"Jessica Jones" A.K.A. Smile (TV Episode 2015) Poster

(TV Series)

(2015)

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8/10
Jessica Jones - Smile
Scarecrow-8831 July 2018
Warning: Spoilers
I think "Smile"-despite the satisfaction of seeing Kilgrave's neck snapped like a twig by Jessica Jones, his body dropped in a heap to the sidewalk of the marina where he had a bunch of folks attack each other until seizing control of Trish, mocking his adversary regarding how he would rape and torment her "sister"-does suffer from a sense of inevitability and predictability. Being that this is the final episode, it was obvious JJ wouldn't die. Sure there might have been concern that something might happen to Trish, particularly because she kept helping Jessica and putting herself in the dangerous crosshairs. Jeri Hogarth even actually makes herself useful instead of a liability; facing being pushed out of her firm, having lost her lover due to the murder charge regarding the ex-wife, and still enduring the scars caused by Kilgrave's orders, Jeri defends Jessica when the law wants to pursue litigation against Jessica. Jeri concocts quite a story involving Kilgrave ordering Jessica to kill him due to "guilt". And with the police ordered by Kilgrave (a serum his father eventually successfully develops gives him even greater power) to shoot at Jessica-a trick using Trish as a ruse is cool-in a cathedral further helps her cause against the law coming after her. The main weakness of Kilgrave has always been his obsession with Jessica, wanting her to admit love to him, but Luke is the man she truly cares for, which has just further enflamed his psychopathy. Kilgrave certainly commits to finishing off his pops as Jessica finds him absent arms in the upscale apartment of a male couple forced to cooperate due to the mind control.

In the secondary sidebar, Jessica admits to a comatose Luke (after getting help from a nurse, Claire (a welcome Rosario Dawson, bringing some real class and cool to the show), who decides to assist her when the cops come looking for him), she wishes for a future together or perhaps even a simple date, leaving him for the time being to confront and hopefully defeat (or die trying) Kilgrave. Despite his best efforts not to care, Malcolm can't just abandon Jessica, meeting Claire (who decides to remain with Luke at Jessica's request) when visiting JJ's apartment. He later answers the phone for Jessica when the public call looking for her help, knowing that she was responsible for the end of Kilgrave, a terror that victimized a city. Claire's no-nonsense, sees-it-like-it-is personality, and considerate nature, is refreshing because, quite frankly, Jessica needed someone (besides Trish) to give up some of their time in order for her to settle the Kilgrave business. I do hope this is just a start for something increasingly substantial for Dawson. And Malcolm has a rather pleasant conversation with Claire about Jessica and Luke, both aware of how these two feel about each other even if circumstances have disrupted any romantic potential they have.

Jeri recalling the casualties of Kilgrave while defending Jessica, including Hope's own fate, is a nice way of letting us not forget what the mind control monster was responsible for and why his death was beneficial for all mankind. Jeri using her "shark" mentality, ingenuity, and wit to get Jessica out of a jam proves that she is capable of much. Yes, Jeri's allowing Kilgrave to gain access to the fetal tissue would allow him greater power, but ultimately she came through for Jessica in her time of need. That is a start if anything, but Jessica let her know they aren't square. Now Jessica will not be able to just dismiss any obligation her power possesses. Oh, and that leap Jessica has gets great height and distance!

Although the ending of the first season was never in doubt, seeing Kilgrave get his was incredibly enjoyable. Jessica having to lure him in and telling Trish she loved her was special because it has a sincerity without being mushy.
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9/10
IMMENSELY gratifying, if not slightly anti-climactic.
TouchTheGarlicProduction22 November 2015
Warning: Spoilers
Much like the last episode, a lot of this episode was strangely slow for a finale. There was one neat sequence involving a hospital part way through, but that's pretty much all the action until the end. I was nervous when I heard that Daredevil appears in the finale, but I didn't see him. His nurse friend was there, but he wasn't.

