Summary
Marvel Studios’Echoseries is already setting itself apart from its many contemporaries on Disney Plus with its cultural ties and feature of a deaf actress in the lead role. But the show will also be the first step into a new era for the Marvel Cinematic Universe.
Marvel Studiosrecently confirmed that theEchoseries will change two big things from the comics. For one, the lead character Maya Lopez/Echo will have a different set of powers from her Marvel Comics counterpart, no longer boasting the ability to copy any movement or ability she sees. It also ties into the second change, which adjusts Maya’s cultural heritage to where she now hails from the Choctaw tribe of Oklahoma rather than the Cheyenne Nation. Her new powers will come from her connection to past Choctaw women, giving her different abilities for different situations. But those aren’t the only big changes thatEchois bringing to the table.

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Durant, Oklahoma recently saw the Choctaw Nation’s Choctaw Day celebration, and Marvel was onsite to premiere the upcoming series. Receiving a sneak peek of the first two episodes ofEcho, the audience was also the first to see the intro for a brand new subset of Marvel projects known as Marvel Spotlight, along with a snazzy new fanfare from composer Michael Giacchino. As explained by Head of Streaming Brad Winderbaum (viaMarvel.com), the new slate of projects will be much more standalone and grounded, allowing newcomers to the MCU to come in and enjoy them without having to brush up on a college course level of prerequisites to understand why some glowy dude is more important than that other glowy dude.
“Marvel Spotlight gives us a platform to bring more grounded, character-driven stories to the screen, and in the case ofEcho, focusing on street-level stakes over larger MCU continuity. Just like comics fans didn’t need to readAvengersorFantastic Fourto enjoy aGhost RiderSpotlight comic, our audience doesn’t need to have seen other Marvel series to understand what’s happening in Maya’s story.”
The series starsAlaqua Cox as Maya Lopez/Echo, who first appeared as part of the MCU in the Disney Plus seriesHawkeye. In that show, she was the leader of a criminal organization working for Vincent D’Onofrio’s Wilson Fisk/Kingpin. She was also revealed to be Kingpin’s adopted daughter, just like in the comics. Those who sawHawkeyeknow that things didn’t go particularly amicably once she discovered Fisk killed her father, as she was last seen shooting her adoptive father in the face. But he’s still around, and now she’s headed back to her hometown to reconnect with her family and heritage.
As mentioned by Winderbaum, Marvel Spotlight seems to be continuing the spirit of the Spotlight anthology series of comics. This series introduced such characters as Ghost Rider and evenGwen Stacy’sAcross the Spider-VerseidolSpider-Woman. So, the streaming version of Spotlight could serve as a palate cleanser for fans suffering from that all-too-real Marvel fatigue that comes with all these projects tying together. Of course,Echostill has a connection toHawkeye, at the very least. But the odds are good thatEchowill explain things well enough.
Marvel has tried many things to fix that fatigue, so here’s hoping this one sticks. Despite how ubiquitous the MCU is in media, it can still offer some compelling ideas.Echo’s story includes some important representation for people who don’t often get to see themselves in mainstream media (and even then, even more rarely as the hero). So, hopefully,Echois the shot in the arm the franchise so desperately needs.
Echowill release all 5 episodes on January 10th, 2024, on Disney Plus and Hulu.
Echo
Alaqua Cox returns as Maya Lopez in Echo, a first-of-its-kind Marvel Spotlight series. The show explores Maya’s past as she deals with the fallout of her confrontation with Wilson Fisk (Vincent D’Onofrio) in Hawkeye. Unlike previous Marvel projects, Echo is rated TV-MA and explores a grittier, more violent side of the MCU.