Two Girls and a Bat: The Dark Knight Rises

This post contains spoilers for Christopher Nolan’s Batman trilogy.

Anika: I had low to no expectations going into this film. I love Batman Begins but I have a lot of issues with The Dark Knight and nothing about the previews enticed me. I don’t like Catwoman and I worried about a lot of superfluous characters getting in the way of the story I wanted to watch: The Revenge of Talia al Ghul. I spent most of the build up to the premiere trying to convince myself that I didn’t care, but two days before the movie opened I realized it wasn’t working. I really, really, really wanted to watch The Revenge of Talia al Ghul.

In that, I’m happy. Her plot could have been handled better — simply introducing Miranda Tate in the second film would have helped — but her characterization was spot on. Plus I actually loved Anne Hathaway’s Selina, none of the many characters came off superfluous, and watching this third installment made me appreciate the trilogy more. Especially what it has to say about Bruce Wayne, and about Batman. I loved the ending. But I’m still processing my thoughts and feelings about all the rest.

Caroline: I’m not sure what I was expecting going into The Dark Knight Rises. . .and I’m still not sure what I watched, so I guess that’s fitting.

I’ve been thinking a lot about the recent wave of superhero movies. I recently dug up the journal I was keeping when I first watched Batman Begins, and it reminded me how completely fresh and original that movie felt in 2005. It was a superhero story, but in a very back-to-basics way where it was less about gadgets and effects than the evolution of this single character. When Marvel made Iron Man in 2008, I think they were scrambling to keep up, and were trying to make a movie in the mold of Christopher Nolan’s Batman franchise.

But then Nolan went and put out The Dark Knight and changed the game. Now I’m not saying Nolan improved the game. Iron Man is one of my favorite movies, and God knows there’s a good argument that The Dark Knight has been overpraised. But Nolan jumped from a focused origin story to a sprawling movie about an entire society. The movie is driven by the Joker and Harvey Dent and Jim Gordon and the people of Gotham. Sometimes Batman hardly seemed to be in it at all. I have some very specific issues with TDK — the death of Rachel Dawes is embarrassing, and I still have no idea what that showdown over Gordon’s son is supposed to accomplish — but there’s still so much in the movie that I like. I love that it’s a story about the systems that keep a city going, and I’m fascinated by the exploration of what happens to those systems when you throw a chaotic force like the Joker into them.

So that brings us to The Dark Knight Rises. I was expecting Nolan to put all the pieces together, but I suppose I was expecting more continuation of The Dark Knight. Instead, it feels like a return to Batman Begins. That shouldn’t bother me, because I liked that movie, too, but — I don’t know. In Bane, we’ve got an antagonist who echoes the Joker’s methods, but R’as al Ghul’s goals. And I literally had to go back to the first movie to figure out what R’as’s goals were (and honestly I’m still not sure.) The end result, I think, is to retroactively diminish the Joker’s impact as an antagonist, without bringing anything new to the table.

I could be missing something, though. Anika, you’ve been plotting Talia’s revenge for the past seven years. What do you think she and Bane are after? Or am I asking the wrong question?

Anika: Balance. Balance is what they are all after. Ra’s and Talia say it explicitly; Talia even did so under the guise of Miranda, which I appreciated. I wasn’t looking to be surprised by a Talia reveal, I wanted her to be clearly Ra’s’s daughter throughout and she was. I did have a secret hope that she was also Rachel Dawes — Marion Cotillard resembles Maggie Gyllenhaal enough for this to be plausible to me — that Ra’s had planned the whole thing from their childhood, planting a cuckoo… But I love that Talia’s backstory ends up being a mirror of Bruce’s. She was born with nothing and gained her father, wealth, and power, and he was born with everything and loses it all. Balance again.

But it extends beyond the League of Shadows. Harvey’s character basically personified balance. The Joker and Bane encouraged the masses to take control so everyone is counted in the same way. Thomas Wayne wanted to raise the whole city up closer to his level. Selina went on about the imbalances between the rich and poor. Rachel shouted that “Justice is about harmony” and it sent Bruce running for seven years.

Bane wanted to follow Talia and Talia wanted to exact revenge and finish what her father started, and if we’re to believe Alfred, it’s what the Joker wanted, too. Talia wanted to watch Gotham burn. Her goal was to level everything so it may rise again, stronger, from the ashes, like she did.

The disconnect I have is with the street brawl between Gotham’s finest and Bane’s army of miscreants. In The Dark Knight the Joker sets up the average people of Gotham with prisoners and both sides choose not to kill anyone. Not to fight. But in The Dark Knight Rises we get the GCPD plus Batman and Catwoman beating down a mob made up of a guerrilla version of the League of Shadows, a bunch of prisoners that were mistreated by the legal system under the Harvey Dent Law (whatever that is), and quite possibly some random Gothamites who decided to answer Bane’s call sometime in the five months they were under siege. And Gordon, the best of Gotham’s police force, admits to Blake that even he has been corrupted. So it’s a brawl between a spectrum of grey characters and it makes me extremely uncomfortable. Which could very well be the point and lends credence to the al Ghul goals but I don’t like it.

