It is not a "comfort watch." It is a show that will make you angry, sad, and profoundly exhausted. But it is also a show about finding strength in broken places. It’s about a woman who decides that the worst thing that ever happened to her does not get to be the last thing that happens to her.

David Tennant delivers a career-best performance, swapping the sonic screwdriver for a creepy purple suit and an unsettling smirk. He isn't a villain because he has powers; he’s a villain because he has zero empathy. He genuinely doesn't understand why "forcing someone to love you" is wrong. He’s a toxic ex-boyfriend with the power of a god. That is infinitely more frightening than a CGI sky beam.

This isn’t a show about punching. It’s a show about .

Let’s be honest: Most Marvel villains want to destroy the world or rule a galaxy. Boring.

The show deals heavily with sexual assault, psychological abuse, mind control, and PTSD.

S1E10 "AKA 1,000 Cuts" – A bottle episode that is pure tension and horror.

Forget the capes, the quips, and the world-saving. Jessica Jones isn’t about saving the world. It’s about surviving your own living room.

When Marvel partnered with Netflix, we expected grit. Daredevil gave us bloody knuckles and hallway fights. But Jessica Jones ? It gave us a panic attack in a bottle. Released in 2015, Season 1 of Jessica Jones remains the most mature, terrifying, and psychologically profound thing the Marvel universe has ever produced.