Re: The Avengers
"May not have noticed"? Dude's a wookiee.
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"May not have noticed"? Dude's a wookiee.
Aw. Aw. Allison was gonna segue into a really interesting thing!
But I strongly endorse the prospect of an Allison-penned Joss thread, because I'm curious as all hell.
And, seriously, I did not notice the Hulk hair until now. Maybe because I hadn't seen the other Hulks since their release so I wasn't struck by the difference?
Last edited by Allison (2012-11-25 06:02:54)
I ogled women in comics as a kid. For me, there is no dispute over the sexualization and objectification of women in comics. Or I was especially preverse somehow. But compared to Batman the animated series or the X-Men cartoon, you get an idea what an un-sexualized heroine looks like. They were characters who happened to be women. Not much to ogle.
I don't have much to add here other than I largely agree with Dorkman's points about the systemic problems in comics, the west, and most of the world in general.
Don't forget - African-American men were able to vote before woman of any race were in the US. And just as racism still exists institutionally, sexism is equally as prevalent throughout society. The major problem is how almost invisible it can be because of social norms.
Last edited by oTom (2012-11-25 06:38:46)
I ogled women in comics as a kid. For me, there is no dispute over the sexualization and objectification of women in comics. Or I was especially preverse somehow. But compared to Batman the animated series or the X-Men cartoon, you get an idea what an un-sexualized heroine looks like. They were characters who happened to be women. Not much to ogle.
I don't have much to add here other than I largely agree with Dorkman's points about the systemic problems in comics, the west, and most of the world in general.
Don't forget - African-American men were able to vote before woman of any race were in the US. And just as racism still exists institutionally, sexism is equally as prevalent throughout society. The major problem is how almost invisible it can be because of social norms.
I liked it whole-heartedly.
I'd like to watch the whole lot, back to back one of these days, just to see how it all ties together.
Can I thoroughly derail this conversation from the awkward "lol sexism" aftermath?
Answer me this.
How could The Avengers have been better? Furthermore, what were the mistakes?
I always feel like an asshole mod when I break out the color formatting, but everyone has access to it.
Revolution! Revolt! Red letters!
Without re-watching, the only thing which springs to mind (and as Trey mentioned) are the opening 20-30 minutes. Didn't fit, they're from a different film.
Oh, how the shield around the thingy at the end is removed. Bugged the hell out of me.
Last edited by Dave (2012-11-25 08:02:34)
Can I thoroughly derail this conversation from the awkward "lol sexism" aftermath?
Answer me this.
How could The Avengers have been better? Furthermore, what were the mistakes?
Teague! Quit trolling threads and derailing them with your questions
I enjoyed the Avengers a lot (saw it twice in a week-that was weird) and felt it was close to being a perfect movie in the general sense that there are characters who have arcs, and change (whether or nor you agree with the changes is purely subjective).
One thing that made Avengers great is the family atmosphere of bring this group of characters together, with all their differences, manage to come together, united for a common purpose. I think the fact that they do so, with the one moment of Captain calling out orders and seeing them work together really brought in the team and family atmosphere in a organic way. Kind of like boot camp-nothing unites better than a common enemy.
I think it could have been better if it were a little tighter in the beginning, but that is a minor nitpick. I like Agent Hill, and getting to know Colson better because it makes his death more pointed. But, it does drag in the beginning but makes up for at the end.
And I never understood the gripe regarding Loki as the villain. I mean, it makes sense that people would be annoyed at having to see Thor to get it but I thought his motivation was well done and kept driving the movie.
I believe an opening which established the threat of the alien army would have made for a stronger film (something like them wiping out another alien civilisation or an advance party coming through with Loki and trashing SHIELD forces). As it stands, they drop out of the sky in the third act and we don't know anything about them (and truthfully, don't really even get to see them very clearly either). Further, the ease at which they're removed by the Avengers reduces them to an army of cannon fodder (and thus they aren't very interesting, which is probably why they've got the slightly ridiculous giant flying armoured worms). So with that in mind, I would have had them introduced earlier in the movie and have them defeat some of the Avengers who act separately or without proper teamwork.