The final confrontation with Kilgrave is low on action, but very clever and immensely satisfying. It was an ending I was pretty happy with. I just wish the show had been a couple episodes shorter. The same thing happened with Daredevil. It built amazing pace then fizzled in the last couple episodes ending with a finale that's good but feels like it doesn't justify the sudden slow pacing leading up to it. I think thirteen was too many. They should have gone with ten for both shows. That's probably why it felt a bit anti-climactic. Other than that, it was a good ending to the season.
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9/10
OK With the Ending
Hitchcoc31 July 2019
I don't know what they could have done to put an end to all this. As it turns out, we get the two principle characters, face to face, and we have a result. I'm not sure they ever made his super strength an issue. All it did was raise his confidence level a notch. It took a long time but the forces were believable in the established setting and it had intensity. I enjoyed this, even though I'm not a true Marvel follower.
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8/10
Uneven but worth the watch
anselmdaniel2 November 2019
Warning: Spoilers
This review contains spoilers.

Jessica Jones' thirteenth episode of the first season is entitled 'AKA Smile'. The episode is the season finale.

The finale of Jessia Jones' first season is great. We see the conclusion of the Kilgrave storyline. The way that it concludes is with Jessica approaching Kilgrave one final time. It is an uneventful finale but it delivered one last interaction between Kilgrave and Jessica that made it interesting to watch. This season does incredibly well in its interactions between Kilgrave and Jessica and the final interaction did bring in the battle that both of the characters fought for.

Grade: B

Jessica Jones Season One

Jessica Jones is a Netflix exclusive television series that is set in the Marvel universe. The series follows Jessica Jones a private investigator with super powers. The series also follows other characters Jessica is acquainted with. The series arc is overcoming Kilgrave, another human with superpowers.

Jessica Jones has some great components. David Tennant as Kilgrave is great. The actor does a great job portraying the villain that can control minds through speech. The series does a good job in setting up the character before the audience sees him through Jessica's flashbacks. It was clear that the writers intended for Jessica to overcome the post-traumatic stress disorder that was brought on by Kilgrave's control. Likewise Krysten Ritter as Jessica Jones does a good job in the role. She plays the private detective plagued by her past well. The story and writing is overall good but suffers from some problems. The story's focus is on Kilgrave, but the series sets him up at the start and spends a few episodes focusing on other characters. The story could have been improved by editing out the characters or by shortening the length of the season. The season was and should always have been about Kilgrave and Jessica. The side characters in this show are still interesting but reinforce the same main arc of the story. Nothing new is added by including these stories even when they reach their satisfying conclusion. It seemed as if these side arcs were meant to be filler with very few times they are reused in the main arc.

The directing and editing are bland overall. There were not any scenes that stuck out as impressive. The main draw to this series is its high budget and actors.

Overall Jessica Jones season 1 is a worthwhile watch even though the story can be uneven at times.

Grade: C
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9/10
Thank God it is over
amindostiari29 March 2021
I'm really happy that I got rid of this series. I really hate Jessica Jones and her actress. Although Kilgrave was a bad person, I think he was better than Jessica.
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7/10
Solid, but unsatisfactory
remanisboss15 March 2018
Warning: Spoilers
In my opinion, a solid episode. The series on the whole I love, and this episode was good, but I really wanted something great to close off such an amazing storyline. I won't go through everything I liked because there is a lot, hence the 7/10 rating, but there are some things I would like to cover. I felt like the performances both Krysten Ritter and David Tennant put in where incredible. Both are incredibly talented actors and the chemistry between them is like no other hero and villain in the entirety of the MCU. Having not seen Krysten in much, it was great to find out I really liked her. Not just in this episode, but in the whole series I just love the way she manages to be a bitch you love rooting for. And David Tennant... being a fan of Doctor Who and his performance as the 10th Doctor, I was really looking forward to seeing him play a bad guy. Boy, was I surprised when I found he fit in better as Killgrave than the Doctor. The way his English accent, despite being Scottish, strikes fear into you whenever you hear it, and how in the beginning half of the season, just a couple of shots were good enough to already make him the best villain in the Marvel Cinematic Universe.

