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No Self-Respecting Adult should Buy Comics or Watch Superhero Movies
The Telegraph ^ | March 28, 2016 | Rhymer Rigby

Posted on 03/30/2016 5:05:51 PM PDT by MoochPooch

Another month, another superhero movie staggers to the silver screen, lurching under the weight of its own self-importance, groaning with the expectations of fans, and burdened with a nine-figure marketing budget. I am, of course, talking about Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice, to give it its full, clunkingly portentous title.

Can we all please grow up? Can we acknowledge that Marvel and DC have scraped right though the bottom of the barrel? Can we call time on superhero films? Films which are too dark for kids the comics were originally written for, yet too dumb for any thinking adult.

(Excerpt) Read more at telegraph.co.uk ...


TOPICS: Society; TV/Movies
KEYWORDS: comics; dc; hollywood; marvel; superheroes
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To: MoochPooch

Heroes, myths, sagas, etc. have always existed, from Classical Greece to Beowulf to the Lone Ranger.

Superheroes are merely the late 20th/early 21st century manifestation of same. They are the brain’s attempt to deal with dizzying contemporary scientific and technological advances. They were and are also a coping mechanism and/or a revenge fantasy in response to war, despotism, etc.

It may be a stretch to call Godzilla a superhero but he is obviously a mythical creature expressly created as a sort of anguished collective cry in response to the loss of WWII, the loss of empire and/or imperial infallibility and, of course, the very real terror of nuclear weapons on home soil. He has been called a stand-in for the US military.

For better or worse, Marvel took so-called teen alienation and growing pains (often little more than the product of postwar affluence and idleness) and made them the centerpiece of their heroes and books (Spider-Man, X-Men) as the 60s and 70s advanced and the kids reading them ate it up as opposed to a reclusive millionaire (Bruce Wayne) or a mild-mannered newspaper reporter (Clark Kent) they couldn’t identify with.

DC, on the other hand, were way behind on the introspection curve and still issuing the corny wham-boom-biff-kapow put-the-bank-robber-in-jail stuff.

Comics and derivative films are escapism just as westerns and musicals were. Some of the psychological torment hero-as-Hamlet stuff gets old as does the temptation to destroy cities, continents and planets via convincing high-res CGI in every film but the protagonist-antagonist narrative has never and will never really change.


21 posted on 03/30/2016 5:27:01 PM PDT by relictele (Principiis obsta & Finem respice - Resist The Beginnings & Consider The Ends.)
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To: unlearner

One of my grandsons (18) saw the new movie——said it was so-so.

.


22 posted on 03/30/2016 5:27:07 PM PDT by Mears
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To: MoochPooch

Give up Captain America, Iron Man, Thor? Not hardly.


23 posted on 03/30/2016 5:27:19 PM PDT by Duchess47 ("One day I will leave this world and dream myself to Reality" Crazy Horse)
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To: ObozoMustGo2012

True. Superman fought Nazis. There was a greater innocence then.

Unfortunately, given the extreme amorality nowadays, the comics have taken a dangerous left-wing turn, which would preclude any kind of patriotism.

Graphic novels, a sort of “rich cousin,” I find perverse. All the characters are so alienated.


24 posted on 03/30/2016 5:29:14 PM PDT by MoochPooch (I'm a compassionate cynic.)
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To: MoochPooch
I would disagree with article as it applies to movies. I like many of the comic book movies. Some I thought were good, some I hated. Some I watch with my son, some I will not let him see.

As for comic books.... yeah... I do not see the appeal for adults to buy them, but that is just me.

25 posted on 03/30/2016 5:30:13 PM PDT by GregoTX
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To: unlearner

Patrick Leahey has a cameo in Batman vs Superman where he gets blown up - that was pretty cool...


26 posted on 03/30/2016 5:32:02 PM PDT by steel_resolve (And an angel still rides in the whirlwind and directs this storm)
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To: MoochPooch

I call it “Daily Show Syndrome”. Everybody is just mired in stupid crap.


27 posted on 03/30/2016 5:32:17 PM PDT by DeathBeforeDishonor1
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To: MoochPooch

As a kid, I was not allowed by my parents to possess/read comic books. Couldn’t wait to visit my cousins who possessed a plethora of Archie comic books. My husband, I, and our three children enjoy watching Star Wars movies and The Walking Dead series. Have never read the comics. I have enjoyed reading BOOKS - an escapism of sorts. However, the stories are also adventures that someone else has shared...


