Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D. (season 3)

Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D. (season 3)

Promotional poster
Starring
Country of origin United States
Release
Original network ABC
Original release September 29, 2015 (2015-09-29) – present (present)

The third season of the American television series Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D., which is based on the Marvel Comics organization S.H.I.E.L.D. (Strategic Homeland Intervention, Enforcement, and Logistics Division), revolves around the character of Phil Coulson and his team of S.H.I.E.L.D. agents and allies, who begin a secret mission to assemble a team of super-powered individuals, such as the Inhumans, to deal with new threats to the world, while others are also tracking down members of the group. It is set in the Marvel Cinematic Universe (MCU), sharing continuity with the films of the franchise. The first episode of the season premiered in Los Angeles on September 23, 2015, with the season, consisting of 22 episodes, airing on ABC beginning on September 29. It is produced by ABC Studios, Marvel Television, and Mutant Enemy Productions, with Jed Whedon, Maurissa Tancharoen, and Jeffrey Bell serving as showrunners.

A third season of Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D. was ordered in May 2015, with production beginning late that July. Alongside Clark Gregg, who reprises his role as Coulson from the film series, principal cast members Ming-Na Wen, Brett Dalton, Chloe Bennet, Iain De Caestecker, Elizabeth Henstridge, Nick Blood, and Adrianne Palicki return from previous seasons, as do Henry Simmons and Luke Mitchell, now promoted to series regulars from their status as recurring characters in season two. Other characters from previous MCU media, including the films, also appear. The season takes inspiration from the Secret Warriors comic series, combining it with the Inhuman storyline introduced in the previous season. Glenn Hetrick created prosthetics for the less-human looking Inhumans, and Legacy Effects provided additional practical effects and props.

The season premiere was watched by 4.90 million viewers, higher than any episode of the entire second half of season two.[1]