I think I’m just too much of an idealist for the Nolanverse.

Caroline: You know, I have to agree with you about that, which I wouldn’t have said after The Dark Knight. I’m not that much of an idealist for one thing. But even if I had been, I didn’t think that The Dark Knight was a fundamentally cynical movie. It was quite a big point in that film that the Joker is sometimes right about people, but sometimes — important times — he’s also wrong.

Here, like you say, the cops and the convicts become rival gangs, everybody trying to work within the system is tarnished, and the tarnishing is treated as justification for Robin Blake going outside of it at the ending. That frustrates me because I like the idea of Gordon as a good cop making the best choices he can in a corrupt system. Here he ends up being basically shamed and apologizing for what seems like an understandable lie. What difference does it make to Gotham how Harvey Dent died? If the Dent Act is supposed to represent some corruption of due process that allowed Gotham to clean up its streets at the price of Gordon’s integrity — well, it seems like the problem is the law, not the lie. There was a lot of that kind of thing, where the movie’s moral compass seemed to be just a bit off. Though on the other hand, I appreciated Alfred’s apology for hiding Rachel’s letter almost enough to forgive him for doing it.

Now, speaking of Rachel — I love the idea of revealing a connection between her and Talia, but that wasn’t to be. I’ve come to appreciate Rachel’s role in the first film, particularly, more and more on repeated viewings. I wonder if John Blake is here in part to fill the role that Rachel did in the first film. He’s an original-to-the-movieverse character who serves to ground Bruce and remind him where he came from. I admit I was distracted by his early scenes, wondering why his function couldn’t have been filled by Renee Montoya, the best-known uniform officer turned detective in the Batman universe. But even putting that aside, I couldn’t quite figure out where to slot him.

What did you think of Blake’s character? Good idea, bad idea? Does he do anything to fill the idealist quota for the film? (Don’t worry. Once we get done with him we can talk about Catwoman.)

Anika: I liked Blake. As soon as Bruce said “anyone can be Batman” I knew Blake was going to end up in the suit but I liked to watch his journey to it. And I think you’re right. He does fill that same purpose as Rachel, and yes he is idealistic. Seeing that it bugs me that Rachel is killed off by harsh reality and Blake is set up to fight it. But Blake’s character is driven by (and possibly consists of) his relationship to Bruce, and to Gordon, so he isn’t necessarily better served than her.

I was honestly a bit dumbstruck when Joseph Gordon-Levitt launched into a monologue to describe how he knew Bruce Wayne was Batman (how anyone didn’t know, I’m not sure since Bruce and Bats both disappeared and reappeared from public sight at the exact same time?). But by the end of that exchange I was interested in the character. I wanted him to be Robin. So I vote good idea because John Blake has the potential to be “the hero that Gotham needs”. He seems made of stronger stuff than Harvey Dent and he’s not as removed as Bruce Wayne is. Bruce is such an introvert.

Caroline: You make a good point that it’s hard to dislike Blake. He doesn’t have any notable character flaws, but he’s not obnoxious about it or unrealistically good at everything in way that makes people cry, “Gary Stu.” He’s set up to take over as Batman at the end, and he’s much more well adjusted about it than Bruce. Which, well. . .

Is that what anybody wants to see? A well-adjusted Batman? I realize there’s a point at which there’s a risk of fetishizing a character’s flaws, and I never get the point of bashing characters as boring just because they’re well-adjusted. On the other hand, there’s no point in denying that darkness is part of what draws people to Batman as a character. Blake hardly even exists as a person, except as a reflection of Bruce and Gordon. It’s hard to imagine Blake as a hero in his own movie, since he doesn’t have any apparent internal conflict — and hardly any external conflict really. He calls Bruce out on his identity and Gordon on his lie and the response is basically, “Gee, buddy, you’re right. What can we say?” I don’t see how you get even a 90 minute movie out of the guy, barring a personality transplant.

On the other hand, I’d watch an Anne Hathaway-as-Selina Kyle movie any time. Right now, can I get one right now? This doesn’t come as any shock. Anne Hathaway is in my top tier of actresses, and I’ve loved Catwoman since the Michelle Pfeiffer movie, and Selina, along with the cops of Gotham Central, was my gateway drug into the DCU. Still, it’s gratifying to see her getting such universal kudos (even from a certified nonfan of the character like you, Anika).

