#marvel and dc geek
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aeterna-auroral-avenger Ā· 3 months ago
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Nowwww quick
Top 5 Scott Lang moments
Ooh! Oh oh oh oh! Okay uhhhhhā€¦ since itā€™s me, youā€™re also getting the why theyā€™re my top 5
Scott breaking into Hankā€™s house (including the deleted scenes showing him getting a feel for the place) - this effectively shows us how brilliant Scott is at what he does. This man is super smart, and very few actually give him the credit for it. He overcame every obstacle thrown at him in clever, ingenious ways. Truthfully, the only thing that stumped him was finding the suit instead of the score he was hoping for. Everything else was cake. In one deleted scene, it shows Hank explaining to Hope why Scott breaking into a coded vault was such a big deal was because Scott figured out the pattern the algorithm gave for the alarm code and broke in that way.
ā€œThinks for thanking of meā€ - This scene was my very first introduction to Scott Lang waaaaaaay back when Civil War hit the theaters, and I was immediately hooked by this sweet guy who looked like he was voluntold to help out a bunch of superheroes who didnā€™t match his energy. I loved him from the moment Hawkeye opened the van door and made Scott flinch out of sleep. That scene was just a really good snapshot of his character.
ā€œI donā€™t have to win; we both just have to lose.ā€ - This. This is the most (serious) Scott Lang thing Iā€™ve ever heard. Scott is not a winner. Not in the sense everyone thinks a winner should be. Scott wins when he can see everyone he loves is safe, and heā€™s done the right thing. Even if he pays the price for it. Scott was willing to give up everything to make sure his world, his timeline, his loved ones were safe and out of harmā€™s way. In the face of what felt like a lose-lose, Scott said, ā€œI choose to lose so others can win, and Iā€™ll be okay with it.ā€ Ultimate hero status here, people. I said what I said!
Time Heist - Look, Endgame was very problematic, but the best thing that came out of it was Scott Langā€™s brand of genius and optimism rolling in to save the day. Nothing - and I do mean nothing - made me happier while watching the movie than seeing the guy almost everyone overlooked giving the Avengers what they needed to succeed (thank you, Doc Strange for making sure Scott survived the Snap). The Time Heist was brilliant! Danny Oceans who? No, my dude, Scott Lang is the heist master, and the only reason why we didnā€™t see more of Scott taking more action and training the Avengers on the heist and how it was gonna work was because Marvel execs are cowards who didnā€™t know how to wield such power.
Dad of the Year Award - I cannot create such a list without recognizing the amazing relationship between Scott and Cassie. Do you know (one of many reasons) why Ant-Man was so good? Besides being an excellent heist story, it was a love story. A love story about a dad trying to get back to his daughter (mirrored by another dad trying to get back to his daughter fyi) because nothing was more important than that. And the heist worked because that was Scottā€™s ticket to do just that. You make the outcome be in Cassieā€™s favor, and Scott will achieve the impossible. Hell, the man sacrificed his life and existence by shrinking to subatomic levels, believing he would never ever come back from that, to save her. And then actually did come back because of her! Plus, the man turned his entire house into a live-in heist game out of cardboard and duct tape for Cassie. You cannot tell me Cassie is not the number one person in his life; you just canā€™t. And I love him for that tbh.
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im-not-buying-it-ether Ā· 8 months ago
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God I canā€™t remember it but someone else pitched this
So when DC tried to tie in Captain Marvel comics they basically put him as a comic within a comic, meeting Superman and his characters a few times and marveling (ha) that a comic book character came to life and was fighting in the real world.
I think they also pointed out in the post how Billy was from the 40ā€™s and could grow up in those continuities and ended it with the fun idea of Superman being a Captain Marvel fan, with Billy having grown up and become a veteran hero for the modern time
And now my mind is just swirling with lilā€™ Clark reading some Captain Marvel adventures and tying a white towel around his shoulders to copy his cape and then older Clark geeking out meeting his hero (Ala Batman meeting his with the Grey Ghost) and getting along with his older colleague
Itā€™s a fun switch of the ā€œwho inspired/inspires who?ā€ thing and would leave lots of room for experimentation with an actual grown up Billy and Marvel Family
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spideyzitos Ā· 2 years ago
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black headers.
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bish-0-p Ā· 9 months ago
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send me a number 1-100
and ill reply with the corresponding character on my league of comics geek list, and my favorite comic run, issue, or fact about them
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supergeek21 Ā· 4 months ago
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Calling U.S. Geeks & Nerds!!! šŸ‡ŗšŸ‡ø
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To all my Good Omens friends, @gish folks and anybody who is into @fandomtrumpshate thereā€™s a political fundraiser page you might be interested in. Lynda Carterā€”the original Wonder Woman herselfā€” is summoning U.S. based geeks and nerds to help raise money and voter participation for Kamala Harris (@kamalahq). Come check it out, tag your fandom, and tell your other nerdy friends! Thereā€™s even a competition of Earth based vs Space based fandoms for who can raise the most money. Nerd royalty like @mishacollins and Mark Hamill are behind it! Letā€™s join in!
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aeterna-auroral-avenger Ā· 2 years ago
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Oh wow okay letā€™s see here.