Episodes

No.
overall 
No. in
season 
Title  Directed by  Written by  Original air date  U.S. viewers
(millions) 
451"Laws of Nature"Vincent MisianoJed Whedon & Maurissa TancharoenSeptember 29, 2015 (2015-09-29)4.90[2]
After developing metal-melting abilities, Joey Gutierrez is saved from the hostile Advanced Threat Containment Unit by S.H.I.E.L.D. agents. When Agent Daisy Johnson struggles to explain to Gutierrez their Inhuman heritage, activated by exposure to the recently released compound Terrigen, she seeks the help of Lincoln Campbell, who taught her but now wants to live a normal life. S.H.I.E.L.D. Director Phil Coulson finds the leader of the ATCU, Rosalind Price, and the two realize that there is a third party interested in new Inhumans: the monstrous Inhuman Lash, who attacks Johnson and Campbell. The subsequent arrival of the ATCU causes both Lash and Campbell to flee. The President officially announces the ATCU as the replacement of the underground S.H.I.E.L.D., and they begin hunting Campbell. Agent Leo Fitz acquires an ancient Hebrew scroll describing the Kree Monolith, that consumed his partner Jemma Simmons, as "Death" (Hebrew: מות), which Fitz is unable to accept. Simmons, meanwhile, is on a desolate alien planet.
462"Purpose in the Machine"Kevin TancharoenDJ DoyleOctober 6, 2015 (2015-10-06)4.32[3]
Dr. Andrew Garner evaluates Gutierrez and deems him not yet ready to join the Secret Warriors, Johnson's potential team of Inhumans. Grant Ward, looking to rebuild Hydra, recruits Werner von Strucker, son of previous leader Baron Wolfgang von Strucker. Tasked with hunting down and killing Ward, Agent Lance Hunter tracks down Garner's ex-wife Agent Melinda May, who has been on leave from S.H.I.E.L.D. for six months. May is convinced not to run from her life despite difficulties in her relationships with Garner and Coulson, and eventually agrees to join Hunter in his mission. Fitz realizes that the Monolith is a portal, and S.H.I.E.L.D. enlists Asgardian Elliot Randolph. Randolph takes them to an old English castle where a now-deteriorated machine was constructed to open the Monolith using vibrations. Johnson is able to replicate this effect with her abilities and Fitz sends a flare through, before entering the portal himself. He finds Simmons and is able to bring her back just as Johnson's power destroys the Monolith.
473"A Wanted (Inhu)man"Garry A. BrownMonica Owusu-BreenOctober 13, 2015 (2015-10-13)3.74[4]
The ATCU closes in on Campbell, who is betrayed by an old friend when the ATCU asks for public help in capturing the "alien". He calls Johnson for help. Coulson meets with Price, asking her to let S.H.I.E.L.D. take Campbell instead, but realizes that they know of Johnson too, and that to keep her safe he must let the ATCU take Campbell. Unaware of this, Johnson finds Campbell, but is followed by the ATCU. Campbell attacks them and escapes, so they try to take Johnson instead. To save her, Coulson agrees to work with Price to capture the Inhumans together. Hunter and May meet with a contact Hunter has in Hydra, who takes them to the new initiation system: Hunter must fight to the death to prove himself worthy of Hydra. Hunter fights his contact, kills him, and is accepted into Hydra's ranks. Fitz attempts to help Simmons acclimatize to her old life, but she is struggling with both the different physics of Earth, and mental trauma. Later, Agent Bobbi Morse finds Simmons wanting to reopen the portal and return to the planet.
484"Devils You Know"Ron UnderwoodPaul ZbyszewskiOctober 20, 2015 (2015-10-20)3.85[5]
Johnson discovers an encoded email at the scene of a Lash attack and traces it to Dwight Frye, an Inhuman who is negatively affected by the presence of other Inhumans that Lash has been using to find targets. May visits S.H.I.E.L.D. to warn Coulson that Hunter's mission is becoming too personal and reckless, but refuses to talk to Garner, who had left her while they were trying to rekindle their relationship. The ATCU takes Frye, with Johnson and Agent Mack allowed to go with them to see their base and Inhuman facilities. However, Lash ambushes their van, kills Frye, and injures Mack, but spares Daisy, who witnesses him transforming into an ordinary human afterward. Hunter is brought in on a mission with Hydra, but is seen by Ward and attacks him. May arrives to help, but Ward reveals Strucker is prepared to kill Garner unless Hunter and May allow him to escape. May, unable to sacrifice Garner, is willing to back off, but Hunter attacks Ward, shooting him in the shoulder as he flees. In retaliation, Strucker seemingly kills Garner.
495"4,722 Hours"Jesse BochcoCraig TitleyOctober 27, 2015 (2015-10-27)3.81[6]
Simmons agrees to tell Fitz of her six months on the planet. After being dragged through the portal, she found herself on an apparently sun-less, deserted planet, where she came across a pool of water and an alien life form inhabiting it, allowing her to sustain herself until she met stranded astronaut Will Daniels. Daniels had traveled through the portal with a team of scientists in 2001, when the monolith was in the possession of NASA, but over time they had been driven mad by the planet and an evil entity upon it, each eventually dying. Simmons realized that the opening of the portal can be predicted by studying the stars and alignment of the planet's moons, and over months they were able to anticipate the next opening of the portal. When they missed it, Simmons lost hope, but found solace with Daniels and fell in love with him. When they saw Fitz's flare, Simmons was able to make it to him while Daniels distracted the entity. Now, Simmons wants to reopen the portal so they can return to save Daniels, which Fitz agrees to help with.
