Marvel’s Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D.‘s Executive Producer Jeff Bell on What to Expect In Season Three and Beyond
If buzz surrounding Marvel’s Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D. was huge for Seasons One and Two, consider it already off the charts for this fall’s third season premiere. With character developments aplenty, an entire new race of super-powered beings set to pop up all over the world, another twist in the Fitz-Simmons romance, and a new haircut for Skye… errr, Daisy that might just break the ‘net for good, we are desperate for any information that we can get about the upcoming season. Luckily, Executive Producer Jeff Bell was kind enough to duck out of the writer’s room and chat with Paste about what we should (and shouldn’t) expect as we get ready for S.H.I.E.L.D.’s biggest year yet.
Paste: Looking back at the early days of the show, the scope of Season One was obviously smaller. The team was smaller—you had that core group that gave off the feeling of camaraderie and family. Things have since gotten bigger, and the characters have developed different agendas. Are those quieter moments where everyone’s hanging out going to be harder to come by as characters grow and evolve in Season Three?
Jeff Bell: I hope they’re not fewer and farther between, but sort of new variations of that. One of the things we try and do on this show is to keep re-inventing it. One of the challenges when we began was that we were doing a Marvel show with one Marvel character that people knew about, which was Agent Coulson, and I think some die-hard fans reacted negatively to that. “Who are these people? They’re not who we wanted. Boo, you guys. We don’t like you.” I think over time, audiences have really grown to love these characters, and care about them, and a lot of that was getting them to spend time with those characters—with Coulson and also in different pairings. Coulson and May in the beginning, and Fitz and Simmons really seemed to be the same person at the beginning, and Ward was one guy, then after the Hydra reveal, became a different guy.
By the end of Season One, I think people were much more deeply invested in these characters, which then allowed us to start adjusting them based on what happened at the end of the first season. And so last season was really the birth of Skye into Daisy Johnson and Fitz and Simmons became two individual people. All those relationships changed, and we brought some new people in. As we go into Season Three, we’re looking to do more of that. So we do have a whole lot of people. But, we’re also looking to find ways to pair them up in different ways, and for them to grow as characters.
When Mack was brought on at the beginning of Season Two, he was the mechanic who really didn’t want to fight, and at the end of Season Two, he still didn’t really want to fight, but stepped up and saved Coulson’s arm, and grew into that new role. All of our characters, hopefully, are continuing to do that. But at the core of it, is the emotional relationships between them. We hope that, whether it’s a quiet moment or in action, we can deepen the audience’s love and concern, and hopes for these characters. That’s a long answer to what wasn’t a very long question (laughs).
Paste: That’s okay! We have an idea of what the “Secret Warriors” initiative, so to speak, is going to be. It’s going to be a group looking for, or making a connection with super-powered individuals. At this point, is the primary focus for that going to be on inhumans, or is this the kind of thing that could lead to connecting with some of the super-powered individuals we’ve seen in past seasons—maybe characters that we haven’t seen since Season One?
Bell: The first thing I would say is we teased Secret Warriors at Comic-con, and we do have a character now named Daisy Johnson, but that really is just one aspect of what we’re hoping the season to be. We left the season with the Terrigan Mist in the ecosystem. What does that mean? The idea that the inhumans could be anywhere at any time is a great story engine for us, and if you remember at the end of Season Two, when we talked about putting a group together, the idea was, “Well, we have to be careful.” So right now, Daisy is the only member of that.
The process of building that team will be something that I think will happen over the course of a longer time. That way, the audience gets to participate in putting that together, rather than starting Season Three with, “Oh, look! Here’s Yo-Yo Rodriguez. We have a team up and running” (laughs). That happens between seasons, so I think the process of doing that will be one story thread of Season Three, but at the end of the season we also had Simmons sucked into the portal, and May was leaving with her ex-husband, Andrew. Bobbi was saying to Hunter, “I can’t do this anymore,” and Coulson had his arm cut off, and Lincoln—is he going to be with the team, or not? We feel like there’s a lot of really good threads that we left to pick up on, which will allow for a lot of different stories, and Secret Warriors is just sort of part of that.