Since my initials are TB, my nickname in high school was Tuberculosis. Yes, sometimes I still answer to that. Old habits die hard, ya know?
My favorite colors in the whole wide world are purple any shade really and green almost any shade of that one too.
I have never seen a full episode of the Office.
No pressure tags: @fandom-took-my-sanity @smolbendyhorn @oldmanwithashield @azaraspirit @marvelstuff-iguess and anyone who wants to play
šŸŒ» If you get this, answer with 3 random facts about yourself and send it to the last 7 blogs in your notifications, anonymously or not! Let's get to know the person behind the blog šŸŒ»
I like to watch anything, regardless of media.
I enjoy drawing
I am human
@pieisbestdessert @marvel-and-dc-geek @violentraine @grumpiestconversationalist @prince-zephyr @schreksdoubledeckerhomechecker @thennemazha
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fvcking-panda Ā· 2 years ago
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Just thinking in big nerd of comics Gareth who LOVES Marvel and went to every movie premier when the MCU started.
He used his fame as CC drummer to get tickets every time and it get a regular meme how people waited for his photos instead of the main cast, because he was photographed before and after every movie, Is kinda funny how some fans score the movie with that, if he's crying then the movie will be amazing, if he's not the movie perhaps is funny but not spectacular, If he's just smiling awkwardly then that's the lame movie even witnessed (it only happened with Iron Man 3 tho).
The first photography after Avengers wasnt Robert Downey Jr or Chris Evans or Scarlette Johansson, it was Gareth Emerson crying in Will Byers arms because he was overwhelmed for seeing his favorite heros in screen for the first time.
He eventually open his social media accounts and people though it was fake because he immediately started discussing about the MCU and the comics, his social meddia accounts are divided between Corroded Coffin news, embarrasing stories about Eddie, Will Byers n. 1 fanpage and Marvel.
He's always the most excited with new material, and when Infinity War came, Gareth had to take some days out internet before and after the movie to avoid spoilers and then because he was absolutely devastated crying in bed, Will had to post a photo where you could see him in bed cuddling his Spider Man plushie with a caption saying: "worst time to be Marvel fan but he'll survive."
Will also shares in ig stories how he's taking care of him and Eddie films himself going to the Byers-Emerson house with what it looks like buckets of ice cream saying to Steve: "dont wait for me tonight, my best friend is probably dying" and post it in tiktok.
Corroded Coffin also had the chance to record a song for the MCU and Gareth still believes is his biggest achievement, the next one is marrying with Will (and Will doesn't feel offended because he says his biggest achievement was meeting "The Clash" and then his marriage)
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necrotic-nephilim Ā· 3 months ago
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ok so sending my question here bc this is more marvel comics than mcu related so im like. sliding you a note in class about an somewhat related but mostly tangential topic here šŸ˜‚
so i've been wanting to get into bucky comics (and winter soldier comics) recently but as a dc fan now whose only marvel comics background is reading matt fractions hawkeye (the best ever, currently rereading it to feel something again actually) and part of wilsons ms marvel run back when i was in high school i have no idea where to start. you said that you have read comics for bucky; do you have any recommendations?
hello i love being slid notes this is so sweet <3 bc luckily Bucky is one of a small handful of characters i can *actually* give good recs for on the Marvel side of the fence! so i'm MORE than happy to give recs bc i actually already have a list i'm happy to share. also, BIG agree on Fraction's Hawkeye run, oh my god. that comic means *so* much to me and though i haven't really read Hawkeye comics outside of it, i love it a lot. 10/10 taste <3
so when it comes to Bucky, he has a *lot* of Golden and Silver Age comics as Captain America's teen sidekick and all. skip them. they're not worth it and they're not the version of the character you want to read. honestly, you should just start with his return as Winter Soldier, and go from there so
Captain America (2005) - this is Ed Brubaker's run, it's fantastic and it's the run that brings back Bucky as the Winter Soldier. i will warn you if you're used to DC comics, Marvel does this really confusing thing called legacy numbering. (DC sometimes does it but not as much) so you're gonna notice it'll jump from issue #50 to #600. you did not somehow miss hundreds of comics, it's just numbered that way bc it's the 600th Captain America comic overall. this run is super good though.
Captain America & Bucky by Ed Brubaker - once again numbering is weird just don't mind it. but this will give you a primer on Bucky's backstory as Cap's sidekick without you having to read all the Silver Age stuff and it's a great comic.
Captain America: Forever Allies (2010) - if you want to read where Bucky was Captain America for a bit, this comic is good for that. it also briefly touches on Secret Allies, a team he was on as a teen during the war. i'm not the biggest Cap!Bucky fun, but this is decent.
Winter Soldier (2012) - by *far* the best Winter Soldier solo run. Ed Brubaker my beloved. this is just amazing. this was where i started with Bucky and tbh if you vaguely understand his comics backstory and don't want to read all the Captain America stuff, i think you can start here. you get to see his relationship with Natasha, his spy work it's just. everything <3
Winter Soldier: The Bitter March - if you want to see a story that takes place during Bucky's time brainwashed under Hydra, that's what this one is and it's pretty solid
Thunderbolts (2016) - this comic is most known for the relationship between Bucky and a young girl who's a cosmic cube named Kobik and it's just so delightful. the whole team is really fun and explores moral greyness in superhero work, but mostly i love this one for Kobik.
