I took the Ant-Man reference to represent their lack of faith in Scott more than their views on the Avengers.
The Ant-man argument is just ridiculous, though. People use death as a metaphor for losing a fight all the time and there is no reason at all to assume that Scott actually thinks the Avengers are cold blooded killers. In fact, if he suspected anything even remotely like that, then the post credit scene revealing his participation in the new movie wouldn't make any sense whatsoever.
Not "cold-blooded killers," just people who use deadly force in combat, like soldiers. Or like most movie action heroes, which is the point.
Fine. But my point remains - the quote quite clearly has nothing to do with the expectation that Falcon would actually kill Scott. It's an expression of shock that Scott could actually match an Avenger in combat.
Iron Man- 73 Pepper- 2 Rhodey- 4
Obadiah Stane- 21 Ivan Vanko- 7 Mandarin- 11
Hulk- 7 Abomination- 19
Thor- 42 (Sidenote: Thor kills the most people onscreen at once in “Thor” when he summons lightning on the Frost Giants, I didn’t add them to the tally because I couldn’t get a proper count, it’s between 30-50.)
Loki- 22 (102 if you add the 80 Black Widow says he kills in The Avengers)
Malekith- 17
Captain America- 64 Falcon- 4 Red Skull- 10
Winter Soldier- 21
Black Widow- 9
Hawkeye- 5
So when are we redubbing "The House of Marvel" to "The House of Murder"? No? I guess it's only okay to say something as ridiculous as "Murderverse" if Zack Snyder is involved.
I have no issues with how the Marvel heroes are portrayed, incidentally. And I quite enjoy MCU movies and TV. But I do find the hypocrisy of some commentators re: the respective properties a bit annoying.
I agree with this...@Christopher is taking the expression too literally. It's like a kid saying "My mom's gonna kill me!"Fine. But my point remains - the quote quite clearly has nothing to do with the expectation that Falcon would actually kill Scott. It's an expression of shock that Scott could actually match an Avenger in combat.
I'm not crazy about the heroes' willingness to use deadly force in either franchise, but at least Marvel ameliorates it by having the heroes actually give a damn about protecting innocents, which is more than Snyder can be bothered to pay more than lip service to. The characters' own history makes a difference too. While most Silver Age Marvel heroes preferred to avoid deadly force, and many have continued that practice further on, it's a policy that's more strongly associated with some characters than others. It's understandable for a soldier like Cap or a SHIELD agent like Black Widow (though I do find it hypocritical that Iron Man swears off selling weapons and then keeps using deadly weapons on his own armor). But I'd be rather more upset if they had Spider-Man killing people, because his inviolable no-kill policy is a fundamental part of his character. And it is for Superman and Batman as well, a few anomalous portrayals aside.
And it's as much a matter of attitude as of raw statistics and facts. The Marvel filmmakers may fall short on some aspects, but for the most part they understand and respect the characters and are trying to do right by them. The violence is a flaw in what's otherwise a pretty good interpretation. Snyder, on the other hand, has made it pretty clear that he has a fundamental contempt for the concepts of Superman and Batman and is approaching their films in exactly the same way he approached Watchmen, as a dark, cynical deconstruction and critique of the very idea of heroism -- and he specifically uses the violence as a blunt instrument to convey that idea, as well as a fetishistic element that he indulges in to excess. The "Murderverse" label is not about the characters' actions so much as the filmmakers' mindsets.
which is more than Snyder can be bothered to pay more than lip service to.
Arrgh. To be fair to Supes, in BvS he is clearly shown to care about people and tries to take the fight away from where innocents can get hurt. In that film, it is Batman who is okay with killing.
It's a puerile substitute for intelligent discussion of what's actually happening in the films, as opposed to regurgitated echo chamber "commentary". Nothing more.
I wasn't quoting anyone specifically and even a quick perusal of various threads shows the term in use with little by way of nuance. Your points are more nuanced than most, though ultimately I find them largely unpersuasive. And regardless of nuance, falling into the use of such inane labels as "Murderverse" and the like weakens the persuasiveness of whatever argument is being made.You may not like the label, but leaving that aside, I've tried to explain that it's not hypocritical to find the violence in the DC movies more objectionable than that in the Marvel movies, because there are substantive differences. If you ignore my attempt to clarify those differences in detail because you'd rather just fixate on one label, then you're the one choosing to reject intelligent discussion in favor of simplistic kneejerk negativity.
And regardless of nuance, falling into the use of such inane labels as "Murderverse" and the like weakens the persuasiveness of whatever argument is being made.
I don't think so. That was actually the second of two lines that suggested Scott's life had been in danger. The first was before the fight, when Hank told Scott to abort the mission and Scott went in anyway. Hank said "He's gonna lose the suit," and Hope replied, "He's gonna lose his life." She didn't seem to be joking.
I found a Tumblr post listing onscreen kill counts for MCU characters, though it doesn't give specifics, and it's only a link to an original post that shows up all-black on my browser. And some of them are bound to be judgment calls, but here are the results:
And that's from August 2014, before Age of Ultron. Even then, Iron Man, Thor, and Cap all had pretty sizeable body counts, and all the Avengers had some kills to their name.
In general, I think most of the current Marvel characters are characters who automatically should not be held to the same no killing standard as the 'classic' superman style hero. Thor is a child of norse (warlike) mythology. Iron Man is a weapons manufacturer. Cap is a soldier. Hulk is a rage monster. Widow and Hawkeye are super spies. The idea that these characters accept the need to kill in certain situations is perfectly logical, and does not in any way mean that they view killing far too lightly/easily, and use it as a routine rather than an 'only when necessary' practice.
Sure, you can rationalize it, but I don't agree that you should. I don't like the movie mentality that heroes who kill are something that we need to have. I like the fact that most comic-book superheroes value life, even the lives of their enemies, and go to great lengths to avoid killing. Heck, I grew up in an era (the '70s and '80s) when most TV heroes avoided lethal force, and of course the cartoon heroes I liked as a child always did as well. (Heck, even the A-Team almost never killed people, despite all the bullets they fired.) So to me, that's part of the definition of heroism. And I regret that we've lost that in our modern culture, that we've become so much more callous and casual about our heroes taking lives. I wish we had more screen heroes like the ones of my youth. (Heck, the one thing I actually liked about the climax of Man of Steel is that Superman reacted to his killing of Zod as a tragedy rather than a triumph.)
And Iron Man is supposed to be a reformed weapons manufacturer. He's supposed to be someone who renounced making deadly things when he realized how much harm it did. So it would make more sense for him to refuse to kill. That inconsistency has bugged me throughout the entire movie series.
As for the Hulk... I don't know. I'm used to the Bill Bixby version where he was a doctor and had a deeply ingrained moral code against killing that constrained the Hulk as well. But I've recently read the early Hulk comics, and they're kind of inconsistent on that score. On the one hand, they paint Bruce Banner as a good and compassionate man whose innate morality constrains the Hulk from using lethal force. On the other hand... the dude's whole job was building bigger and deadlier nukes and WMDs for the military. The bombs and superweapons he kept pulling out of his hat -- or that he'd already invented before he became the Hulk, presumably, given how little time he had to actually invent them after becoming the Hulk and being constantly in peril -- were so destructive and horrific that they make Banner come off as kind of a monster to modern eyes. The idea that he was inventing these hideously deadly doomsday weapons "for peace" doesn't quite cut it today, and it makes the claims about what a good and gentle man he was come off as kind of hypocritical.
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