Boy Scout
Avenger
- Joined
- Nov 24, 2011
- Messages
- 15,277
- Reaction score
- 4,600
- Points
- 103
I think that is again perception....and that is fine, people are going to have different perceptions.
To me, it wasn't forced at all, I hear that stuff all the time in my daily life...it is normal to me. BUT, I do understand that it was quite a shock to some that have not heard it in such a way before....
And that's fine. Again, the ideas that were being expressed were ones that I agreed with. They just weren't expressed in the best way, even if that sort of talk is normal in certain circles.
Edit: and now that I read my other post up there, it kind of comes off as harsh....I didn't mean it that way.
I didn't think it was harsh at all, personally.
As far as feminist outlooks on comic book shows, I think there were three approaches
-I feel like with Agent Carter they set out to make a show about female empowerment without a really good concept behind it. It's like their entire thesis was feminism, then tried to shoehorn in a show around it
-With Supergirl I feel like they just set out to make a superhero show, then crammed feminist tones into it in the least sublte way possible
-With Jessica Jones I feel like they had a great story to tell with great characters, and it just happened to echo and highlight certain feminist issues as it went about it
I think Jessica Jones went about it the best way while Agent Carter went about it the worst way. To me Agent Carter is the most hollow, boring comic book show in recent memory. Supergirl got a lot better as it went along because the characters became humanized rather than just analogs for sophomoric interpretations of feminist rhetoric.
EDIT:
Forgot about iZombie, which again I think takes a much more natural and intelligent approach
Interesting. I need to finally watch JJ and get back into iZ.
Yes spot on.
I think when you do this you actually create the reverse effect aswell. You bring to much attention to it.
Oh, definitely.