I might go so far to say that Hathaway’s Selina already had her own movie, because every scene she was in seemed to have dropped in from a different, livelier universe. Batman Begins had its share of laugh lines — Bale even gets most of them — but The Dark Knight is almost universally dour. TDKR threatens to repeat that, except when Selina’s on the screen. She still has her share of, “There’s a storm coming,” and “You should be as terrified of Bane as I am!” to say, but for the most part, she looks like the only person on screen allowing herself to have a good time. (I was particularly fond of the “Do those shoes hurt?” “I don’t know, do they?” exchange, punctuated by Selina basically stabbing a dude with her spike heel.)

I wouldn’t go so far to say she and Bale have chemistry, but then I keep straining to think of the last time Bale portrayed convincing sexual chemistry on screen. (For what it’s worth, I keep coming up with Jack and David in Newsies.) It does seem to liven him up, though, to have a co-star with whom he can trade banter rather than ponderous speeches. In a world where everybody seems bound and determined to exposit their own life story, if not somebody else’s, I liked that Selina’s past and circumstances retained a bit of mystery.

Anika: My husband and I came out of the movie saying “Anne Hathaway should be a superstar and if DC and WB had any sense they’d greenlight a Catwoman prequel right now”. I have no evidence DC or WB has any sense but I did enjoy Selina. I especially liked that she was looking out for her own, for downtrodden young women, because that’s something she does but not something that people know about her. My main problem with the character is how she’s most often depicted as either one half of a One True Pairing (and it’s not mine) or as a one note sex kitten bad girl with a heart of gold. Anne’s Selina had more notes. And, this is crazy (but call me, maybe — wait, no, just kidding), but because of how Bruce was portrayed I actually like them ending up together. I like the idea that they can reinvent themselves and, well, be well-adjusted-ish. I… I think I ship it. I don’t even know who I am anymore!

Except, I do. I’m the girl that likes Bruce Wayne more than Batman. I’m like Alfred so of course I can get behind Alfred’s dream. Especially after Alfred’s apology at the burial made me sob. Bruce Wayne is a control freak who thinks he knows what’s best for everyone and it is wildly out of character for him to leave Gotham and all his toys to a kid. But I think I like it because of that. If Bruce can let himself have a happy ending, and acknowledge that the kid will be better at the job because he doesn’t have all of Bruce’s baggage, if Bruce can let go and move on and be okay — well, maybe the rest of us will be. Talia used the street brawl as a distraction, maybe Nolan did, too.

Caroline: Maybe. I wasn’t sure about the ending — I liked the suggestion I read somewhere, that Selina and Bruce aren’t a couple, he’s just helping her plan a heist. For great justice, of course.

I did appreciate Alfred’s dream for Bruce — when I wasn’t getting distracted by how much it’s like Ben Affleck’s big emotional speech in Good Will Hunting –but I don’t know how I feel about the movie expecting the audience to share it. It’s not Batman or Bruce I care most about. It’s Gotham, so Bruce outside of Gotham is something I greet with a shrug. (Though I’d totally watch a movie starring Christian Bale and Anne Hathaway as ambiguously involved international jewel thieves, staging capers for great justice. Get on that, Hollywood!)

On the other hand, I don’t know what kind of ending I would have wanted. How do you put the cap on a franchise about a character whose story has been told and retold, with infinite variations, for over sixty years? If I came out of this film feeling like Batman’s story was over, then I would be disappointed.

Now. Time to start counting down to the reboot.

Q&A #165: How do you feel about retcons in comics?

In Q & A, a weekly feature of Fantastic Fangirls, we ask our staff to tackle a simple question — then open the floor to comments.

How do you feel about retcons in comics?


Anika

Excuse me while I get on my soapbox. I feel that the collective comic book industry and fandom should stop fighting the cyclical nature of comic book stories and embrace the retcon. If comics were about maintaining realism within the confines of their fantasy Peter Parker would be sixty-seven years old this year. But it taking fifty years for him to age fifteen isn’t really an issue, it’s that he’s had fifty years worth of stories and that’s too much to fit into fifteen years (and it’s closer to ten anyway). It’s too much to move forward with. Comic book continuity only goes so far, then someone gets to hit the retcon button. Sometimes it’s logical, sometimes it’s absurd, sometimes it’s welcome, sometimes it feels like a personal attack, but it always comes around again.

I would like to freeze origin stories and let everything else be a free for all. Why does there have to be a prime universe? Set limits on series instead of characters and let the creators tell the stories they want to tell: borrowing this, ignoring that, exploring the other, exploding the new. And then after that series is done, another team gets a shot to tell a whole other story. Or not! I don’t want to do away with continuations or crossovers entirely. I want to do away with whining and arguing about whether or not a retcon was “worth it” or “necessary” or “a power trip”. I want to dismantle the hierarchy of what “counts” and what’s “real”. I want there to be a comic I can hand a new reader every month.

It would take a lot of bravery to implement my plan. And a lot of trust. It’s a near impossible task. But these are stories about superheroes and things are only impossible until they’re not.


Caroline

It’s all pretend.

