[Looks at empty box of Ritz in horror.]
Except it isn't. The MCU movie characters have rarely, if ever, voiced any overt preference for nonviolent solutions. Iron Man swears off selling weapons to bad guys, but an hour later he's casually blowing up his enemies without a qualm. Lethal force is the movie characters' default position. Heck, in Ant-Man, Scott expresses amazement that he took on an Avenger and lived, implying that the Avengers are perceived as killers by default. That's a lot different from "not unless we absolutely have to."
But that's not what we're seeing here, which is my point. None of these characters has even stated a reluctance to kill. Lethal force is treated as the default. That's different from Arrow and The Flash, where the morality of killing has been addressed in actual plot and dialogue. You're saying these shows and movies are all the same in their approach, but they aren't.
Karen Page.
Only because my brain would blow up if I had to see Karen in tight leather body armour, or dare I wish: Spandex and boots.
But, at the same time, I'd prefer a genre that's able to show both sides of the coin (even if the balance isn't perfect) far and away above one that's stuck in ancient tropes about never killing no matter what.
But, either way, this team is definitely shaping up to be more anti-hero than hero. I can certainly understand if that's not your cup of tea, or even if it's a major disappointment (since some of these characters don't really seem the anti-hero type), but that does seem to be the character of the show, so I don't really see any point in judging it by more heroic standards.
And I disagree emphatically that it's an "ancient trope." It's still very much a part of many comics characters' personalities. It's a defining trait of comics characters like Superman, Batman, and Spider-Man in the present day, regardless of how the movies have compromised those characters. For a while in the recent Spider-Man comics -- maybe still ongoing for all I know -- a recurring story/character thread was that Peter got tired of failing to save people and committed himself to a policy that nobody, good or bad, would be allowed to die on his watch. I've only read a few stories from that period, but I gather that the challenges and difficulties of such a policy, and no doubt the disbelief and disagreement of many of Spidey's peers, were very much a topic of exploration in the stories. (For instance, if he were teamed up with Wolverine.) Daredevil's first season on Netflix was all about Matt wrestling with his determination not to kill under any circumstances, and the second season is clearly going to be contrasting that with the Punisher's more brutal approach. Supergirl on CBS has occasionally touched on the question, with Supergirl insisting that she does not and will not kill, and finding herself challenged on that question by her sister and others.
So your dismissal of the value or currency of the idea of a hero refusing to kill is not grounded in the facts. It's not a dead or discredited trope -- it's still an idea very much worth exploring, precisely because it challenges modern society's glib and callous assumptions about the "necessity" of lethal force. It takes great courage and commitment to stick with such a policy despite all the peer pressure telling you to compromise, and great creativity and intelligence to find nonlethal ways of solving problems. And that can generate interesting stories and engaging character interactions.
It was kind of like any of DCs possible futures..it won't happen if the team succeeds in their mission and/or are returned to the proper timeline. In my opinion, it kind of means they were important all along despite Rip's claims to the contrary in the pilot.So, I haven't been watching LoT - haven't had the time - but as I understand it, they just showed a craphole of a 2050 Star City. Does that mean that the present-day Team Arrow's efforts to turn things around for their hometown are doomed, or is it all fungible?
Who's to say Carter wasn't supposed to die anyway--and we still don't know what Mick's ultimate fate is going to be.Right now, 2 legends are missing/dead, so when they get back, the present they arrive at, is going to still lead to a different new future that is not the same as if none of them left.
So, I haven't been watching LoT - haven't had the time - but as I understand it, they just showed a craphole of a 2050 Star City. Does that mean that the present-day Team Arrow's efforts to turn things around for their hometown are doomed, or is it all fungible?
Carter may be dead but there are still quite a few "Khufus" to encounter.If they had never left, which is what was supposed to have happened, before Rip derailed history, Carter may have died the next day, or he may have lived to be 90. Point is that none of them were supposed to go with Rip because it's a time crime to take them.
Presumably it would for him.Rip didn't explain anything well to these people.
Mic Rory thought that the bad future would still exist if they left changed the past.
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