Monday, March 25, 2019

Why Captain Marvel is Important

I said I'd do a post about Captain Marvel today, and I'm going to do it.

 


Warning right now: this is not a review, and it will have plot spoilers, so if you haven't seen it and don't want spoilers, come back later. If you want a review, my short review is though I have some notes, as a writer, I thought it was a very fun movie and worth a watch.

I also think it's a very important movie right now, and I think I need to explain what I mean by that.

I've been watching the controversy online over the movie and how Rotten Tomatoes had to change their rating/review allowances due to people trying to sink the movie before it even came out. According to this article from The Atlantic, this was due to the film having a female lead, although when I talked to a male friend, he also added that a lot of people were boycotting the movie or rating it low because they didn't like Brie Larson or comments she made about "40 year old white dudes" reviewing movies.

On the other hand, the women I speak to either loved this movie, enjoyed it to some degree (like I did) or think that at least, it was important and good that it exists. I also agree with this, and this is why:

1. Hate groups tried to drag the movie, but it did well anyway.



See above about Rotten Tomatoes; people were leaving bad reviews for Captain Marvel, trying to prevent it from doing well, just because we have a female lead. I understand not wanting to support an actor that you dislike or who has said or done things you disagree with; I can think of a few celebrities I do not acknowledge or watch. However, and this is a side point, the comment that Brie Larson's movies shouldn't be watched because she said something rude sounds pretty hollow if the speaker is still watching films made by/starring John Travolta, Charlie Sheen, Kevin Spacey, Dustin Hoffman, Jeffrey Tambor, (men who have been accused of sexual harasment and worse), etc., while making the case that we should "separate the art from the artist."

Again, I don't dispute that it's okay to refuse to watch a movie because you dislike an actor. I'm just condemning hypocrisy and asking that you don't give bad reviews without seeing a movie. Just be freaking honest, okay?

But despite all that, Captain Marvel did well. It made $153,433,423 its opening weekend, making it the #1 film that weekend. It now is the 10th highest earning film in the MCU. This is important: despite the smear campaign, people came to see it. This tells Marvel that there is an audience for films about female heroes (so where's our Black Widow movie?). After years of hearing that no one wants to see a movie about a female hero, we have our proof right here that yes, we really do.

And why is this important?

2. A stand-alone female superhero.

I just did a count of MCU superheroes. Of the 24 heroes I found on one list, 18 of them were men. Only 6 were women, and this counted Black Widow, Gamora, Mantis, Wasp, Scarlet Witch, and Captain Marvel. Of course, this wasn't complete (I mean, where's Valkyrie in this list? Or Hank Pym?) but it does show a disparity.


Of the 21 MCU films that have come out so far, 14 are stand-alone hero films starring a male hero. Six are ensemble casts with a blend of male and female characters (Avengers, Guardians, etc.) although I think the case could be made with the Guardians films that Peter Quill is the protagonist, and everyone else is a side character. I included Ant-Man and the Wasp in this category. And we have 1, just 1, with a stand-alone female hero.

Considering that 50% of the population are female, this math seems a bit skewed. And yet we still have some guys complaining that there are too many female leads and Hollywood hates white men.

And yes, this is important. For the first time, Marvel fans are able to watch a movie about a woman, dealing with the issues of being a woman. We don't have to watch a man and just figure out a way to relate, like we always do. We love the male superheroes, we do. But its empowering and wonderful to see the hero look like us, finally. It gives us so much to see a woman, on her own, save the world. For once, we're not a sidekick or love interest: we're the hero.

Boys, how would you feel if every time you turned around, the hero was a woman? If every film and story only showed you as eye candy or a prize for the leading lady to rescue and win?


How would it feel, then, if suddenly one movie was actually about you? That is why this movie is so important.

Yes, I know Wonder Woman came out, and yes, I loved that as well. It was important, too. Captain Marvel, though, shows the trend continue, and frankly, is coming from a better loved film franchise. Personally, I also appreciate that Captain Marvel's costume isn't so revealing; I wouldn't feel comfortable trying to cosplay as Wonder Woman.

Now, though, we have a hero that little girls can look up to. Finally, there's merchandise for the girls, with a female superhero.