I say this at the risk of being extremely obvious. But. Whenever you (and my “you” includes “I,” because I do this, too) find yourself getting upset that the stories you read didn’t happen, it’s worth remembering.

It’s all pretend.

So, for me, the question of whether you like a retcon is the same as the question of whether you would have liked a story if it had been told that way in the first place. The retcon process is neutral (and in fact I often prefer an ingenious retcon to a carefully planned story). If anything, I wish comic books didn’t spend so much time on it and just basically announced, “Yes, we did it that way before. Now we’re doing it this way.”

Just ask Holly Robinson.


Sigrid

I am a mixed and hypocritical fan of retcons. To wit, I like the retcons that remember the things I agree with while forgetting or revising the things I dislike. And I scowl at retcons that accomplish the reverse.

I am a big fan of reboots, re-envisionings, and Alternate Universe takes on things, though. I really enjoyed Marvel’s Ultimate Universe. I liked many of DC’s Elseworlds. I like the baldfaced chutzpah with which X-Men comics have forty-kajillion future-alternate-possible-AUs. If establish continuity comics want to end everything and start all over every few years, I’m along for the ride.

Nothing anyone can publish in the future can take away the stories I love. And what’s new might be another thing I enjoy. So why not? Bring me your rebooted retcon re-imagining and let’s see what happens.


So what about you? How do you feel about retcons in comics?

A Fond Farewell

Loyal Fantastic Fangirls readers may remember that last summer I took an internship at Marvel Comics in the X-Men editorial office. Today, I’m here to announce that I’ve become a part of that office in a more official capacity: as a full-time assistant editor.

As you might imagine, I’m thrilled to be starting this job, and I want to extend my thanks to anyone I’ve talked to through this blog over the past four years as I shored up my comics knowledge and sharpened my ability to think critically about the medium.

Unfortunately, my acceptance of this position means that my time at Fantastic Fangirls has come to an end. Continuing to review or even make silly comments about comics would be a major conflict of interest for me in my new role. I’ll still be active on twitter (now @jenmargretsmith), and you can always e-mail me at throughthebrush@gmail.com. Caroline, Sigrid, and Anika remain some of my closest friends, and I can’t thank them enough for being a part of this crazy journey with me.

Thanks, everyone, for following my words. I hope you’ll do the same for some of the comics I’ll be working on.

Posted by Jennifer Margret Smith
Twitter: @jenmargretsmith
E-Mail: throughthebrush@gmail.com

I’m Spider-Man (And So Are You)

Posted by Anika

Marc Webb’s The Amazing Spider-Man is perfectly imperfect. To me. I’ve taken to calling it Gwen Stacy’s Shoes and I could probably write 500 words on their significance. But that would be an injustice to her character — Gwen is far more than a pair of killer boots, she’s an intelligent and proactive role model and part of a love story I can’t help but love. I read one headline that likened this film to Twilight (a romantic drama with some action tacked on the end) but it shares far more in common with Titanic (a romantic drama surrounded by action). Still, I don’t watch Titanic for the sinking of the boat, I watch it for Jack and Rose. But as Titanic is Rose’s story, The Amazing Spider-Man is Peter’s.

At the very end of the film Peter’s teacher tells the class:

“People argue there are only 10 possible plots to telling a story. I’m here to tell you they’re wrong. There is only one: ‘Who am I?’”

Whether or not you agree, the movie is certainly that plot and conveniently, the answer is the title. I find The Amazing Spider-Man near flawless up to the point where Dr. Connors infects himself. Then it becomes a thematic mess with a bunch of gimmicky supervillain nonsense punctuated by the Parkers (Peter and May) and Stacys (Gwen and Captain George) continuing to be near flawless in a regrettably flawed film. But I love it anyway because while the theme is muddled, the thesis is clear and exactly mine: we can all be Spider-Man.

Recently I was in an airport, waiting to board, and wearing a t-shirt that mimics Spider-Man’s costume. It’s a cute shirt that stands out and this one chatty (or bored) passenger also waiting to board asked me “Why Spider-Man?”. I’m not very good at small talk and the question caught me off-guard so I didn’t have a clever answer; all I could do was tell the truth.

“Because he’s a little guy who does the right thing because it’s the right thing,” I explained. “I really believe in his ‘with great power comes great responsibility’ schtick and it’s my opinion that we all have great power so we all have the responsibility to do good in the world.”

