Showing posts with label agent carter. Show all posts
Showing posts with label agent carter. Show all posts

Friday, November 10, 2017

Bésame Cosmetics' Agent Carter Collection and the Women Who Wore It Before

"Peggy,

Your newest pieces of tech are on the way.

I’ll admit makeup is not my strong suit, so we teamed up with an American brand to make our tech look as convincing as possible.

This is as much detail as I can tell you in an unclassified letter.

Your mission briefing will be in the fall, enjoy the summer!"

- Howard

(source)
When Bésame Cosmetics announced an impending Agent Carter makeup collection at D23, I was ecstatic. The company is well known among many fans for carrying the lipstick that Hayley wore on the show, and they pride themselves on re-creating golden-age makeup for the modern woman. It became the perfect crossover for Peggy Carter, a modern woman existing at the same time as the Golden Age of Hollywood, especially when season two brought our favorite agent to Hollywood.

The collaboration comes with the popularity of Bésame’s 1946 Red Velvet lipstick, which is often sold out on their website, and was made easy because of their already existing relationship with Disney. Hayley Atwell tweeted about the lipstick at the end of 2014 after many fans were curious about Peggy's style, and now it shows up on Agent Carter cosplayers who are looking for that little something extra. For almost three years, the many reviews on the product are from excited fans. While the makeup line release will most likely include this shade, it would be re-packaged to look like a prop from the show (perhaps Dottie's "Sweet Dreams" lipstick?). The collection is slated to debut early in 2018 along with letters, puzzles, and fun story-driven materials. It appears that the pieces will be released one by one and hopefully there will be an option to purchase the full set by San Diego Comic Con in July 2018. In the meantime, you can enjoy the bit of detective work the site provides on the Agent Carter page and subscribe to emails to be notified when new information is released about the collection.

And while the makeup collection and continued news is exciting, Peggy Carter isn't all about looking glamorous while she kicks butt. At the same time that Peggy navigates World War II and her SSR career thereafter, the CIA and the OSS (Office of Strategic Services) was formed with women at the heart of many legendary missions. It’s fair to say that many women make up the rich pool from whence Peggy Carter came. In honor of this new avenue for our favorite super spy, let’s take a look at some of the women whose work was top secret in the 1940s, the women who came before Agent Carter.

Julia Child née McWilliams

Yes, that Julia Child, the chef we all knew about as kids. But she didn’t become a chef until after the war. Julia worked as a clerk in the OSS headquarters office in D.C.. Eventually she found herself stationed in India and later China, where she worked with classified communications that in part helped locate POW camps. She was in charge of dealing with an incredible amount of filed information and organizing it so the OSS could keep track of what was going on. With that amount of information accessible to Julia and the others that worked with her, it was important that they be trusted. As head of the Kandy Registry, Julia held the secrets of OSS intelligence that included names and code names of many agents currently operating around the world. If the information were to be compromised, it could mean the death of many agents and possibly a turn in the tide of the war. After WWII, Child got married and lived in France, where she discovered her love of cooking French cuisine.

Betty Lussier

The OSS worked heavily with the French resistance. Betty Lussier worked in the X-2 branch, where she created her own adventure. Prior to joining the OSS, she was a pilot with the British Air Transport Auxiliary. After joining, she trained in cryptography and counterespionage, although she wanted more action. It was partly why she had become a pilot (her father had served in the Royal Air Force during WWI). She wasn’t allowed to serve on the front lines with the Seventh Army but made her way there anyway to help pass information between British and American armies. One of the more notable things Lussier did was look for Nazis and their collaborators. Some of these men were turned into double agents for X-2. She turned one such man who had dreams to work in Hollywood but worked for the Germans. A promise to get him to Hollywood led to a confession and a few Nazi arrests. The French made sure he never made it to Hollywood. After the war, she also got married and ended up in Spain with her husband helping develop and establish schools in poorer communities.

