The Movie Romanoff is based on the comic Romanoff who takes her current look from Mrs Peel, but the character predates the first appearance of Mrs Peel on TV. Her DNA includes the femme fatale type who influenced her original look, the Black Canary who influenced her super-villain costume and Mrs. Peel who influenced her super-hero costume. Super-heroes have all sorts of DNA: from the pulps, from espionage thrillers, from science fiction, from mythology, from comic strips and other sources. Is a genre that's always looking for more, too.That's because Mrs. Peel is a spy. She uses the skill set in different genre.
Somerset Maugham and Eric Ambler are spinning in their graves.
And John LeCarre is probably desperately sticking a nitroglycerin tablet under his tongue. Alan Furst and Edward Wilson are no doubt swigging Pepto-Bismol. Seriously, the movie Romanoff has Mrs. Peel DNA.
The thing is, characters like The Four Horsemen in Now You See Me don't have any skills or character any different from superheroes. It's just that their fictional universe doesn't make it plain that they are so super they don't need guns like us ordinary mortals. This thread can't settle on the differences between superheroes and regular heroes or costumed heroes because it keeps trying to limit the discussion to superheroes.
Thinking about it, maybe the toughest case is Allan Quatermain. I don't think anyone will accept him as a superhero, even though in the end he apparently had a superpower! I suppose Quatermain's most popular descendant would be Doc Savage and he's not a superhero either.
Quatermain and Savage are adventurers and they contributed to super-hero DNA too. Quatermain is a jungle adventurer who's DNA can be found in characters like Tarzan, Jungle Jim and Indiana Jones. Savage is more of crime-fighter who's DNA can be found in Batman, Superman and the Fantastic Four.
What was Quatermain superpower?
Didn't see Now You See Me, so the relevance of the reference is lost on me. It's a heist film with magicians, right?