Chatty guy was a little taken aback but The Amazing Spider-Man agrees with me. We are watching Peter Parker’s story — it’s his journey through the question ‘who am I?’ — but along the way, Gwen, Uncle Ben, Aunt May, Captain Stacy, the ghost of Richard Parker, Curt Connors, the dad of a kid who was trapped in a car, and a city-ful of crane operators also act like Spider-Man. The plot is murky, the theme is confused, but this thesis is laid out again and again in the dialogue. When Uncle Ben tells Peter he looks just like his father and later that he is just like his father — and his father lived a life of moral responsibility. When Peter argues with Captain Stacy and claims that Spider-man is “just like you”. When the Lizard lays out his crazy idea to make everyone a lizard so they are all equally awesome. When Gwen compares Peter’s Spider-Man-ing to her father’s police detective-ing. When Captain Stacy asserts Peter is “not alone.” And most clearly when Peter pulls his mask off to tell a scared kid “I’m normal, just like you” and then tells the kid to put on the mask and it will make him brave.

My favorite example of this idea is the character arc of Eugene “Flash” Thompson, which just might be the most compelling who am I story in the film.

Flash is a bully. He doesn’t have to be anything else for the story to work. Flash is the bully that Peter stands up to twice; the first time he gets bruised but also Gwen’s attention and the second time he gets vindication but also Ben’s disappointment. Peter learns a lesson. But! So does Eugene. The next time we see Flash he’s trying to give Peter his condolences for the death of Uncle Ben but Peter pins him to a locker. And Flash doesn’t fight back, he doesn’t even appear angry. He says, “Feels better, right?”

Flash understands better than Gwen or Ben or anyone else why Peter reacts with violence. If he knew about Peter’s hunt for the man who killed Uncle Ben he’d understand that, too, better even than Peter. It takes Captain Stacy describing Spider-Man’s actions as a personal vendetta for Peter to realize he’s not doing what he says he’s doing. He wants to protect people from bad guys but the way he’s going about it is just another form of bullying. So he stops. And at the very end of the film Flash and Peter are friendly and Flash is wearing a Spider-Man shirt. He says it’s to catch chicks but it’s also a message that inside every bully is a Spider-Man waiting to be told how to be responsible.

As star Andrew Garfield said to a group of middle schoolers the week before the movie came out,

“I think that’s what Spider-Man always stood for. Hate doesn’t end hate. Love ends hate.”

Peter Parker isn’t a superhero because he can stick to the wall.

The Amazing Spider-Man is:

1. a flawed film filled with amazing performances.
2. an answer to the question ‘who am I?’: I’m Spider-Man (and so are you).
3. a love story.

And to me, that’s perfect.


Posted by Anika
email: anika@fantasticfangirls.org
twitter: magnetgirl

Q&A #164: What does a favorite character/team do to escape the summer heat?

In Q & A, a weekly feature of Fantastic Fangirls, we ask our staff to tackle a simple question — then open the floor to comments.

What does a favorite character/team do to escape the summer heat?


Anika

I am pretty certain that under the Superhuman Registration Act all superhumans with any variety of “ice” or “cold” or related abilities were required to sign a separate document stipulating they be on special duty during heat waves or related incidents (natural or supervillain created). While the Act itself was rescinded these contracts are handled separately, extended and given to anyone who hadn’t signed up the first time, and still in effect during the legal battle to have them overturned. It’s a long process because this thing called Summer happens every year and the city is sweltering…


Caroline

I’m imagining the crew of X Factor Investigations in their New York City office with a busted air conditioner. Lorna, Monet, Theresa and Layla are all stripped to short shorts and bikini tops. (Guido would really like to make a remark about it but he knows better when he sees the look M is giving him.) Rahne, with her wolf metabolism, is not hot and so carries on as usual.

Pip the Troll advocates that Madrox create enough dupes to serve as cabana boys, fetch drinks, and fan off each of the other members of the team. Monet and Lorna like this idea, especially. Havok does not.

Layla, who knows stuff, looks at the weather forecast claiming the heat wave will break tomorrow and says, “Don’t count on it.” Longshot, however, insists that

Nobody knows where Rictor and Shatterstar went.


Jennifer

Jennifer is currently on hiatus.


Sigrid

I like to think that Carrie Stetko, from Greg Rucka and Steve Lieber’s comic Whiteout, doesn’t bother escaping the heat. When I think of her, I think of her on an enforced leave while her paperwork is sorted out and the agency figures out what to do with her, sitting on the beach in front of a cabin somewhere in the Carolina islands. It’s over a hundred degrees and the humidity makes the air liquid, thick enough for all manner of health advisories and warnings. But I see Stetko sitting in a canvas chair, swimsuit on and sandals on the ground, sipping a beverage.

Nothing to remind a person of Antarctica, except for the unending ocean view.

Maybe Carrie turns her chair around to face the cabin. Maybe she doesn’t. It probably varies from day to day.


So what about you? What does a favorite character/team do to escape the summer heat?

Lightspeed: Carol Danvers, Peter Parker, and Star Wars

Posted by Anika

Carol Danvers has a cat. This being comics the cat is half-magic, a holdover from the House of M reality where The Scarlet Witch gave everyone their heart’s desire. Carol was the most famous, most popular, most powerful, most special, most loved superhero in the land. She was called Captain Marvel and she had a cat. Soon after her return to the main continuity, an identical cat adopted her. If she never shows up in another panel I will still always imagine her sleeping on Carol’s bed.

