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Posted
28 minutes ago, battlewraith said:

Go into that class and tell those ladies that they shouldn't hold any leadership positions. 

That would destroy them--they would become girlbosses. Being a mother and a matriarch is enough.

 

No one has said anything of the sort and you know it.

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Posted
9 minutes ago, Excraft said:

 

No one has said anything of the sort and you know it.

 

You've implied that throughout with respect to Sue. You give two options: either she serves as the mother figure of the team but doesn't officially lead anything. Or she becomes a leader and is therefore a reimagined girlboss for a modern audience. Nobody has given any kind of coherent explanation for how giving her some sort of authority outside of her family relationships is going to ruin the character. Other than cherrypicking examples of other films (Snow White, etc.) where changes were done in poorly received films.

 

Moreover, I can't find any information to the effect that Sue in this film is leader of the Fantastic Four. Wikipedia says that she is the leader of the Future Foundation--which seems to be another team. So that begs the question, what is Sue allowed to be in charge of before she transitions into a horrid girlboss? It's deeply profound issues like this that keep someone... somewhere.. awake at night..at least part of the time.

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Posted
9 minutes ago, battlewraith said:

You've implied that throughout with respect to Sue.

 

No, I have not.  That's what you would like people to be saying to continue arguing with them, but it isn't.  The only person insulting Sue Storm and saying she is shallow, boring and weak has been you. 

 

10 minutes ago, battlewraith said:

You give two options: either she serves as the mother figure of the team but doesn't officially lead anything.

 

Again, being the "maternal" figure to the team is part of who she is.  It's not a weakness, it doesn't make her shallow or boring.  It's part of her character in the comics and what has endeared fans to her character for the last 60 years.  Read the linked article above,  I'm not the only one who says this, and anyone with a basic knowledge of her character understands this much about her.  She's not a pushover.  She's a valued member of the team.  Changing that is changing a core part of who she is as a person and a character.  That doesn't work for me, same as it wouldn't work for me if they made Black Panther a Chinese midget living in Australia or The Thing the "smart one" and Reed the brute, or Tony Stark a destitute moron who wears rags instead of a suit of armor.  It doesn't work.  See the last Fantastic Four film.

 

12 minutes ago, battlewraith said:

Or she becomes a leader and is therefore a reimagined girlboss for a modern audience.

 

There is absolutely nothing wrong with a female character being a leader or in a position of authority.  No one has said otherwise.  See the aforementioned Captain Janeway, Elizabeth Weir, Samantha Carter et al.  All of them well loved, well written characters.  There is an enormous difference between a well written, well fleshed out character and a poorly written mary sue/girlboss.  This is no different than than a well written male heroic figure and a badly written one.  Given the recent track record of Disney and Hollywood in general, it's a safe bet that when you hear words like "modern audiences" and "modern sensibilities" used to describe "updates" to the characters, more often than not, it means they're falling on the poorly written side of the equation.  See the most recent Snow White film, Rey in the new Star Wars films, Terminator: Dark Fate etc.  There are (sadly) many examples that proof this out, and that is a legitimate concern to have, no matter how much you want to argue.

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Posted
17 minutes ago, Excraft said:

 

No, I have not.  That's what you would like people to be saying to continue arguing with them, but it isn't.  The only person insulting Sue Storm and saying she is shallow, boring and weak has been you. 

 

 

Again, being the "maternal" figure to the team is part of who she is.  It's not a weakness, it doesn't make her shallow or boring.  It's part of her character in the comics and what has endeared fans to her character for the last 60 years.  Read the linked article above,  I'm not the only one who says this, and anyone with a basic knowledge of her character understands this much about her.  She's not a pushover.  She's a valued member of the team.  Changing that is changing a core part of who she is as a person and a character.  That doesn't work for me, same as it wouldn't work for me if they made Black Panther a Chinese midget living in Australia or The Thing the "smart one" and Reed the brute, or Tony Stark a destitute moron who wears rags instead of a suit of armor.  It doesn't work.  See the last Fantastic Four film.

 

 

There is absolutely nothing wrong with a female character being a leader or in a position of authority.  No one has said otherwise.  See the aforementioned Captain Janeway, Elizabeth Weir, Samantha Carter et al.  All of them well loved, well written characters.  There is an enormous difference between a well written, well fleshed out character and a poorly written mary sue/girlboss.  This is no different than than a well written male heroic figure and a badly written one.  Given the recent track record of Disney and Hollywood in general, it's a safe bet that when you hear words like "modern audiences" and "modern sensibilities" used to describe "updates" to the characters, more often than not, it means they're falling on the poorly written side of the equation.  See the most recent Snow White film, Rey in the new Star Wars films, Terminator: Dark Fate etc.  There are (sadly) many examples that proof this out, and that is a legitimate concern to have, no matter how much you want to argue.

 

More of the same. You just repeat your bias while dodging the argument.

There is no reason why Sue can't be a mother AND have a leadership position. It can work. It has worked already in the comics. 

You are insisting on a false dichotomy--either this characterization entirely conforms to some unspecified era of the comics that suits you or the characterization is going to be bad. 

 

Let's try this: I'm an editor for Marvel and I'm going to do a new iteration of one of the superhero teams--West Coast Avengers, or defenders, or something. And I decide that I would like Sue Storm to be the leader of the team. Given all that classic Sue brings to the table--why would she be a bad choice?

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Posted
43 minutes ago, battlewraith said:

More of the same. You just repeat your bias while dodging the argument.

 

What bias? 

 

44 minutes ago, battlewraith said:

There is no reason why Sue can't be a mother AND have a leadership position. It can work. It has worked already in the comics. 

 

I didn't say she can't be a mother and have a leadership position.  I've said that she's not the leader of the team in the comics, Reed is.  If that's what Disney/Marvel is doing for this movie, ok but I personally don't see the necessity for it, especially if they're going to ruin her character by turning her into the cliche mary sue/girl boss they're known for creating.  Sue can be a strong, powerful and valued member of the team without being the leader of it, same as Ben Grimm and Jonny Storm. 

 

49 minutes ago, battlewraith said:

Let's try this: I'm an editor for Marvel and I'm going to do a new iteration of one of the superhero teams--West Coast Avengers, or defenders, or something. And I decide that I would like Sue Storm to be the leader of the team. Given all that classic Sue brings to the table--why would she be a bad choice?

 

I don't think she'd be a bad choice at all.  I never said she would be a bad choice for a leader. 

Posted

Popcorn.gif.992d9cd9d0322498cca0a6de144413fa.gif

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"Homecoming is not perfect but it is still better than the alternative.. at least so far" - Unknown  (Wise words Unknown!)

Si vis pacem, para bellum

Posted
5 hours ago, battlewraith said:

You just repeat your bias while dodging the argument.

 

Yep, you do.😉

  

On 4/25/2025 at 3:30 PM, battlewraith said:

It would be really disappointing if they just relegated her to being a shallow mother figure character.

 

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Posted
6 hours ago, ZacKing said:

 

Yep, you do.😉

  

 

Lol I don't even think you understand the objection.

But at least you're not straining yourself anymore actually trying to say anything.

Posted
3 hours ago, battlewraith said:

Lol I don't even think you understand the objection.

 

Oh I understand just fine.  You don't understand the character of Sue Storm at all, and believe female characters who are written to have strong maternal instincts and/or are mothers with children are weak and shallow and boring.  You said so yourself.

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