Marvel Defenders of The Status Quo

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  • čas přidán 29. 11. 2022
  • Superheroes usually manage to roll back the various apocalypses but rarely use their powers to build a better world. The villains are the ones constantly dreaming up big audacious schemes to transform the universe.
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    REFERENCES
    • Super Position by David Graeber
    thenewinquiry.com/super-position
    • The Utopia of Rules by David Graeber
    www.mhpbooks.com/books/the-ut...
    • Alan Moore Gives Rare Interview
    deadline.com/2020/10/alan-moo...
    DOCUMENTARY FOOTAGE FROM
    • This Changes Everything (2015)
    • The 13th (2016)
    • Sir No Sir (2005)
    • I Am Not Your Negro (2016)
    • Eyes on the Prize (1987)
    • The Vote (2020)
    • Harlan County U.S.A. (1976)
    • Disobedience (2016)
    • We Were Here (2011)
    • The Corporation (2003)
    • Zapatista (1999)
    SUBTITLES
    • Help by adding subtitle translations via Amara
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    TEXT TRANSCRIPT
    • Coming soon
    COMMENTS
    Many CZcams comments are held for approval to reduce the number of bad-faith trolls. If you'd like to participate in constructive online conversations about this video, please share it on your social media networks.
    FAIR USE
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    VIDEO LINK FOR EDUCATORS
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    CREDITS
    Writer/Editing: Jonathan McIntosh
    Outro music: Rick Lopez
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Komentáře • 6K

  • @PopCultureDetective
    @PopCultureDetective  Před rokem +460

    Subtitles for this video are now available in English, French, and Japanese. If you'd like to us help out with even more language translations, it's easy over on Amara: amara.org/videos/bnhuIc588XqN/info/marvels-defenders-of-the-status-quo/

    • @mankytoes
      @mankytoes Před rokem +15

      Do you think the issues you discuss have anything to do with America's tradition of anti-communism? Because I swear that whole section where you talk about a group of people with revolutionary ideas who seem like they have great ideas for promoting society, but in practise are ridiculously callous about killing innocent people, could have been written about the Bolsheviks.

    • @YelDohan
      @YelDohan Před rokem +12

      ​@@mankytoes Agreed. The Americans' distrust for any system certainly prevented the writers from imagining the possibility of building a good system. The only system they can imagine is to let the protagonists do their thing according to their respective moral compasses. In comparison, the heroes in Japanese action anime are often a team of specialists working together under government supervision while the status quo is not always maintained. The heroes in Korean action film are often trying to change the status quo but usually ended up in a dystopian tragedy. And the heroes in Chinese action films often changes the status quo to promote China.

    • @AutistRapper
      @AutistRapper Před rokem

      uh... meow?

    • @godoftomatos881
      @godoftomatos881 Před rokem

      This whole video just had me thinking about invincible now that I’ve read it.

    • @jmay2530
      @jmay2530 Před 11 měsíci

      Muchas gracias por ponerlo al español

  • @questodipende
    @questodipende Před rokem +5176

    something that I think about a lot is how Spider-Man 2’s train scene was really one of the last and only times that we saw civilians taking an active role in helping a hero as a collective. now in most films they just exist to be either starry eyed or to die screaming

    • @ollieb.9731
      @ollieb.9731 Před rokem +85

      The Wakandans fought in Infinity War. But I did really like that bit in Spider-Man 2.

    • @BurkinaFaso69
      @BurkinaFaso69 Před rokem +447

      @@ollieb.9731 doesn't count, that was just an army of faceless goons

    • @mohammedhany5640
      @mohammedhany5640 Před rokem +86

      Amazing spiderman crane scene ?

    • @proofofparadox1098
      @proofofparadox1098 Před rokem +249

      Spiderman did it often new Yorkers threw things at green goblin too

    • @esdraslopez4658
      @esdraslopez4658 Před rokem +229

      The other scene that comes to mind is The Dark Knight’s ferry scene

  • @tariqthomas9090
    @tariqthomas9090 Před rokem +15430

    I feel like this is why many people prefer the X-Men to the Avengers.
    The Avengers, as cool as they are, are glorified superpowered police. The X-Men, in comparison, have no choice but to constantly call the status quo into question because their lives and existence count on it.

    • @PrettyPrincess9609
      @PrettyPrincess9609 Před rokem +1352

      I always been an X-men fan since I was a little kid. Before the MCU came out, I hated the Avengers and thought they were corny. I loved reading the X-men comics, watching the shows, and movies. I found the X-men more relatable especially as someone who experienced racism since I was a kid. I related to the prejudice they experience for being mutants just like I was discriminated against for being black.

    • @thiagodszsnts
      @thiagodszsnts Před rokem +1053

      Yeah, they're activelly fighting racism and creating safe spaces for their persecuted minority. I've always felt the X-Men is the best take on superhero stories, and it's quite telling that most of the viewership claim for a version that's more similar to the Avengers.

    • @carlbonara602
      @carlbonara602 Před rokem +247

      Kevin Feige needs to see this vid, especially since he's about to include the mutants/x-men in the mcu

    • @thiagodszsnts
      @thiagodszsnts Před rokem +473

      @@carlbonara602 nah, he already knows all about this, he's the architect. If the X-Men were to be more in touch with real life social problems and challenge the status quo in any way, they had to stay as far as possible from Disney and Marvel Studios.

    • @pranavgoel9978
      @pranavgoel9978 Před rokem +653

      I mean, just look at what they did to Spider man with his working class hero roots to a billionaire stooge in the MCU - that's what they'll do to the X-Men too. Verily has a great video breaking down MCU spiderman

  • @AntiSocialismo50
    @AntiSocialismo50 Před rokem +4206

    "You confuse peace with quiet. "
    Great sentence from Ultron

    • @wormflavoredskittles6395
      @wormflavoredskittles6395 Před rokem +243

      ​@chandllerburse737 I think that's a case of marvel making the villains hypocrites or pull atrocities so you'll be on the side of the hero even though the villain has valid social justice ideas

    • @wormflavoredskittles6395
      @wormflavoredskittles6395 Před rokem +91

      @chandllerburse737 well im just kinda going based off the video here, but like theyll have villians who have genuine good points like the confusing peace with quiet and then compeltely distort that points and not have the heros questions their defense of the status quo if that makes sense? he didnt have a good goal, but it comes across as elaborate villianization of those who seek change . my og comment didnt really word that well and ill be honest its been years since ive watched age of ultron so i cant pull more examples, but the video explains what im trying ot get at way better. mb if i sound wordy or defendy of him, i think the you confuse peace with quiet is a great line and one that a lot of mcu villians reflect, like the flagsmashers and thanos. they just always have to do something evil. why cant the good guys do something that isnt keeping the status quo for once? why do they rarely question it? why cant they fight the systems that was causing resource distrubution issues to counter thanos weird "lets kill them all" mindset? or at least try to provide some of those resources themselves? why couldnt they fight against systems of oppression that prefer quiet over peace instead of upholding it?