Lussier’s memoir is titled Intrepid Woman: Betty Lussier’s Secret War, 1942-1945

Gertrude Legendre

Gerturde Legendre was another adventurous agent, one who got captured near Luxembourg with other agents in 1944. Her cover story, developed in the middle of the attack, was that she was an interpreter for one of the “officers” she was with. She was a clerk at the Paris embassy. The cover story worked. She stuck to it as she was transferred from cell to cell and interrogated multiple times over the course of six months. Before this, she worked at the Cable Desk and was privy to a lot of sensitive information that she pretended not to recognize when she was captured. She knew information about operations and people that, if compromised, would prove beneficial to Nazi Germany in defeating the French Resistance. When she ended up in Switzerland, Legendre told her story to operatives and was brought home.

Gertrude has a memoir entitled The Time of My Life

Virginia Hall

Virginia Hall was the queen of disguise, transferred from Britain’s special ops to the OSS in 1944. She had lost her leg years prior from a hunting accident. Hall helped train hundreds of agents who were responsible for subverting German operations. While her limp was the only identifying mark of her person, she evaded the Gestapo for years, keeping in constant motion and continuing to train forces as part of the French resistance. She was trained in radio transmission, weaponry, and security, and managed to make use of every bit of her education prior to joining to help her career and covers flourish. After the war, she worked in Washington at the CIA, retiring only when she reached the mandatory retirement age. Hall is one of the most well-known women agents from WWII, and she was the first civilian and woman to receive the Distinguished Service Cross for her work.

There is a biography about Virginia Hall titled Wolves at the Door: The True Story Of America's Greatest Female Spy by Judith Pearson

For further reading on these and many others, check out Sisterhood of Spies by Elizabeth P. McIntosh!

Wednesday, April 19, 2017

Like This? Try That: The CW Superhero Edition


Some days, the fangirl life can be tough. Your favorite TV show goes on summer hiatus, you have to wait an entire year to read the next installment in a new book series, you've watched Lord of the Rings three times in a row and still can't believe there aren't any more movies coming. So what should you do during this time of waiting? Find a new fandom to love, of course! There are an endless supply of fandoms out there, but you just need to figure out what you like. That's where I come in. "Like This? Try That" is a new way to share similar recommendations for popular TV shows, genre book series, your favorite movie franchises, or any type of fandom you love.

Since the CW superhero shows are on hiatus until the end of April, I thought I'd spotlight a few shows similar to the ones I've come to love on the CW. If you watch Arrow, The Flash, Supergirl, or Legends of Tomorrow and you're looking for something new to experience, check out these recommendations!

If you like Arrow, try Daredevil


Maybe it's breaching some kind of golden rule to recommend a Marvel show for DC fans, but I like to think you can be in both fandoms without having to choose sides. That being said, when Daredevil first released on Netflix, I saw a lot of people comparing it to Arrow (Stephen Amell even made a comment about it). For good reason. Arrow and Daredevil share several similarities, most importantly a main character without superpowers who has a personal vendetta to save his city. From the Green Arrow suit to the Daredevil suit to the darker tones and more realistic and serious portrayals to dealing with mob bosses and drug dealers, these shows go hand-in-hand with depicting the darker, grittier side of the superhero universes. While Arrow is rated TV-14, Daredevil is rated TV-M, so it does go a step further with the gritty violence of the big city underworld. If you're a fan of Arrow, you might want to give Daredevil a shot.

If you like The Flash, try Smallville


Smallville was the first superhero show on the CW, which paved the way for the lineup we have today. Still, I think it's worth watching--at least most of it--if you're a fan of The Flash. The main storylines are similar: a guy with incredible super powers tries to save the world and live a normal life. Clark and Barry both have super powers that they use to help people; they both have big hearts and they personally carry the world on their shoulders. They encounter all types of crazy things from aliens to other meta-humans. They're surrounded by a great group of people who help them in their journey to becoming a hero. They struggle with romantic relationships, parental relationships, and friendships. The shows follow similar paths, maybe with different aspects, but they're both pretty standard superhero shows. I think if you like The Flash, you'll enjoy Smallville just as much. Plus, a different version of Barry Allen makes an appearance here and there in Smallville as well.

If you like Supergirl, try Agent Carter


There aren't a lot of solo female superhero shows out there yet, and there aren't many with the optimistic, morally upright, do-the-right-thing-just-because main character like Kara Danvers. Agent Carter, however, is one of these shows. While Peggy Carter doesn't have superpowers, she has determination, confidence, and intelligence--traits Kara also possesses. Both of these stunning leading ladies do their best to help save those around them and the world. While Agent Carter is set during the 1950s, I think the feminist themes and strong female characters will appeal to fans of Supergirl. In addition, both main characters wear red and blue, encounter bizarre things from aliens to weird portals to meta-humans, and are stuck in awkward romantic relationships and love triangles. All in all, if you like Supergirl for Kara's character and the strong female role models, Agent Carter is right up your alley.