Winter Soldier (2018) - i really enjoy this mini-series, it has Bucky trying to save a young boy who's forced to be a weapon and there's just a lot of good stuff. always have a soft spot for Bucky trying to do right by kids.
Falcon & Winter Soldier (2020) - a good team up mini-series. also Bucky has a cat so yk, that's delightful. <3
there are other Winter Soldier comics and comics he's in but Marvel's comic world is big and fucking confusing (to me as a DC fan, anyway) so these will be the easiest to start with. my top recs are probably Captain America & Bucky and Winter Soldier (2012), though i'm incredibly biased to any comic written by Brubaker for Bucky. i love Bucky so dearly. he is everything to me. i hope you enjoy!
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greenheros Ā· 5 months ago
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MY COMIC GEEKS AS OF AUGUST 13, 2024
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A lot of the comics I read are digital thatā€™s why I only own 28 comics and have read 600. I donā€™t have a lot of money and have yet to get a job (Iā€™m trying to get one!!).
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Top 10 characters Iā€™ve read the most of. Itā€™s not a lot per character itā€™s because I start runs and Iā€™m horrible at finishing them Iā€™m trying to get better at that. I start a run and then get distracted by another comic itā€™s incredibly annoying I need to stop.
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I donā€™t really have a writer or artist preference however I obviously like the more modern and handsome look like Dan Mora.
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unnamedmedicalprofessional Ā· 5 months ago
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One of the downsides of geek culture becoming mainstream is that occassionally you see that people can now pass themselves off as edgy countercultural intellectuals with sentiments that fundamentally just boil down to 'give me your lunch money nerd'. Like it's one thing to say what Martin Scorsese for example said about Marvel movies. I disagree with him, but he was polite in what he said, and never insulted people who like Marvel movies. He's perfectly entitled to his opinion, but sometimes you see people like Bill Maher being outright hostile and thinking this makes them smart.
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aeterna-auroral-avenger Ā· 2 years ago
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Tag 9 People You Want to Know Better
@marvel-and-dc-geek tagged me for this, so I'm starting a new thread for it. Thanks for the tag, buddy!!
3 Ships: Oh geez uhhhh I don't know. Lol I don't really care about ships anymore, so I don't keep up with them. Okay, sooooo Emma Swan/Captain Hook, Shawn Spencer/Juliet O'Hara, and Niles Crane/Daphne Moon. All over the place lol.
1st Ever Ship: Cory/Topanga 90s kids, anyone?
Last Song: More Than I Could Be by Danny Gokey
Last Movie: Avengers Endgame in my prep for Quantumania
Currently Reading: Spare by Prince Harry
Currently Watching: 1923
Currently Consuming: Diet Coke
Currently Craving: Friday 17th 8:15 PM to get here faster
No pressure tags: @edelweiss-and-maple-trees @ant-man98 @lang-vers003 @fandom-took-my-sanity @necromancer0225 @likepotato @and-allthat-jazz @marvelstuff-iguess @oldmanwithashield @smolbendyhorn @azaraspirit @hamster-on-fire and anyone else who wants to join
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quaveyllc Ā· 27 days ago
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ON NOVEMBER 30TH 2024 AT 11:21 YA BOY HAS READ 4,000 COMICS LETS GOOOOOOOOOOOOO
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taytayb1993 Ā· 11 months ago
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Happy Valentine's Day, everyone and all those who are interested in comic books and anime, and missed the cartoon series that we watched back in the 2000s. I'm kind of a comic book geek myself, honestly, even, though, I don't feel like a geek, but I'm into geek girls. Anyway, enjoy your day, everyone.
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2t2r Ā· 12 years ago
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Mini Heros et mini Vilains
Nouvel article publiƩ sur https://www.2tout2rien.fr/mini-heros-et-mini-vilains/
Mini Heros et mini Vilains
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simssiomisvault Ā· 2 years ago
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Hello again I made this set of 8 nerdy random objects for your crazy room! Thank you so much for your love and support keeps me creating! Siomi
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DOWNLOAD HERE
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stereogeekspodcast Ā· 6 months ago
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[Transcript] Season 4, Episode 8. We've Been Busy With... Nightwing, Lore Olympus, Madame Web, Godzilla Minus One, and more
The Stereo Geeks discuss the TV shows and films they've been watching, and the books they've been reading.
Listen to the episode on Spotify.
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Mon: Hello and welcome to a new episode of Stereo Geeks. Weā€™re doing things a little differently today. Weā€™ll be discussing a bunch of stuff weā€™ve been watching, listening to and reading recently.
Iā€™m Mon.
Ron: And Iā€™m Ron.
Mon: Tom Taylor, Bruno Redondo, and a team of artists brought Dick Grayson/Nightwing back to himself in the Eisner Award-winning series, Nightwing Volumes 1-4. Iā€™m behind on this series, but I intend to get back into it because of these four volumes.Ā 
There was a lot of controversy surrounding what happened to Dick Grayson in Batman #55 way back in 2018.Ā 
Ron: Was it that long ago?Ā 
Mon: Yeah, Iā€™m still processing that.Ā 
I kept reading the Nightwing books after that, but those were a tough read. Dick wasnā€™t himself, so these new volumes were a welcome change.Ā 
Ron: I havenā€™t read the latest volumes. I barely got through the Ric Grayson nonsense. Whatā€™s our favourite pretty bird been up to?
