Friday, December 31, 2021

Bleeding Fool

Bleeding Fool


Why Do Actors Think Anyone Cares About Their Opinions?

Posted: 30 Dec 2021 03:55 PM PST

 

Oh look, another actor (whose face is far less well known than the mask he wears on screen) has decided to share his thoughts with us. This seems to happen a lot these days, and one can’t help but wonder why these people think any serious person would listen.

 

After all, for most of human history, actors were regarded as having the same social status of prostitutes.  This makes perfect sense when one understands that acting is nothing more than the ability to lie convincingly and do it for extended periods of time.  The United States was no different, though things began to change during the silent movie era.  Films – silent ones in particular – created distance between the performer and the audience, and savvy marketers used this to create a sense of mystery around the new stars.

 

It also made it easier to portray them as moral and upstanding – just like the audience!  Of course, they weren’t, but in that far-off time, decadence chiefly consisted of furtive homosexuality and discrete bed-hopping.  Remember, this was an era when Hollywood itself embraced censorship in response to audience pressure.  While some people reflexively bristle at the idea, I would argue that films made under the Hays Code were objectively better in just about every way – including how they dealt with sexuality.

 

 

In any event, studio-system Hollywood spent considerable energy keeping a lid on their celebrities, who dutifully ran their every utterance by the guys in marketing before approving its release.  This had the benefit of both hiding the dirty laundry and also creating super-stars who had universal appeal.  You see, the movie moguls knew that people were paying to see a show, not get a lecture from people who make frequent use of the casting couch.

 

The World War II Curse

If I had to name the single most important event in our slide to government-by-celebrity, it would be World War II, specifically the willingness of so many film stars to drop their careers and join the war effort.  Yes, yes, everyone knows Ronald Reagan (and a lot of other stars) mostly made training movies, but against them one can set Clark Gable, who served as tail gunner on a Flying Fortress.  Even more impressive was Jimmy Stewart, or should I say Brig. Gen. James Stewart, US Air Force (ret).  Yep, he flew bomber missions over Germany, rising to the rank of colonel by the war’s end and staying in the reserves until his retirement in 1969.

 

 

Even the ones that didn’t put on a uniform made ostentatious displays of support for the troops, such as Bette Davis’ Hollywood USO club (The Hollywood Canteen) which naturally got a movie about it.

 

A key reason so many actors signed up was that many of them weren’t really show business types in the traditional sense, but normal people who were “discovered” and offered a job in film.  They came to Hollywood having lived in small towns, or after working various jobs and were grateful for the opportunity. 

 

The afterglow of that good will has long since dimmed, but wartime service made acting – film acting in particular – respectable.  The culmination of this change in social status was the election of Ronald Reagan as president.  Leftists still seethe of the guy, but young folks may be stunned to know that when he ran for re-election in 1984, he carried 49 states

 

 

 

The Selectively Permeable Celebrity Bubble

Social media provides something of a paradox.  One the hand hand, the rich and powerful have never been more insulated from the lives, concerns and needs of actual working people.  At the same time, it has never been easier for celebrities to interact with their fans – or vilify them.

 

Thus, we find ourselves in a place where actors have never been more able to prove what shallow, hollow-headed jackasses they are.  More than that, actors are now actually assuming that simply because they read lines on a script, they have some say in the future portrayal of that character. 

 

Time was, actors were quite open that what they wanted in a role was the opportunity to perform.  The character was someone else’s creation – the only task before them was to give it life and do so in a credible way.  Not coincidentally, actors were more skilled and the roles more interesting.  Those were the days when you could get big box office simply watching a barn-raising.

 

Acting has never been more trivial and shallow than it is now.  Compared to our special effects demo-reels, Vaudeville had the emotional complexity of Shakespeare.  You’d think that knowledge would in some way be humbling, but along with their insufferable arrogance, today’s actors are also invincibly ignorant, thinking that women got the vote in 1973 and that black actors never got Oscar nominations before the invention of the DVD.

 

 

This is why I continue to swim through the rich, rewarding waters of the films of my youth.  All the stuff I was too young to appreciate I’m really digging right now – and I’m buying it on physical media, too.

The post Why Do Actors Think Anyone Cares About Their Opinions? appeared first on Bleeding Fool.

