Wonder Man, Season 1, Episode 2: Self-Tape
Another short, simple episode. After the reveal that Trevor Slattery is befriending Simon Williams not because of some fateful coincidence but was planted there by an organization, we learn the nature of Trevor. He was arrested after returning to the United States by the FBI, due to his role of being the false Mandarin in Iron Man 3 (and his subsequent unwilling breakout via Wenwu). The villain here is Agent Cleary of Damage Control fame, last seen in Ms. Marvel. Not anywhere as memorable as Trevor, but at least a known quantity and one that was shown to us in a simple enough manner.
Agent Cleary, while a bit overzealous, tells Trevor that he could avoid jail by doing some governmental job... which is to get close to Simon Williams, a suspected dangerous metahuman, and spy on him. Hence, the recruitment for the Wonder Man movie.
The episode then moves to the present day, where things seem to be going up for Simon -- his angry agent Janelle isn't quite happy that Simon impersonated her to get the audition in the first episode, but he did get an opportunity of doing the titular 'self-tape', which is the conflict and plot for this episode. And for the most part, the episode involves Simon trying to get into the zone of playing this character.
His initial attempts of self-taping in his own apartment is foiled when he accidentally sees an old video of his ex Vivian helping him tape... leading to glowing eyes and the items in his apartment vibrating before causing a shockwave. So Simon does have powers at this point, and he seems to at least be somewhat aware about it. One of the audition crew in episode 1 did mention something about actors signing waivers that they don't have superpowers, so that is an interesting reason as to why Simon might be keeping things secret.
We cut away nicely to Agent Cleary and Trevor discussing their next plans, with Cleary giving Trevor his own mission -- put a ring-hacker device on Simon's laptop. Trevor continues on with his role, going through the motions with far more grace than Agent Cleary. Love that sequence where Trevor clearly understands the importance of maintaining a cover story and takes time to believably reply to Simon, while Cleary just wants everything to be cut-and-dry, economical, soulless. Even when doing this, Trevor is still acting, in a way.
Simon wants to do the self-taping outside of his apartment, though, waylaying Trevor's spy plans, and we see them go from one point to another. A local self-tape studio had disruptive staff that can't bounce off Simon at all; while Trevor's apartment has an obnoxious noisy neighbour; and Joe Pantoliano* (as himself) ends up being condescending towards Trevor and disrespects the art of acting. While Trevor just swallows the insults -- which, honestly, knowing what we do about Trevor, Joe might even be right -- Simon is having none of it and gets angry at Joe Pantoliano.
*While I know who Joe Pantoliano is, I only know him via his movies. I tend to not give a shit about Hollywood drama stuff, so if there's any subtleties or in-jokes about these, these would fly over my head. Unlike the as-themselves cameos in She-Hulk, though, Joe could be replaced by a-fictional-actor-played-by-Joe and the episode would have worked fine.
It's actually some nice stuff, particularly the brief speeches by Joe about how acting should be treated as a job, while Trevor is very much still seeing it as a calling. It's done particularly well with Trevor's advices to Simon, and even how he acts while interacting with Agent Cleary. And it is done excellently well by the body language and acting how much Trevor is really uncomfortable around Joe, and how he appreciates Simon standing up for him.
They eventually do an excellent take in Simon's apartment. Which is done well, of course; a nice scene that also shows the work that goes behind the preparation of the scene.
But as Simon goes off to order pizza, Trevor does his mission. Putting his ring to hack Simon's laptop, a visibly guilty Trevor wanders around... and sees a massive destroyed wall that is a clear sign of Simon Williams's superpowers. Realizing that Agent Cleary might be right and that Simon Williams might be a metahuman, Trevor ends up with a conflicted look on his face, before handwaving it for pizza as Simon returns to the room.
Again, the stand-alone-ness of this is a great fresh breath of air considering how every Marvel project seems to need so many tie-ins and cameos. And sure, Trevor and Agent Cleary both are characters with some history in the MCU, but the show gives us what is needed and doesn't burden us with any more that is necessary to understand the Simon and Trevor dynamic. There's a lot of nice spirit and showcase of the duality of work and passion; of the work needed even before getting onto the set of a TV/movie, and of course, just a little hint about Simon Williams's true superpowers... and amidst that, Trevor gets nicely conflicted between his loyalty to his mission (or rather, to his freedom) versus his newfound friend.
Marvel Easter Eggs Corner:
- Trevor's history in the MCU is explored in this episode, going through archival footage from Iron Man 3, and throughout his interview, Trevor brings up how he was broken out of prison by forces out of his control (Wenwu, the real 'real' Mandarin) in the Marvel One-Shots: Hail to the King and later made into a plot point in Shang-Chi and the Legend of the Ten Rings.
- Agent Cleary of Damage Control first appeared in Spider-Man: No Way Home, and later served as a secondary antagonist in Ms. Marvel.