 
I have two work-out shirts based on superhero costumes: the Flash and Spider-Man. But I have never been able to find a female hero's costume represented. I'm hopeful that soon I'll find a Captain Marvel compression shirt.

This film is important because it tells girls that we're valuable and heroic, too. It's a step to representing us fairly and equally. Maybe, someday, we won't be 1 out of 21. Maybe there will be actual representative equality one day.

Which brings me to my last point.

3. The film resonated quite a bit with women's perspectives.

Okay, why am I talking about this? Like I said earlier, this was a movie about a woman, and women tended to like it more than men did. I went to see it with a group of men, and they came out saying, "Meh." And while I did think the movie could have been improved, story-wise, I left with my sister, and we were talking about parts of the film that mattered to us but probably not to the men.

Because they have different lives, different perspectives. And, for most of the MCU movies, they've had heroes with lives and perspectives that were like theirs.

But Captain Marvel is about a woman, and her perspective is a woman's. I think this is true also with Wonder Woman but maybe a little more with Captain Marvel. Let me explain:

- There's a scene in the film where a man hits on Captain Marvel and tells her to smile. My sister and I were so mad about that, because it's happened to us. My fiance and I both went to England, separately, last summer. I was there with a female friend. He was with his family. My friend and I got hit on by two drunk Welsh men, and it was scary. We thought the men might follow us off the bus. They didn't, but I don't think my fiance or his family had to deal with this.

- Captain Marvel is told, over and over again, that she's too emotional. That she doesn't deserve her powers if she can't stifle her emotions. She is told her powers are a gift to her and they can be taken away, when the powers are actually a part of her and she's being manipulated. For an audience of women who get told that they're too emotional to hold office or be taken seriously, while young men shoot up schools for being rejected, for an audience who has heard men talk down to them and take credit for their contributions (and believe me, this happens), this sounded very familiar, and it was beautiful to see Carol Danvers rise above this.


- At the end, Captain Marvel comes face to face with her old mentor who demands that she fight him without her powers, that she prove that she's better than him without them. To which she responds by shooting a photon blast at him and saying, "I don't have to prove anything to you."

This last one really spoke to the geek girl in me. When a geek girl says she's a fan, she's sometimes put on trial by boys who want her to prove that she's a real fan, usually by giving trivia on a subject that only a die-hard fan would know. A girl has to be more of a geek than anyone just to prove that she likes something. A woman has to be more competent, more intelligent, more of anything just to be taken seriously.


Take this movie. Captain Marvel was one of Marvel's more mediocre stories. I think it could have been better. But I have heard people complaining that it wasn't good, that Marvel should have made a better female-led film if they want more superhero movies about women. At that, I wonder, why is no one saying it about the movies about men? No one complains that Ant-Man is mediocre, or Guardians of the Galaxy 2. No one is complaining about how Age of Ultron needs to be astounding or no one will want to do another Avengers movie.

Women can relate to being told to be perfect. To be smart and beautiful and powerful and a perfect mother and wife and a killer in the workplace just to be considered on par with the men around them. So when Carol says, "I don't have to prove anything to you," it felt really, really good. I don't have to prove anything; I'm heroic and valuable without having to reach your unattainable standards.

So, basically, Captain Marvel was an important film for at least half of the human population. Men, if you didn't like it because of the story and its value as a film, that's fine. I get it and I respect it. But be careful that you're not dismissing it because it's not about you or your lives. Be careful that you are, in fact, supporting equality. We ladies need our heroes, too.

Wednesday, March 20, 2019

Some Good News

Sorry for the late post. This was a result of my internet going out. But it's back now.

Also, it has recently come to my attention that people can't follow my blog unless I invite them? I'm trying to fix this problem, but I can't figure out what's happening and how to fix it if it can be fixed. I'll let you know as I move forward with this what happens.

Anyway, I have some good news. On the personal front this time.

I'm engaged.







This handsome guy is Spencer, and we're getting married in July. He proposed on February 11, which you may recognize as the 42nd day of the year, and to all you out there who are not geeks, 42 is a rather significant number in the science fiction world. This picture of us was taken right after the proposal.