506"Among Us Hide..."Dwight LittleDrew Z. GreenbergNovember 3, 2015 (2015-11-03)3.84[7]
S.H.I.E.L.D. finds Garner alive after Strucker fled the scene. Hunter is replaced by Morse on the Ward mission; she and May begin tracking Strucker. Since Johnson and Mack never made it to the ATCU facility, Coulson visits it himself, while Johnson, Mack, and Hunter believe that Price's right-hand man, Luther Banks, may be Lash. They find Banks, knock him out, take some of his blood, and sneak a camera into the facility to which he was headed. As an analysis proves that Banks is not an Inhuman, they realize that they are at the ATCU facility and witness Coulson seeing a captured Inhuman arrive in suspended animation. Price tells Coulson that she wants to 'cure' the Inhumans because she could not help her husband, who died of cancer. May and Morse trace Strucker to the apartment of Gideon Malick, with whom Strucker sought sanctuary. Malick, instead, turned him over to Hydra in exchange for a future favor. As Morse fights off the Hydra members, Strucker tells May that Garner survived his attack because Garner is Lash.
517"Chaos Theory"David SolomonLauren LeFrancNovember 10, 2015 (2015-11-10)3.49[8]
May confronts Garner, who explains that, while researching for S.H.I.E.L.D., he opened a ledger of known Inhumans belonging to Johnson's late mother which was booby trapped to release Terrigen on its reader. Inhuman abilities within Garner were unlocked and, when Garner was subsequently drawn to an 'unworthy' Inhuman, transformed into Lash, and killed him, Garner broke things off with May. Coulson joins Price for a meeting with the President about the outbreak of enhanced people, but is interrupted en route by Campbell, who has deduced that Lash must have access to the ledger. S.H.I.E.L.D. and the ATCU track down Garner and May, the latter being held hostage, and Coulson tries to talk down Garner. Garner's Lash instincts want him to kill Campbell and, after the latter attacks Lash, only May is able to calm him down and return him to his human form. Campbell warns that the Lash form will soon be permanent, so May has the ATCU put Garner in stasis until their cure is complete. Coulson then spends the night with Price.
528"Many Heads, One Tale"Garry A. BrownJed Whedon & DJ DoyleNovember 17, 2015 (2015-11-17)3.60[9]
Malick knows that Ward wants access to one of Baron Strucker's vaults—said to contain the true power of Hydra, which he wishes to use to kill Coulson—so he sends men to kill Ward. Ward defeats them and tortures the vault's location from them. Hunter and Morse enter the ATCU, disguised as FBI agents investigating a security breach triggered by Garner's containment module. Morse discovers that the ATCU is keeping the Inhumans offsite, and is trying to make more instead of curing them. Coulson confronts Price, but she was unaware of this because her long-time business partner, Malick, had been running that side. Ward breaks into the vault and is confronted by an impressed Malick. As Fitz and Simmons realize that Daniels was sent through the portal by Hydra as a sacrifice to the entity, Malick explains to Ward that the entity is an ancient Inhuman who was banished through the portal, and that Hydra was founded to return it to Earth. Malick agrees to help Ward take down S.H.I.E.L.D. if Ward helps him bring back the entity.
539"Closure"Kate WoodsBrent FletcherDecember 1, 2015 (2015-12-01)3.84[10]
At dinner with Coulson, Price reveals plans to confront Malick, before being abruptly sniped by Ward and dying in Coulson's arms. Promoting Mack to interim director of S.H.I.E.L.D., Coulson sets out for revenge, and goes off-book with Hunter and Morse to kidnap Ward's younger brother, Thomas. Fitz and Simmons go with Banks to investigate the ATCU, but Banks is killed and the two are captured by Hydra. Simmons is tortured until Fitz agrees to help Hydra return the Inhuman to Earth, while Coulson uses a phone call between the Ward brothers, where Grant attempts to justify himself and his past actions to Thomas, to locate Hydra: they have set up base at the English castle. Mack clears Gutierrez and Campbell for field duty and mobilizes the rest of S.H.I.E.L.D. for a rescue mission. Hydra reopens the portal, and Malick convinces Ward to lead Hydra through it with Fitz and return with the Inhuman, promising that Coulson will die when they return. Determined to kill Ward, Coulson manages to enter the portal as well.
5410"Maveth"Vincent MisianoJeffrey BellDecember 8, 2015 (2015-12-08)3.85[11]
Fitz finds Daniels and convinces Ward that they will need him to find the exit point. Mack sends May and the Secret Warriors (Johnson, Campbell, and Gutierrez) to find Simmons while he, Morse, and Hunter infiltrate the castle and secure the portal room. Simmons escapes herself after Campbell shuts down Hydra's power, and discovers several Inhumans that Malick has gathered as an army, including Garner. Simmons agrees to unleash Lash on Hydra before making her way to the others. Fitz and Daniels lead Ward to the ruins of an ancient civilization where they manage to get away, while Coulson catches up to Ward and overpowers him, forcing him to follow them. At the exit, Daniels attacks Fitz: the Inhuman had killed Daniels as Simmons escaped, and now inhabits his body. Ward attacks Coulson when he is distracted by Fitz, but Coulson uses his prosthetic hand to kill Ward, while Fitz uses a flare to destroy Daniels' body. Fitz and Coulson return to Earth, but the Inhuman secretly does as well, now inhabiting Ward's body.
5511"Bouncing Back"[12]TBATBAMarch 8, 2016 (2016-03-08)[13]TBD