    • @zakai-kaz
      @zakai-kaz Před rokem +35

      @Chandller Burse I’d say the main problem with that quote is that it was so obviously inspired by Martin Luther king’s writings of “When peace becomes obnoxious” and they went and shoved it down the throat of a genocidal robot.🙄

    • @ccshumshum8104
      @ccshumshum8104 Před rokem +3

      @@wormflavoredskittles6395 "valid social justice ideas" hhhhhhh just say you have trouble telling right from wrong

    • @mongoliandude
      @mongoliandude Před 9 měsíci +31

      This is a quote from Martin Luther King that resonates with that Ultron quote, and this video more generally:
      - - I have almost reached the regrettable conclusion that the [African American's] great stumbling block in the stride toward freedom is not the White Citizen's Council-er or the [pointy hooded clansmen], but ; who constantly says who paternalistically feels he can set the timetable for another man's freedom; who lives by the myth of time and who constantly advises the [African American] to wait until a "more convenient season." - -

  • @totesMagotes83
    @totesMagotes83 Před rokem +1130

    This isn't MCU, but in Wonder-Woman 1984, at the climax of the movie she says: "The world is fine the way it is" to the antagonist whose whole project was to use a magical wishing stone to change the world. That movie is a really good example of what you're talking about.

    • @ShadowSonic2
      @ShadowSonic2 Před rokem +73

      The problem was that it only showed the extremes of how everyone getting every wish they wanted ended up being destructive.

    • @EclipsingTNT
      @EclipsingTNT Před 10 měsíci +21

      @@ShadowSonic2Yeah, WW84 has problems, but this is not one of them.

    • @KartonRealista2
      @KartonRealista2 Před 8 měsíci +40

      Literally 1984

    • @Zack-fu4lo
      @Zack-fu4lo Před 8 měsíci

      I love how she says that only 20 years after segregation ended.
      Hell, domestic abuse was legal during her time lol. Like, you could get away with raping your wives during this time.

    • @mexicantimberwolf
      @mexicantimberwolf Před 5 měsíci +6

      Very jarring when you consider part of what she learns in the first one is that humans aren't inherently good, but not inherently evil either. They have to learn from each other and improve.

  • @dragonslair951167
    @dragonslair951167 Před rokem +6990

    "You wanna protect the world, but you don't want it to change."
    It always bothered me that this quote came out of the mouth of a villain.

    • @seventhcyborg
      @seventhcyborg Před rokem +1191

      "You confuse peace with quiet." was also pretty good.

    • @charlieflight6124
      @charlieflight6124 Před rokem

      It's almost like change is a possible vessel for those who plan corruption or something.

    • @michaellevin1400
      @michaellevin1400 Před rokem +598

      @@seventhcyborg sounds very similar to you promoting a "negative peace, which is a lack of tensions, to a positive peace, which is the presence of justice." In his time, MLK was viewed as a villain by two-thirds of the population...

    • @seventhcyborg
      @seventhcyborg Před rokem

      @@michaellevin1400 MLK was right on the money.

    • @alessiodelcastillo1613
      @alessiodelcastillo1613 Před rokem +121

      @@seventhcyborgUltron was so philosophical

  • @coleames514
    @coleames514 Před rokem +14845

    i will say it is incredibly annoying when you notice how many of the villains are on the right path but then they randomly decide to start murdering people just so we don't forget who the bag guy is.

    • @daisymagnus306
      @daisymagnus306 Před rokem +547

      Pretty much what happened with the Riddler in Batman

    • @near4316
      @near4316 Před rokem +1008

      i don't understand that logic cause the heroes themselves have killed a lot of people

    • @gaymiens
      @gaymiens Před rokem +81

      @@daisymagnus306 thiiiiis

    • @julianjpantoja4603
      @julianjpantoja4603 Před rokem +569

      @@daisymagnus306 the riddler is shown to be totally wrong, and he was never in the right. People who agreed with him are scary.

    • @mrpurple11
      @mrpurple11 Před rokem +52

      @@julianjpantoja4603 agree

  • @SW017
    @SW017 Před rokem +2430

    On the other side, it’s frustrating just how many villains these days have the motivation ‘fix a problem, but do it evil’

    • @notaburneraccount
      @notaburneraccount Před rokem +217

      That's the point. The message often times in MCU is that changing society from the status quo is and can only ever be evil and must be stopped, which is the heroic and right thing to do. Even though _restoring_ things to how they were doesn't actually help anyone and is actually saying that things are fine as they are. It's quite sad.

    • @SW017
      @SW017 Před rokem +68

      @@notaburneraccount I was actually talking about modern media more generally. Kingsmen, apparently that fast and furious spin off with Idris Elba, I don’t know if you’ve heard of Alex rider, but the Amazon series changed the villain’s motivation from racism to population reduction

    • @amiablereaper
      @amiablereaper Před 8 měsíci +29

      ​@@SW017yeah Kingsmen and Stormbreaker actually have very similar villain plots. "I'm going to gift efelctronics to poor people... and then kill them with it"

    • @zagreus5773
      @zagreus5773 Před 8 měsíci +1

      @amiablereaper How does Kingsmen fit into this? The villain doesn't try to improve society using evil methods. Instead he starts off as outright evil and hides this by doing something aparently generous: Gifting phones to the everyone (iirc). So if anything it is thre exact opposite to a Marvel villain who has seemingly good motivations and goals but does unnecessarily horrible things to archive them or just because he can (like Killmongers sexism).
      Unless you think population reduction is a good thing, which it isn't. Populations ideally remain stable.