Mon: Well, Dick is back as Nightwing, but heā€™s reeling from losing his memory and himself, and his home of BlĆ¼dhaven is worse off since his absence.Ā 
What I liked about this section of the series is that Dick returns and he wants to do so much more for his city than just punch bad guys. I like that the creators addressed the fact that Bruce Wayne could have done so much more with his money, and Dick is hoping to course correct in BlĆ¼dhaven.
The story had a lot of emotional beats, and the ones concerning Alfred got me in the feels. Who knew Iā€™d get teary over Dick and Alfredā€™s relationship, but here we are. I do love how newer renditions of the Bat-universe comics really lean into the notion of them being a family who love and loathe each other, just like any other family. Thereā€™s so much love in the writing, it makes it such a joy to read these stories.
I loved the art and coloursā€”for most of the volumes Redondo is leading the art team, so the character art is especially beautiful, giving the Bat-family distinct and gorgeous faces. Good art, especially art that flatters the characters I love, helps me become more invested in the story.
After eons of Dick being touted as the next big thing, he finally feels like heā€™s taking on that mantle. I believe heā€™s become a big deal in the DC Comics universe. I need to read more of the current stuff to know for sure.Ā 
Volumes 1-3 are particularly solid. 4 is a little more gruesome, so I didnā€™t like it that much. I also hate it when the art changes during a volume or a run. I know it happens, but itā€™s so frustrating, especially when you start off with the kind of art you love and then it changes. Sigh.
Highly recommend these volumes for Nightwing fans. I really hope what comes after is just as excellent.
Ron: Lore Olympus by Rachel Smythe is a retelling of Greek mythology in Webtoon form, now available across several paperbacks as well.
Mon: Greek gods in Webtoon form. Tell me more!
Ron: Itā€™s essentially about the romance between Persephone and Hades but pretty much every Greek god and goddess makes an appearance. The story started fairly small but expanded to encompass so much of the mythos. It was such a rich world and I found it a very immersive reading experience.
Smythe has been writing this series since 2018. I only started reading Lore Olympus during the pandemic and then I ended up taking a break from Webtoons for a long while. But I went back to it this year and I couldnā€™t stop reading. I ended up racing through to the end. I was a bit bereft when Iā€™d come to the end of the 280 episodes.
The story is engaging but what captivated me at first was the art. I love the way Smythe uses colours to differentiate the characters and the different realms. Thereā€™s a lot of detail in her art that had me lingering on sections of the story. But she also uses colours to display emotions which I found very moving. Lore Olympus goes to some pretty dark places at times and I appreciated her putting content warnings for those episodes.
My only criticism was that the final volume both dragged and felt rushed. We had too many episodes that were stuck on one plot point and then the entire story was wrapped up in just two episodes. Having said that, 280 episodes is a massive commitment from a writer and artist. It was a riveting story and I loved the modern incarnations of the gods and goddesses. Highly recommended.
Mon: Wow, Iā€™ll add it to my list.Ā 
Mon: Anyone whoā€™s read Marvel comics is going to tell you that the What Ifā€¦? series of books is the coolest part of being a comic reader. Alternate takes on what would have happened to our favourite characters are always fun to read. My guess is, Marvel, seeing that the What Ifā€¦? animated show got some traction, decided to venture into new territoryā€“YA What Ifā€¦? novels. So we have Marvel: What If...Loki Was Worthy? by Madeleine Roux.
Look, I love Loki as much as the next person, and Iā€™ll admit, at the start I was itching to get to the book whenever I was away from it. At one point, the book mentions a Marvel character who Iā€™m fond of, and I got so excited I decided to ā€˜saveā€™ the book and read it at my own pace.
Ron: Just for that cameo, I want to read this book now. Should I?
Mon: No. Taking a break was actually a dumb idea because this is a library book and it got snatched away. Iā€™m back to reading it now, havenā€™t finished it yet, but the magicā€™s gone. Iā€™m struggling to read this. The writing is so slow, the descriptions are overlong and unnecessary. They donā€™t just bring the pace to a halt, they grind it backward. Iā€™m literally screaming in my head for the story to move forward, but nope, we need to describe every single room in this tiny trailer with the utmost detail.Ā 
And hereā€™s the thing, I donā€™t hate descriptions. I used to love Thomas Hardyā€™s books, so I canā€™t complain about descriptions. But my issue is the descriptions are given more importance than what Loki goes through. Iā€™m sorry, but I am way more interested in knowing how he coped with a certain live-changing event than his bloody lizard!
And donā€™t get me started on Tony Stark. Crikeyā€“what is with the overly sentimental histrionics? And why are they three chapters long?Ā 
Iā€™m halfway through, and I think things are picking up. At this point, I just want the book to be over. I donā€™t care if Loki was worthy, I just know Iā€™m unworthy of this suffering.Ā 
Ron: Well, that takes us to more comics-related suffering. This is something Iā€™ve been dying to talk about. The Krakoa-era of X-Men! I have so many thoughts and I donā€™t know if Iā€™ll be able to cover it all but Iā€™m going to try.