If you like Legends of Tomorrow, try Doctor Who


What show involves time-travel adventures, hilarious jokes, a large cast of characters that come and go, John Barrowman, and Arthur Darvill? That's right folks, Legends of Tomorrow. But also Doctor Who. If you like Legends of Tomorrow for the fun time travel and the characters, I have no doubt you'll enjoy Doctor Who for its fun time travel and characters. Both shows follow a ragtag group that jumps from time to place in order to accomplish some kind of goal or stop some kind of evil from ripping the universe apart. Both shows incorporate a lot of humor and have a large cast of characters, which sometimes changes from season to season. Plus, John Barrowman and Arthur Darvill star in both shows. I'd say that fans of Legends of Tomorrow would definitely enjoy Doctor Who.

Do you agree with these recommendations? What other fandoms would CW superhero fans enjoy?

Saturday, February 20, 2016

Agent Carter Review: Season 2, Episodes 4 & 5


Peggy Carter’s life is one of adventure. That is no surprise. What may come as a surprise, however, is that this was not always the case.


Episode four pushes the plot of season two forward, but it also gives us a chance to look backward. Through scattered flashbacks, we see Peggy’s journey to becoming an agent. In the midst of World War II, the younger Margaret Carter is a code breaker in the historic Bletchley Park. She’s doing her part to fight for her side, albeit it from behind the front lines.  Then comes a life-changing offer. Someone has recommended her for fieldwork. Margaret refuses, saying it isn’t a good fit. Besides, she’s recently become engaged. She can’t just leave her fiancé to accept such a dangerous mission.

At her engagement party we learn that her dear brother Michael recommended her for the post. “You are meant to fight,” he tells her. “Stop trying to be someone you’re not.” Margaret isn’t convinced. Even though she and Michael were equals in childhood, their lives are very different now.


 Michael is enlisted in the military. He is meant for the front. Margaret Carter and her fiancé Fred are not. Both of them aid the war effort from behind the lines.

That is, until Margaret’s wedding day arrives… Along with tragic news. Her brother isn’t coming home. Michael was killed on the front lines. This tragedy is what spurs his grief-stricken sister to call off her marriage to a man she doesn’t really love. 


Margaret becomes Agent Peggy Carter and the rest is history.

Speaking of history, we also see some of Whitney Frost’s origin story. She grows up as the brainy but misfit Agnes Culley. Her mother doesn’t appreciate her intelligence, however. Bitter by life’s hardship and accustomed only to unsavory men, Mrs. Culley scoffs at her daughter’s inventiveness and instead tells her she should be focused on her appearance. 


Years later, Agnes encounters a talent scout in the streets of Hollywood. With a little smooth talk, the man convinces her to give show business a try. He also insists she trade in the name Agnes for something more appealing. Enter Whitney Frost.


I really appreciated the expansion of backstory for both Peggy and Whitney/Agnes. In Season One, we witnessed the horrific making of Dottie Underwood. I wanted to understand more of Peggy, though, so the glimpse into her pre-Agent days was both intriguing and touching. As for Whitney, I still can’t stand her. However, her descent into villainy does make more sense now.

Back in the action of Season Two, Peggy’s crew is still searching for a way to stop Whitney that makes sense. As Jason remarks, “She defies categorization.”

“The Chadwicks appear to have built quite a formidable wall around them,” Jarvis observes.


This is true. Along with the Arena’s Council of the Nine, Calvin and Whitney have Rufus Hunt as their personal thug. Aided as always by Jarvis, Peggy decides to kidnap Mr. Hunt as a way to get information. 


By bluffing and using another Stark concoction gone awry, Peggy pries information from him regarding the Council of the Nine. Once he’s free of Peggy and Sousa, Rufus Hunt believes he’s escaped with his life. Alas, he didn’t bank on the terror that is Whitney Frost. He becomes her next Zero Matter victim.


