roach
I am the night
- Joined
- Oct 26, 2002
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The problem is, the story you just described to me doesn't have to be about Steve Rogers. It could be about any person who gets involved with the War and has to do things they don't want to. Johnston's story couldn't have been told about any character other than Steve. It's about someone chasing their dream of being able to help their country fight the war, and the obstacles he must overcome in order to do so. If it's about a character other than Steve Rogers, we don't get the emotional connection of what he had to go through to be an acceptable soldier, which means that him being turned into a USO mascot is that much less painful for for the character.
yet the story of someone wanting to fight in WW2 and being held back to sell bonds is not a unique story either. It was part of the Flags of our father and the WW2 series the Pacific....and considering how the story was done in the Pacific most recently its gonna come off as copying
If you get rid of Steve's struggle to make it onto the battlefield in the first place, even after he gets the SSS, then suddenly Steve can be easily replaced with any character. The internal conflict has to be specific to Steve and where he came from, because if you set up a character with an origin as specific as his and then just make it be about universal themes of war and peace, then suddenly you've got just an average WW2 movie that happens to have a superhero in it.
But see you get all that pre SSS. No need to show it again after he gets the serum...Once you cut out the USO then the internal conflict comes from him trying to live up to being Captain America.