I've waited to announce because I wanted to have the ring to show off. And, believe it or not, I'm not quick to share relationship things online. I wanted to make sure I knew what I wanted to say. Anyway, I'm pretty happy, to say the least, and I wanted to tell you all about what's going on in my life.

I'll keep it short today, since it is late and I have work to do, plans to make, etc., but I'll have a longer post for you next week on Captain Marvel, probably, so stay tuned.

Monday, March 11, 2019

Avengers of the Round Table

Confession time, people: I have not watched the TV show Merlin all the way through.


I stopped at the end of the fourth season. I never watched the fifth.

This realization and subsequent confession is drawn from a couple of things that happened over the weekend.

The first is that I reread the last book in Gerald Morris's The Squire's Tale series. This is an excellent middle grade series telling the stories of King Arthur and the Knights of the Round Table. I gleefully snap up every book in the series and devour them, laughing at the sly and clever humor and enjoying the well-rounded characters and their adventures. Until I get to the last two books. Those I take off the shelf gravely, considering if I truly want to read this book, this excellent, well-written book, one more time, and then I take it home and read slower, more gravely.


These last two books are the ones about Mordred and his campaign against Arthur. We all know how it ends. If you don't, treasure your innocence. And, probably, stop reading now because centuries-old spoilers ahead.

The show Merlin ends the same way. The legends of King Arthur have a set ending, and no matter how you reimagine the characters, no matter what adventures they have, they come to the end, and it hurts.

If I don't finish the story, it didn't happen. Camelot lives and thrives, and the golden age continues. I get to relive the Green Knight and the Holy Grail without fear that all this is heading for pain and death, and a bittersweet glory in legend.

I don't react to other stories like this. Comedies, tragedies...for some reason, I can end them just fine. There's something about Arthurian legend that hurts to end. Maybe it's the way it seems too short, too pointless in the connivings that bring down a kingdom. Maybe it's the noble heroes and how they all fail, all fall, one by one. How the kingdom breaks up, and how nothing strong and glorious can last forever except as legend, where it can inspire forever. There's something tragic and grand about Arthur that I feel I need to take seriously. It's more than just a story.

Confession #2: I have only watched Infinity War Part 1 once, even though I really enjoyed it and thought it was a well-made movie.

See the similarity here? Because I sure did.

If I don't watch it, I don't have to see it. I don't have to acknowledge an ending that hurts, that costs, that's the end of a golden age. I don't have to think about what could have been.

Just like with Camelot.

From there the comparisons grow. I hesitate to compare the MCU to Camelot, because seriously, Camelot is timeless (that's the point). But I think there's an analysis to be made about our modern superheroes, and especially the MCU with their particular plot arc, being our modern-day Knights of the Round Table.


- A collection of superhumans, who can fight anyone and not fail
- People who protect the weak and fight those who hurt the weak
- A fellowship of heroes, sometimes fighting each other but also relying on their friends
- Madcap, serious, or tragic stories, the heroes rising and falling in turn, but always coming home to tell their tale
- Stand-alone tales, and team-ups welcome
- Magic and supernatural forces helping or hurting our heroes


I could keep going. But what I think matters here is the way we read these heroes. Superhuman, but human still. Flawed but capable. They're everything we want to be, and we connect with them. Boy, do we connect with them. Want fan fiction? Let me introduce you to 90% (if not, really, all) of our current King Arthur legends (Chretien de Troyes, I'm looking at you). We've written and rewritten those stories way more than comic books have retconned anything new, or than fans have rewritten plots and characters in online fan fiction.

That's what we do with a certain kind of hero. We make them, remake them, make them ours. We have our favorites, our chosen few that we admire and defend over others. They become us: our society, who we admire as heroes. They reflect our values and our greatest pride in people.

Maybe that's why it hurts so much to watch them hurt, because they are our heroes. Us. Maybe that's why it hurts to watch what once shone so brightly tarnish and diminish, as all things do.

We don't want to see that last battle, not when all these heroes we came to love and admire might not make it, not this time. We don't want that glory to end: we want it to live forever, in legend and reality, when it can only live on in legend. This is why I'm thrilled, but very nervous, about seeing Infinity War: Endgame.

I'd like to think Marvel knew what it was doing, tapping into the Arthurian narrative for its Infinity War movie arc. It certainly fits well.