Chief Sousa continues to look out for Agent Carter and is preparing to assist her with raiding the Arena club. He even gets a search warrant by calling in a favor from a friend. Weapons at the ready, the LA branch of the SSR is prepared for action. Then the FBI shows up with an audit to shut down the raid.


We’re left with high tension at the end of episode four. And then there’s episode five.

Dr. Jason Wilks is still hard at work researching Zero Matter. He wakes Peggy late one night to bring her to the lab over his latest finding.


He has a tissue sample from Jane Scott, the young woman found frozen in the lake in Episode 1. Oddly enough, this sample is drawn to Jason. It turns out to be Zero Matter. Similar to Whitney’s absorption of living things, the tissue sample is absorbed into Dr. Wilks. This small amount of Zero Matter makes the doctor temporarily tangible again. If this small amount of tissue from Jane Scott can have such an impact, what would the rest of the Zero Matter inside her do?


“Does Howard have a hearse?” Peggy asks Jarvis. “We’re going to steal Jane Scott’s body.” It turns out that Jane’s body is being hidden in County Cold Storage, which happens to be owned by a friend of Calvin Chadwick. Peggy and Jarvis sneak in, despite some complaints from the British butler.

“Me? In the vent?” He protests. “Isn’t that why you wore your recreation tie?” Peggy counters.

 They’re too late, however. Whitney Frost arrives first. Though her husband is understandably horrified, Whitney claims that the Zero Matter “called me here. It wants to be let out.” As Peggy and Jarvis observe unseen from the vent, Whitney absorbs all the Zero Matter from Jane’s corpse. The stuff courses through her and sparks her next idea.

“I need an atomic bomb,” she announces, as if saying she needs a cup of coffee. When Peggy and Jarvis report back, Jason Wilks quickly pieces the clues together. Whitney is trying to recreate the Isodyne Atomic test responsible for Zero Matter.


Equipped with a memory inhibitor and disguised as “Wanda,” Peggy figures out who is supplying the uranium.


Stark’s “Cooperate Espionage” reveals the location of the bombs Whitney is after. It’s a big mission to get to the bombs before the power-hungry starlet. Whitney will back down for nothing, exulting to her husband, “Imagine what we could accomplish if we could bend the world to our will.” 


Peggy can’t call in SSR Agents this time since it’s impossible to tell which ones are trustworthy. Instead, she turns to Rose, the feisty secretary of the LA branch. Chief Sousa balks at the notion until Peggy tells him, “It’s funny, I’m seeing Daniel Sousa but hearing Jack Thompson.” Rose has received the same training as a field agent, Peg argues, and is someone they can trust. Daniel relents, and Rose’s somewhat unexpected help is enlisted.


Along with her comes the scientist Dr. Sanberly. Rather a stodgy character, the scientist has a soft spot for Rose and refuses to be left out of the action.

The unlikely crew has a dramatic slow motion exit, until Peggy interrupts to ask Jarvis, “Where did you park?”


“Oh! Around the corner,” the butler exclaims, all spy pretense gone. “Back in a jiffy!”

Despite some doubts from Sousa and Jarvis, Rose and Sanberly manage to get the team inside the secret facility. Rose demonstrates that her skills go further than typing and ushering in appointments. She can actually fight, in a Peggy-esque style. I loved seeing her get in on the action.

Inadvertently, Jarvis gets stuck right in the midst of the tension. He finds himself locked in the room housing the bombs. Dr. Sanberly works to disarm the lock, cheered on by Rose. Time is running short, however, and Jarvis must step in to complete the task of getting the bombs into their transport crate. Sousa encourages him from the other side of the door, telling the butler it’s just like making a soufflé.

Meanwhile, Peg goes after Whitney. She tries to reason with her, saying she isn’t beyond help. She can be fixed. Whitney scoffs at the idea and retorts, “Why would I want to be fixed? I’ve never felt more powerful in my entire life!”


It quickly becomes clear that for all Peggy’s skill, she can’t overpower Whitney in a fight. Whitney is moments away from killing Peg when the agent elects to fall from a ledge rather than be destroyed by the actress. Calvin Chadwick finally steps in and hurries his deranged wife away.