    • @MrReaperofDead
      @MrReaperofDead Před 8 měsíci +12

      @SW017
      Oh come on now dude. There _has_ to be some kind of plot. You can't just have a villain that fixes a problem and does good, and the heroes fight him for doing good. Then they wouldn't be a villain, they'd be heroes fighting. The villain has to have a warped mindset, in order to be believable as a villain, otherwise it would be frustrating as well, seeing somebody with the right ideals in every way get attacked.
      The trick in order to make a good villain, is to be skilled enough as writer to combine the best of two worlds. For example:
      let's say a villain wants to blow up the world in order to stop people from bullying him. Despite the trope being potentially oversaturated, it's still a good villain plot set up, because it shows their warped mindset is transfixed on vengeance, and not concerned with who they hurt. They become the bully they were against.

  • @greg-gamer
    @greg-gamer Před rokem +2304

    Not to mention that, if when they do something against the status quo, it's always misled or warped. One thing that always bothered me about Black Panther was that Wakanda's very first social center was built in.... CALIFORNIA, only the richest state of the richest nation of the world; not in - say - any other neighboring AFRICAN COUNTRY lol.

    • @dodec8449
      @dodec8449 Před rokem +192

      As long as the rich people see that you are doing good.

    • @Just_normal_youtube_channel
      @Just_normal_youtube_channel Před rokem +123

      Or because California has the highest homeless population in the US (a country with very high racial tension).

    • @maddieb.4282
      @maddieb.4282 Před rokem +79

      @@Just_normal_youtube_channelthey’re not AMERICAN

    • @Just_normal_youtube_channel
      @Just_normal_youtube_channel Před rokem +58

      @@maddieb.4282 So? Wouldn’t be the only time Wakanda has violated another nation’s borders.

    • @TheSolidOne
      @TheSolidOne Před rokem +35

      @@Just_normal_youtube_channel That’s... actually a pretty good reason.

  • @samsmith5947
    @samsmith5947 Před rokem +5954

    I remember after Infinity War, a friend of mine said "Well, Thanos has a point. Resources are distributed unfairly, people suffer, and this is a solution." I then pointed out that instead of killing half the universe (which is, besides cruel, also ineffective because a society can't run with a sudden 50% drop) he could've doubled the resources instead. With that, my friend agreed that Thanos was indeed a bad guy. But neither of us realized that it made our 'heroes' bad guys for not doubling all resources when undoing the blip.

    • @renoirrr
      @renoirrr Před rokem +691

      literally yesterday we rewatched infinity war bc at least the villain won for once and i heard thanos saying that “the universe is finite, it’s resources finite. it needs correction” and i suddenly said out loud “so why didn’t you just make everything infinite instead of killing everybody” bc imo doubling would end the same way because it’s still finite, yknow?

    • @Mosstoad
      @Mosstoad Před rokem +1402

      We don't even necessarily need more resources, just resource distribution. For example, we make enough food for 10b people but thousands still die from starvation. It's an issue of hoarding and waste rather than resource scarcity

    • @samsmith5947
      @samsmith5947 Před rokem +210

      @@Mosstoad Very true! Thank you for this addition! :)

    • @quivygm
      @quivygm Před rokem +242

      If you think about it doubling the resources could cause problems too. Because resources isn't just ores and food (both of which would need space to be stored in) it's also landspace and labor and energy all of which would need new space of their own. This basically means that Thanos would have to more of less double the size of the universe and everything in it. Thus even more problems.

    • @metausername7195
      @metausername7195 Před rokem +252

      @@Mosstoad yeah, the doubled resources would prolly just go to the wealthy while the Poor will have poverty

  • @shadyguy23
    @shadyguy23 Před rokem +3439

    I remember thinking a few years after the first Iron Man: Tony Stark invents what appears to be an infinite nearly-free energy source - this would be a world changing event, and solve so many societal problems, with the potential to save the environment, reduce wealth inequality, and save lives in countless ways. Yet in the MCU, life for regular people appears unchanged. It's clear that Tony never plans to actually share this technology with the world, I'm guess due to some fear of it 'falling into the wrong hands', which is when I realized those movies are about punching bad guys, not actually helping improve the world.

    • @cameronsitton501
      @cameronsitton501 Před rokem +531

      Well, the parts to make it are probably incredibly difficult to find. You can't just whip one together out of anyth- hold on, what's that? I'm- I'm being told Tony Stark built it in a cave with a box of scraps.

    • @nicknorris4612
      @nicknorris4612 Před rokem +532

      "Falling into the wrong hands" also implies his hands aren't the wrong ones. He only uses this power supply to fly around in a suit of metal and for his own vanity. I'd wager his hands might be the "wrong" ones afterall.

    • @theleap2946
      @theleap2946 Před rokem +221

      The issue I see with him not employing these ideas is because he too would lose his status among society. For an arrogant, self centered individual like him what is life if he can’t go to Monaco on a whim?

    • @Revenkin
      @Revenkin Před rokem +46

      The problem is... What are the right hands? Absolute power corrupts absolutely

    • @vilkristproductions6772
      @vilkristproductions6772 Před rokem +56

      @@theleap2946 bro literally killed himself to save everybody and this is your take on him 💀

  • @literallymalware
    @literallymalware Před 7 měsíci +387

    My least favorite part of this trope is that even if the hero realizes "damn, the bad guy was kinda right, we do need to have a change" and they donate 20 dollars to charity or something insignificant like that

    • @chaz693
      @chaz693 Před 4 měsíci +14

      Just give the cops a Pepsi

    • @selalewis9189
      @selalewis9189 Před 3 měsíci +12

      Basically the ending of Black Panther.

    • @randomusername3873
      @randomusername3873 Před 2 měsíci

      Point out a villain that has a point then
      And no, killmonger "kill all white people" is not a valid point

    • @derigel7662
      @derigel7662 Před 2 měsíci +9

      @@selalewis9189 where they ignore all of Africa...cough....cough

    • @wrestlinganime4life288
      @wrestlinganime4life288 Před 9 dny +1

      ​@derigel7662 and one of Tchalla ally was a CIA agent

  • @viniciusvyller9458
    @viniciusvyller9458 Před rokem +558

    There's a comic where Superman tries to solve world hunger by himself just to get ousted by politicians who dont want an alien to intervene. That story for me is the epitome of superheroing, as Superman challenges the status quo and gets defeated temporarily by it. Truly, the hidden archnemesis of all superheroes is status quo

    • @tekkersmo3816
      @tekkersmo3816 Před rokem +7

      Well said

    • @viniciusvyller9458
      @viniciusvyller9458 Před rokem

      @Chandller Burse Yes, probably because he resides in America, so yeah, propaganda.