Or maybe all of this is just justification for me not wanting to see my boy Peter Parker cry and die again. Who knows. But if you have any comments, arguments, or book recommendations for me, I'd love to hear them!

And if you're interested in more summary and analysis of King Arthur and his Knights of the Round Table, the following videos are very good.




Tuesday, March 5, 2019

Mario Kart Monday

Sorry for the late post, folks. Sometimes the muse strikes at an odd time.

Like, in this case, during my Monday night Mario Kart games.


Every Monday night I get with a big group and we play Mario Kart. I've gone from pretty terrible to halfway decent, over the course of several years. It's a fun, social time, and all skill levels are welcome, although there are some people who are ridiculously good. We get players and watchers, and like I said, it's a good time.

Anyway, last night I was watching (I do play sometimes, but lately I've been tired and it's been a busier night than normal) and I realized that I really, really want to film Mario Kart Monday and present it for your enjoyment.

They won't let me.

But they will let me give you a taste of what a typical Monday night looks like. To protect identities, I will refer to the players and guests with code names, the characters they play as (or if I don't know, one of the Mario Kart characters).

With no further ado, Mario Kart Monday:

Luigi: *easily beating everyone*

King Boo (hitting a banana peel): No! Nonononononono!


Tanooki Mario: Wow, I guess he didn't find that appeeling at all!

*Luigi and Tanooki Mario laugh like Statler and Waldorf*

King Boo: I hate all you hosers.

Shy Guy: *laughs, quietly playing*

Blue Link: Breath of the Wild Link is better!

Green Link: Green Link has always and will always be better!

*Daisy, Peach, and Yoshi look at YouTube videos on their phones and laugh*

King Boo, pulling ahead: Woohoo! Hehehehehe! (giggles like Daffy Duck)

Green Link, also pulling ahead: Ahaha! What was that about green Link?

Blue Link: I hope all your dinners burn!


Rosalina: Looks like Green Link Hy-rules!

*Groans from King Boo and a couple others, Statler and Waldorf laughter from Luigi and Tanooki Mario*

King Boo, making a hard turn and going a little too far: Oh, mother!

Tanooki Mario: You keep calling for your mother, but she has never actually comes to help you. Welp, it looks like I'm back in sixth again.


*Several watchers break into a side conversation about anime*

King Boo: *own bomb explodes upon being hit with a banana peel* NO! Who did that?

Luigi: *evil laughter*

King Boo: This game hates me. Why do we even play it?

Luigi: Now, now, no need to explode over it.

 
*Statler and Waldorf laughter*

*Blue Link and Green Link escalate argument*

Blue Link: I hope all your socks are just the slightest bit damp all the time. And cold.

Green Link: Don't hate me because I'm beautiful.


--- Final Stretch ---

Luigi: *focuses*

King Boo: Go! Gogogogogogo! *bouncing in his seat with the controller all the way out*

*Luigi wins, followed closely behind by King Boo*

King Boo: Cheater. Never trust a green man.

Green Link: What was that?

King Boo: Nothing. Nothing at all.

Luigi: *laughing*

The final results:

Luigi - 1st
King Boo - 2nd
Shy Guy - 3rd or 4th
Tanooki Mario - 6th again
Green Link - ahead of Blue Link
Blue Link - salty

Okay, so this scenario is obviously much more fun to watch, and I'm not really capturing the lovely chaos around the room. Like, last night I was showing a couple of watchers a video of piranha plants singing "Bohemian Rhapsody" while the players bantered and played and Shy Guy played a different video game on the couch, and a few conversations flew around the room...well, you get it. I also conflated a couple of games since we can only play with four at a time.

I also left myself out, though my comments are often "Die in a fire," and "I think my controller isn't working." Or, "Did I just beat Luigi/King Boo/Tanooki Mario? How did that happen?"

NOTE: this is partially a work of fiction and partially (mostly) nonfiction, comments taken from last night or past Mondays. The people depicted are very real and I did my best to capture the recurring trends for each of them. Obviously, these vary from game to game or night to night. If you recognize yourself and don't like how I portrayed you, please know it was not meant to be meanspirited. I love all you crazy hilarious people.