Fans Petitioning Marvel to Re-Cast Chadwick Boseman’s Black Panther

Posted: 30 Dec 2021 01:15 PM PST

 

Kevin Feige of Marvel Studios said Black Panther 2 will “honor the legacy” of Chadwick Boseman and not recast T’Challa, but fans want to honor the late actor another way: by having Boseman’s beloved character live on in the MCU.

 

Boseman — who played the African king and superhero in 2016’s Captain America: Civil War, 2018’s Black Panther, and Avengers sequels Infinity War and Endgame — died last August at the age of 43 after a four-year battle with colon cancer. Feige and fellow Black Panther producer Nate Moore later confirmed Marvel Studios, now in production on sequel Wakanda Forever, would never recast Boseman’s role in the Marvel Cinematic Universe.

 

YouTube Video

 

“The Legacy of T’Challa as the Black Panther shouldn’t end with Chadwick, it should start with him. Continue what he started,” one fan tweeted as part of the viral “Recast T’Challa” and “Save T’Challa” campaign urging Marvel to reconsider writing Boseman’s character out of the MCU. Fans previously launched a change.org petition in support of recasting the role — not to replace Boseman, but “to continue the portrayal of T’Challa in the MCU.”

 

 

“If Marvel Studios removes T’Challa, it would be at the expense of the audiences (especially Black boys and men) who saw themselves in him. That also includes the millions of fans who were inspired by the character as well,” reads the petition nearing 50,000 signatures. “By not recasting, it could stifle the opportunity for one of the most popular, leading Black superheroes to add on to their legacy. The #1 way to kill a legend, is to stop telling their story.”

 

Last December, Feige announced Marvel would not recast Boseman’s T’Challa because the late actor’s portrayal “is iconic and transcends any iteration of the character in any other medium from Marvel’s past.” Instead, Feige said, “To honor the legacy that Chad helped us build, we want to continue to explore the world of Wakanda and all the rich and varied characters introduced in the first film.”

 

 

Those characters include princess Shuri (Letitia Wright), T’Challa’s tech-minded younger sister, mother Ramonda (Angela Bassett), Wakandan spy Nakia (Lupita Nyong’o), Dora Milaje general Okoye (Danai Gurira), and Jabari mountain tribe leader M’Baku (Winston Duke). A Black Panther spinoff series further exploring their home, the technologically advanced African kingdom of Wakanda, is in development at Disney+.

 

Boseman’s brother, Derrick Boseman, reportedly told TMZ that Chadwick would have wanted T’Challa to continue in the MCU. Paraphrasing Derrick’s comments, TMZ reported “Chadwick thought T’Challa was bigger than just himself as one guy.” 

 

via ComicBook.com

The post Fans Petitioning Marvel to Re-Cast Chadwick Boseman’s Black Panther appeared first on Bleeding Fool.

How Many Spider-Man Universes Will Morbius Connect To?

Posted: 30 Dec 2021 11:25 AM PST

 

Audiences will soon be introduced to actor Jared Leto in another comic book role. The Oscar winner previously inhabited the character of the DC Universe’s Joker and appeared in two films as the Clown Prince of Crime. Now, Sony has brought him to screen as their take on Morbius the Living Vampire as part of their Spider-Man Universe, which also comprises the two Venom films starring Tom Hardy.

 

According to The Direct, reception to Sony’s own universe of Spider-Man-affiliated characters has been mixed, to say the least, but the studio still appears determined to press on with adapting the Marvel characters for which they own the film rights to screen. This continuity was also separate from Marvel Studios’ MCU, but that post-credits scene of Venom: Let There Be Carnage was a game changer.

 

 

Others have reported which Spider-Man cinematic universes this new film will be tied to, as it appears to be crossing multiple universes, as revealed in the Morbius trailers.

 

During the Morbius trailer, Morbius walks past a mural of Spider-Man with the word "murderer" spray-painted over it. This graffiti is not only important because it confirms that Spider-Man exists in this continuity, but because of the version of Spider-Man depicted. The suit that he is wearing is not Tom Holland's MCU suit, but rather the Sam Raimi era suit. The image itself is actually taken directly from a promo image for Sony's 2018 Spider-Man video game that depicts him in Tobey Maguire's suit. Additionally, Morbius is seen reading a copy of J. Jonah Jameson's The Daily Bugle, the header of which appears to be taken directly from Sam Raimi's Spider-Man era and is distinct from any appearances The Daily Bugle has made in Andrew Garfield's The Amazing Spider-Man or Tom Holland's MCU appearances. These two points combined suggest that Morbius is connected to the Sam Raimi Spider-Man movies.