His task completed, Jarvis informs Chief Sousa, “That was nothing like making a soufflé.” The butler, secretary and scientist carry the bombs away while the chief rushes off to find Peggy. He discovers her on the floor, impaled and in critical condition. Since even the hospital doesn’t seem safe, Daniel does the only thing he can think of. He takes Peggy to Nurse Violet’s house. 


By this point, I’m no longer suspicious of the sweet nurse. She doesn’t seem to be hiding anything after all. Apparently all my imaginary agent work has caused me to be overly suspicious.

Since Peggy refuses Violet’s urging to go to a hospital, the nurse manages to fix her up. She also manages to see something that both Daniel and Peggy have been willfully blind to. Although Daniel proposed to Violet at the beginning of the episode, Violet now realizes he’s in love with Peggy. At the end of episode four, Sousa tells Thompson, “The only thing that brought me out West was a promotion.”

“You sure it wasn’t a broken heart?” Thompson challenges.


Violet echoes something similar, telling Daniel he didn’t move to LA just for a new start. He moved to get away from Peggy. I feel completely sorry for Violet and really guilty for ever doubting her goodness. I also feel guilty that I started shipping Daniel and Peggy ever so slightly. ONLY SLIGHTLY, PEOPLE.

Shortly after this exchange, the team leaves Violet, not wanting to place her in any further danger.

Back home, Jarvis affectionately tucks Peggy in with a few too many blankets.

“These adventures are only enjoyable if you return from them,” he tells her.

After Jarvis leaves her to rest, Jason remains. Peggy confides that being touched by Whitney was more agonizing than being impaled. “The place Zero Matter comes from is dark, painful,” Jason tells her.

The moment is lightened slightly when Jason’s favorite song comes on the radio. When Peggy remarks on it, telling him, “It’s your song, I Want to be Loved,” he quietly replies, “Don’t we all?” The tender moment (still not shipping them but whatever) is shattered when Jason disappears into thin air. Will he ever recover from the effects of Zero Matter? Can Whitney Frost be stopped?

These are the burning questions Episode 5 leaves us with.

Tune in to the double feature of Episodes 6 & 7 for answers! One teaser: Dottie Underwood is coming back at last. I never thought I’d want to see her again, but I predicted she would be lethal in taking down Whitney. I’m sort of excited about seeing our old enemy go after our new one.


What else awaits us? Double up and let’s find out how it goes down! 

Tuesday, February 2, 2016

Agent Carter Review: Season 2, Episode 3

Agent Carter, take three! 

At the end of my review for Season 2, Episodes 1 & 2 I said the second season hadn't drawn me in as intensely as the first season. Then Episode 3 aired. 

I couldn't take my eyes off the screen for an instant. As soon as the third episode ended, I wanted to watch it again. If you haven't watched it at least once, I warn you that spoilers are ahead. 

Episode 2 concluded with Dr. Jason Wilkes tragically losing his life in the Isodyne explosion. Now the newspapers are calling him a communist. A search of his home turns up communist propaganda, which Peggy is convinced someone planted there. The evidence is far too obvious to be true, she argues. Someone is trying to frame the late physicist. 


It appears that "someone" is Hollywood starlet Whitney Frost. Somehow she survived the explosion of Zero Matter that killed Jason Wilkes. Whitney didn't make it out of the struggle totally unscathed, though. What appears to be a small scrape at first is drastically more. She wasn't just in the Zero Matter explosion - the Zero Matter explosion is in her now. Although Whitney claims to understand Zero Matter better than anyone, even she can't understand what is happening to her. She manages to cover it up while simultaneously keeping several other secrets. Among them is her true identity as the brains behind Isodyne and Zero Matter. I predict a new villain on the horizon. Move over, Dottie Underwood. There's a new blonde baddie on the block. 


Whitney's secrets also include the activities of her husband, Isodyne president and politician Calvin Chadwick. Chadwick is part of the powerful Arena Club. It's the same club Peggy has been trying to track down since Dottie hinted at it during her interrogation. Infiltrating the club will prove a challenge though, even for the savvy Agent Carter. The Arena Club admits men only and although Peggy is a master of disguises, that isn't one she can pull off. Enter Howard Stark. (Who is none too thrilled to be taken away from his film project and production team.) 