    • @tekkersmo3816
      @tekkersmo3816 Před rokem +4

      @Chandller Burse which is why pen will always be mightier than sword

    • @arturouribebertolotti1169
      @arturouribebertolotti1169 Před 8 měsíci +19

      ​@chandllerburse737i mean if you come with a suit that represents america to a country that was invaded by them, i don't think people will receive you well

    • @arturouribebertolotti1169
      @arturouribebertolotti1169 Před 8 měsíci +21

      @chandllerburse737 well i didnt read that comic so i dont know if it is a case of superman being naive at not knowing the resentment third world countries have over the US or the comic just making a racist stereotype portraying middle eastern people as inherently violent

  • @vighnesh1768
    @vighnesh1768 Před rokem +3841

    Status quo and celebrity worship is so ingrain in MCU that we never questioned that Tony Stark basically hires literal child with some superpowers to fight his own organisation Civil war by giving him scholarship as bribe.

    • @Newfiecat
      @Newfiecat Před rokem +359

      Well... I questioned it, lol. But then again, I've never liked Tony Stark. Argh, I can't help it: I will forever side-eye an "Asshole with Billions" character even if it's a superhero who prevents the apocalypse.

    • @wrestlinganime4life288
      @wrestlinganime4life288 Před rokem +154

      @@Newfiecat I thought I was the only one..
      I never understood the hype around Iron man, sure he's cool and all but nothing really impressive compared to a batman or Superman.
      And his comic version its even worse 😱

    • @thisisajourney8956
      @thisisajourney8956 Před rokem +7

      @@Newfiecat I agree

    • @jaydenc367
      @jaydenc367 Před rokem +71

      @@wrestlinganime4life288 eh....because he develops, he's interesting because of his flaws but he does get better.

    • @aya_5791
      @aya_5791 Před rokem +64

      @@wrestlinganime4life288 that’s the point, he is flawed and learns from his mistakes. He is more human than superman or batman will ever be.

  • @TheBloodyloon
    @TheBloodyloon Před rokem +6099

    Woah. You really pointed out something that consistently bothered me about MCU films. I frequently felt like the villains had a point and then bam, pointless murder. You put it into words, thank you.

    • @markayala3754
      @markayala3754 Před rokem +208

      They do the same in the musical Across the Universe
      In Forest Gump, the black panthers were portrayed as misogynist
      I think 2pac, Marley, and Lennon were targets of the state
      In movies and in reality

    • @FeministCatwoman
      @FeministCatwoman Před rokem +218

      @@markayala3754 They also do the same in nearly all Disney properties, and animated shows like Korra

    • @user-ln6gn2zu9j
      @user-ln6gn2zu9j Před rokem +464

      Step 1: Make the villain compelling by having them make good points
      Step 2: Get the audience to sympathize with the villain
      Step 3: Wait we need to make the heroes punch the villain
      Step 4: Have the villain kick a puppy, that'll get the audience to hate them!
      Step 5: ???
      Step 6: Profit!

    • @Blizaros
      @Blizaros Před rokem +83

      Or pointless genocide in Endgame...
      And don't forget to treat the culprit as a war hero and a martyr before going to eat cheeseburgers.

    • @Kadda975
      @Kadda975 Před rokem +159

      @@FeministCatwoman I'd argue that Korra (and the world around her) still very much learns from the villains - unlike people in the mcu.
      At the end of book 1, Republic city elects a non-bender as mayor; at the end of book 2, Korra decides to leave the spirit portals open and so on.
      The only marvel movie with a similar development that comes to mind is Black Panther, I think.

  • @MysteryFaceX
    @MysteryFaceX Před rokem +629

    I mean, if the super heroes challenged the status quo, Disney would be one of the villains. And we can't have that.

    • @plak77
      @plak77 Před 5 měsíci

      Statu Quo, no S

    • @ilovepeoplebro
      @ilovepeoplebro Před 5 měsíci +4

      ​@@plak77StatuS quo StatuS quo StatuS quo StatuS quo StatuS quo StatuS quo StatuS quo StatuS quo StatuS quo

  • @zzxp1
    @zzxp1 Před 8 měsíci +407

    They did Killmonguer so dirty. "Quickly, the villain is making too much sense, is time to make him an evil maniac for no reason"

    • @avenger4027
      @avenger4027 Před 4 měsíci +16

      Killmonger never made sense.

    • @thesilliestgoose5990
      @thesilliestgoose5990 Před 3 měsíci

      @@avenger4027🍘🍘🍘🍘🍘

    • @IronheartvsMiles
      @IronheartvsMiles Před 3 měsíci +11

      @@avenger4027 For racist. yes

    • @happynihilist2573
      @happynihilist2573 Před 2 měsíci

      @@IronheartvsMiles no i'd imagine racists find him quite relatable, he to want's to kill everyone with a different skin colour after all

    • @happynihilist2573
      @happynihilist2573 Před 2 měsíci +7

      @@IronheartvsMiles he kills his girlfriend for no reason, I don't think you want to say "racist" is the only one how can have a problem with that

  • @justafish9618
    @justafish9618 Před rokem +3394

    Reminds me of how in every survival or horror story the self sufficient kind community is secretly cannibalistic or sadistic. It never fails.

    • @mikei6605
      @mikei6605 Před rokem +295

      That reminds me of the manga Fire Punch, where the protagonist has healing powers and so feeds himself to his village to help them survive, and the villain is the one to attack them for doing so.

    • @justafish9618
      @justafish9618 Před rokem +143

      @@mikei6605 Fire punch is good but I think it's different because they don't try to portray an ideal as opposed to this. Like for the walking dead the richeous characters are the main cast whereas in fire punch no one is.

    • @nuclearpancake3683
      @nuclearpancake3683 Před rokem +61

      the walking dead 💀

    • @mr.b89
      @mr.b89 Před rokem +21

      @@mikei6605 fire punch is so damn good bruh

    • @mistery8363
      @mistery8363 Před rokem +9

      how are they supposed to drive catt-i mean TOURISTS in the village?

