Have been watching the third season of Jessica Jones on Netflix. I really enjoyed it! While it is not as compelling as the first season with David Tennant as the villain (what could compete with that?) I thought it made a good conclusion to the series. The ending is appropriate to what is supposed to be a noir series but felt satisfying to me; because of where Jessica Jones was in the development pipeline at Netflix, the producers figured out with enough notice that the Marvel shows were on the way out that they were able to leave the series with an actual stopping point instead of a cliffhanger. Unfortunately, the villain this time around was kind of anemic compared to the first two seasons but there is a lot of interesting stuff going on among the other characters to make up for it, and Jeri Hogarth's plot, while mostly separate from the main plot, intersects with it enough to feel like it belongs on the same show (unlike Season 2, when I wondered why she was even there.) There were some slow spots (and I always wonder why on this particular show...if you need to take a break from the main plot, Jessica is a private eye who needs to work for a living...have her go work on a case for awhile!) but I didn't think it sagged in the middle as much as some of the other seasons/Marvel series.
Don't know whether Disney/Marvel will ever bring this world back on another platform but I hope so. I was thinking as I watched that now that anthology shows are in, that format might work well for this group of characters. Do three Daredevil episodes here, four Jessica Jones there, a couple of Iron Fists...sometimes a couple of characters intersect and every once in awhile they all get together. One of the things that always seemed weird, especially post-Defenders was the plotline,..."Oh, no, this terrible villain is threatening (my friends and family/my neighborhood/New York City). Whatever shall I do?" Um...get on the phone and call one of your superhero friends for an assist? (Obviously there were practical reasons not to, but the show either had to ignore that plothole or come up with some convoluted reasoning about it.)