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Saturday, February 09, 2019 

Brie Larson and Sana Amanat seem to be exploiting the Captain Marvel movie for more politicized activism

The bad Marvel editor herself interviewed the star of the Captain Marvel movie at In Style magazine (via ABC), and in the process, Larson sounds more like she only cares about it for the sake of activism than for entertainment. But first, here's how Amanat chose to begin the article:
It was a tad surreal waiting for Brie Larson at a dimly lit, rustic Italian restaurant in Beverly Hills. I’m a Marvel comic-book editor, as well as the co-creator of Kamala Khan, a Muslim-American hero whose idol happens to be Captain Marvel, the very role that Larson, 29, is playing in movie theaters around the world this month. Meeting the star of Marvel’s first female-led superhero film felt, well, a touch meta.
And this paragraph sounds a touch self-serving, to say nothing of shoving propaganda on the readers. For realists, it can be quite an eyebrow-raiser, making one wonder what they're really trying to sell.
Part of the reason Larson took on the role of Marvel’s ultimate feminist icon, Captain Marvel, is due to the character’s own sense of humanity. “She didn’t apologize for herself,” Larson explains. “I felt like that was a really valuable trait, because she is incredibly flawed and makes a lot of mistakes … and has to ask to atone for them, and that is super valuable. She’s not ever shrinking herself down.”

It also linked back to her mission of filmmaking with a purpose. “The movie was the biggest and best opportunity I could have ever asked for,” Larson says. “It was, like, my superpower. This could be my form of activism: doing a film that can play all over the world and be in more places than I can be physically.”
You know, I have to wonder, if she read any of the material with Carol Danvers (and it's not like there's enough up to the turn of the century), or just what came after, if at all? Like, how Carol was characterized during Civil War, taking the really bad side involving Tony Stark and demanding superpowered folk register with the government. Speaking of which, I may not want to see Captain America taking such a stance, but then, neither do I want Shell-Head in that position either. That's what's really irritating about the 2006 crossover in hindsight; the way it was set up served more as a way for the press to water it all down to a question of whom readers side with, rather than the story merit of the finished product. I don't think Danvers as a fictional character needs to apologize for something that's the fault of the writers who foisted it on her, but I do know they haven't apologized for such blatant misuse.

And that part about activism is a clue to the liberal politics Larson apparently adheres to. More on which anon.
To understand the significance of this role, here’s a swift lesson in Marvel history. Captain Marvel, whose civilian identity is Carol Danvers, had been known as Ms. Marvel since 1968. In 2012, Ms. Marvel’s bathing-suit-like attire was revamped into a red, blue, and gold uniform that alludes to Danvers’s Air Force background, and she was reintroduced to audiences as Captain Marvel. As Marvel’s vice president of creative development Stephen Wacker puts it, “She is Earth’s mightiest hero. Period. Not Earth’s mightiest female hero.”
First, Danvers may have debuted in 1968, but didn't become Ms. Marvel until nearly a decade later in 1977, so that's a pretty confused statement there. Second, it sounds like Wacker was trying to borrow the arguments from Comicsgate supporters as to how Danvers should be marketed. Regardless, doesn't this kind of risk elevating Carol to an absurd deity status minus significant flaws? Even Thor, as a deity with formidable physical strength, has some. The Avengers may be taglined as Earth's Mightiest Heroes, but individually or together, they're not invulnerable or flawless. This is another example of the risk of making the star sound...too powerful.

But maybe more telling is the following, misleading statement:
As the editor of the Captain Marvel comic, I witnessed firsthand how the audience transformed around Danvers’s re-imagining. A contingency of superfans coined the Carol Corps celebrated the change as a sign that comics were becoming more welcoming to female audiences. Two years later it was announced that Captain Marvel would be a stand-alone film. For fans and those of us working there, it was an emotional and historic moment. For Larson, it was a role she had unknowingly waited for her whole life.
Yep, as if they never were. So there never were any female fans of Wonder Woman, whose iconic outfit was kept intact in Gal Gadot's adaptation, and worn by young cosplayers too? Let's also note that in nearly a decade of Carol Danvers' transformation from Ms. Marvel to Captain Marvel, there were 4 different volumes that got cancelled a short time after one another, and sold so dully, it's hard to believe there's enough of a fanbase out there, and the transformation to "Carl Manvers", making her look more masculine, was so insulting, is it any wonder the fandom may have worn off? I'd noticed some of the press sources talking about the movie shied away from using illustrations from post 2012, because the image of Carol looking masculine was so horrific and honestly insulting to women everywhere, it's no wonder the sales weren't doing well.

Here's more about Larson's politics:
Yet Larson wants to keep a bit of Captain Marvel with her: “I want to hold on to the cockiness and the sense of ownership,” she says. “Because I do believe in my abilities, and I do value myself, and I do know that I’m strong, and I do know that I can do a lot of things that people don’t think I can do.”

And what she can do is make an impact. Much of her drive these days is using her celebrity as a platform to push for social change. She is heavily involved in the Time’s Up movement, was one of the first actors to adopt an inclusion rider in her contract (mandating diversity in casting and production staff), and is a vocal advocate for representation in the media. As she begins her global Captain Marvel press tour, she has pledged to spotlight other women behind the scenes, insisting on gender and racial parity in the press and wearing mostly female designers. “Inclusion has to be a choice; it’s not happening naturally,” Larson says bluntly. “You really have to fight for it.”
So, it's never happened naturally? Well I figure that's because most leftists never wanted it to. Or, why has it become such a big deal these days to remake famous old TV shows with stars of different racial background, recalling I just discovered Magnum PI was remade with a guy of Mexican background, and the Higgins character was changed to a woman? And here when I thought earlier the producers were planning to make it a sequel to the original 1980-88 series with Tom Selleck, starring his now grown-up daughter of Vietnamese descent, according to earlier reports I'd read. Wouldn't it be better to just make a separate TV show unrelated, with a lead of different background? Point: all this remake-mania's gotten way out of hand, as has identity politics like what Larson's absurdly become an activist for. Diversity in casting and production is one thing, but if it lacks merit of talent, that's another.

And this Captain Marvel movie continues to sound so much more like political activism, it only enforces the perception it's not done for serious entertainment.

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I wonder if any actual acting will be done here, or if it's another boring picture like the rest of the MCU.

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