Of course Carol Danvers loves Han Solo. Carol Danvers is Han Solo. She’s an ace pilot. She’s a space cowboy. She’s a hot shot with something to prove. She’s not religious or traditional but she can be sentimental. She doesn’t shoot first but she probably wants to. She plays things close to the chest, but she’s furiously loyal. She’s a flirt. She’s a hero.

Bring 'em on, I'd prefer a straight fight to all this sneaking around.

And as of Avenging Spider-Man #9, she has her own bucket of bolts.

She'll make point five past lightspeed. She may not look like much, but she's got it where it counts, kid.*

Intentional or not, it’s an implicit Star Wars reference (aside: and could also be read as a Firefly reference but Mal Reynolds is himself a throwback to Han Solo) in the comic that contains her first appearance as Captain Marvel**. Go back up to the first paragraph to be reminded what that name represents. And Peter Parker is cast as Luke Skywalker.

Why don't you outrun them? I thought you said this thing was fast!

Peter Parker is an orphan who was raised by his aunt and uncle. He’s bright and hard-working but dreams of something a lot more exciting than the life he has — and then he gets it. But it comes at the cost of his mentor, Ben. He’s naive and impatient. Reckless. But he is destined to be great and determined to accept the responsibility. He’s overprotective. He’s insecure. He’s a knight.

And their friendship is a perfect example of why I read comic books.

Avenging Spider-Man is the Marvel comics equivalent to the DCAU’s Batman: The Brave and Bold in that each story is a team-up between Spidey and an Avenger. I feel this works better with your friendly neighborhood Spider-Man than the dark knight detective. It can’t be overstated how much I approve of this particular team-up; I have a tumblr dedicated to Petrol (Peter and Carol). I’m also a big fan of both creators (w: Kelly Sue DeConnick; p: Terry Dodson). My opinion is so biased I’m not going to review the issues beyond saying: you should pick this up and read it for yourself.

Addendum: An argument could be made that Peter is both Luke AND Leia. Leia is better at quips! But how’s about this idea:

*It’s crazy but I wrote part of this essay as a list started in December of 2009 and I’m not the only one who thinks this way!
**Captain Marvel (Deconnick/Soy) is out this Wednesday!


Posted by Anika
email: anika@fantasticfangirls.org
twitter: magnetgirl

Q&A #163: If you became a superhero (or villain), how would you acquire your superpowers?

In Q & A, a weekly feature of Fantastic Fangirls, we ask our staff to tackle a simple question — then open the floor to comments.

If you became a superhero (or villain), how would you acquire your superpowers?


Anika

A little while ago my Twitter feed nominated me as Most Likely To Be A Sleeper Agent. I could answer this question, but then I’d have to kill you.


Caroline

I’m pretty sure I would download them when I got a DM on Twitter that said, “Find out what everybody is saying about you!” I’d click the link, go to the page, and be infected by superpowers.

Basically, I need to learn to remember not click on those things. But if they were awesome superpowers, maybe it would be worth it.


Jennifer

Jennifer is currently on hiatus.


Sigrid

Well, despite massive effort during puberty, I did not develop mutant powers. I tried, I really, really tried. In secret, of course — whenever asked, I swore up and down that I wanted NO superpowers, thankyouverymuch, as they all came with too much trouble attached. But I tried.

I did the squinting-and-thinking-really-hard thing that one sees in movies and television. When I worked on the custodial crew in college, I would try with mighty effort to move objects in the deserted hallways of the academic buildings at night. But no mutant powers arrived.

If I ever do get superpowers, at this late juncture, I have no idea how they might come to pass.


So what about you? If you became a superhero (or villain), how would you acquire your superpowers?

GUEST POST: Rebecca Gadling, Michelle Rodriguez, and Why I’m Buying Fame & Misfortune, by Rachel Edidin

Hello from Fantastic Fangirls! We are pleased this week to bring to you a post from Friend of the Blog Rachel Edidin. Rachel would like a word in your ear about Strong Female Protagonists. Without further ado, Ms Edidin —

So. My friend Kel McDonald is currently running a kickstarter for a comic called Fame and Misfortune. You should, of course, go fund it, because it’s gonna be awesome*, but that’s not why I’m telling you about it.

What I want to talk about is the main character of Fame and Misfortune, Rebecca Gadling. See, Kel posted a preview of the first ten pages of F&M, and it got people talking. And an awful lot of them are saying things like this:

“…rebecca kinda looked like a man which made it realy confusing when they pronounced her name…”

“Really nice! I’m intrigued already and wanting to know what happens next and what all is going on… however I will say that it’d be nice if Rebecca looked a bit less like a man. It’d be less confusing”

“It does look promising and it’s nice to see the interaction between Rebecca and Connor, and witness Rebecca’s abilities. But I also agree that she looks like a man and that’s quite confusing.”