The club has been trying to recruit him for years. Begrudgingly, Howard agrees to temporarily join so Peggy can get in. He arrives with typical Stark style and quickly disrupts the stuffy order of things. As the men-only club spirals into a "Code Pink" and is swarmed by women, Peggy uses the chaos to investigate and plant bugs. In the library, she discovers a secret study. (It's naturally hidden behind a bookcase, because how else would you enter an evil lair?) In this conference room, her eyes fall upon a newspaper. Dated for the next day. The headline declares Calvin Chadwick's political opponent has withdrawn from the election. Peggy quickly realizes blackmail is in play. She's nearly caught snooping around but an American accent and Edwin Jarvis throw off suspicion enough for her to escape. 


Seeing that the mission has been accomplished, Howard Stark announces that the club is terrible and he's never coming back. Recapping her findings, Peggy says, "The Arena Club knows what's happening because they're making it happen." Agent Thompson scoffs at her idea, especially when he finds out she couldn't retrieve evidence and all of the bugs malfunctioned. The overbearing chief reiterates that he had closed this case and refuses to allow Peggy to chase her leads. He also gets on my last nerve and makes me shout GO AWAY several times. 


There is a moment towards the end of the episode that makes me thaw slightly towards Thompson. Sousa is working late because he claims, "The early bird's got nothing on the night owl." Jack Thompson surprisingly seems to extend friendship to the other chief, or at least his version of it. It comes after he discovers Daniel is getting engaged and is therefore over Peggy. (Or supposedly. We'll see.) Thompson's change of attitude when he finds out Sousa isn't pursuing Peggy intrigued me against my will. Could the chief who demeans and undermines Peggy somehow have feelings for her? I'm still not on that ship but it's worth paying attention to. 


Even though Thompson isn't supporting the investigation, Peggy can't give up. Howard is fully invested now and Jarvis would stand by Peggy until the end. Sousa remains involved too, albeit rather reluctantly. 

Peggy knows something is off with Whitney Frost and she takes an opportunity to interrogate the actress. Whitney keeps her composure but later alerts her husband that Agent Carter is on to them. Chadwick calls in his thug Mr. Hunt to handle Peggy. Mr. Hunt catches Peggy off guard when she's outside working off steam. 


She fights back brilliantly and Mr. Jarvis rushes out to her aid. It turns out that Edwin's workouts have paid off. 


Jarvis's skill set isn't limited to bodyguard, though. Howard would be lost without his butler. As Mr. Stark becomes more obsessed with the science of Zero Matter, he runs around asking Jarvis for coffee and velveeta cheese. Until this point, we haven't seen much of Mr. Jarvis and Mr. Stark's interaction. Jarvis has spent more time helping Peggy than Howard. I loved watching Edwin act as if he were Howard's long-suffering parent. 


Childish as he can be, Howard has his uses. When Peggy notices a disturbance in the gravity around her, there's a moment of anxiety. Has she been infected with Zero Matter too? Past observation shows that it eventually freezes people to death. Will Agent Carter be the next victim? With his typical scientific flair, Howard puts this worry to rest. The disturbance isn't in Peg; it's around her. 

Combining his knowledge of science and film making, Howard reveals something shocking. Dr. Jason Wilkes isn't dead. He's trapped in a mysterious state caused by the Zero Matter and has been following Peg, hoping to get her attention. Howard devises a way to counteract the invisibility caused by this Zero Matter state, but it is to be determined if he can permanently restore Dr. Wilkes.


Peggy is delighted to see Jason again and we get a bit more screen time of them. It's obvious the physicist has feelings for her and she's warming up to him in her own way. At one point, she pays him the compliment, "You've impressed Howard Stark and you've impressed me." 

I am still not shipping Jason and Peggy, but I am interested in seeing the physicist included more. I would extend Peggy's compliment to Dr. Wilkes to this entire episode. It impressed me and I can't wait to see what awaits us in Episode Four. 

Don't forget to tune in tonight! Over and out, agents. 



Sunday, January 24, 2016

Agent Carter Review: Season 2, Episodes 1 & 2


Lights! Camera! Carter! Agent Peggy Carter is back for her second season, and this time, she’s taking on Hollywood. Spoilers ahead – proceed with caution.

The events of season one are still fairly recent, and we pick back up with the dastardly Dottie Underwood. (Because plummeting out a window into a plane hangar wasn’t enough to finish her off. Naturally.) Within the first five minutes, there’s a knockout fight between the hated villainess and our beloved Agent Carter. Things are looking promising for Peggy’s mission when Agent Thompson feels the need to interfere.