According to Cinemark, Morbius comes in with a 1-hour-48-minute runtime, which is only eleven minutes longer than Venom: Let There Be CarnageVenom 2 was a notably brief film, clocking in at 1 hour and 37 minutes. Now, it appears that Morbius is following suit as the third installment in Sony’s Spider-Man Universe.

In the Morbius trailer, when Morbius is reading The Daily Bugle, the headline news is about Morbius himself. However, two small stories at the top reference other characters. One reads "RHINO ON THE LOOSE: ZOO HOAX FOOLS US ALL," while the other says "BLACK CAT: FRIEND OR FOE." This confirms both Black Cat and Rhino exist in Morbius’ continuity and the fact that they are both also in The Amazing Spider-Man universe suggests that the two coincide. Two more elements continue this connection. The Oscorp logo can be seen on a building in the Morbius trailer and it appears to be the same as the logo that appears in the Andrew Garfield Spider-Man movies. Additionally, in The Amazing Spider-Man 2, a computer screen that lists various files including Dr. Connor's also includes Dr. Morbius, cementing the connection between the Morbius and The Amazing Spider-Man universes.  

[…] Michael Keaton [also] appears in the Morbius trailer seemingly reprising his Spider-Man: Homecoming role as Adrian Toomes, AKA The Vulture, still wearing his prison jumpsuit from the original movie's post-credits scene.

 

According to Cinemark, Morbius comes in with a 1-hour-48-minute runtime, which is only eleven minutes longer than Venom: Let There Be CarnageVenom 2 was a notably brief film, clocking in at 1 hour and 37 minutes. Now, it appears that Morbius is following suit as the third installment in Sony’s Spider-Man Universe. 

 

Morbius opens exclusively in movie theaters on January 28 and is rated PG-13 for intense sequences of violence, some frightening images, and brief strong language.

 

 

 

 

The post How Many Spider-Man Universes Will Morbius Connect To? appeared first on Bleeding Fool.

Avi Picks the Worst PC Selections in Those “Best Comics of 2021” Lists

Posted: 30 Dec 2021 06:15 AM PST

 

The dreadful propagandist Graeme McMillan wrote up his choices in Variety for what he thinks – or wants the readers to think – are the best comics of 2021. For example, two works of Tom King, Rorschach and Strange Adventures:

 

These two projects by former "Batman" and "Mister Miracle" writer Tom King tell different stories, but ones that feel very much in conversation with each other; in "Strange Adventures," the hero of an intergalactic war's attempts to sell his version of events slowly fall apart as his trauma becomes more obvious, while Rorschach — set in the world of "Watchmen" — is about an attempted murder seeming committed by someone who was, themselves, a product of traumatic events. Taken separately, they're impressive works featuring some stunning artwork; taken together, they're some of the most essential pieces of superhero storytelling released in years.

 

Not a single comment in this brief statement about how horribly misused the 2nd Mr. Terrific Michael Holt is in the book that’s allegedly about Adam Strange. And all this in a column citing 2 other graphic novels said to be focused on racism, Cyclopedia Exotica and Good Asian. Gee, what’s the guy’s point? Not to mention the artwork in Strange Adventures is nothing to write home about. McMillan also cites Far Sector, a Green Lantern-connected story:

 

Acclaimed sci-fi novelist Jemesin ("The City We Became") makes her comic book writing debut with this dizzying take on the Green Lantern mythos, in which a human attempts to bring something resembling law and order to a distant part of the universe — hence, "far sector" — populated by A.I.s that feast on human internet memes and aliens that have worked to rid themselves of all emotion. There's a lot more going on underneath the surface as should be expected in any murder mystery, but it's Jemesin's worldbuilding and Campbell's amazing artwork that stand out in this book.

 

 

What honestly disgusts me is the emphasis on murder mysteries here, along with the ultra-leftism it builds on. There’s been so much emphasis on such violence lately, that alone sours the milk of the mystery genre. Besides, the GL franchise was ruined long ago, in over 3 decades. Another example listed is an Eternals miniseries by Kieron Gillen:

 

Who really expected that, in the same year that the obscure 1970s comic became the next big Marvel Studios movie, a comic book revival of "Eternals" would mine new ground and redefine the entire concept, adding no small amount of tragedy to the core story to make it a truly Marvel idea. What price is too high to protect the world — and what happens when you're not aware of who's been forced to pay that price all along?