“Wow, the plot is good, and the art is interesting and attractive.. but Rebecca looks like a MAN. And it’s, well, really distracting. Really manly. So, were you going for the butch look?”

Here are a few more that didn’t make it past moderation:

“I’m sad that Rebecca looks like a man when she grows up.”

“why does that man have boobs? and why does he have Danny’s broken nose? wait a minute… why are they calling him Rebecca?”

“That, my friends IS a man. Rebecca deserves a redesign.”

And here’s the character they’re talking about:

Rebecca Gadling

Rebecca Gadling in action.

Rebecca’s design is my single favorite thing about Fame & Misfortune.

This is the kind of character I will buy a book for. Look at her: She’s tall, muscular, and generally physically imposing–and she knows it, and plays it up. I totally buy this woman as a bodyguard. She’s not afraid to take up space. She’s got practical, shortish hair that’s just shaggy enough to perpetually look in need of a trim. She dresses practically, almost androgynously–except, there’s that halter top, and the overshirt that’s clearly designed to accentuate both her breasts and her ripped-as-hell shoulders, which means that either she doesn’t give a fuck about cohesive gender presentation, or she’s playing it deliberately, and either way, I’m sold.

Here’s the clincher: She’s not pretty.

That Rebecca is big, and strong, and most of all that she’s not pretty says, clearly and loudly, that this isn’t a character whose purpose is to titillate or please the viewer. If I pick up this comic, I know Rebecca’s function in the story isn’t going to be limited to eye candy. She’s a Michelle Rodriguez⁺ in a world full of Summer Glaus.

(Of course, that carries its own cost. Ask Michelle Rodriguez: “Saying no to the girlfriend, saying no to the girl that gets captured, no to this, no to that. and eventually I just got left with the strong chick that’s always being killed and there’s nothing wrong with that.”)

It wouldn’t be a big deal if she were pretty, really. It’s comics–everyone is supposed to be pretty, right? Superhero books are full of Hollywood-style fake-ugly girls, models with the cursory coding of a pair of glasses or heavy bangs, bombshells but for the grace of plot demands. There are tropes built around this, and those tropes fly fast and fierce around action-hero ladies in particular: They can fight, but they have to do it while being waifish and nonthreatening and very very femme; and, above all, they have to be traditionally attractive. That an action lady can kick any given straight male fan’s ass six ways from Sunday just makes her a better status symbol in his wish-fulfillment fantasy. These are the River Tams, and the Natasha Romanovs, and the Alices, and the Buffys; and yes, they’re all strong and interesting and complex, but first and foremost, they are all pretty. That’s the price of a female action hero: our mainstream visual media flat-out doesn’t have a place for female protagonists who you can’t fantasize about taking home to make the football team jealous, so we get compromises, where the girl can be strong and fierce, but only as long as she’s also a perfect size two with long hair that falls just so. There are very occasional exceptions–Brienne of Tarth is a notable and recently visible one–but never protagonists, and more often than not, their formidability is played as freakishness, muffling the vulnerable waif within. There is no female analogue to Ron Perlman or Bruce Willis.

And that’s precisely what makes Rebecca so transgressive, and so very, very important. It’s not just that she gets to be big, and tough, and strong, and a little genderfucky, without being punished for it. It’s that she gets to be all those things, and she’s a protagonist. Rebecca’s the goddamn hero. Spoiler: She’s not going to die in act two. She’s not going to get the makeover that’s the only thing holding her back from running through a field laughing with newly shiny hair and a sundress and a boy large enough to make her look delicate. Rebecca doesn’t give a fuck about looking delicate. She speaks loudly and clearly to a different kind of wish-fulfillment fantasy–one I’m far hungrier for.

*It really is. I’ve seen the script. Plus, If it gets to $10k, there’s gonna be a limited-edition hardcover, and I really, really want one; and at just $5k, there’ll be a sketchbook with character design process stuff. And hell, all that aside, imagine how cool it would be to have a market where comics like this not only exist but are financially rewarding for their creators, and then go do your part to make that happen.

⁺Look, we all know Michelle Rodriguez is hot as all fuck. But actual hotness and Hollywood’s impossibly narrow window of acceptably homogenous hotness are two very different animals.

Q&A #162: What comic book character would you name your band after, and why?

In Q & A, a weekly feature of Fantastic Fangirls, we ask our staff to tackle a simple question — then open the floor to comments.

What comic book character would you name your band after, and why?


Anika

I answered years ago, it’s in my info.

Yes, that’s me singing and yes, I wrote the song.


Caroline

Considering my convergence of interests, I have spent shockingly little time thinking about comic book-based band names. Also, I have about thirty seconds to write this Q&A in because my power was out for 12 hours yesterday.

