X-Maniac
Storm In A Teacup
- Joined
- Nov 26, 2003
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- 15,210
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Of course it would have, but it was the lack of respect that made people majorly upset.
I don't see it that way at all. I've never heard a 'mainstream viewer' go on about Cyclops' death at all. Ever. And I talk to a lot of people about X-Men.
Again, you're generalizing. It's not a matter of a good guy or a bad guy dying, it's a matter of how their deaths were presented; for the 3 above they were presented with dignity, not shock value.
I don't entirely agree. I think fans' attachments to characters play a strong part in the fuss generated. That fuss is always on fan forums, we don't have people gathering in the street or in supermarkets. The fan factor is crucial in how these events go down online.
Actually, those villain deaths did kick up a lot of fuss.
So none of those villain deaths had the dignity you describe as so important?
It's not a matter of accurate every time, it's a matter that there's nothing signifying the black man dying first being a cliche.
The perception exists of the black man always dying first. Just google 'black man dies first.' There's pages and pages of people going on about it.
Because there was no connection/not a strong connection to the character for his death to matter.
It was a plot device, much like what happens in Avengers. It could be argued that killing those in whom the audience is heavily invested is also risky because of that investment.
And I can tell you the people I've talked to outside of forum say different. Not to say that you don't have people saying that to you, but to generalize it like you say here:
It is insulting.
Hey look, another insult; thinking that I have clouded vision in a geek bubble, that I can't possibly see it another way, that the general audience didn't care, etc. It's bull.
My experience of the general audience is that don't care as much, if at all. It's the fans like us who go on about for years.
I'm not saying the general audience expect the movies to be entirely faithful to the source material, but they expect a good movie, and they voiced their opinions clearly otherwise we wouldn't be getting reboots/sequels.
The general audience doesn't care about faithfulness because they are mostly unaware of how it all goes down in the comics.
I think faithfulness is equally tricky, but a respect for the fanbase and the source material is important.
Like I said, the general audience (and mainstream critics) weren't freaking out over 'Barakapool'. The fanboys were.
And Avengers indicates that keeping true to the comic can provide the blockbuster all studios want. So no, spare telling me or anyone else that the fans are the only ones who were upset with the movies. And quit generalizing, it only makes you look bad.
It's an interesting point to debate about fans v mainstream, respect to comics vs ignoring the comics.
I would argue that the mainstream audience didn't know or care whether Avengers follows the comics. In fact it doesn't exactly follow the way events played out in the comics (Black Widow and Hawkeye were not founder members of the Avengers in the books and Captain America didn't pop up until four issues in). But it respects the fans and respects (though not slavishly follows) the comics that the fans love. The essence of characters, personalities and scenarios is preserved.
The general audience loved it because of the humour, the fun, the blockbuster 'popcorn' action and spectacle, and charismatic actors like Downey Jr. It clearly aimed for as wide an appeal as possible, including fans. A smart move. And it benefited from the build-up over several solo films. (although, even so, someone in my office thought i was referring to the 60s spy series at first and had no knowledge of the superhero franchise!!!)
The non-geeky fans with whom I saw Avengers had no idea about how much it stuck to the comics. Some of them asked me afterwards and had no clue at all about the accuracy to the comics.
I think that respecting the essence of the characters and the comics in this type of film is a wise move.
The persistent complaints I heard about First Class were people online saying ' this isn't the original line-up, this isn't like the First Class comic' and warning everyone they knew not to see the film on the basis it had butchered the material.
I just think that studios have to be careful about straying too far from the books. It's a balancing act.