Three Stooges.”

    New episodes of “Marvel’s Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D.” return to ABC on January 10th.