Ron: For the longest time, I just couldnā€™t find a way back into the X-Men comics. I found that so frustrating because they are our favourite comics team. But with the House of X/Powers of X series in 2019, I finally got a way in. We read that series for our comic book club and I stayed with it.
Mon: I never read past Hox/PoX, which we covered on this podcast, by the way. So Iā€™m all ears.
Ron: At first, I really enjoyed the Krakoa comics. After decades of being despised, hunted, killed, just for being born different, the mutants had a safe home on Krakoa, the living island. I loved reading about the way they were setting up their lives, how Krakoa would give them whatever they needed to thrive. And the resurrection protocols ensured the mutants couldnā€™t die. The Five, consisting of Tempus, Proteus, Hope Summers, Elixir, and Egg, combined their mutant powers with Xavier to resurrect dead X-Men. All the mutants who lost their powers in House of M, or died on Genosha, they were all being brought back. That wasnā€™t all. Mutants had created a medicine that was going to help humans fight diseases. I was so enjoying reading about this mutant Utopia.
Mon: That sounds awesome. I love my X-Men being happy.
Ron: Not so fast. Things werenā€™t all that rosy on Krakoa. The Quiet Council, the governing body of the island, was made up of past villains with their own agendas, like Mr Sinister, Sebastian Shaw, and Apocalypse, who seemed to have turned over a new leaf at least. Cyclops and Jean were so annoyed with Xavier and Magneto keeping secrets from them that they both abandoned the Quiet Council. Xavier and Magneto also made Mystiqueā€™s life miserable; they put her on the council but refused to resurrect her wife, Destiny, for absolutely no good reason. Honestly, the internal politics of the Quiet Council were to die for. I loved the drama, the tension, the subterfuge. Who was betraying whom? Who had their own plan for world domination? Who knew whoā€™s secrets. This is what had me picking up issue after issue.
Mon: Wait, so you liked that part?
Ron: Very much so! But alas, Marvel comics got in their own way. Instead of giving us these self-contained stories about mutant intrigue, Marvel introduced fantastical elements like the Arakki, an ancient mutant civilization to which Apocalypse belonged to.Ā 
Mon: The ruddy Arakki. How many times have I heard you complain about the Arakki?
Ron: I know I go on about it, but I cannot stress enough how much I despise the Arakki. The moment they appeared on the comic page, the mutants I wanted to read about went right out the window. Practically every single issue became focused on the Arakki. They were a warring race so we got plenty of mindless action and no character development. They didnā€™t want to fit in on Krakoa, so the mutants terraformed Mars and made it Arakko and the Arakki were still fighting. Worse, Storm and Magneto were appointed leaders of the Arakki so the entirety of their story in X-Men: Red was just them quelling fights between the Arakki. It was so boring!
Ron: And let me not start on Avalon and the Braddocks. I donā€™t know Betsy Braddock very well but her constant tussle with Saturnyne which went on and on and on made me dislike them both and all of Avalon so much. Betsy was in a group with Jubilee, Rogue, Gambit, and Rictor, all of them much more interesting than her. Yet every Excalibur book was about Betsy and only Betsy. I was so glad when she shattered into glass pieces but alas, she got better and even more insufferable.
Mon: Wow, that soundsā€¦ not great. A book featuring your favs Rogue and Gambit, and itā€™s about neither of them? I donā€™t know how you persevered.Ā 
Ron: I didnā€™t. I gave up on Excalibur when Rogue fell into a coma.
Mon: You have got to be kidding me.Ā 
Ron: Nope! However, I did get to hang out with some very cool characters on Krakoa. Mystique and Destiny, who was eventually resurrected behind Xavierā€™s back, haha, take that sucker. They were such an amazing couple. They were so conniving, so smart, so in love, I enjoyed every moment I got to read them. Laura Kinney got a few incredible story arcs. She and Synch, a mutant Iā€™d never met before, had this incredible storyline of living many lives to fight a terrifying enemy. It was a sad ending for them but Synch has become one of my favourite mutants now. Heā€™s got the ability to use any superpowers that heā€™s been near but because of his experiences, his powers are killing him. And yet, he keeps fighting to save mutantkind.
Mon: Iā€™d really like to meet Synch one day in the comics.Ā 
Ron: Donā€™t hold your breath; heā€™s not slated for any new books.
Ron: There were lots of little moments that I enjoyed from Krakoa, as well. Scott, Jean, Logan, and Emma Frost becoming a happy quadrangle. Logan even lives on the Moon in the Summers home. Almost everyone getting their families back. Jean and Scott have Cable and Rachel. Logan has all his kids, Akihiro, Laura, Gabby. Krakoa was very queer-friendly. Lots of the lads wore gorgeous dresses to the Hellfire Gala. Northstarā€™s husband, Kyle, whoā€™s human, got to live on Krakoa. Then thereā€™s Ms Marvel becoming a mutant and adapting to her multiple identities, which was a great additionā€“sheā€™s an absolute natural as a mutant even though her powers havenā€™t appeared yet. Seeing Captain America step up and lead the mutant resistance, considering the Avengers have historically been absolutely awful to the X-Men. The political machinations of the Quiet Council and how mutants like Emma Frost managed to get the upper hand over their rivals was so thrilling! And nothing will surpass the shock of Orchis murdering all the mutants at the Hellfire Gala just as the new X-Men team was announced.