  • @iLLiCiT_XL
    @iLLiCiT_XL Před rokem +3055

    The message here was so much more clear in "Falcon and the Winter Soldier" and "Black Panther." It's always been there, but in those two particular MCU inclusions, it was staring you dead in the face that the heroes were actively stopping social progress. And the that villians were being made to take actions deemed "too much, too fast, too far" in order to stop the audience from aligning with them.

    • @Vivigreeny25
      @Vivigreeny25 Před rokem +539

      At least Black Panther had the heroes learn from the villain. T’challa strives for change after Killmonger dies. My biggest issue with it all is the fact that we… really don’t see any changes? Like Wakanda going public should have had MASSIVE effects on the world and. Instead we get. Nothing.

    • @jtreidno1
      @jtreidno1 Před rokem

      Ah the old "as long as they're minorities they can kill and oppress whoever they want" trope.

    • @Confettifun
      @Confettifun Před rokem

      @@Vivigreeny25 i mean we got countries trying to steal wakandas resources and attempting to kill them all to get them(the nato scene in wakada forever)

    • @JundlandBanshee
      @JundlandBanshee Před rokem +339

      Also interesting how when the MCU goes full mask off in defending Imperialism and Colonialism they use black heroes as their mouth piece. In "Falcon and the Winter Soldier" they have Falcon literally play the part of the White Moderate that MLK Jr called out in this "Letter From a Birmingham Jail".

    • @SigfriedBigcheeseVanMemelordII
      @SigfriedBigcheeseVanMemelordII Před rokem +222

      Exactly. I was 100% on the Flag Smashers' side until they blew up that building (which was completely out of character). And I still would have been happier if they'd won in the end because they actually wanted positive change. It's so obvious they accidentally made their villains too sympathetic and tried hard to walk it back.

  • @luisfilipe2747
    @luisfilipe2747 Před 10 měsíci +321

    I've always found funny how sometimes the villains have legitime good points and objectives, but the writters need to make you hate them and their ideas, so they'll make the villain kill people or blow an hospital for no reason at all other than to show to you that they're the bad guys

    • @PepeGibon
      @PepeGibon Před 8 měsíci +26

      I remember that scene of Black Panther when Killmonger orders a lady to burn the heart flowers, but when she doubts about it he starts to strangle her. I was like ''Bro wtf'', this was so much out of character for him.

    • @luisfilipe2747
      @luisfilipe2747 Před 8 měsíci +20

      @@PepeGibon exactly. Want to make a evil character, make him evil, don't give him actual reasons for someone to revolt and then stamp a "now I kill people for no related reason"

    • @oscarlove4394
      @oscarlove4394 Před 7 měsíci +12

      i'm reminded of the white fang in RWBY. the show isn't that great but the white fang is especially bad.
      They're animal people, but its supposed to be a thin alegory for the civil rights movement.
      however they're also one dimentional villains, because the show wanted to have those. And needless to say they did not handle this complexity well.
      As a result the show's message (at least the white fang parts) boils down to "MLK should have kept his mouth shut"

    • @mausolus8466
      @mausolus8466 Před 7 měsíci +1

      Memory of Vulture from SM Homecoming immediately jumps on

    • @DreamyAileen
      @DreamyAileen Před 4 měsíci +1

      @@mausolus8466 I mean iirc Vulture didn't really kill anyone in the movie, he just made threats. The only guy we saw him kill was the first Shocker and that guy lowkey deserved it

  • @pennyforyourthots
    @pennyforyourthots Před 10 měsíci +179

    You know, coming back to this video a few months later I'm just now realizing how similar ultron's "I think you're confusing peace with quiet" is to martin Luther king jrs "who is more devoted to 'order' than to justice; who prefers a negative peace which is the absence of tension to a positive peace which is the presence of justice", at least in sentiment. Of course, Ultron wanted to exterminate all of humanity, but I find it kind of weird that the villain is basically unintentionally quoting MLK lol. Kindaa concerning.

    • @derigel7662
      @derigel7662 Před 2 měsíci +1

      i mean people ignore also the fact that we should not be looking at skin color but character......funny isnt it

    • @wrestlinganime4life288
      @wrestlinganime4life288 Před 9 dny

      Don't forget King was THE most hated men in America at a times so it should not even surprise at all

  • @OnlyRoke
    @OnlyRoke Před rokem +1286

    The closest the MCU has come to rejecting the status quo was Civil War whereby one half literally went like "Yeah let's be state-mandated super-cops, I guess." and the other half was like "Maybe let's stay as vigilantes who are above the law and don't actually carry any responsibilities."

    • @alanrubio8435
      @alanrubio8435 Před rokem +158

      Either way, I think that makes the heroes look bad. In the first scenario, the heroes turn into super cops, as you said. They work for the American Government and help reinforce the status quo that the government wants to keep to stay comfortable as they are. The other way is for sups to stay as vigilantes who carry no responsibilities, no matter what they do or decide not to do. That way they can opt to not engage in something as it’s not their job to do so. That could lead into them allowing suffering if they don’t feel like acting, or causing suffering themselves if they decide to fight for something that may be wrong or bad for the general public.
      Imo, the mcu movies don’t want to go against or question the status quo in general. The only one that feels kinda different in that way for me is The Winter Soldier, as the Captain fights a governmental institution that wants people to resign their liberties in exchange for security. Sure, security is a nice thing, but to achieve that, people have to die and anyone who starts causing waves to change the status quo will be considered a danger to society. It’s a fantastic movie, but it also fails to create a meaningful conversation about the matter because it turned out not to be a plan of the government, but a plan of a secret nazi organization that infiltrated the us. Winter soldier, as many other mcu movies before and after, just threw the conflict out of the window because the writers decided that the bad guys should be nazis in disguise.

    • @clarkmichaels822
      @clarkmichaels822 Před rokem +66

      Wouldn't really be super-cops as much as super-slaves. They'd have no say in when or where they'd be used, against who, for what reason, and how. The UN, notoriously indecisive and prone to geopolitics, would be able to send superpeople to end genocide just as easily as to facilitate one. And while some of the heroes would be able to lay down their suits or trinkets or whathaveyou and stop being heroes, others were innately superpowered and would have no choice but to submit to the state by virtue of being born.