Cast and characters

Recurring

Guest

Production

Development

In March 2014, executive producer Jeffrey Bell stated at the Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D. PaleyFest panel that the producers and the writers are able to read the screenplays for upcoming Marvel Cinematic Universe films to know where the universe is heading, which allowed them to form a general plan for the show through the end of a third season.[31] The series was renewed for that third season on May 7, 2015.[32] By April 2015, Marvel had been developing a spinoff series to accompany Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D.,[33] starring Adrianne Palicki and Nick Blood, but ABC opted not to go ahead with it, with entertainment president Paul Lee saying, "We thought the right thing now is to leave [Palicki and Blood] on S.H.I.E.L.D., because S.H.I.E.L.D. is so strong on the moment".[34]

Writing

Having someone on the team now being enhanced, how do people feel about that? What’s that like? What’s it like to be different? And again, I think that’s another metaphor that people really resonate to, whether it’s the color of your skin or your religion, or whether you’re gay. The modern-day world is becoming more and more accepting of those things, but it still doesn’t mean that there aren’t challenges to them....you could tell someone it’s going to get better, but that doesn’t mean it’s going to get better for them. When you get to take that and put it in Marvel terms, it’s, "OK, everything I touch turns to ice....what’s going to happen to me? And do I want to live in this world?

—Head of Marvel Television Jeph Loeb on the real life parallels to the Inhumans that the series explores.[35]

Writing for the season was revealed to begin in early June 2015,[36] with the season beginning six months after the events that concluded the second season.[37] Bell stated that S.H.I.E.L.D. would be depicted as it was in the second season, underground with small "pockets" of S.H.I.E.L.D. around the world, as following the release of Captain America: The Winter Soldier "we found we like our team...as underdogs, as opposed to a giant, powerful, NSA organization that can do pretty much anything."[38]

Regarding the characters that could appear in the season, Bell said in May 2015 that "The idea of some familiar faces with some new faces is something to look forward to. I also think finding some new Marvel characters to pull into the universe would be cool. Fans seem to respond when there are characters from the Marvel comics and Marvel Cinematic Universe."[36] He later explained that the series has the opportunity to explore the Inhumans outside of the Royal Family (who are the major focus of the comics and film).[39]

When asked about possible hints made in the season two finale towards an adaptation of Secret Warriors, Bell replied "Well, Daisy Johnson certainly has a big part in Secret Warriors and having a team like that. If you'll notice, Coulson says right now she is the only person in what might be this new outfit. But you know, the idea of a team of powered people is something we've seen in the show, and I think there's a world down the road where we do our version."[40] Elaborating on this and the series dealing with the many powered people introduced in season two, Bell said, "People seem to respond to powered people on the show and while it’s not going to take over and become what the show’s about, as a texture and flavor of the stories, we really enjoy that. The fact that Inhumans are now out there is something I think we need to investigate".[38] He later clarified that characters would not have to be Inhuman to join the Secret Warriors, just powered, and that not just any powered character would be allowed to join, given that Johnson had to go through years of training on top of getting powers to join the team, and so similar rules would apply to other potential members.[41] Executive producers Maurissa Tancharoen and Jed Whedon also discussed the Secret Warriors, the former cautioning "a very slow build" to the team,[42] and the later explaining, "We feel a duty to the Cinematic Universe to not hyper-accelerate how many people have powers...We don't want it to be there's a thousand people with powers with a show that at its heart is about what it's like to not have powers in a world with powers."[43]

In September 2015, Tancharoen stated the overall theme for the season explored with each character was them "trying to get back in touch with their humanity in a world where Inhumans are popping up," with Whedon adding that the nature of couples–some having broken up in previous episodes, some getting back together, and potential for new ones–would be explored.[42] Later that month, Bell talked about some of the new character pairings in the season, saying "Putting Mack and Daisy together; putting Hunter and May together; putting Bobbi and Fitz together—suddenly you have all these different dynamics, all these different stories that you didn't have before. I think people will get a kick out of seeing those ... I think all the writers love writing scenes with characters in different combos, and I think the fans will really like watching those as well."[39] Tancharoen later highlighted the number of characters in the season compared to previous, stating that "There's more scale and scope, but at the same time, I think we're diving into each character's internal struggle a little bit more. You would be surprised that there's even room to do that, but somehow, there is."[44]