However, for me, it was the ending that cost the episode; I just would have liked it to have been dragged out a little further with more consequence. Here's where I'm coming from: to find out Killgrave's already OP power has now been enhanced to become ridiculously powerful was scary. But we didn't really get to see him use it, not that well at least. Instead of about 30 people, having a portion of New York at risk would have had me on the edge far more. But instead we have characters like Trish, who the writers give to much of a sh*t about, being included in an ending that really should have just been Jessica and Killgrave, as well as the death of the scariest on screen Marvel villain to date being something I could have written. Then we get 5 minutes to finish the season and the show ends. In the end, this episode is great and had me gasping and fearing at the right times, but an ending that just makes me feel, "oh ok, guess I'll see you next season".
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5/10
Underwhelming
Leofwine_draca4 May 2021
Warning: Spoilers
And so we finally come to the end of the first season of JESSICA JONES, and was this climax worth the wait? The answer is, not really. The quality is okay but it's the kind of material I'd expect from a mid-season episode, not a big climax like this is supposed to be. In fact it's quite low key and predictable and you do wonder why it wasn't just done early on to save a whole season of this back-and-forth behaviour. Still, at least we don't have to put up with David Tennant anymore.
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7/10
Very anti-climactic, although still a good ending
Tarx30930 May 2016
Warning: Spoilers
Things really started moving in this episode, and thankfully it was a very eventful. The pace was quite fast and we got some good character moments, especially from Kilgrave. There was a great lead-up to the final scene between Jessica and Kilgrave, although, even after the constant intensity leading up to it, the conclusion to the series was far too anti-climactic and quick. Aside from this it was a mostly solid episode, and I feel it's good that they still left some threads still answered (in particular Trish and her mother's storyline), so there is something to look forward to for the next season. Although killing off Kilgrave may damage the next season, as it's obviously going to be hard to find an ample villain to replace him. In the end this was a satisfying and fast paced conclusion to a series that has often been extremely slowly paced in the past.
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6/10
No surprises and weak ending
joonyjoon24 June 2020
Warning: Spoilers
There was no complexity in this finale. The highlight was the hospital scene where all the patients and staff were ordered to kill Jessica, yet all she got was a small cut on her leg. Somehow none of these people pursued her to finish the job. Somehow none of the other people Killgrave orders around end up even hurting Jessica, let alone killing her. It all just seems so lackluster and weak.

Killgrave risks a 60% chance of death in the hope that he might be able to control Jessica using a dangerous serum meant to enhance his power. He sets up another dumb meeting with her in the hope that she will love him this time, with the stereotypical escape plan of running away through a back entrance. This time, he stops just before his escape to test whether the dangerous serum was worth taking. He practically commits suicide in the name of his obsessive love for her, just because she acted like it was working for a few seconds.

If he actually wanted her dead, he could have at any point in these 13 episodes just showed up to a police station or armed gang meeting, gave them all the intel on Jessica, and ordered them to take her out. That was never what he wanted, and so the immunity to mind-control leaves his life in her hands, literally until his dying moment.

The plot armor and weak story doesn't really leave you feeling like there was much of an accomplishment through this season 1 story arc. The other seasons seem to be far worse, so that's a big no from me.
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7/10
Why didn't they do that before?
gani040115 November 2020
So I may not have thought about it until episode 3 or so, but why didn't Jessica Jones and Co. think to wear headphones or ear plugs before the Season 1 finale? It was a good season finale. If I had started watching this back in 2014 instead of 2020, I would've thought that it would have made a decent series finale. I'm glad they were able to bring back the show a few years later to give two more seasons of the story. I'll start Season 2 tonight. Nice show.
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