    • @endershepard7117
      @endershepard7117 Před rokem +8

      @@alanrubio8435 “allow suffering” why do you assume that suffering shouldn’t be allowed? We all are the architects of our own suffering most of the time. And superheroes don’t owe anyone anything. There every act of grace, mercy and compassion towards the less fortunate than themselves is a gift not a right!
      And instead of responsibility you should have used accountability perhaps. You used a lot of words but Cap is still right with what he said to Tony in Captain America 🇺🇸 Civil War. That even Iron Man himself had no debate left in him.
      Steve Rogers: Tony, if someone dies on your watch you don’t give up.
      Tony Stark: Who said we’re giving up?
      Steve: We are if we’re not taking “responsibility” for our actions. This document just shifts the blame.
      Rhodes: Sorry Steve, that… that is dangerously arrogant.
      Me: No Rhodey it’s the truth!
      Rhodey: This is the United Nations 🇺🇳 we’re talking about.
      Me: A well documented trash institution that exploits 3rd world countries that they’re suppose to be helping!
      Rhodey: It’s not the World Security Council. It’s not SHIELD. It’s not HYDRA!
      Steve: No but it’s run by people with agendas and agendas change!
      Tony: That’s good!
      Tony: That’s why I’m here.
      Tony: When I realized what my weapons were capable of in the wrong hands I shut it down and stopped manufacturing.
      Steve: Tony… You chose to do that.
      Steve: If we sign this, we surrender our right to choose!
      Steve: What if this panel sends us somewhere we don’t think we should go?
      Steve: What if there’s somewhere that we need to go and they don’t let us?
      Steve: We may not be perfect but the safest hands are still our own.

    • @baishihua
      @baishihua Před rokem +11

      It is a false dichotomy as well.

    • @endershepard7117
      @endershepard7117 Před rokem +4

      @@clarkmichaels822 thank you Clark! I was just about to say the same thing to Alan. Because the way he’s talking is that he seems to think a superhero is obligated to work nonstop 24/7 to prevent the suffering of others and have no life, no dreams and goals of their own. Meaningful relationships or self agency to speak of.

  • @LaurianeG.
    @LaurianeG. Před rokem +2854

    This actually reminds me of a point Patrick H Willems made talking about the spider-man trilogy compared to the mcu (and specifically the peter of the mcu): the importance of showing the population that inhabits the hero's worlds outside of just the characters important to the plot. The 2000s spider-Man films made a point of showing as much as possible the city of new york and the people who inhabit it and making peter part of them, part of the common people. In comparison, MCU peter is under the tutelage of a billionaire and has access to his company and technology even after his passing and his first bad guy is one of employees of said billionaire who wanted better work conditions.

    • @OMGxITZxPACMAN
      @OMGxITZxPACMAN Před rokem +203

      Hopefully with the ending of No Way Home that will change and Spidey will be seen in the "friendly neighborhood" way we all know and love him for

    • @BadGirlBEcca
      @BadGirlBEcca Před rokem +20

      Nice picrew 😜

    • @Gala-yp8nx
      @Gala-yp8nx Před rokem +248

      That is my problem with MCU Spider-Man too. Jon Favreau and Marvel completely ignored the fact that he’s a working class Superhero and instead made him into little orphan Annie with Tony Stark as his Daddy Warbucks. Also: If Tony Stark was a real Superhero he’d try to use his Arc Reactor tech to transition the Marvel Universe off of Fossil Fuels.

    • @Endru85x
      @Endru85x Před rokem +145

      What you pointed here, kinda reminds me of Civil War. We got this register vs no register conflict, "turn Bucky to law" vs " allow him to be free" etc. but one thing missing IMO is the point of view of average Joes. For them, Bucky is known as terrorist who murdered people. Events do not take place in a vacuum, world is not spinning around Avengers only and i would like to see more of how normal people react to those world changing things.

    • @nont18411
      @nont18411 Před rokem +3

      @@Endru85x Not to mention how Tony “a responsible pro-Sokovia accords” Stark, showed his responsibility by recruiting (more like conning) a 16 year old Peter Parker to fight against hardened warriors like Steve, Sam and Clint. An enigmatic but extremely dangerous hero like Scott. A mentally unstable super powerful witch like Wanda and a most wanted TERRORIST at that time like Bucky.
      Imagine Obama recruiting a 16 years old to take down Bin Laden. Extremely irresponsible, isn’t it?

  • @devofficialchannel
    @devofficialchannel Před rokem +816

    After I finished watching Across the Spider-Verse and came back to this video, I feel like the "canon events" are pretty much similar to the status quo of Marvel that you described in this video. Especially with how Miguel O'Hara pretty much represents the enforcer of the status quo.
    Also, Hobie Brown/Spider-Punk is probably the only time I've seen a Marvel movie (well, one by Sony and not Disney) handle an anarchist character well and actually make him a HERO. And it's gorgeous.

    • @valqzx1144
      @valqzx1144 Před 8 měsíci +42

      its kind of weird tho that big companies are not even afraid of showcasing anti-capitalist sentiments. its not in their best interest at all to broadcast these ideas but anti capitalist ideas hold so little weight and power it doesnt even matter.

    • @devofficialchannel
      @devofficialchannel Před 8 měsíci +80

      ​@@valqzx1144What's upsetting is also the news of the animators for ATSV being overworked. Even if the animation is gorgeous and wroth the effort, knowing about what happened soured me and it's hard to rewatch ATSV without thinking of how many animators had been treated poorly during the process.
      And the Red Scare itself is still in full effect, so any actual attempts at promoting an anti-capitalist message would be met with scorn.

    • @gary7867
      @gary7867 Před 8 měsíci +14

      @@devofficialchannel ancap is a joke when now corporates themselfs are doing it, and animation are always wrought with overworked miserable artist.

    • @andreydoronin6995
      @andreydoronin6995 Před 8 měsíci +34

      Slight critique of capitalism does pop up from time to time in popular productions but often time it seems more like "ofc we are rich but we recognize that it's bad so it's not so bad" rather than genuine criticism or strive for change.

    • @Elamado97
      @Elamado97 Před 7 měsíci +6

      You know that the canon events are changeable right? What made miguel's universe collapse was miguel himself, not the change of canon events, the universe where spiderman doesn't exist is still fine.

