You read that right. Marvel is going ahead with a comedy television project titled, Damage Control. This 30-minute single-camera show will follow a group of underpaid and overworked cleanup crew that presumably goes around cleaning up after our Avengers and Agents of Shield. Think this plot is too ridiculous? Well, Damage Control ran as a comic series in 1989.

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The show will produced by Ben Carlin, of Daily Show fame, and David Miner. Miner has been involved with both Brooklyn Nine-Nine & Parks and Recreation. No news on casting yet. This marks the second Marvel spin-off show that’s in the works. Damage Control will run on ABC.

“Maybe I should learn to fly.”

A fitting opening to an episode that proved that “Marvel’s Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D.” is hitting its stride in its fourth episode, with an offering of mix-it-up action with emotional and humorous beats peppered around where you’d like them. What “Eye Spy” did well was set up what we were going to see (SEE what I did there? AND THERE?) while still making it entertaining to watch. With our eye… balls… No, I’m not gonna do that. We’re done now.

We knew that Coulson was probably right about his wayward agent Akela Amador. We knew that Ward’s mention of Skye’s training would come back as a beat later. We knew that the feed was looking at the van before they did. All this, but the storytelling rhythm managed to make us still want to see what would come of it. Especially noteworthy was the very ending shot (not THAT ending shot, but the story end), with the voice-over on Akela Amador finally getting her first uninterrupted, unwatched, sleep in years. From the emotionless, inhuman faces of the opening shot to this very vulnerable idea of someone closing their eyes to sleep, it was an inspired arc.

Agent Coulson had something of an Obi-Wan Kenobi moment this episode, getting to delve into his regrets of the past with former agent Akela Amador. The concept that his trainee had gone to the dark side did not sit well with him — or at all — and he clung to the thought that there was another explanation. This shows a certain vulnerability in Coulson, as he reenacts his own resurrection through the thought-to-be-dead rogue agent. Unlike the agent we saw making the hard choice with Dr. Hall in the previous episode, this was a Coulson not quite willing to take that commitment. Though it remained firmly in the line of saving everyone, even one person doing wrong, if you can.

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“Go for short bus.”

Even Ward got to participate in this episode’s speckling of humorous lines, proving that, despite Skye’s running joke, he is not a robot. He continues to break out of his shell at a similar pace as the show itself. Even though he’s not as much a vehicle for the audience as Skye intends to be, it’s important for us to emphasize with him as much as anyone else, as he was the character we started with. There is more to Ward (hopefully), and as he peels back, he may prove to be one of the more interesting characters. Fitzsimmons were regulated to their usual background science chatter, but their participation in the entire scene in the van was precious enough to save them this episode from what otherwise would’ve been their descent into obscurity and uselessness.

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“You value me.”

Our lady spy Skye is developing: she still hasn’t learned how to use a gun quite properly but that’s a note I appreciate. Showing her learning, and failing, instead of just becoming badass overnight is a smart choice and keeps her from teetering over the edge into truly annoying. She’s also showing signs of being subtly (and sometimes not so subtly) overwhelmed by what’s been going on, which is another thing to remember: she used to live in a van down by the river. It’s reasonable for her to be in over her head right now, and it’s a note to appreciate when that comes out in the character, even if some may find her quips obnoxious.

Skye has also developed as far as her relationships, as clearly Ward is giving her more responsibility — you don’t let just anybody see through your eyes these days — and she’s developing a possible two-way fondness for Agent Coulson. Something that’s going to bite her in the ass when her continuing Riding Tide connections surface (possibly even in the next episode, if our preview is any indication. But don’t trust previews. I mean it. I know.) Skye and Coulson’s moments in the van allow us to remember that she’s a little girl out of her depth and he’s just a human beneath that suit (or is he) fighting daily against the superhuman. It’s the taste of humanity that we crave, and have come to expect, in Whedon pieces and I’m hoping that the next episode doesn’t split that open too soon.

We also saw Melinda’s value continue to rise. She sure does not go slowly into that good fieldwork. Kicking it into high gear, she proved that she was going to protect Coulson, even if that potentially meant from himself and his emotional decisions. Though they seemed to smooth things out by the end, I don’t expect this will be their last disagreement on how to run matters.

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“That’s not me anymore.”

A telling line for Agent Coulson tonight, whose changes are beginning to wear on those who knew him best before. It’s possible that his and Melinda’s fight is a result of his new and possibly not improved (for SHIELD) loose attitude, but we also know this his former protege noticed it — and something else? Did she close her eyes and see that Coulson is not truly Coulson? SHIELD strings us along for another episode with the promise of a development in that direction. With Melinda on the case, I think we are guaranteed to see more and more of this mystery unravel.

