Moon Knight: Marvel still undecided on season 2
A second season of Moon Knight is not in Marvel’s plans yet.
If the final episode of the first season of Moon Knight clearly opens the door for a sequel, then Egyptian director Mohamed Diab has not yet been asked to continue the story: “If you ask me a question, I want to tell you that Moon Knight is here to stay. He’s a compelling character and instead of Marvel, it would only make sense on a commercial level to keep him around. But that doesn’t necessarily mean season 2. In addition, I want to clarify that I am completely in the dark on this issue. I have no idea what they are planning. But I’m sure they will keep their character. It might be in the movies. Maybe it will be a trip like WandaVision. I wish there was a sequel to Moon Knight someday and I would love to be a part of it. We ended in such a way that it looks like the beginning. ”
If nothing is done immediately, Mohamed Diab already has ideas for the second season of Moon Knight: “You see Mark Spector and Stephen Grant developing a new dynamic, the two coming together as one body. We see Jake Lockley (avatar of Khonshu). We see Layla Abdalla El-Fawley in Scarlet Scarab… Everyone wants to know more about Jake. We didn’t really have time to develop him here and make him a fully fledged character like Mark and Steven. It would be unfair to him. Therefore, we took this option from the last scene. I think now we have opened the door. If there is ever a sequel, Jake will have time to prove himself! ”
What to remember from Moon Knight on Disney+?
Throughout the Moon Knight television series, it became clear that the superhero played by Oscar Isaac has serious mental health issues. Indeed, his dissociative identity disorder split his psyche in two, namely Mark Spector, a strong-willed American mercenary, and Stephen Grant, a mild-mannered British gift shop worker. But that’s not all… There is a third person in Mark’s mind. And in the last scene of the final episode, the audience finally got to meet Jake Lockley. In the comics, he is a taxi driver with a thorough knowledge of the streets, but in the series, the suspicion arises – after Mark or Steven pass out when their lives are in danger – that Jake is capable of egregious acts of violence. But it is only in the post-credits scene that he finally appears.
Leave a Reply