  • @synth-wave_steve
    @synth-wave_steve Před 8 měsíci +128

    My least favourite trope in possibly all of fiction has to be ‘revolutionary that goes too far’
    Because it acknowledges something wrong with the world around us but implies any form of substantial action won’t work because of the personal grievances that motivate it.

    • @louisvictor3473
      @louisvictor3473 Před 5 měsíci +9

      I don't mind that trope per se, what I hate is its justaposition to status quo defending heroes and an ethos of change only being allowed at a pace that makes the people in power comfy with the pace, and only going through channels approved by the status quo, and the commonality of that. Revoluntaries heroes that don't go too far stopping wannabe revolutionaries with bad ideas would be fine and dandy in my book, or even some hero defending a better status quo from a revolutionary that goes too far, as long as what they fight against isn't exclusive either that or completely moustache twisting evil for evilness sake cartoony villains.

    • @eleonorepb4565
      @eleonorepb4565 Před měsícem

      I agree that this tropes is often used in a bad way, a cliche that came with it is that the story imply that since the revolution is violent the society should have stayed the same even if it caused the same share of violence than the revolution to end it because said violence is less spectacular than the one caused by the revolution. Writters also tend to forget that if revolution are violent the violence is meant to be temporary and that even if the one doing the revolution gave up to not be violent their enemies would repress them and put back the unfaire system

    • @wrestlinganime4life288
      @wrestlinganime4life288 Před 9 dny

      Basically Jet from Avatar the last arbender or Bismuth from Steven Universe

  • @ferranp3600
    @ferranp3600 Před rokem +2008

    Ok the final shot with the avengers pointing at the camera with him saying "makes you a villain" is pure brilliant

    • @Krashnachen
      @Krashnachen Před rokem +53

      and musk when he talks about ruling class

    • @dreadcthulhu5
      @dreadcthulhu5 Před rokem +1

      The media is the propaganda arm of the ruling elite who have a vested interest in maintaining things exactly as they are with them firmly in charge like always. Does anyone really think those people wouldn't do everything they could to take down anyone who tried to create stories that showed anything different? Regular people might begin to think they could actually change the world or that they actually matter.

    • @Zimuahaha
      @Zimuahaha Před rokem +9

      I got shivers!

  • @anonymous-zs9rn
    @anonymous-zs9rn Před rokem +2221

    This kinda reminds me of Shaun's critique of Harry Potter, how our heroes never challenge the status quo or fight for institutional changes, to the point that some magical beings support voldemort because the ministry of magic is so against their rights.

    • @CosmoShidan
      @CosmoShidan Před rokem +140

      Alan Moore did an excellent critique of Harry Potter in his League for Extraordinary Gentlemen.

    • @ShadowSonic2
      @ShadowSonic2 Před rokem +1

      @@CosmoShidan The one where Harry was the Antichrist who shot lightning out of his Penis and God turned into Mary Poppins to kill him?

    • @Qaosbringer
      @Qaosbringer Před rokem +13

      would you watch a "POLITICAL" movie? I don't think so. Every people watch these movies for action genre purposes.

    • @CosmoShidan
      @CosmoShidan Před rokem +1

      @@ShadowSonic2 Yes, that's the one.

    • @CosmoShidan
      @CosmoShidan Před rokem +253

      @@Qaosbringer "Everything is political."
      -Gaheris Rhade, Gene Roddenberry's Andromeda

  • @thisIsFunnyLolz
    @thisIsFunnyLolz Před rokem +553

    And that’s why Daredevil is arguably the best marvel content. Matt has been fighting for innocents in the law while buried in debt and as daredevil even before Fisk and he unites groups to not only bring down Fisk but many criminals and collectively improve life in New York in multiple ways. He is proactive in his law practice and monitoring of criminal developments, he fights for the little guy instead of protecting politicians or current economic landscape. He gives it his all every second and if he had the wealth of tony stark, the world would’ve ended up a hundred times better off

    • @son_guhun
      @son_guhun Před rokem +62

      The key here is that he does not use his status as a superhero to leverage his monopoly of force in order to unduly give more weight to his own agenda. Though it could be argued that Daredevil is far from strong enough of a hero to actually be a monopoly of force.
      But yes, it's fine for heroes to fight for social justice. As long as they don't abuse their power to do so. It has to be separate from their superhero identity. And if they start using their powers to bypass democratic institutions to further their own goals, they're at a great risk of becoming corrupt.

    • @raycath0de
      @raycath0de Před rokem +90

      it’s also telling that it is a disabled man that is looking out for under privileged people rather than a super able bodied hero

    • @seanpe8474
      @seanpe8474 Před 9 měsíci +18

      And this is exactly the issue with comics. If you have superheroes who have literal reality warping powers, they could literally solve the issues of the world immediately (imagine if Wanda just replaced all fossil fuels or used her powers for an infinite renewable energy source, or us seeing the direct result of a mass produced arc reactor), making it much more difficult to write a compelling villain and thus forcing heroes to be reactionary else there wouldn't ever be a villain in the first place. Luke Cage also does this well with a really compelling story (fighting the congress woman), but bungled the finale.

    • @kman1893
      @kman1893 Před 9 měsíci +5

      @@son_guhun ? Hes basically a wanted man for the entire series (in his daredevil persona anyway). He has 0 leverage outside of just being a very good lawyer, hed be arrested if he tried to enact change as daredevil

    • @son_guhun
      @son_guhun Před 9 měsíci +3

      @@kman1893 The point is he could simply defeat the cops and enact his agenda using force. Thus he would not have to go through any legal or democratic processes and his word would be law. Even if someone has good intentions, that's just bound to end up badly.
      As I said, Daredevil probably isn't strong enough to actually do this successfully, but someone like Superman is literally unstoppable by any human institution and thus has an effective monopoly of force. His leverage is literally that he can strip you of your freedoms instantly if you disagree with his views on morality.
      Even without a total monopoly, it would still be extremely questionable for Daredevil to just beat up his political opponents instead of engaging with them through legal means. Or to just destroy the headquarters of a corrupt company that his client is suing instead of facing them in the court room. That's when the hero can easily become corrupt.

  • @LogicGated
    @LogicGated Před rokem +550

    Killmonger was actually out here taking direct action but they had to make him cartoonishly evil.