On the structure of the season and shifting the focus between the first and second halves of it, Bell stated it was the intent to follow the format from season two, by tying "a whole bunch of [interesting threads] but not all of them off by the midseason. And then we launch something exciting for the back half... the promise of more to come."[45] However, Whedon added that "though we do break the season up, we feel that the season as a whole is one arc" and so the series would explore the same themes in the second half, "themes of what it means to be human and Inhuman. What does it mean to all these people when they have to live with their actions? Are they capable of the things their enemies are capable of?... What is the true nature of a person? Is everybody capable of everything if put in a terrible position? Or is there true good and a true evil?"[46] Talking about the changing nature of Hydra's goals over the two halves of the season, from Ward's "narrow-minded" and "laser-focused" attempts to kill Coulson, to the mission of the Inhuman Hydra leader, Brett Dalton said, "Suddenly it's about bigger things, [Hydra has]...been around for centuries, trying to get this creature from another planet." Clark Gregg elaborated, "Coulson doesn't know any of this yet, but the lengths to which they went deep in the comic book universe and the origins of Hydra and revealing what it was on Maveth was pretty astonishing...Hydra's got a lot of nastiness left in 'em."[47] The second part of the season, which begins with episode 11, takes place three months after the events of episode 10.[48]

Casting

All principal cast members from the first and second seasons (Gregg as Phil Coulson, Ming-Na Wen as Melinda May, Dalton as Grant Ward, Chloe Bennet as Daisy Johnson [no longer going by her previous name of "Skye"],[15] Iain De Caestecker as Leo Fitz, Elizabeth Henstridge as Jemma Simmons, Blood as Lance Hunter, and Palicki as Bobbi Morse) return for the third season.[14] In May 2015, Bell said that the writers would look to incorporate Lincoln Campbell into the season, as he was a "nice addition" to the second season,[36] and that they were looking forward to exploring Mack's character in new ways during the third season following his role in the second season finale.[38] Luke Mitchell and Henry Simmons, who recurred as Lincoln and Mack, respectively, throughout the second season, were subsequently promoted to the principal cast for the third.[16][17] Also returning from earlier in the series are Daz Crawford as Kebo, Peter MacNicol as Elliot Randolph, Blair Underwood as Andrew Garner, and Alicia Vela-Bailey as Alisha.[23][25][29]

In July 2015, the Inhuman Lash, a villainous character from the comics, was confirmed to be appearing in the season,[15] while Andrew Howard and Constance Zimmer were cast as Luther Banks and Rosalind Price, respectively, both recurring.[19][20][21] In August 2015, Matthew Willig was revealed to be cast as Lash, while Juan Pablo Raba was announced as another new Inhuman, Joey Gutierrez.[20][22] The next month, Powers Boothe was announced in the recurring role of Gideon Malick,[26] the previously unnamed World Security Council member that he portrayed in The Avengers.[49] In November 2015, Lash was revealed to be the Inhuman form of Garner,[24] and Mark Dacascos was announced in the "heavily recurring" role of Mr. Giyera.[27] The next month, Tyler Ritter appeared as Grant Ward's younger brother Thomas, who had previously appeared as a young boy through flashbacks in "The Well".[30]

William Sadler reprises his role from Iron Man 3 in the season, portraying President Matthew Ellis.[28]

Design

Bennet cut her hair for the season, in order to further her character's transformation to Daisy Johnson, as she is portrayed in the comics. While not cutting her hair as short as her comic counterpart, Bennet stated, "The comic book version of Daisy Johnson has very short, Miley Cyrus-esque hair. We wanted to stay true to the comic book character fans love; I wanted to please them but also make sure there was still some movement and length and sexiness in the hair."[50] Glenn Hetrick again worked with the make-up and visual effects departments to design and create the more "unique"-looking Inhumans, such as Lash, after having worked on Raina during season two.[51] Willig's Lash make-up initially took 6 hours to apply, but the make-up team was able to reduce the time to 4.5 hours.[52] Before a new Inhuman character can be introduced, the cost of creating their powers must be weighed, with Bell saying, "Can we afford to produce this effect? Because every time last year Gordon [teleported] we went, 'Wow, that was [expensive].' We want to do things we can do well, and that are visually interesting, and ideally serve as a metaphor somehow."[39]