28 posted on 03/30/2016 5:34:06 PM PDT by lyby ("Mathematics is the language with which God has written the universe." ~ Galileo Galilei)
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To: MoochPooch

For the most part, these movies do tend to take themselves too seriously, even when they go for the laughs. So I’d agree. Except.

The TV batman was kinda campy, and I liked it. Likewise the first Iron Man. Most of the Batmans are too convoluted to enjoy. Plus the stupid things are so dark (meaning filmed in the dark) and noisy.

I hated The Lone Ranger when I saw it first, expecting it to be something like what I grew up with. But the second time I saw it, I saw it did not intend to take itself seriously (Depp’s Tonto: “Did my name come up?) Really enjoyed it.


29 posted on 03/30/2016 5:34:17 PM PDT by StAntKnee (Add your own danged sarc tag)
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To: MoochPooch

No self respecting adult should deem themselves the judge of MY choice of entertainment if I like seeing movies that, thanks to technology, can bring comics to life in a high quality fashion. I’ve waited decades for them to not be horrible.


30 posted on 03/30/2016 5:34:36 PM PDT by jdsteel (Give me freedom, not more government.)
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To: MoochPooch
Can we all please grow up?

A desperate plea from one whose parents threw away his first edition copies of all the Marvel and DC comics that would now be worth a fortune.......LOL!

31 posted on 03/30/2016 5:35:03 PM PDT by Hot Tabasco
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To: MoochPooch
I was at the airport last year and saw a 30 year old looking bearded man wearing, what I eventually figured out, an expensive teenage mutant ninja turtle replica shell/backpack thing. He looked ridiculous.
32 posted on 03/30/2016 5:36:13 PM PDT by Vision (Obama is not a well man.)
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To: MoochPooch

“Can we all please grow up?”

Entirely out of the question.


33 posted on 03/30/2016 5:36:43 PM PDT by pax_et_bonum (Never Forget the Seals of Extortion 17 - and God Bless America)
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To: MoochPooch

This is the golden age of comic book movies. Enjoy it while it lasts.


34 posted on 03/30/2016 5:37:52 PM PDT by Mr. N. Wolfe
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To: MoochPooch
Oh, dear. I have a small collection of underground comics which were never meant for young, grubby fingers, and certain graphic novels which are not comics at all but high art - Maus, for example. Mainstream comix leave me utterly cold, although there are certain elevated social tropes in Archie, such as which of the characters are next to catch a fatal social disease through bathhouse sexual excess. Looking forward to their first AIDS issue.

The solution? I don't see the movies. And I don't criticize those who do. I have never once called them superannuated pre-pubescent morons with attention spans you'd need an atomic clock to measure, not me, not even once. Well, once. Approximately.

No, my tastes are a little more highbrow than that - Sylvia Plath poetry, for example. "Oh, the tea was cold today / and my little dog Fluffy has the runs / I think I'll slash my wrists." Damn, that sings. Modern art, too. If it can't be done through multicolored wino vomit it's really a little passe, don't you think? Well, I sure do. Class and taste, that's me. No comix.

I hate you all.

35 posted on 03/30/2016 5:38:45 PM PDT by Billthedrill
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To: MoochPooch
And World War II followed. People need to wake up.

You act like WWIII would be a bad thing.

36 posted on 03/30/2016 5:39:03 PM PDT by disndat
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To: dirtboy
Captain America: The Winter Soldier touched on security versus liberty issues very solidly.

Beat me to it. Winter Soldier Is one of my favorite movies of all time.

37 posted on 03/30/2016 5:40:25 PM PDT by America_Right (Time to play your Trump card, America. Use it or lose it.)
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To: MoochPooch

I for one will abstain from watching wretched politically correct message movies.

Superhero movies are feel good, old time Hollywood fun, leave the theater happy movies.

This writer can watch all the Michael Moore, Sean Penn, George Clooney, and Jane Fonda movies he wants. - I won’t go near them.


38 posted on 03/30/2016 5:42:57 PM PDT by Nachum (ISIS is alive... and Chris Stevens is dead)
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To: ozzymandus

Scrooge McDuck fan here, especially when he went up against evil tycoon Flintheart Glomgold.

Any duck worth eighteen susquetillion dollars has my respect.


39 posted on 03/30/2016 5:43:51 PM PDT by elcid1970 ("The Second Amendment is more important than Islam. Buy ammo.")
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To: raybbr

I enjoyed “Guardians of The Galaxy”...soundtrack, too...:)


40 posted on 03/30/2016 5:43:55 PM PDT by rlmorel ("Irrational violence against muslims" is a myth, but "Irrational violence against non-muslims" isn't)
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