Met een beroerd gevoel kwam ik de bioscoopzaal uit deze week na he zien van X-Men: Dark Phoenix. Deze geek en X-Men-fan is zwaar teleurgesteld.
In deze vlog vertel ik waarom.
In deze vlog vertel ik waarom.
Because:
1: She started out as a bad guy, er… bad girl and redeemed herself and became a hero.
2. She has great powers.
3. She looks great and has a sexy accent.
4. She kicked Captain Marvel’s ass. And if one holier than thou character should get her ass kicked every once in a while, it’s Carol Danvers.
Having said that, I also love X-Men: Storm, Kitty Pryde and Wolverine. If you’d put a gun to my head and make me choose between these mutants, I’d say Wolverine is my all time favorite. But since I don’t think anyone finds this matter important enough to threaten me with a gun, you’ll have to accept the answer that I love all four of the mentioned characters.
And the team that was introduced in this Giant Size X-Men is my favorite team of the X-Men. Granted, this is the genesis of that team: Kitty Pryde and Rogue would join the ranks of the X-Men later on. However, I have always wanted to know how Len Wein and Dave Cockrum practically rebooted the X-Men franchise with this comic. And thanks to a True Believers reprint of this story, I was able to finally read it.
Dat vraagt natuurlijk om een mega unboxing video (die overigens niet gesponsord wordt door Cheap, mocht je dat wellicht denken. Al zou ik sponsoring natuurlijk niet erg vinden!)
Check ook het nieuwste vlog van WeeklyDose.
I will give you the answers I would have given back then, but I’m also very curious about what your answers would’ve been.
A moment later I realize this is supposed to be Jean Grey of the X-Men. Did the artists use Gina Gershon as a reference for Jean Grey? How great would it have been if she’d been in an X-Men movie? Speaking of X-Men movies: who would you cast as Jean Grey?
Most of the illustrations are from the ’94 Fleer Ultra X-Men Trading Cards. Enjoy! By the way, I’m suffering from a nasty cold, that’s why my voice is a bit screwed up in this vlog. Oh, well, what can you do…
In this video I explain what makes it so great.
Also, here’s the link to Comic Tropes Top 10 Comics of 2018.
Here’s the intro:
It may seem that Marvel’s focus on diversity and representation is a recent development, but that’s not entirely true. From its early days, the Marvel Universe has had a diverse cast of characters. Black Panther, Luke Cage, Falcon, Sunspot, Danielle Moonstar, Karma, Storm, Blade, Puma, Daredevil and Rocket Racoon (shouldn’t genetically engineered animals be represented as well?), have been around for quite some time. And let’s consider The Vulture, one of Spider-Man’s deadliest foes, as an example of an old guy who is still energetic and kick-ass. The same goes for Peter Parker’s aunt May and many other supporting characters in Marvel stories.
In recent years Marvel added characters like America Chavez, Ms. Marvel, a female Thor, a Korean-American Hulk, a black Spider-Man and a black Captain America and so on. Not that all these efforts at diversity have been successful; a lot of solo titles with non-white and/or feminist characters have been cancelled after a relatively short run.
Still, representation matters. A lot. When you check the letter pages of America for instance, the comic revolving around America Chavez, Marvel’s first Latin-American LGBTQ character to star in an ongoing series, readers express how happy they are to finally read about heroes that look like them, that have to deal with the same stuff as they do. As Nathan Hinojosa writes: ‘I have to thank y’all for representing Latinas, and giving me a character that my daughter could one day look up to and admire.’
However, ‘America’ has been cancelled after only 12 issues because of poor sales. According to some detractors, this has everything to do with poor writing and the comic being too preachy.
Personally I find minority superheroes that are a direct rip-off of existing characters a sign of a lack of creativity. The black superhero Sam Wilson, who played Captain America for a while, comes to mind. And the female version of Thor. Wilson was a great character in his own right as the Falcon. I find these solutions rather insulting to the reader. I’d rather see NEW superheroes with a diverse background and sexual orientation rather than those lazy, non-creative variants of existing heroes. People who feel they need to be represented more in fiction deserve better. And frankly the same can be said for all readers.
Come on, Marvel! Introduce new interesting gay, lesbian, transsexual, asexual and whatever characters instead of ripping off existing characters. Marvel doesn’t call itself ‘The house of ideas’ for nothing. Those words are better worth something! Thankfully, a lot of times those ideas are pretty good as you can see by this short list of great Marvel characters.
Read my top 5 on SubmarineChannel.com
Want: geen censuur van Amerikaanse puriteinse bedrijven.
Hier laten verschillende tekenaars Storm van de X-Men van haar beste kanten zien.
Storm is een van mijn favoriete Marvel-personages. Ik heb haar dan ook opgenomen in een top 5 beste diversiteit superhelden die ik voor Submarine Channel heb geschreven en die binnenkort gepubliceerd zal worden. Storm is een heel gelaagd personage met een getroebleerde achtergrond. Ze is verbonden met de natuur, maar ook met de menselijke wereld. Een godin volgens sommigen, een straatvechter volgens anderen. En dus eigenlijk belichaamt ze allebei deze uitersten. Ze is een leider en een sterke vrouw. Ze is zeer aantrekkelijk en heeft bijzondere superkrachten. Maar wanneer ze die kwijt raakt, wat ergens in de X-Men-comics gebeurt, blijft ze gewoon door vechten en de X-Men leiden.
Het is eigenlijk jammer dat we in de X-Men-films nog zo weinig van Storm hebben gezien. Een gemiste kans die hopelijk in de toekomst hersteld wordt.
Storm, Rogue en Kitty Pryde zijn mijn favoriete X-vrouwen.
Wie is jouw favoriete X-vrouw?