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Female Marvel superheroes who deserve their own ABC shows: She-Hulk, Valkyrie and more – CNET

Tessa Thompson played a Valkyrie warrior in the 2017 movie Thor: Ragnarok.

Marvel

With a new liv..

Tessa Thompson played a Valkyrie warrior in the 2017 movie Thor: Ragnarok.

Marvel

With a new live-action series focused on Scarlet Witch (Elizabeth Olsen) called WandaVision headed to the new Disney Plus streaming service. And now it looks like ABC might be eyeing a Marvel female superhero series for its own network.

"I have spoken to Marvel and we are in active talks about one project in particular," ABC Entertainment president Karey Burke told Deadline on Monday. Burke said the character would be "something brand new, mostly" to align with ABC's strategy of focusing on female superheroes.

While ABC is still deciding how many other Marvel characters to focus on, we have our own list of female superheroes we think deserve their own TV series.

She-Hulk in the Marvel comics.

Marvel

1. She-Hulk

When lawyer Jennifer Walters gets an emergency blood transfusion from her cousin Dr. Bruce Banner, she ends up getting a milder case of his Hulk condition. Unlike Hulk, Walters can keep her emotions in check when she transforms into She-Hulk.

The lawyer-by-day, vigilante-by-night angle worked well for the Marvel character Daredevil in the hit Netflix series, so why not She-Hulk?

Perhaps ABC can relaunch She-Hulk as a Law & Order-type drama, or maybe even an Ally McBeal comedy. In the comics, She-Hulk was also a member of the Avengers, the Fantastic Four, the Defenders and S.H.I.E.L.D., so the crossover potential is endless.

2. Black Widow

Natalia "Natasha" Romanova/Black Widow (played by Scarlett Johansson in the MCU) was a Russian spy and adversary to Iron Man. She ultimately defected to the US and joined S.H.I.E.L.D. Later, she became an important member of the Avengers. Black Widow is already getting her own prequel movie where we see how she transformed from spy to superhero, but what about an ABC series with Black Widow as a teenager? High school Natasha Romanova could be like Riverdale with a lot more fighting.

The fictional nation of Wakanda in "Black Panther" was guarded by the Dora Milaje, which took inspiration from a real group.

Marvel Films

3. The Dora Milaje

The warrior women of Wakanda from Black Panther are fierce and fabulous, so why not give them their own women-centric spin-off series? Black Panther director Ryan Coogler recently commented that he'd be interested in making a spin-off movie about them. Even the real-world 19th-century Dahomey Warriors — the all-female military regiment who inspired the Dora Milaje — are getting a TV series. It would be interesting to see how the Dora Milaje came to be, before Wakanda was revealed to the outside world.

4. X-23

Laura Kinney AKA X-23 was created to be the ideal killing machine thanks to Wolverine's stolen DNA. In the Marvel comics, Laura's mother Dr. Sarah Kinney was hired by a top-secret program to recreate the Weapon X experiment that originally turned Logan into Wolverine. Laura — named X-23 — was a clone created from these experiments and trained to kill. But she eventually escaped and eventually found Charles Xavier and joined the Avengers Academy. Imagine what she could do with her own TV series?

Zoe Saldana as Gamora in Guardians of the Galaxy.

Marvel

5. Gamora

Then there's the female space assassin Gamora (Zoe Saldana) in Marvel's Guardians of the Galaxy movies. Her character's complex history would make for an ideal ABC series, particularly if the show focused on why she's the last of her species (Zen-Whoberis) after everyone was exterminated by the Badoon. Overcoming her tragic past to later rise up as one of the deadliest assassins in the universe is inspiring to say the least.

6. Danielle Moonstar

It's about time fans were introduced to one of the first female Native American characters in a series all her own. Danielle Moonstar is a mutant raised as part of the Cheyenne Nation. Under the guidance of X-Men's Professor Xavier, she learned to hone her ability to create images of people's greatest fears. This series could either focus on her life with other teen mutants at the school, or the superhero she became later as an adult.

7. A-Force

The Avengers might have felt like the superhero all-stars in their heyday, but the all-female A-Force is even cooler. This lineup consists of Read More – Source
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