But itā€™s been downhill for a while. The focus on the Arakki, the overlong Dominion plotline that fizzled out, quite literally, with the return of Dark Phoenix. Sidelining characters I love, like Storm and Iceman. I had such high hopes for Krakoa and now Iā€™m just happy itā€™s ending. I really felt like theyā€™d lost their way. Now weā€™ve got the Fall of the X-Men thatā€™s spread over some 13 series, and you have to read each issue from each series sequentially. Itā€™s bonkers. I am so going to miss the hope and joy I thought Krakoa would bring. Not to me, my X-Men.
Mon: Dang, that sucks. Iā€™m hoping for good things with the new series. But, you never know.
Mon: Anyway. So, I like listening to podcasts, but my podcast habits are pretty standardā€“Iā€™m either listening to reviews or news. But I heard ads for the BBC and CBC podcast Hollywood Exiles, which is about the Red Scare in the US and J.Edgar Hooverā€™s apparent obsession with taking down Charlie Chaplin.Ā 
The podcast is hosted and narrated by Chaplinā€™s granddaughter Oona. Oona is an actress, so she has a great voice for podcastingā€“very soothing and measured. We, of course, know about the Red Scare and the witch-hunts for supposed communists, but it was really interesting to hear about the rise of Hoover and the impact of these trials on Hollywood.Ā 
Apparently, Hoover started a file on Charlie Chaplinā€“one that grew to over 1000 pagesā€“as early as the 1920s. Chaplin, was, according to the podcast, one of the earliest targets of the Bureau for un-American activities. Chaplin was an immigrant from Britainā€“he never got American citizenship, and was openly ā€˜anti-authoritarianā€™, if you can call it that, in his work. That immediately drew a target on his back even though he wasnā€™t part of the Communist Party in the USā€“or so he said, anyway.Ā 
Listening to this podcast, itā€™s really heart-breaking. Chaplin was older, secure in his career, and rich. Life got tough, he upped and offed to England. But other writers and creators, they went through hell and back and lost their jobs. Some left the US, forever, others eventually returned. But they couldnā€™t return to their old jobs because they were put on the ā€œHollywood blacklistā€. Man, that sucked to hear. The adult children of those exiles talking about how life changed for their families, was so sad. And over what? Fear-mongering.
And listening to it now, when the US is so divisive and so quick to judge and cancelā€“all the wrong people, of courseā€“just made me so angry. It hits worse now that weā€™re in North America.
My one grouse with the podcast was that, because itā€™s hosted by Chaplinā€™s kin, Oona sort of brushes off Chaplin's less-than-stellar inclinations. The dude had a penchant for really young women, and even if the women were of consenting age, the power dynamic between Chaplin and anyone else is off. Oona Chaplin never really deals with that in the podcast. I think the producers at the BBC and CBC should have stepped in to contextualize the problematic side of Chaplin.
But this podcast is worth a listen to understand how and why Hollywood was so embroiled in the Red Scare.Ā 
Ron: Iā€™ve been hearing a lot of talk about a mind-bendy thriller called Dark Matter on Apple TV+ so I decided to check it out. You and I loved Netflixā€™s Dark, and I adored the other sci-fi show called Dark Matter so why not? Itā€™s based on a book by Blake Crouch and the premise is around alternate universes. I love alternate universes so I was very excited when I realised that was what the show was about.
My enthusiasm was waning partway through episode one, of what I believe is a 10-episode series. Joel Edgerton plays Jason Dessen, a science professor.Ā 
Mon: Iā€™m sorryā€“thatā€™s a name choice.
Ron: Hehe. His wife Daniela, played by Jennifer Connelly, works in an art gallery. The two of them gave up their dreams of being a scientist and an artist to raise their son. First up, how cliche, the dude is the scientist, the lady is an artist. Why donā€™t we swap it around and really make things interesting? Anyway!
Then they waste the first three episodes with this setup about Jason being kidnapped and left in an alternate reality. And heā€™s wondering who couldā€™ve done it. When we already know the answer in episode one. Why would you spend three episodes with the characters not knowing something the audience has already been told?
Also, I tuned in to see alternate universes. Those really only appear from episode 4. And I donā€™t know if itā€™s a budget issue, but the characters rarely interact with the alternate universes. Theyā€™re mostly green screen. How very boring.
But the premise of the story is so dull. Jason loves his wife and wants to go back to her. Thatā€™s literally all there is to this man. Nothing else. Every single episode he keeps going on about how much he loves his wife. But I donā€™t understand what theyā€™re on about because, honestly, Jason and Danielaā€™s life looks awful. Thereā€™s no excitement. They have no hobbies. The show has to keep telling us they love each other when it really looks like theyā€™ve just settled for this existence.