 

I think tragedy is another theme that’s been overused to the point of absurdity, and yet another of darkness that’s become insufferable in an age where grimness takes up too much of the market. And then, in an example of moral equivalence, McMillan also cites a graphic novel called Tunnels by Rutu Modan:

 

What initially sounds like the set-up for a "Raiders of the Lost Ark"-style romp — a race against time to complete an archeological dig to uncover a religious artifact of great significance — is, in fact, the background for what might be Modan's most political book yet, as both Israelis and Palestinians work in disputed territory in the Middle East to try and discover what might be a true conduit to God. Biting, bracing, and bold in both its satire and ambition, "Tunnels" is a book that works on multiple levels, and is successful on every single one.

It won’t shock me if no acknowledgement is made that the concept of an Arab/Islamic country called “palestine” is merely a political invention of the past several decades to undermine Israel, having originally been a name coined by the Romans, nor how Golda Meir tried to make clear in her time that there was no such thing as a palestinian Arab/Islamic people in the past. Why, if it’s that political, it’s just one more reason why it’d be better not to buy and read it. Too much politics of this sort is ruining comicdom.

The Nerdist site also listed what they tout as the best of the year, and wouldn’t you know it, this includes the Nubia book, which serves as one of now many DC propaganda pipelines:

 

Look, sometimes one hero just shines brighter than the rest. This year that star was Nubia. After Smith and McKinney reintroduced her, Nubia's now got her own solo title and it's a smash. Vita Ayala, Stephanie Williams, and Alitha Martinez have created an accessible, exciting, and vital reconsideration of Nubia and Themyscira that's the must read of 2021.

All because of the LGBT propaganda it builds on. As does the Poison Ivy special they’ve cited here:

 

Putting a gothic twist on one of our favorite anti-heroines, Kody Keplinger and Sara Kipin deliver something truly special with Poison Ivy: Thorns. This queer romance leans into the haunting horror of gothic literature, introducing a new beginning for Pamela. This is the sort of story you can lose yourself in, whether you've never read a comic or you're a lifelong fan.

 

I think that’s just what happened with the reviewers: they’ve gotten lost, in their own far-left politics. That this is horror-themed is no avail either. Even more frightening would have to be their choice of ABO Comix’s A Queer Prisoner’s Anthology:

 

We are huge fans of the work that A.B.O. Comix does here at Nerdist. The abolitionist publisher supports queer people in prison by publishing their comics and giving them the profits. The fourth volume of the ongoing series is another certified banger. Beautiful, moving, vital, and cool as all heck, this is 374 pages of real radical underground comics.

 

A movement that’s dedicated to abolishing prisons, and no matter what the offenses of the inmates, they allow them to profiteer?!? Ugh, this has got to be one of the most chilling examples of politicized activism. And it explains perfectly why this is an entertainment site best avoided. Who would’ve thought before political activism could go that far?

 

 

Polygon’s also got a list, telling more about Far Sector:

 

While everybody on 2020 Twitter was interrogating the relationship between superheroes and copaganda, Far Sector — a book conceived and started in 2019 and finally collected in 2021 — was confronting the idea head on. Across 12 issues, N.K. Jemisin (yes, that N.K. Jemisin) spun a murder mystery at the edge of space, grafted just so slightly to the edge of DC Comics continuity. Newly minted Green Lantern Sojourner "Jo" Mullein, who just happens to look a lot like Janelle Monae, began to unravel a generational cycle of state violence against an exploited and disadvantaged underclass.

 

Oh yes, all we need is more anti-police propaganda, attacking law enforcement for all the wrong reasons. And then, wouldn’t you know it, they made sure to cite Al Ewing’s Immortal Hulk:

 

In All of the Marvels, which would be one of the best comics of 2021 if it were not a prose book, author Douglas Wolk points out that at its start, monsters were as core to the Marvel Comics universe as crimefighting or romance. Since 2018, Al Ewing and numerous artists have been reminding us that they still are.