Bennet also received a new costume for the season, along with Quake's signature gauntlets, from series costume designer Ann Foley. On the costume, Foley said, "It's about strength. She feels very empowered in it.... That's what was important to me, that she felt empowered to me. I wanted to stay true to some of the designs I saw in the comics. In the style lines, I wanted to pay a little bit of a tribute to [Daisy's] tactical ability from last season, but we also incorporated the Quake symbol into her gauntlets and on the back of her suit." For the rest of the S.H.I.E.L.D. agents in the season, Foley made sure to reflect the fact that they've "graduated from the ragtag group of soldiers and scientists to the more precise militaristic outfit they always imagined they were."[53] Legacy Effects created the costume's gauntlets and utility belt, making them "out of flexible materials painted to look like metal" so as not to injure anyone during stunts.[54]

The season introduces a new title graphic for the series, replacing the one that appeared for the first two seasons,[28] as well as a new aircraft for the team called Zephyr One,[15] designed by series visual effects vendor FuseFX.[55]

Filming

Production on the season began in late July 2015,[56] in Culver City, California.[57] Location filming for the alien planet occurred in a work quarry in Simi Valley and in Northridge, Los Angeles near the Mojave Desert.[58]

Music

With the season reinventing the series again, composer Bear McCreary expanded the sound of the score "in a big way". In addition to introducing new themes for the characters of Lash and Rosalind Price, McCreary made some changes to the orchestra: "To represent Lash, I brought in larger percussion: merciless pounding taikos that I digitally compressed and distorted. This new, mangled percussion sound is horrific, and will become increasingly important as the season progresses." McCreary also brought in trombones "to get the scariest sound possible," which resulted in the recording space being reconfigured when they were recorded. For Price, her scenes with Coulson "give the series the feeling of a dense political thriller...I really leaned into that, musically. I introduce light acoustic percussion, mostly egg shakers, to give the pulsing synths a softer edge. And I used an acoustic piano to play the "Rosalind Theme" at key moments in her scenes...her music is meant to add intrigue and suspicion, and simultaneously allow us to have some fun with their witty banter."[59] For "Maveth", McCreary used a 90-piece orchestra rather than the series' typical 50 or 70 players.[60]

Marvel Cinematic Universe tie-ins

On the potential for crossover in the season with the rest of the MCU, Bell said in May 2015 that "I think [last] year worked really well — we got to be our own show and tell our own stories in the Marvel Cinematic Universe and do a nice hand off or a tie-in, but neither are incumbent upon the other to be a follow, and I think that’s a great model for us. Ant-Man comes out this summer and will have come and gone before we air again in September, so whether there’s anything vestigial from that or for [Captain America: Civil War] next season is to be determined. But we’re in contact with the movie people and them with us, and any time we can put little easter eggs in, it’s a lot of fun for die-hard fans." Bell also stated that there was a possibility of Hayley Atwell once again reprising her role as Peggy Carter in the season for an Agent Carter crossover.[38]

In June 2015, it was revealed that the season would include the Secret Warriors team by introducing Inhuman characters inspired by the comic of the same name.[61] On Daisy stepping up to be the leader of the Secret Warriors,[15] Bell said, "Some people will be excited and some people will be a little intimidated or threatened by that. Any time a person grows or steps out of the role that they’re perceived to be a part of, it’s a problem. What happens when the student reaches the level of master or teacher? There’s a lot of good fodder for us... with that."[36] On how this allows the series to tie-in with Civil War, Whedon stated that "we do have people across the globe who have powers on our show and there would be varying reactions to that. A lot of fear, some excitement, some people wanting to use it for good, some people wanting to use it for evil. So, a lot of those same themes [from the film] will be addressed on our show. How they tie in is a question mark for all involved, but we would definitely be dealing with some of those same themes."[62] With the episode "Many Heads, One Tale", the season ties its Hydra and Inhuman storylines together, while also retconning the history of Hydra in the MCU.[63]