But it could be that Joss deliberately did not choose to go with the above as it would be the predictable route to go.
My only disappointments were the Thor-Loki story and the precise way the heroes came together as a team.
The Thor-Loki story didn't actually follow on from Thor. I mean, they worked Coulson into the previous movies like there was this grand plan, and then they fucked up the villain for the climactic film, leaving both him and Thor in Asgard.
The team dynamic between the Avengers wasn't quite Whedonesque ENOUGH for me. Their whole storyline is about coming together as a team, but we didn't see that play out as clearly as I'd like. I would have liked 1) Stark coming to realize that Cap is a leader while he is a loner; 2) Thor realizing that Cap is his equal in heart if not brawn; 3) Banner realizing that Hulk just plain LIKES Cap; and 4) even Black Widow and Hawkeye getting some compassionate advice from Cap (re: getting the red out of their ledger) that they never got from Fury. That stuff fits with Cap finding his purpose in this strange new world of Jersey Shore and the designated hitter rule.
To make all that work, you'd need a somewhat clearer line from Loki to the final battle. Loki needs to be stopped by the helicarrier initially. Then he tricks Fury into bringing Banner on board to figure out some science, and he uses the scepter to get Banner to Hulk out and ruin the ship. The heroes all try to fight Hulk and Loki and his minions their own way and fail, and Loki escapes. Gradually, based on the stuff I mentioned above, the heroes decide that Cap is in charge. Then they go after Loki and the Chitauri as a team.
I believe an opening which established the threat of the alien army would have made for a stronger film (something like them wiping out another alien civilisation or an advance party coming through with Loki and trashing SHIELD forces). As it stands, they drop out of the sky in the third act and we don't know anything about them (and truthfully, don't really even get to see them very clearly either). Further, the ease at which they're removed by the Avengers reduces them to an army of cannon fodder (and thus they aren't very interesting, which is probably why they've got the slightly ridiculous giant flying armoured worms). So with that in mind, I would have had them introduced earlier in the movie and have them defeat some of the Avengers who act separately or without proper teamwork.
But it could be that Joss deliberately did not choose to go with the above as it would be the predictable route to go.
Actually, the movie follows the same pattern as the pilot of the Bruce Timm Justice League cartoon. The aliens ARE cannon fodder, and only there so there's something for the Avengers to do in the last half hour. The point was to get them together, so in the next movie they can do what you're asking. That's actually one of the problems of a series: if you come up with a big epic scene to end it, all the chapter endings leading up to it must be smaller.
Naturally, if you don't expect there to be more episodes you run into the Buffy problem, where the first season had the best bad guy
So, when do I get to hear more about the adventures of the super twins, Vinyl Backflip and Leather Somersault, and their mission to thwart the plans of their nefarious archnemisis, Red-faced Motherfucker and National Association for Being Upset About Shit.
Zarban,
you make great points, especially regarding the chemistry between the Avengers, which I think was missed because they spent too much time introducing new audiences to the characters. By the time they did that, there was time for the next action piece and the finale. It would have been nice to set up a comicesque feel that did a kind of cliffhanger of Loki escaping until next time, but I doubt that would have been satisfactory to a modern movie goer.
But, I agree that seeing the Chitauri being presented as more of a threat would have been better played out and given greater weight to the invasion of Earth. I can only hope that the sequel will have the Chitarui returning for vengeance, a far greater threat because of Thanos' intervention.
Naturally, if you don't expect there to be more episodes you run into the Buffy problem, where the first season had the best bad guy
Not only is that a pretty big typo, but it's bad math, too. The word (or number) you're looking for was not "first", but "third".