Beginning as a ghost story, concluding as a primal scream begging to know why a just god would allow suffering, the series seemed to reinvent itself every six issues or so. It resurrected repeatedly, as its namesake, in a froth of snapping bones and stretching skin, to snake its crushing hands onto the neck of a new monster, eventually settling, as mentioned, on God Himself.

Four years ago, it was the series that finally showed the world Ewing's potential. Completed and collected this year, Immortal Hulk is already a classic of the Marvel Comics canon — in the literary sense, not the continuity one. It is simply among the greatest Marvel stories ever told.

 

Let me get this straight. In addition to the far-left politics, they take an especially twisted atheist take, to the point of being anti-God? This is plain stupefying as it’s insulting to the intellect. They also strongly hint they have no problem with trashing continuity of the past, as it’s been for 2 decades already. And of course, they gush till the bitter end about how this is one of the most classic stories ever conceived, no doubt, far more so than anything Lee ever wrote in his time.

 

 

IGN’s list also boasts some laughable items, like this Daredevil story:

 

Daredevil has consistently ranked as one of Marvel’s best monthly comics since writer Chip Zdarsky and artist Marco Checchetto took over the relaunched series in 2019, and that certainly didn’t change in 2021. The series has only grown more fascinating thanks to the shocking dual twist of Matt Murdock turning himself into police custody and Elektra taking up the mantle in his place. No Marvel series has a stronger pedigree, but this run has no problem standing alongside the absolute greats.

 

I guess this is DD’s take on forced gender-swapping. They already did an early form of race-swapping a decade ago when Black Panther took over Matt’s role. And then, they cite a James Tynion book:

 

James Tynion IV may have written some of DC’s most iconic superheroes, but it’s the horror genre where his talents shine brightest. The Nice House on the Lake is yet another reminder of that fact. Reuniting Tynion with Detective Comics artist Alvaro Martinez Bueno, this series follows a group of people all linked by their friendship with the wealthy, eccentric Walter. When Walter offers them a lavish vacation at his lakeside manor, how could any of them refuse? Naturally, that’s where things go terribly, terribly wrong.

 

Mainly with the overemphasis on this genre. Honestly, this is such disgust. And look what else is cited, a Nightwing book written by guess who:

 

The past few years have been very rough on Dick Grayson, which makes DC’s revamped approach to Nightwing a very welcome one indeed. Leave it to the Injustice: Gods Among Us team of writer Tom Taylor and artist Bruno Redondo to immediately revitalize Nightwing and his corner of the DCU. More than a little reminiscent of Matt Fraction and David Aja’s legendary Hawkeye run, the series delivers all the fun superhero antics, soul-searching and vibrant visuals we could ask for in a Nightwing story.

 

With Taylor at the helm? Sorry, but after his political activism at the expense of Superman, I wouldn’t touch his books with a 50 foot pole. Besides, if memory serves, hasn’t Nightwing also been sidelined? Something that’s in discussion further below.

 

 

There’s also a list from Adventures in Poor Taste, and one of the examples they cite is Spider-Man issues written by at least one very unwelcome scribe:

 

Just in time for Spidey's 60th anniversary in 2022, The Amazing Spider-Man has been given an all-new direction from an all-new creative team (to include story/writing from Kelly Thompson and Saladin Ahmed and art by Jorge Fornes). If you, like me, have been burnt out by ASM over the past few years, this has been a refreshing change of pace. Starting in issue #75, the "Beyond" storyline sees Ben Reilly's return as a corporate-backed wall-crawler while Peter Parker is out of commission. Each issue is a self-contained story, too. Of course, there are hooks and cliffhangers to get you to the next issue, but I find myself satisfied after each 20-page installment. While "Beyond" may be a modern Spider-Man story, it feels like going back to reading some of the classics. If the Spider-Fan in your life is hyped up by the PlayStation games or Spider-Man: No Way Home, this is the perfect reintroduction to the series.

 

I wonder why we’re supposed to care about the writings of somebody who made statements hostile to Jews that are as hurtful to Stan Lee as they are to many more of his fellow brethren? And why is this particular story cited, rather than one reversing much of the worst story elements in Spidey from the past 20 years? Oh, and look who else is cited in a take on Dark Knights of Steel and Ages:

 

There's no denying that writer Tom Taylor is a brilliant talent, but even he had me doubting his one-two punch of Dark Knights of Steel (at DC) and Dark Ages (from Marvel). The former was a medieval retelling of the DCU, with Superman as a prince and Batman as his loyal knight (oh, and so much palace intrigue). The latter, meanwhile, imagined a Marvel universe where electricity had ceased to exist and how that inevitably changes everything for heroes and villains alike.

