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Defends his city where the heroin drug has spread. In the second season he tries to rescue her from the certain danger he fought for so long and will destroy everything, especially since Luke has a great fame, where Luke tries to highlight his abilities on the planet.
Andy Goddard, Marc Jobst, Clark Johnson, Stephen Surjik, Neema Barnette, Alex Garcia Lopez, Everardo Gout, Rashaad Ernesto Green, Steph Green, Kasi Lemmons, Lucy Liu, Salli Richardson-Whitfield, Millicent Shelton
Perhaps the worst offender yet of the Netflix/Marvel drama approach of filling up a 13-episode bag with only three or four episodes' worth of story at best.
While season 2 is far from perfect, it not only avoids the sophomore slump, it surpasses season 1 through a relentless focus on how both its heroes and villains are defined by their families.
Luke Cage might be bulletproof, but the character's eponymous Netflix series looks weaker in Season 2 -- not bad, overall, but still experiencing the equivalent of a sophomore slump.
There's just too much stuff to really do justice to any of it, and that lack of focus makes it tough to latch on to anything the season is trying to do.
The visual style and kinetic, music-driven fight scenes from season one return, and while there may be a few more scraps than the show necessarily needs, the writers make sure to bring some creativity to Luke's predicaments.
As it is, though, season two is an improvement on the first, delivering enough powerful set pieces and rich character development to satisfy the fans across its 13 episodes.