However, I’ve noted before that the English-language name of my favorite manga, Fullmetal Alchemist *already* sounds like an indie band. Arcade Fire, for that matter, could just as plausibly be the name of a manga series. Once you start thinking like this, you can do it all day.


Jennifer

I can think of a billion options. Arm-Fall-Off Boy! (They’d play Fall Out Boy covers.) Nick Fury and the Howling Commandos! (With his fedora and moustache, Dum Dum Dugan was a hipster before you’d even heard of hipsters.) Or how about Heroes4Hire (a wedding and Bar Mitzvah band specializing in 70s music)?

But if we’re talking about a band I might actually be in (which is unlikely in itself, since I can neither sing nor play a single musical instrument, but let’s pretend for minute), it would have to be a bit more feminine. And while Marvel doesn’t have as high profile an all-female team as DC’s Birds of Prey, I’ve always been partial to the “Lady Liberators.” In any incarnation, they’ve represented some of the best female superheroes Marvel has to offer teaming up to kick ass, and if I had a band with some of my female friends, that’s who I’d want to emulate.


Sigrid

Well, now, there’s just so many.

From age thirteen to seventeen, my garage band would have been named something Kitty-Pryde-related. From seventeen to twenty, something Phoenix-related. From twenty to twenty-four, oh, something from Sandman, or Strangers in Paradise, or Love and Rockets, or Hellblazer. Twenty-five to twenty-eight, Dykes to Watch Out For. After that, Jessica Jones, perhaps, or Emma Frost, or Barbara Gordon, or Cassandra Cain, or Wanda Maximoff — I don’t know, really, there are just so MANY characters to name a band after!

Whatever band name I might have picked, rest assured it would be suitably melodramatic and serious.

Out of Phase
Ashes on the Moon
In Dreams
Lily Sisters

Oh, you get the idea, right?


So what about you? What comic book character would you name your band after, and why?

Q&A #161: What Marvel or DC character would you like to see in a manga universe?

In Q & A, a weekly feature of Fantastic Fangirls, we ask our staff to tackle a simple question — then open the floor to comments.

What Marvel or DC character would you like to see in a manga universe?


Anika

There have been a number of manga series based on the anime Neon Genesis Evangelion but none (I’m aware of) deals with NERV’s American partner. Which is, quite obviously, Norman Osborn’s HAMMER. Normie, post-apocalypse, building giant robots that can only be piloted by people under the age of 15…so he (quite obviously) has a ‘camp’ for his teenage minions. And, of course, a small band of them rebel. It’s the best parts of Dark Avengers PLUS GIANT SEMI-SENTIENT ROBOTS WITH THE BRAIN PATTERNS OF THE CHILDREN’S MOTHERS AND/OR NORMIE’s EXES. (You’re welcome).

Fun fact! Neither NERV nor HAMMER are actually acronyms.

Also, Beast Boy in Fruits Basket is a thing that should happen.


Caroline

Since I’ve already argued that the Heroes for Hire would make a great rock band, and since I first encounter Misty Knight and Colleen Wing when they were hanging out with the X-Men in Japan. . .clearly Misty, Colleen, Danny, and Luke should go up in a battle of the bands against the kids from Nana.


Jennifer

Once again, the only manga I’ve read in its entirety is Fullmetal Alchemist, but the worldbuilding for that series is so rich that I could probably think of a million potential options for crossovers. In this case, though, I have to go with Tony Stark. FMA, after all, contains a town called “Rush Valley” — a thriving region populated almost entirely with engineers who specialize in crafting frequently-weaponized metal prostheses. The creator of the Iron Man armor, much like FMA’s teenage girl engineer Winry Rockbell, would think he’d found heaven on earth.


Sigrid

One of the strengths, in my estimation, of the manga form, is an exaggeration of emotion. Passion causes physical pain, grief blackens the entire room, rage blanks out an entire page. I like this.

Okay, to be honest, I flat-out love this. I revel in the wildly out-of-control emotions in manga. Heck, I revel in the out-of-control repression in manga. Mmmm, repression …

This is the sort of fanfic I used to write for comics. Take the superhero characters I love and turn all the emotions up to eleven and turn them loose on the unsuspecting world! Turn them loose to rage, to pine, to mourn, to, to, to — to have really aggressively angst-laden conversations about their feelings outside of a Starbucks. To pick an example not-at-all at random.

So who would I like to see move from superhero comics to a manga-verse? Any of them. All of them. I love Bendis’s New Avengers to pieces, and the only thing I would change is I would have MORE angsty conversations about feeeeeeeeelings. I love X-Men Legacy, and the only change I would make would be to remove the fights and have them process their relationships all the time. I love Batwoman, and want to have a whole comic of Kate Kane and Maggie Sawyer talking to each other about their family angst.

So. Yes. Any character would do.


So what about you? What Marvel or DC character would you like to see in a manga universe?