Anyone think it a little odd that Marvel seems to have a tendency to make female counterparts to well known heroes, but then have them have little to nothing to do with said counterpart, both in terms of their origin and powers? Spider-Woman, Ms. Marvel, and now Ms. America.Despite all of the recent announcements, the rumor mill churns on. This time it reports that there's a Disney+ series in the very early stages of development featuring America Chavez. As always with rumors, take with a grain of salt. However, pretty much every Disney+ rumor that I have heard so far has wound up being confirmed.
https://thegww.com/exclusive-marvel-studios-developing-miss-america-series-for-disney/
Anyone think it a little odd that Marvel seems to have a tendency to make female counterparts to well known heroes, but then have them have little to nothing to do with said counterpart, both in terms of their origin and powers? Spider-Woman, Ms. Marvel, and now Ms. America.
Maybe I'm just too used to the way DC usually does it with the legacy characters, but it feels a little strange to me.
I meant counterpart not in the protege sense, but in terms of the name and character design. That most deliberately have nothing to do (plotwise) with said counterpart was kinda my whole point.I don't think Ms. America was ever intended as anyone's counterpart. I'm not sure the Ms. America name was ever actually even used all that much. And aren't Carol Danver's powers pretty close to Mar-Vell's? Or are you talking about Kamala Khan? Because she also wasn't intended to be anyone's counterpart (she's literally a Carol Danvers fangirl, that's where her name comes from).
Don't know why exactly Spider-Woman was done the way she was (especially since Spiders aren't exactly known for gliding), but it seems to have worked out in the long run precisely because she's so different that she doesn't fall into the background as much.
Honestly, I think a lot of it is probably just using the name recognition to get people's attention. It might be a bit deceptive, but it does seem to get the books the attention their looking for, so I guess it works.Anyone think it a little odd that Marvel seems to have a tendency to make female counterparts to well known heroes, but then have them have little to nothing to do with said counterpart, both in terms of their origin and powers? Spider-Woman, Ms. Marvel, and now Ms. America.
Maybe I'm just too used to the way DC usually does it with the legacy characters, but it feels a little strange to me.
I didn’t say she was.America Chavez is a totally different character from Madeline Joyce, the original Miss America. She's a Hispanic, lesbian from a parallel dimension, who has super strength, flight, and the ability to punch holes through reality.
I thought Ms America was an update of Marvel's old Miss America property.
I thought Ms America was an update of Marvel's old Miss America property.
I meant counterpart not in the protege sense, but in terms of the name and character design. That most deliberately have nothing to do (plotwise) with said counterpart was kinda my whole point.
And yes, I was referring to Kamala.
Just to be clear, I wasn't criticising, just noting the pattern.I still don't see how America or Kamala can even be called counterparts in the first place, though.
I assume you're linking Ms. America to Captain America, yes? But the two are very clearly not named for each other, nor was her design really 'inspired' by his. They were just both conceived as symbols of what's great about America itself, but very different symbols (in both character and iconography) because they were conceived in very different eras. The actual Captain America counterparts would be characters like Jack Flag and Free Spirit. Maybe La Bandera. And of course the alternate universe Captain America (Peggy Carter).
And Kamala isn't named for or visually based on Mar-Vell, she's named for and based on Carol for clear reasons that have nothing do with her being a counterpart to anyone.
Just to be clear, I wasn't criticising, just noting the pattern.
And as I said, I'm only talking about them being counterpart from a name & design standpoint. Nothing to do with the characters themselves.
I mean come on, if you can't see a clear visual or at least thematic connection between Cap & Miss America, or Spider-Man and Spider-Woman then I really don't know what else to say!
For those who thought Downey would inevitably return as the Tony AI (eventually Tony 2.0 ?) :
https://metro.co.uk/2019/09/04/robert-downey-jr-set-return-iron-man-joins-disney-show-10682734/
We use essential cookies to make this site work, and optional cookies to enhance your experience.