Also, I cannot stand when characters make stupid decisions. We all do dumb things sometimes, sure. But nobody looks at a snowstorm and willingly runs into it. Thereā€™s this pandemic world they go to, and you will not believe it, Jason, after being told that the virus on this world is spread through fluids, he handles a vial that Daniela was holding after she was wiping her tears away. Dude, two seconds ago, they told you not to do that!
The show is really held back by the central romance between Jason and Daniela, because I just donā€™t see that love. Companionship, sure. Love? Whatever. Just show me the cool alternate worlds.
Mon: Yikes. Giving that a miss then.
Mon: On to some stuff weā€™ve been watching together.Ā 
I think a lot more people have heard about Madame Web the film, than actually seen it. Itā€™s a running joke at this pointā€“another Sony Marvel movie that bombed, haha.Ā 
We only recently caught up with it. I had no hopes for the film. Iā€™d heard nothing but outrage at how bad it was, so my only expectation was to be mildly entertained.Ā 
But you know what, now that Iā€™ve watched it, Iā€™m really annoyed. Iā€™m annoyed with people, especially the people who said donā€™t even bother watching this film because itā€™s dead on arrival. Like, if youā€™re a fan of superhero stuff, this film was worth one viewing at least.
Ron: This is the same nonsense that happened to The Marvels. People kept saying donā€™t watch it because itā€™s bad but since you and I got a preview screening, we were completely confused because we knew The Marvels was incredibly fun. I wish weā€™d got to give Madame Web a chance because it was also fun, in a very different way.
Mon: Madame Web is not great. The CGI is so janky, I canā€™t believe they let it out in public like that. And then thereā€™s the first scene, which is atrociously acted. Yikes! But if you stick around, you get this really wholesome road trip, sorority sisters sticking together vibe. I kinda liked it. It was, I donā€™t know, adorable?Ā 
Ron: Hereā€™s the thing though, the CGI was janky in Doctor Strange and the Multiverse of Madness and Guardians of the Galaxy 3 but people were still raving about those!
Mon: Yep.Ā 
None of the performances are great, but itā€™s like everyone had a bit and they stuck to it. The whole film does feel, a little, like everyone involved is on cruise control, but again, it didnā€™t make me hate it. It was a surprisingly pleasant experience to hang out with these characters and this film. I mean, I liked this film more than the second and third volumes of Guardians of the Galaxy and Ant-Man and the Wasp: Quantumania, which isnā€™t saying much, because those were awful entries. But they made money and arenā€™t as openly mocked as this women-led and directed film. I wonder why. #sarcasm
Ron: I really liked the characters in Madame Web. Cassie Web is relatable. That scene where the kid hands her a drawing and sheā€™s like, what do I do with this? Relatable! That entire subway section with her and the three teenagers and theyā€™re sure this woman is kidnapping them, was hilarious. This movie was genuinely so funny. All the emotion that Guardians 3 was forcing on its script and actors, this film did it organically. I found myself so moved when Cassie had that revelation about her mother. Now Iā€™ve just made myself sad again.
Mon: The characters were the best part of the filmā€“truly surprising, but thatā€™s what annoys me more about people being so mean about this film.
Mon: Two things about this film Iā€™m not sure aboutā€“they made it like this was a one-and-done. These people will be superheroes, even though we donā€™t know how. We see them in costume, but itā€™s not in the present. That was a weird choice, and it seals the deal on there being no future for these characters.
Ron: There could easily have been a sequel that shows us how this group gets to that point. I mean, Venom seemed like a one and done film and itā€™s got two sequels!
Mon: The first Venom was so bad. How do people like it more than this film?
The other thing that weirded me out about Madame Web was the ending. Iā€™m still trying to process what they were trying to say with that ending. This goes back to the film being on cruise control. A character needed to be a certain way to reflect their comic book persona, so even though they go through a life-altering experience, everyoneā€™s super-chill about it becauseā€¦ thatā€™s destiny? It was really weird. I wonder if that put critics off. I mean, this film does not hold up to criticism, but man, it does not deserve the hate. This felt like The Marvels all over againā€“though that film is objectively much better made and really fun.Ā 
Ron: I actually really liked the ending. Life-altering injuries are always treated like the end of the world in stories but I like that this film had this character accept it as part of her journey. A sequel could have explored it more.Ā 
Ron: With the crazy backlash against The Marvels, and before that, the vitriol against She-Hulk, which was such a fun, enjoyable, relatable show, and now Madame Web, Marvelā€™s not going to have any female superheroes headlining films or shows. These stories are hated on to the point where they lose box office sales and thatā€™s it, we never get to see these characters again. But Starlord will return! Iā€™m so angry.
Mon: Booooooooo!
Ron: Moving on, I guess. We didnā€™t catch Godzilla Minus One in theatres because going to the movies is expensive, you guys! We had to wait quite a while but eventually it arrived on Netflix Canada and we duly watched it. I was expecting standard monster fare. People screaming. Monsters destroying buildings. Lots of action and great VFX, because the film won the Oscar for VFX. But hoo boy, we got so much more!
