Pennyworth said:
No offense intened to female heros/villians or those that love them out there...but I just feel that the movie would take on a more traditional comic book feel, rather than the gritty serious feel he's got going.
Just my opinion. Sorry if I offended anyone.
I personally took no offense, you explained what you meant. *nods*
You don't think Catwoman falls into the stereotype?
If someone created a female villain as twisted as the Joker or as complex as Two-Face, I'd be all for it. But comics are by and large written by men. And men tend to write women as sexy and alluring, not dangerous and threatening. I want a woman that isn't a sex object. Then I will a take her seriously as a villain.
Exactly. In comics the female villain may be threatening but she's still sexy and wearing revealing clothing and high heels, so it's "sexy danger" to the male opponent... Not DANGER, period. Hard to take a villain seriously when she's dressed like that. That's how I see it anyway.
I agree about twisted female villains, I'm itching to see one like that! Forget sexy and her gender for a second and just write her like the male characters. There you go. Same rules should apply here.
As an example, did anyone see the female
"Miniature Killer" (great link about her) on
CSI last (and this) season? She was the main villain and you could follow her story (and her killings) over several episodes (over the entire season, in fact). In the end the killer was revealed to be female and completely demented, scarred emotionally from childhood, with daddy issues, jealous of her sister who used to get all the attention, etc etc. She was a brown-haired girl in her 20's or early 30's (forgot the details) of no exceptional beauty but she was a
master at brilliant miniatures and clever ways of killing her victims. It took the CSI team a long time to figure her out and she even almost killed one of the main characters. It was even a catalyst for her leaving the job a bit later. The experience scarred her.
The female villian seemed like a soulless, broken doll, hungry for attention. She used miniature photos of vintage porcelain dolls as her "signature" whenever she left one of the miniature dollrooms behind on the crime scene. Fantastic. The character was so well conceived. Whispering and murmuring to herself, her hair covering most of her face... Completely wacko but intriguing and fascinating at the same time. She was strangely "beautiful" in some scenes. In that scary, evil way. Grissom had to talk to her like a child because she was anti-social and had burried herself into her miniature work most of her life.
Why can't there be more female villains like that? I hope it's not just because they're not sexy, so of no interest to some male readers...
