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Madame Web, go-go Marvel Fatigue!

How good was it?

  • A. Madame Web is just as Good as a REAL Marvel Movie.

    Votes: 0 0.0%
  • B. There were moments that were approaching great, like random M&Ms mixed into a box of raisins.

    Votes: 4 22.2%
  • C. The crew must have been held at gunpoint to continue and finish their work?

    Votes: 2 11.1%
  • D. Adam Scott stole the movie! Where the hell is Severance Season 2?

    Votes: 3 16.7%
  • E. This travesty will finally capsize the home Blu Ray/DVD market!

    Votes: 0 0.0%
  • F. A lady gave birth in the seat next to me, the baby realized where it was, and crawled back in.

    Votes: 9 50.0%

  • Total voters
    18
What I don't get is why Spider-Gwen didn't get all the usual "She's SJW Propaganda!" complaints tossed at her like other female characters do.

She was actually a good character and also one in service of a male character. Those complaints are usually over characters that are actually not all that great and most of these complaints also tend to revolve less about their being female characters being represented but how the male characters are written around her. Every popular female character that is beloved seems to exists in a show or movie that also has a equal or almost equal male character.

Ripley had mostly male truck drivers types then marines in the second movie. Sarah Connor exists in a movie with Arnold's Terminator and Kyle Reese not to mention John Connor being the future savior. Wonder Woman had Steve Trevor. Even in Barbie you have the very popular Ken character.

That is the trend I have noticed in more mainstream entertainment. This changes when you get to horror where the female characters have always been strong, hence the final girl trope and of course romantic comedies. Then you have prestige movies or shows were they are more likely going to be rewarded with awards than ratings it doesn't matter.Those movies cover the entire gambit of the human experience.
 
Watching SNL...

During her monologue Sydney Sweeny says "You probably seen me in "Anyone But You", or "Euphoria", but you have definitely have not seen me in "Madame Web"."
 
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Might as well call it. Madame Web is easily going to win this years Razzie Award as worst movie or something like that. You know things are bad, not just when you got a bad movie on your hands but it becomes a punch line to all sorts of jokes.
 
Might as well call it. Madame Web is easily going to win this years Razzie Award as worst movie or something like that. You know things are bad, not just when you got a bad movie on your hands but it becomes a punch line to all sorts of jokes.

Its still better than the 1990 Captain America movie.

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Isn't the Spider-Gwen from the Spider-Verse movies supposed to be getting her own movie?
Yes, focused on Gwen, Jessica Drew, and Cindy Moon. We don't know when it's coming out and I'm not even sure if they've started production on it yet.
 
Did people have fits like they do now when things like the Alien movies or Terminator 2 came out?
The Alien movies and Terminator 2 are protected by some sort of weird "the exception to the rule" thing. Even the most insistent of the whiners complaining about "woke feminism ruining modern movies" seems okay with Ellen Ripley and Sarah Connor being action heroines. It's weird and bizarre, but it is the way, apparently.
 
She was actually a good character and also one in service of a male character. Those complaints are usually over characters that are actually not all that great and most of these complaints also tend to revolve less about their being female characters being represented but how the male characters are written around her. Every popular female character that is beloved seems to exists in a show or movie that also has a equal or almost equal male character.

So it's fine as long as the woman never ever gets to be a genuine lead and always is overshadowed by men?
 
So it's fine as long as the woman never ever gets to be a genuine lead and always is overshadowed by men?

When cavemen first saw fire, they tried to have sex with it, and burnt their junk. This was an important lesson they had to learn, as cavemen, and important to their character.

When 70s men first saw a woman crawl out of a heap of bled out dead male actors to kill the boss monster with a machine gun she was clearly too petite to use without braking a nail, we thought it was the same lesson that fire taught us half a million years ago and kept a respectful distance.

By the time that the boys of the word figured out that there was nothing to fear from female empowerment, it was too late, because there were no real men left.
 
No one in their right mind would argue that Ripley is not the lead in Aliens.

She's not the lead until after all the men die.

If a man had lived, as long as she had, Ellen would have been told to start the washing up, while they saved the day.

(Sorry, I was thinking of Alien.)
 
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So it's fine as long as the woman never ever gets to be a genuine lead and always is overshadowed by men?

Not making moral judgments. Just noticing something I think is common in most of these female led movies that have had success and not taken lots of neckbeard heat. Still I wouldn't say the women aren't allowed to be the genuine leads in these movies or shows.. Ripley,Buffy,Sarah Connor for example are not characters hurt by the strong male characters in the movies. It's more along the lines I think of men wanting to see the male perspective represented in the movies so they have someone they can relate to.

One complaint I notice from lots of them is that in movies they do hate on is because they feel the men in the movies are written as being weak or over the top evil in order to make the female character look good in comparison. Basically they are their to be like a jobber in wrestling. Where as the movies they do like the male character is allowed to also be good and well written, just like the female lead.
 
She's not the lead until after all the men die.

If a man had lived, as long as she had, Ellen would have been told to start the washing up, while they saved the day.
The story plays out the same as when Ripely was a well, a guy. So Ripley's gender is irrelevant.
 
Sexism actually kind of helped the "Alien" movie at the time. I don't think people at the time expected Ripley to be the one that survives and kills the monster at the end of the movie. Thus people were even more surprised at the twist and turns. Especially Tom Skeritt being killed off in the middle of the movie. I bet most people at the time felt he would be the ultimate hero of the movie at the time.
 
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