Were these narrative arcs a little hokey? Yes, they're stories predicated on some rather iffy foundations. But Taylor delivered in terms of both projects: Dark Knights played up the humanity with a greatness that transcended any Medieval Times vibes, and Dark Ages was able to use this new world to explore something fresh and exciting about Marvel's inner workings. It's one thing to say "brilliant writers mike brilliant art," but Taylor was able to do this on two fronts — not only because he's gifted, but both stories coming together, at different publishers, worked well together in the sense that they found enough "commonality" in their approach, narrative, and characterizations to support and empower the other. This is a genuine feat that could have been less than what it actually proved to be: a master class from a true comics genius.

 

 

Sometimes, I can’t help but feel these fawning comments about such activist scribes are deliberate from start to finish. They even fawn over one of Marvel’s overabundant events, Inferno:

 

This category was the easiest pick for me. Inferno excels on the #1 front that's essential but that so many other events nonetheless struggle to fulfill: it's legitimately exciting to read. I can't go into the specifics of all the "Oh s**t" moments without entering spoiler territory, but I can say that they use the best kinds of twists: additive reveals, perfectly rooted in the characters' motivations and pivotal plot concerns and yet still unforeseen until the moment of their occurrence. It's like sleight of hand, expertly formulated and planned while keeping you on the edge of your seat as an audience member.

Some of the drama is long awaited payoff for years worth of stories, while fresh seeds of potential are being simultaneously being sewn. This is not a story imposed upon the X-Men for marketing sake, but one which the entire Krakoa Era has been building up to and will build further toward the future from.

 

If they have no issues with activist writers, I see even less reason to believe this. Besides, aren’t crossovers long a problem that should’ve been retired a long time ago? Also cited is DC’s Future State:

 

It has been an eventful year in comics, especially with Marvel having big events like Darkhold, Heroes Reborn, and Death of Doctor Strange. But the event that topped them all has to be DC's own Future State. It's one of the bolder choices in comics in some time, as it dropped readers into a universe that was brand new but nonetheless familiar. Spinning out of the multiversal destruction of Dark Nights: Death Metal, the event allowed creators to remix heroes and defy our expectations in short but sweet two-to-three-issue story arcs. With a looser main arc, there was an easier overall buy in, making it better for readers to pick and choose what they wanted to read rather than be forced to read a main title. Taking place over eight weeks, the event changed the face of DC Comics for a length of time that also made it feel more bold and purposeful. Hell, it was an event so encompassing AIPT even ran an awards article celebrating its achievement!

 

A crossover/event that served as one of the ways for them to introduce almost all the characters who’re going to serve as replacements for their classic cast? No sale here either, and I’m not buying that claim it’s easier to get into this because it supposedly has a looser main arc. Mainly because the writing is dismal. How fascinating they think Clea taking Stephen Strange’s role in a way similar to Jane Foster taking Thor’s is a brilliant direction. It just shows how little value they ever put on Lee’s Master of Mystic Arts too. They also cited DC’s Young Adult book starring Nubia:

 

So many excellent OGNs were released this year, but I think one that deserves more attention is Nubia: Real One. Published under DC's young adult imprint, L. L. McKinney reimagines the amazon as a 17-year-old girl struggling with being both a Black girl and someone who has to deal with her superpowers in a modern-day setting. Robyn Smith's incredibly unique and expressive art tells Nubia's story with a refreshing joy but also tension as she grapples with heartachingly real racism and misogyny. It's a book so honest and rich I was surprised a major publisher greenlighted it, but I'm very glad they did.

 

 

Considering what kind of a political activist McKinney is and how she’s written such books, that’s why it’s better to avoid this too. Don’t be fooled by AIPT’s narrative. They even cite an Image book titled Karmen:

 

Despite its bleak subject matter, Karmen is a book packed with joy and celebration of life. Writer/artist Guillem March presents a sort of sunny, Mediterranean version of Death of the Endless in Karmen, who looks to illustrate the weight of living to someone who has thrown life away. The concept and sentiment might not feel terribly groundbreaking, but March's beautiful world, the character's wonderfully expressive faces and bodies, and the general European lack of American-Puritanical body-shame break ample ground. It's a book that celebrates the human form without sexualizing it, all in the effort to make life feel wonderful to live.

