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Watch: Marvel and Netflix’s new trailers for Luke Cage and Iron Fist

Alex Abad-Santos
Alex Abad-Santos is a senior correspondent who explains what society obsesses over, from Marvel and movies to fitness and skin care. He came to Vox in 2014. Prior to that, he worked at The Atlantic.

Marvel and Netflix gave San Diego Comic-Con, which kicked off Thursday, its first major reveals: the trailer for Luke Cage and a teaser for Iron Fist. Having made his debut on one of Marvel’s other Netflix series, Jessica Jones, Mike Colter (whom Good Wife fans will know as Lemond Bishop) plays Cage. The trailer lets us see Cage, a.k.a. Power Man, a.k.a. the man with unbreakable skin, in action.

Marvel aficionados who tuned in to Jessica Jones will be familiar with a bit of Cage’s backstory: His wife was killed, and he plans to avenge her. That means, according to the trailer, lowering the boom on some street-level bad guys.

The best bit of the trailer is watching Cage use his superpowers. Like Daredevil’s acrobatics or Jessica Jones’s unbridled strength, Cage has his own style of fighting — meant to show people what happens when they get in the way of an unstoppable force. The result: fight scenes that almost have a jaunty sense of humor about them, Cage plows through bad guys like they’re bowling pins.

Luke Cage debuts on Netflix on September 30.

Marvel also released a teaser trailer for Iron Fist, the story of a man named Danny Rand and the mystical powers he inherits:

It’s a little less forthright than the Cage trailer (Iron Fist is set to debut after Luke Cage). But we see a little bit of Rand (Finn Jones) and his origin story. As a young boy he loses his family and finds his way into the magical city of K’un-Lun (somewhere in the Himalayas).

The trailer includes flashes of snow, a couple of monks, and a young Rand drifting in and out of consciousness, a nod to his comic book origin. We also see a grown-up Rand wandering the streets of New York City, cycling in and out of a hospital, signaling that this adventure will show him struggling to make sense of where he’s been, what he’s been through, and what his next steps will be.

Iron Fist is set to debut in 2017, though no official date has been set.

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