Mon: Sitting down to watch Godzilla Minus One was worrying. I was certain this wouldnā€™t live up to the hype. Well, I was wrong. The film is rivetingā€“but not because itā€™s about a monster called Godzilla, itā€™s because itā€™s a character study of people, and who the monsters really are. I know some people were annoyed that the film doesnā€™t touch on the atrocities that Japan committed during the warā€“there are other stories that deal with that, but I donā€™t know how this film would have included that as well. I mean, we all know there are no saints in a war; I donā€™t think this film tries to paint things any differently.Ā 
Ron: The movie does touch on the fact that Japan made some terrible choices in the second World War.
Mon: It does. Godzilla is merely a catalyst to tell a deeper story about governmental and systemic failure, the devastation of war, the real cost of the atomic bombs, and most importantly, the connections among people. This isnā€™t the first Godzilla film to tap into these themes, but itā€™s the first one that Iā€™ve seen do this.Ā 
Ron: Godzilla was created in response to the nuclear bombs dropped on Hiroshima and Nagasaki. To have this movie set during and just after the second World War, drives home the devastation that those bombs caused.
Mon: The American Godzilla movies are always the sameā€“monster fights. Theyā€™re so dull. And then you have this one, with these complicated characters who have so many layers to them. And the special effects. The VFX team won the Oscar for a reason. Godzilla looks so real! Itā€™s scary.
Ron: True. Godzilla Minus One was so much more than the action. Protagonist Shikishima is a failed Kamikaze pilot. And then heā€™s one of only two survivors of Godzillaā€™s attack on a small island refuelling station. Not only that, but he returns home to find his civilian parents died in the war. Itā€™s just survivorā€™s guilt upon survivorā€™s guilt for Shikishima! Ryunosuke Kamiki, who plays Shikishima, carries the film on his shoulders and he manages to portray the unimaginable burden of surviving so much really well. Itā€™s a shame the international awards didnā€™t recognise his acting.
Mon: My only criticism is that I wish our leading lady Noriko had a larger role in the story, and that there were more ladies in the story. I know that Japan can be very patriarchal, and would have probably been even more conservative in the 1940s, but I wish theyā€™d figured out a way to bring more women into the story.
Ron: 100%. Noriko is the amusing heart of the story. Sheā€™s the reason why Shikishima ends up with the worldā€™s most bizarre but loving family unit. Norikoā€™s really the one who makes them work as a family. She had some incredible scenes and was played with a lot of sensitivity by Minami Hamabe. I was impressed by how much love Shikishima and Noriko had for each other without there being long monologues about it, just quiet moments and a shared look. And thatā€™s down to the acting.
Mon: This film is worth a watch whether you like or care for Godzilla. Itā€™s outstanding. Who knew you could get emotional during a Godzilla movie!
Mon: Everyone has been decrying the end of the world because The Fall Guy failed at the box office. Us plebs who refuse to go to the cinema all the time are the worst of humanity, donā€™t you know? How dare we not spend every dollar on passively absorbing every single film that comes out instead of trying to buy groceries and, you know, survive.Ā 
Mon: Iā€™m sorry, did I go on a diatribe? I did. The way the online space made it out, it seemed like The Fall Guy was the best film ever to have been made. Listen, I was going to watch it anyway, just not in the theatre. We have to pick and choose when we spend money and where we go. We used to love going to the cinema every week, but thatā€™s just not possible nowā€“money isnā€™t even the biggest issue, for us at least, itā€™s that you have to be wise about which indoor spaces you want to be in.
Ron: When cinema tickets are $26 per person, before taxes, youā€™ve got to choose the groceries. Iā€™m afraid The Fall Guy isnā€™t the kind of movie Iā€™m spending that much money on. Sorry.
Mon: Anyway, on to the film. The Fall Guy is just meh. I was kinda disappointed, honestly. I was expecting something spectacular. This isnā€™t it. The opening scene? Yeah, sign me up. Awesome direction. That was, wow. And the way it ends, holy moly. That was incredible stuff.Ā 
Ron: That one-take opening scene was so well-executed and then you have that unexpected ending. I couldnā€™t wait to see what happened next.
Mon: But the film goes downhill after that. The pacing is off. It tries so hard to be funny, but it keeps falling flat. Thereā€™s some really slick directing, but the action scenes were badly paced.
I also didnā€™t like that Ryan Goslingā€™s the only one with any significant screen time. Thereā€™s this cast of amazing actors, Winston Duke, Stephanie Hsu, and Aaron Taylor-Johnson, and they donā€™t get their due. Taylor-Johnson has more to do than Duke and Hsu though.
Ron: Aaron Taylor-Johnson is so freaking funny and he absolutely owns this douchebag role. But he disappears for three quarters of the movie! And donā€™t get me started on Stephanie Hsu getting only two scenes.
Mon: And Emily Blunt is totally wasted in this. What the hell! Useless, tiresome role. So boring. At least Gosling can finally act though. I swear, till before Barbie, he was as wooden as a doll, and now he can actually emote.
Ron: Ken has changed Gosling so much. I actually understand the appeal now!
Mon: I have to strain to remember that I watched this film because it was so meh. I cannot believe the vitriol the average movie-goer faced because they didnā€™t support this film. People need to live a little.
Ron: Well, weā€™ve definitely been busy being entertained this year. Have you been watching or reading something youā€™d recommend? Let us know in the comments. Until next time.
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