Just for a bit more context here, and I'll still avoid spoilers as best I can.
The plot setup of a person who tried the superhero schtick for a minute, and not only had it go bad, but had it go utterly sideways is a scenario that always seemed possible, but I didn't think I'd see. My main context for superhero-ish things has been television and movies, not really comic books - so while I'm sure such things have been covered before in comics, this is the first real example I've personally seen.
Which leads me into the thing I like most about this series - its connection with humanity, and its fragility. All the characters shown are well-written, and well-acted - it's very easy to imagine each and every one, including the ones only ever seen on-screen for a few moments, going about their lives before and after they're on screen.
Some of the best characterization in context that I've seen before this was in the movie
Aliens - the show Jessica Jones uses similar techniques to help you to see what the world is like through each character's eyes, and how they each react and respond to life throwing them razor-laden curveballs.
Kingpin's portrayal in Daredevil was nuanced and very well done. It showed him as still being human, despite the despicable things he did - or, sometimes because of them. Both he and Daredevil want Hell's Kitchen to be a better place than the ones they knew as children, but their methods for accomplishing that reveal their natures as people, and therefore their conflict. That dynamic of the show I truly liked.
In Jessica Jones however, the dynamic between hero and villain is very different. Kilgrave is a sociopath - a charming, well-dressed and charismatic man who takes what he likes, and throws the rest over his shoulder to be forgotten. People and things have the same weight to him, which is to say "only while he finds them amusing or useful."
However horrifying this can be to watch, this is balanced by seeing most of the people you meet in this show try to heal their wounds, take a deep breath, and stand up. Each character does so differently, through different means, and for different reasons - but the quiet theme of learning to heal and become stronger than the experience that shattered them is plain.
Too often, one sees the non-powered folk in superhero tales as mainly bystanders, people to get hurt to inspire heroes, but otherwise appearing to be weaker, smaller, and less important than the hero of the tale being told. In a few ways this is understandable, but sometimes, the callousness toward the innocent by both hero and villain can get wearing. This is why I was impressed with seeing Captain America's stubborn "every civilian gets saved, period" attitude.
In Jessica Jones, this dynamic is shown in a very different way. Jessica not only lives alongside and amongst the people in Hell's Kitchen, her portrayal as an actual person with some real issues to work through (and, who just happens to have "powers") goes a long way toward helping to not only truly humanize her, but make all the struggles of the non-powered folk around her much more real, and just as meaningful.
This series reminds me very strongly of old private investigator shows, where the gumshoe drinks whiskey, deals with drama and trouble, and narrates with a cynical air. That this private investigator is a woman, has a cell phone (which, trust me, she uses to clever effect), and has some abilities just adds some interesting spin on the genre, instead of trying to make it into something else. Having the private investigator angle as a central foundation for both the character and the show works very, very well - just as well as Matt Murdock's law firm does for him.
Though this show can get very, very dark in places, and even horrifying, it's never grimdark. Beyond everything else, this is a character drama done very well. Differently than Daredevil, yes, but just as well done, if not better.
I have to say, with Daredevil and now Jessica Jones as Marvel's "lower-leveled heroes", I'm impressed so far. They do not live on high in towers or rub shoulders with the elite, but instead live with and amongst the poor and downtrodden, the people who all too often get swept into the gutters by those who desire power. And so far, both shows (and hopefully the ones to follow) work very well, since none of the heroes think of themselves as "protecting those innocent out there," or anything so abstract. They fight, and they get hurt to protect the people they live amongst - because they are those people too, no matter what gifts they might have.
And as an amusing (but not unimportant) aside, this show passes the
Bechdel Test easily.
Score:
9.5 / 10