Theories are, naturally, bouncing all over the internet. He’s a robot. He’s Vision; that’s a popular one. What do you think? Let me know, or I’ll assume that you’re all the robots instead.

Jeez. You’d think a robot would have something more productive to do with its time.

Briefly: ABC surprised absolutely no-one today when they announced that Marvel’s Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D. has received a full season order.

Sure, ratings fell substantially after the series premiere’s MASSIVE 20 million viewers, but the show is still more than popular enough to warrant more episodes. According to DeadlineAgents is still ranked the  #1 series in the 2013-14 season among adults 18-49, and boasts solid DVR gains weekly.

The full season order brings the total episode count to 22, which should be more than enough to please fans until a second season is inevitably (probably) announced.

What do you think of the series so far? I’m not much of a fan of the villain-of-the-week formula, so I sure hope that something about S.H.I.E.L.D. changes soon, or I can sure see things getting stale fast. In any case, I’d probably keep watching just to see agent Coulson’s weekly quips. That dude’s wonderful.

“We don’t have truth serum.”

DAVID CONRAD, CHLOE BENNET

After last week’s episode, I went into “The Asset” hesitantly, to be sure, but this week’s fare delivered more on par with the first episode: not spectacular, but very entertaining. It’s quick, witty, action-packed stuff, and if Agents of SHIELD can stay in this realm, then it’ll be on a fairly good leg, but still with room for improvement. It’s notable that in the episode not meant to bring the characters together, it did a better job of it, and without being quite as obvious. Though, it’s arguable that EVERY episode has the purpose of bringing the characters closer together, so there’s that. There was progress with Melinda, who decided that she needed to be back in combat if she was going to continue with the team — partially in order to save Coulson’s butt. There was a defining moment for Coulson himself, when he had to make the hard choice during the fight from Inception to either save some lives or potentially save a lot of lives. Coulson choosing to live in the moment and save those who were present, as well as Hall’s argument that these were decisions SHIELD made all the time, was a nice hark back to my complaint last week that SHIELD was too “white knight”. Two for you, Agents of SHIELD.

We also saw Skye progress as a potential field agent, rather than just a nerd at a computer, which left her hacking to a small cameo, but not her background: villain of the week, Tamoh Penikett lookalike David Conrad attempted to lure our Rising Tide undercover while she was… undercover (but kinda not?) into working for him. Skye chose her new SHIELD family, partially thanks to some personal sharing by Ward (anyone else really enjoy the flip they pulled on ‘Big Brother’?), but that doesn’t quite resolve how we saw her answer the Rising Tide query in the previous episode. So, surely, we have more testing of the loyalties to come in the future.

This week’s episode also played out like a small movie — giving us the origin story of a potential reoccurring character that ties into Marvel legend but remained accessible to casual viewers (like me). While anticipating the “end credits” scene to be exactly what it was, I still enjoyed the potential for growth, and for that decision to come back to bite Coulson in the ass. Hard decisions are about consequences, and good storytelling doesn’t make things easy for the characters.

“I saw plenty of action with the Avengers.” “… And you died.”

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More importantly, really: Coulson still wears his suit when coming in from a water approach and climbing a beach full of patrols. Notice how Ward went all Mission Impossible, but Coulson was having none of that.

We got to see more combinations of characters like that, and the quote above, as relationships progressed. Fitzsimmons even managed to perform jobs separated from each other, giving them slightly more defining characteristics. Though, anyone else catch that even Coulson calls them by their shipper name? And speaking of ships, hopefully male! Fitzsimmons will find more personality than just trying to impress Skye in the next episode. They deserve their own moment to shine so that Skye and Ward don’t overtake them as far as personal sharing goes. It’d be nice to see someone else take an interest in the geeks, or for them to step forward, so that it doesn’t become too overloaded with certain characters over another. Balance is important with an ensemble cast, lest some become extraneous or just there to make the others look cool.

Other things of note: Melinda handed over ALL Headquarters’ communications to a known terrorist hacker? All of them?! What happened to not trusting her? This certainly seems like a step. Though I suppose we might imagine that HQ’s communications aren’t exactly in lay terms, but that doesn’t mean that Skye couldn’t do some damage with that information if she wanted to. Also, shouldn’t they wear more protective shielding than they do when handling unknown, dangerous artifacts? Everyone’s just standing around in their civvies. It seems vaguely irresponsible, if you ask me. Which you didn’t. But this is my review and you clicked it, so nyeh.

“Saying his name repeatedly does not increase productivity. Or… maybe it does.”

