She-Hulk: Attorney at Law director Kat Coiro explains how the series finds a balance between being a legal comedy and a Marvel superhero show. As Marvel continues to expand the MCU with dedicated streaming platform Disney+, several comic characters are finally getting their due at a live-action treatment. She-Hulk: Attorney at Law is the next MCU show that will stream on the service, introducingOrphan Black's Tatiana Maslany as Jennifer Walters, the titular lawyer, and Bruce Banner's (Mark Ruffalo) cousin who transforms into a green-hued monster after receiving a blood transfusion from him.
Maslany stars alongside a cast that includes Jameela Jamil as She-Hulk's rival Titania, Josh Segarra, Ginger Gonzaga, Jon Bass, and Renée Elise Goldsberry, with Tim Roth, Mark Ruffalo, and Benedict Wong returning as Emil Blonsky/Abomination, Bruce Banner, and Wong respectively. So far, it's been reported that She-Hulk: Attorney at Law will focus on Jennifer's immediate struggles as she grapples with her superhero alter-ego while also trying to progress her career as a lawyer representing superpowered individuals. The show's approach to Jennifer's dilemma has been far more comedic than the typical MCU tone, and while the lightheartedness has been received positively, She-Hulk does incorporate the standard elements of a superhero show, which seem to be well-propped with the hilarity and jokes.
Related: Why She-Hulk's CGI Is Harder To Get Right Than Hulk's
It's always been about a balance between creating a new genre for Marvel, which is the half-hour legal comedy, but also feeling like it really fits into the MCU and feels big and cinematic and has action-packed moments. It was always about finding that balance.
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