On topic and regarding Teague's question, I loved the movie. Coincidentally, The Avengers and Cabin in the Woods are currently battling it out for my top favorite film of 2012. My response to Trey and others (most people on the internet, it would seem) who complain about this "bad, 20-minute cold open" would be, "Oh, stop it! It's not 20 minutes, it's 12, which includes the opening logos and the narration by The Other. It starts things off with Nick Fury and SHIELD (the human, mortal characters. You know, "us"?) to bring us in, because we'll have PLENTY of time for the superheroes we paid to see. At least 2 hours worth, so to quote Mal Reynolds, "Let's not have any undue fussin'."
Having said that, I will admit, I was also not a fan of the choreography, framing and editing of the action that took place in that scene, initially. I was a little worried. However, in my second viewing of the film, I was able to follow things better and it wasn't so much an issue anymore from that point onward. I think it's being blown way out of proportion and after the movie's all said and done, I'm fine with the "cold open".
I view the alien swarm in the third act as well, a swarm. If a hail of killer bees descends upon you and threatens your life and the lives of everyone around you, do you really care about their backstory, individual identities and characterizations or are you just all, "Holy fuckin' shit! BEEES!!! Someone help us!"? Shouldn't that be enough?
Invid wrote:Naturally, if you don't expect there to be more episodes you run into the Buffy problem, where the first season had the best bad guy
Not only is that a pretty big typo, but it's bad math, too. The word (or number) you're looking for was not "first", but "third".
Yup. The Mayor was the best bad guy the series had. The Master did bugger all, he was trapped underground all season.
My big problem with Avengers is the attack on the Helicarrier which grounds the plot to a stand still. It just keeps going.
Oh and Angelus was obviously the best Buffy villain. By miles.
I had actually forgot about Angelus......yeah, he was good.......
I want to be clear, I am not denying an absence of sexism in the comic medium, specifically the Super Hero Genre, which is the genre that more often than not gets turned into big blockbuster movies. This usually comes from the artist side of things, specifically COVER artists, whose job it is to catch a buyers eye on the spinner rack, and the sole example you use. The poses and framing of those images are designed to be provocative and lure people in. Do Super Hero comics rely more on sexualized imagery to attract customers? Undoubtedly. But even to the adolescent me who gobbled up issues of Punisher War Journal and X-Men like they were crack covered crack what kept me coming back month after month was the story, and for most comic readers, its the same. Think of a comic cover like an ad campaign. It's a specific craft unto itself, (usually done NOT by the person who pencils, inks, or colors the 22 pages in between the covers) and I don't think it can be used as a way to judge the content.
Certainly some comics are going to be written by people with a sexist bent. But I would argue that even comics that are easily defined as feminist in nature, written and/or drawn by women do not stay away from iconography that is sexist or even sexualized on the cover. Here is a cover by a book written by beloved feminist writer Gail Simone, and an interior page. Note the disconnect.
Most of the story is like that. There's like 1 action beat to speak of. Again, I've never denied an element of sexism exists in the MARKETING of comics, as well as some comics themselves. But even the whole sup hero genre isn't a slave to it. Then there are comics outside the realm of superhero, and they tend to look more like this.
Every image above is from a comic that either has been, or is being turned into either a television series or feature film.
One Black Widow butt shot does not poison the well.
Last edited by Eddie (2012-11-27 00:25:45)
I'm adding Powers to the list because it's awesome
BTW this would be a perfect cover for the Vinyl Backflip/Red-faced Motherfucker story
Last edited by Lamer (2012-11-26 19:07:32)
I've never heard of that Fatale comic. I'm dying to read it, mostly because it reminds me of a graphic novel I've had banging around in my head for years. For YEARS! It's called Seraphim. The story is equal parts Hellboy, Dogma and Angel, with a dash of Miller's Crossing.
Fatale is essentially a Film Noir procedural meets Lovecraft. It's pretty epic.
Fatale is essentially a Film Noir procedural meets Lovecraft. It's pretty epic.
And I'm sold on it.
Last edited by Allison (2012-11-27 00:57:13)
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