Since the death of Chief Dooley in the first season, both Agent Thompson and Agent Sousa have been promoted in the SSR. Now chiefs, Thompson oversees the New York office while Sousa is stationed in LA. Los Angeles isn’t all sunshine and Hollywood stars, though. Sousa is soon faced with a case too big to crack alone. He calls for backup, and Thompson takes the opportunity to foist off Peggy. Agent Carter is reluctant to leave, since she’s finally making progress with Dottie’s interrogation. Thompson insists he can handle it and lies to Peggy about the LA mission so she has no choice but to leave New York.


She steps off the plane to be greeted by everyone’s favorite butler, one Edwin Jarvis. There’s also a new addition to the Stark (or perhaps more accurately, Jarvis) family: Bernard the flamingo. Jarvis really deserves a salary increase for everything Howard Stark leaves him to handle. The flamingo is hardly the strangest thing Peggy will be facing in Hollywood, though. She’s quickly briefed on the case and realizes that it was thanks to Thompson and not Sousa she was assigned to Los Angeles. In spite of being assigned this case against her will, Peggy jumps in right away.


As Peggy makes progress in LA, Thompson makes a mess in New York. For once, I agreed with Dottie when she told the new chief to bring Peggy back. To further complicate the already botched interrogation, the FBI swoops in and announces the SSR is off the case. It stinks for the SSR, but Thompson pretty much deserved it for trying to cut in on Agent Carter’s case. Again. I digress.

Back in Los Angeles, something sinister is brewing. The body of a young woman was discovered in a lake. If that isn’t disturbing enough, the lake is frozen... In the middle of a California summer.

Peggy’s probing puts her on the path of atomic threats. Somehow these unexplained deaths are wrapped up with a nuclear plant. Agent Carter will do anything to solve the bizarre occurrences, even accepting a date with a friendly physicist.

Hollywood isn’t all movie screens and palm trees, and Peggy is determined to get to the bottom of this act.

 
By the end of episode two, a portion of the mystery is solved, such as how the lake was frozen. (I’ll never tell!) The promise of a bigger threat lingers just ahead, though, and I’m interested to see what the true mission will shape into.

If I have a chance, I would like to re-watch the premiere episodes, because I certainly missed some information. (Such as the names of most of the new characters. Oops.)

So far, here’s my reaction summed up: 
  • Peggy Carter is still fabulous, and I still want to be like her when I grow up.
  • Jarvis is still my favorite.
  • I was really surprised we got to meet the mysterious Mrs. Jarvis! Since we never saw her in season one, I remained skeptical about her existence. She certainly was not what I expected. I haven’t decided exactly how I feel about her, but she’s been a friend to Peggy, so that makes her a friend of mine.
  • Sousa has an almost-fiancé! I’m okay that he isn’t with Peggy, because I never really shipped them. His new interest is sweet and adorable; therefore, I don’t trust her. Time will tell. I hope she really is all she seems, but when is that the case?
  • Thompson needs to go join the FBI and leave the show. I know he’ll probably be somewhat useful later, and I was even starting to like him in season one… But I’m basically over that now. Go away, Thompson. (For the record, I also do not ship Peggy with him, despite that being a thing for some people. I’m sorry.)
  • While I’m on the subject of not shipping Peggy, I didn’t ship her with that physicist ether. I spent the entire time distrusting him, which I later felt guilty for. But the chemistry just wasn’t there for him and Peggy, or at least it wasn’t given enough time to play out.
  • Overall, I’m looking forward to what Season Two has to offer. I’m not in love with it the way I was with Season One; it hasn’t drawn me in quite as intensely yet. However, it’s shaping up to be rather different than Season One, and that has a draw all its own. I’m still anticipating a resolution with the devilish Dottie Underwood. And I would actually like to see Howard Stark again. There’s a sentence I didn’t expect to say.
Have you watched the premiere yet? What were your thoughts? What did I miss? If you haven’t seen it, I pose a question from Mr. Jarvis… “Are you ready for another adventure, Miss Carter?”

Tune in for Episode Three this Tuesday at 9PM EST on ABC!