Release

Broadcast

The season began airing in the United States on ABC on September 29, 2015, and is scheduled to run for 22 episodes.[36][38][64] In Australia, the season aired on Fox8, rather than Seven Network with previous seasons, with a two-week delay from the U.S. airings.[65] In the United Kingdom, the season moved to E4 after previously airing on Channel 4, and debuted on January 10, 2016.[66]

Marketing

To promote the inclusion of the Secret Warriors in the season, at San Diego Comic-Con International 2015, Marvel gave fans a chance to be a part of the team, with ambassadors roaming the convention to find the most dedicated fans and rewarding them with limited edition “Secret Warriors” pins. Fans with pins were then asked to post a photo of themselves wearing the pin to social media, for cast members of the series to select their favorites.[61] A premiere was held for the season on September 23, 2015, at Pacific Theatres at The Grove in Los Angeles, where the first episode was shown.[67] In early October 2015, Marvel released a comedy video starring Dalton and Marvel Entertainment Chief Creative Officer Joe Quesada discussing a potential rebranding for Hydra, due to their image problem, which was conceived and written by Dalton.[68][69] On October 9, 2015, "A Wanted (Inhu)man" was screened at New York Comic Con.[70]

Reception

Ratings

No. Title Air date Rating/share
(18–49)
Viewers
(millions)
DVR
(18–49)
DVR viewers
(millions)
Total
(18–49)
Total viewers
(millions)
1 "Laws of Nature" September 29, 2015 1.7/5 4.90[2] 1.2 2.96 2.9 7.86[71]
2 "Purpose in the Machine" October 6, 2015 1.6/5 4.32[3] 1.2 2.92 2.8 7.24[72]
3 "A Wanted (Inhu)man" October 13, 2015 1.4/4 3.74[4] 0.9 2.48 2.3 6.22[73]
4 "Devils You Know" October 20, 2015 1.5/4 3.85[5] 1.0 2.54 2.5 6.39[74]
5 "4,722 Hours" October 27, 2015 1.4/4 3.81[6] 1.1 2.59 2.5 6.40[75]
6 "Among Us Hide..." November 3, 2015 1.4/4 3.84[7] 1.1 2.64 2.5 6.48[76]
7 "Chaos Theory" November 10, 2015 1.3/4 3.49[8] 1.0 2.37 2.3 5.86[77]
8 "Many Heads, One Tale" November 17, 2015 1.3/4 3.60[9] 1.1 2.69 2.4 6.29[78]
9 "Closure" December 1, 2015 1.3/4 3.84[10] 1.1 2.62 2.4 6.46[79]
10 "Maveth" December 8, 2015 1.3/4 3.85[11] 0.9 2.16 2.2 6.01[80]
11 "Bouncing Back" March 8, 2016 TBD TBD TBD TBD TBD TBD

Critical response

The review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes reported a 100% approval rating with an average rating of 8.2/10 based on 12 reviews. The website's consensus reads, "Still evolving in its third season, Marvel's Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D. further hits its stride with a blend of thrills, humor, and heart."[81] Based on the first episode, Merrill Barr of Forbes felt that the show "has grown up a lot since its first year, and with the start of season three, it’s hard to imagine what complaints any fans could possibly still have. If you want overall continuity, you got it. If you want people with super powers going crazy, it’s there. If you want an ensemble cast that brings the broadcast television corner of the MCU to life, then look no further. The point is, with the new season of S.H.I.E.L.D., it’s everything one could ask from the show."[82] Writing for Vulture, Scott Meslow stated that the premiere was "riddled with [many] visual signifiers, highlighting the ways Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D. has gradually become sharper, sleeker, and more reliant on the bones of its comic-book source material."[83]

Accolades

The Atlantic named "4,722 Hours" one of the best television episodes of 2015.[84]

Year Award Category Recipient Result Ref.
2015 TVLine's Performer of the Week Performance in "Laws of Nature" Iain De Caestecker Won [85]
Performance in "4,722 Hours" Elizabeth Henstridge Won [86]
2016 Kids' Choice Awards Favorite Family TV Show Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D. Pending [87]
Favorite Female TV Star – Family Show Chloe Bennet Pending
Ming-Na Wen Pending

References

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General references

External links

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