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Lampshades! Don’t know what I’m talking about? Go drown yourself in TV Tropes and come back here after a year. No? Okay, well, lampshading involves clicking the light on a usual cliche — turning it upside-down. When Agents of SHIELD has Fitzsimmons call Coulson out for doing the typical frantic shouting of names during a countdown, it’s the pointing out of a cliche. Of course, then it works, so that’s a whole other layer of humor. It’s important to have layers, which is often what saves SHIELD — well, the show, not the organization, as most of them seem to lack in certain variations of humor the higher up you go. Skye’s finding out the hard way that making quips during a briefing is not exactly the go-to reaction. Though, hopefully, she’ll learn the lesson and not be “that person” every time or we’ll be back in cliche town.

Another example is Fitzsimmons miming Skye’s breasts and then ending up just saying “boobs” after all.

This episode also did well with tie-ins that while not perfectly subtle were also not stupidly in your face — like the PSA message of last week. Most importantly, the comment about creating muscle memory harkening to Coulson’s being “rusty”.

As a parting thought: what do you think about Coulson’s lack of muscle memory? Are those not his muscles? Is it not Coulson? And how many episodes do you think will go by before we see villain Hall (back as Graviton, of course)?

“It means… we don’t know what that means.”

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A quote referencing the mysterious origins of “0-8-4” missions but, unfortunately, also a bit of how I felt about the second serving of “Marvel’s Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D.” Sold by critics as a solid block of entertainment, the show does deliver with quippy lines and fast-paced action scenes, but something– particular– still seems lacking in the sophomore showing. To be fair to SHIELD, it was born into a world where Breaking Bad just died: we’re used to a bit more complexity in character, and in storytelling, that requires us to see people gunned down more regularly and argue a bit more violently. So at least SHIELD makes itself accessible and available by being good, clean entertainment, however I feel that’s harming its structure. It can be good, clean, and available, but it can’t allow itself to become too comfortable in that and sacrifice interesting storytelling in the process. Especially it can’t when we know that behind it is a team capable of transcending such typical fare.

Overall, “0-8-4” had slightly less humor gags and more action — a solid enough plan, except that the action felt very stunted and too purposefully placed exactly to make our heroes learn the lesson of the week. Everyone’s arguing in the beginning? How convenient, now we have a common enemy. It didn’t even let Coulson create that common enemy (he’s kind of experienced in being the motivation by now), but pulled an “old friend betrayal” out of a hat. The trouble of the episode itself, a Tesseract-referencing dooms-day-device had little to do with anything except to sit there and be powerful. It was then handled by the end of the episode just in time for a little hint at a Big Bad in the Rising Tide living on through Skye’s communication.

“We just can’t seem to understand each other.”

ELIZABETH HENSTRIDGE, CHLOE BENNET

For an episode that was very — too — obviously about making the team work together, I still felt very little for the characters we’re being offered. The closest so far was Skype’s (yes, I still type that instead) way of whittling down Agent Ward’s robot exterior and her misguided attempts to use humor with a crowd not quite prepared for her. This felt like a solid play, and a good way to keep Skye as a grounded everyman — as the audience’s way in — rather than the overly snarky potential she had going in the pilot that offended me so much. However, it was too little for a team that didn’t quite deliver. Also, whose plan was to blow a hole in the side of an airplane miles up without being sure that Coulson had any idea what was about to happen and could secure himself. In a way, though, this plan showed what the show is lacking in: grey areas. The idea that “we hope Coulson can take care of himself” shows what we know to be SHIELD’s pragmatic attitude towards getting the job done, not necessarily the way the “good guys” might enjoy. That’s the idea premise behind manipulating the superheroes of the Avengers; they are the good guys, the heroes, and the ones who are allowed to think those misguided idealistic things, while SHIELD knows better. The world is not black and white, and neither is this operation. It’d be nice to see that reflected more in the team, instead of two scientists I can’t understand between lingo and accents and their general ability to blend into a single, babbling unit.

So is the idealism all coming from Coulson? Has the afterlife changed him? These are possibilities I would enjoy exploring, but would like to see hinted more in the show to prove that there’s a depth I’m watching to be revealed. Clark Gregg manages an honorable performance, but he won’t be able to carry the show forever — nor will its hilarious and well-timed cameos. Maybe. Okay, this one was pretty good.

We’ll talk good for a second, then: besides the cameo, Skye did improve, we did see a tiny bit more out of each person’s background despite the constant need for action, and I cannot not applaud Coulson’s ability to use the exact same tone of voice when agreeing with someone and arguing with someone while letting you know just how he feels. There is, as ever, potential with Agents of SHIELD, but it needs to start mining it if it wants to become something more than just “entertaining”.

And maybe it doesn’t?

Am I wrong? Sound off below or I will assume I am queen of the world.