 

With the suggestive cover this book has, that’s a little hard to believe, but in any event, why is that such a big deal whether human form is sexualized or not? Those who make too much of a fuss over such topics make clear something’s wrong. The list also includes their idea of “best” writers:

 

James Tynion IV has become a frequently-cited name in these lists over the last several years, and when it's right, it's just right. Frankly, the dual powerhouse series The Nice House on the Lake and The Department of Truth would be enough to cement Tynion's status as the top writer of the year even before taking into account all his other strong work. I tend to save the best for last, so those two series have been at the bottom of my floppy piles month after month, waiting to blow me away and remind me of the sheer potential of comics as a medium. I'll also shout out his work on Wynd, one of the best all-ages series of the year.

 

 

A book that’s about LGBT ideology isn’t something suitable for children. Evidently, this site has no common sense in that regard. Also listed:

 

Kelly Thompson's Captain Marvel might just be my favorite take on the character thus far — and I've read a lot of Captain Marvel. She just seems to get Carol's character and has taken her in such fun directions. The future plot with Ove was so fun, and I appreciate how she isn't afraid to do unexpected things. She doesn't play it safe, and she really explores characters and gives them a full arc. She's great at cliffhangers and always leaves the reader wanting more. Similarly, her work on Jessica Jones and Sabrina the Teenage Witch are also hugely worth reading.

 

Oh, good grief, this too is such a groaner. I guess all the parts where Carol Danvers was made to look horrifyingly masculine are entirely acceptable, huh? Do those unexpected, unsafe things include turning Carol evil? They even have their own take on Nightwing:

 

Nightwing transformed into Ric Grayson after taking a bullet to the head in Tom King's Batman run, resulting in both memory and personality loss. It was an interesting experiment, but sadly it took Dick Grayson out of the equation. Tom Taylor and Bruno Redondo's Nightwing #78, then, was mind-blowing and understandable why it became an instant sellout: they brought the hero back and made him hopeful again. That injection of positivity helps to attract people to want to read comics; yes, it is great to see the hero struggle, but we don't want to wallow in despair. Here we get dynamic heroism both in the writing and in the beautifully designed panels by Redondo . The banter between characters is charming and authentic, the new villain Heartless is scary, and Grayson is worthwhile outside his slick Nightwing costume. The current direction of the book feels like it has a creative team (editors, colorists, and everyone involved) that genuinely loves Grayson, and it shows in their monthly offerings.

 

Again, with writers like these, this is all a waste of time. And then:

 

It's one of the smartest books on stands. It's also one of the most visually beautiful and among the most emotionally mature. The Department of Truth (from James Tynion IV, Martin Simmonds, and Elsa Charretier) manages quite a feat: it takes a wildly fantastical premise and explores it to deliver perhaps the best political commentary of any American comic this year. Creative, heartbreaking, and wholly original, it occupies a niche I didn't know I needed until I read it.

 

Keep going, please. This deliberate gushing really bores me. It’s more like somebody saying they can’t be comfy without politics.

 

 

One last book they list:

 

Though the run has ended now, writer Al Ewing took the Guardians of the Galaxy and did incredible things with these space misfits. He — alongside artist Juann Cabal — delved into their characters with such expertise that I found myself loving characters I was apathetic on beforehand. His plots always honor the history of the series while adding new and exciting things to keep the reader on their toes. Hopefully Ewing gets another shot at writing this team in the future.

 

I’m sure he did some very incredible things, like political activism. So, why should we believe he honors the history of GotG, if he didn’t honor the Hulk’s? Just another monumental embarrassment, and it’s a terrible shame GotG had to fall victim to this just like the other stuff.

 

Man, these “best lists” sure get worse every consecutive year they’re written up. Why do these farcical writers even persist in associating with the medium?

 

Originally published here.

The post Avi Picks the Worst PC Selections in Those “Best Comics of 2021” Lists appeared first on Bleeding Fool.

No comments:

Post a Comment

How Healthy Is This Weight Loss Health Food Writer? You Might Want To Listen To This Old Guy…

I recommend eating the way I do, but very few will do it. Too strict. Probably l...