The continuing story of Peacemaker, a vainglorious superhero/supervillain who believes in peace at any cost — no matter how many people he has to kill. After a miraculous recovery from his duel with Bloodsport, Peacemaker soon discovers that his freedom comes at a price.
I don't understand how this show has such a high rating and such high praise. Four episodes in and I gave up and just read the wiki pages for the last four episodes.
I feel like both Peacemaker and Harcourt as I watch this; I don't understand why the !@#$ we're here doing any of this because I'm not being told anything, and I don't understand why I'm surrounded by !@#$ing morons.
The only part of this story that has any weight to it is Peacemaker's relationship with his father.
There's certainly entertainment here, else I wouldn't have sat through four episodes, but it's wrapped up in so much brain-dead garbage that it's like watching Whedon's Josstice League and Snyder's Excessive Justice Cut back-to-back.
Holy !@#$. Maybe I'm ...
misubisu
Peacemaker is a Flawless Masterpiece
Lets be unequivocal: the first two seasons of James Gunns Peacemaker are not just great television; they are a rare, explosive, and emotionally resonant masterpiece that achieves a perfect 10/10. In a landscape crowded with superhero media, this series is a glorious, blood-soaked, and unexpectedly heartfelt unicorn. It takes a D-list DC villaina man whose entire personality is built on a ridiculous helmet and a questionable moral compassand crafts one of the most compelling character arcs in modern fiction.
The Gunn-verse Unchained
If The Suicide Squad (2021) let James Gunn off his leash, Peacemaker gives him the keys to the entire kingdom. The show is a pure, unfiltered distill...