Are Marvel movies really helping conservatives?
There is no getting around the fact that the Marvel Universe concept has, like previous film revolutions, changed almost entirely the way Hollywood does business; at least the business of blockbusters in the foreseeable future.I think he's overestimating, though it certainly demonstrates the stark differences between selling the original comics and the movies based on them. Isn't this the same production outfit who kowtowed to China over the content of Iron Man 3? And the ones who trivialized terrorism in the same film? Some of the people they've hired as actors and directors are also boilerplate leftists, like Joss Whedon. Even David Goyer's given reason to worry. Sure, on the surface, they may respect what they think the audience wants, but underneath, these are people who disrespect conservatives behind their backs.
It is no longer just Marvel packing the blockbuster release calendar years in advance with its "universe," it is also Warner Brothers (Superman, Batman), Disney (Star Wars), Sony (Spider-Man), and Fox (X-Men, Fantastic Four).
This is also a big win for conservatives who had grown tired of Hollywood's attempt to mainstream nihilism, anti-Americanism, and sleaze.
And what about the comics they're based on? Why don't they count? Back in the pamphlet scene, Marvel's already done more than enough serious harm to the coherency of their properties, and that's not something to frown upon? If we're not worried about the source material's current state, what good are the movies?
I know this is a film-based article, but Nolte's still making the mistake of being overenthused and thinking this signals greatness in every way. Unfortunately, I think that's too naive, and it's not an example conservatives should be setting, to tell people they should be fully optimistic, when a wiser view would say we should be wary, even when politics don't play a major role per se.
Labels: Fantastic Four, Iron Man, marvel comics, politics, Spider-Man, X-Men
At least it gives many supposed 'conservatives' something to do besides light candles to Ayn Rand.
Posted by 606 | 10:06 AM
Honestly, Avi, I was stunned that Whedon allowed Cap to say the line, "There's only one God, ma'am, and He doesn't dress like that," in The Avengers.
Posted by Anonymous | 8:14 AM
@606, come back when you learn the difference between conservatives and Objectivists.
@Anonymous, Whedon has said people have told him they couldn't believe he'd write that (DVD commentary?). He said that he wrote it not because he'd say it but because he thought Cap would.
It's always been ironic that the guy responsible for the most libertarian show ever on TV (Firefly) would have been squarely on the side of the Alliance, though.
Posted by The Drizzt | 9:40 AM
I figured as much, Drizzt. When I heard Cap say that line, my eyes widened. I figured he felt 'forced' to write it for the character. I'm sure his disciples were upset with it.
Posted by Anonymous | 10:13 AM
I know the difference. Many 'conservatives' don't seem to.
Posted by 606 | 3:27 PM
606...clearly you do not.
Posted by Anonymous | 3:40 PM