    • @comradekolbot2220
      @comradekolbot2220 Před rokem +75

      Do you have any idea how it would look on Marvel and Disney if Killmonger actually did things far more rationally and grounded within The Black Panther? It would endanger how many perceptions of how heroes have existed to begin with. Much less the perception of the world all around us. Companies would never allow for that to happen. It endangers their interests

    • @zillva
      @zillva Před 9 měsíci +44

      Killmonger was planning to commit genocide on white people, essentially. The thing that makes Black Panther good is that T'Challa actually learns from Killmonger, and has enough empathy to understand why he would go that far, and actually implements his ideology into his own, starting to share the resources of Wakanda to make people more equal throughout the world, even starting with Oakland to show his respect to Killmonger for giving him the resolve to do so, despite maybe not being the place that acutally needed it the most

    • @Ale-dd3ek
      @Ale-dd3ek Před 8 měsíci +18

      I love how the super advanced wakanda nation was willing to start war World 3 because a dude Threw another dude from a waterfall
      And they Turned against him because he didn't throw the dude properly

    • @Zack-fu4lo
      @Zack-fu4lo Před 8 měsíci +14

      ​@@Ale-dd3ek advanced technologically but backwards sociologically

    • @chariotrequiem8547
      @chariotrequiem8547 Před 7 měsíci +4

      ​@@Ale-dd3ek The cat lady in the sky told them to

  • @brentstewart8460
    @brentstewart8460 Před rokem +2008

    I think a unintended consequence of the villains being sympathetic and then ending that with a large act of violence is having the unintended consequence of shifting people to the perspective of violence being necessary. Yes may are detoured mostly by the narrative as is, but when cycled over and over again, that teaches those who are struggling that big violence and action are needed or else nothing in their lives will change.
    It’s just a thought.

    • @Jokkkkke
      @Jokkkkke Před rokem +6

      I hope you’re not suggesting large acts of violence

    • @techissus7449
      @techissus7449 Před rokem +8

      @@abibi9458 however history teaches us that social change is driven through the violence of opressed classes taking over their former opressors, a class struggle if you will

    • @appa609
      @appa609 Před rokem +78

      @@abibi9458 but those villains are portrayed as
      1.wrong, primarily due to that violence
      2. almost always fail to bring about their desired social change
      So it's not much of a model for viewers.

    • @appa609
      @appa609 Před rokem +2

      If anything the moral is you can't out violence the status quo. The billionaires, military, deep state, and religious conservatives will stop you.

    • @galactic06
      @galactic06 Před rokem +7

      Basically The Batman tbh

  • @Thisismyletter
    @Thisismyletter Před rokem +4388

    This is what I really like about The Boys. The whole point of the show is calling out how the superheroes are the protectors of the status quo and are so much a part of the system that they ARE the system. This also reminds me of how being a “moderate” and advocating for things to stay in the middle is in actuality a conservative ideological approach. No change means oppression persists

    • @thinkingphoenix297
      @thinkingphoenix297 Před rokem +64

      Oh yes I do hope more things similar to it get made in the future!

    • @ShadowSonic2
      @ShadowSonic2 Před rokem +125

      But the thing is, the Marvel heroes have tried to change things. To varying degrees of success. Like Captain America and Black Widow shutting down SHIELD, Tony wanting to create better defenses for the planet (which Steve objected to every step of the way, admittedly), Thor choosing Earth as the place for New Asgard in hopes that they will help humanity. T'Challa opening Wakanda to the rest of the world, etc.

    • @ComicAcolyte
      @ComicAcolyte Před rokem +236

      So true it's why centrists are so dangerous

    • @Alphajet101
      @Alphajet101 Před rokem +77

      I absolutely love this comment, directly at centrists.

    • @tawelwchgaming8957
      @tawelwchgaming8957 Před rokem +199

      @@ShadowSonic2 yes, but many times it was a villain who made them see that they should or need to do that

  • @wetterschneider
    @wetterschneider Před rokem +497

    When you put it like that "the bigger the villain, the bigger the change they are trying to implement" - that opens up a very interesting thought. What would happen if a BIG villain attempted small change? It would happen quickly and be unstoppable.

    • @returnedtomonkey8886
      @returnedtomonkey8886 Před rokem +36

      How Magneto made Genosha Island his own little mutant comumity in the comics?

    • @JeanLucCaptain
      @JeanLucCaptain Před rokem +63

      You mean of they planned realistically and build up a grassroots movement?

    • @idajohannewahl9718
      @idajohannewahl9718 Před rokem +2

      Too real, it happens all the time

    • @Variocom
      @Variocom Před rokem +29

      This is why I wanna see doom in the mcu. He's a Villain with powers sometimes on par with Dr strange and the like, but he mostly just wants to do small social changes in the country he runs.

    • @74oshua
      @74oshua Před rokem +33

      Reminds me of the last short story in "I, Robot" (the novel, obviously). The world depends on a collective of superintelligent AI to make decisions about how the world is run. Eventually, the main character realizes the AI is intentionally making "bad decisions" to take people that might disable it or change it out of power, since it won't be able to protect humanity if it's disabled, and it's been told to prioritize humanity's survival above all else. It's implied the AI achieves it's goal without anyone save the main character noticing.

  • @plant3341
    @plant3341 Před rokem +673

    That gets VERY disturbing when you realise the people making these films are probably aware of the message they convey.
    Almost like Big Brother Marvel telling you to accept the world how it is because wanting change makes you a supervillain

    • @plant3341
      @plant3341 Před rokem

      @@resyntax not to put on my tinfoil hat, but I could definitely see a dystopian government leveraging exactly a company like Marvel to manipulate ppl

    • @werh227
      @werh227 Před rokem +61

      @@resyntax I mean... Marvel is a corporation at this point.

    • @wjzav1971
      @wjzav1971 Před rokem +56

      Marvel is making big budget mainstream films. They couldn't dare to challenge any status quo in their movies or that would upset their audiences.

    • @ccshumshum8104
      @ccshumshum8104 Před rokem

      surprise surprise, you, the contrarians with a mental age of 14 who think the status quo is bad because it isn't progressive enough, are the bad guys

    • @alexander-vk1rz
      @alexander-vk1rz Před 11 měsíci +8

      you know this has had real world consequences, sometimes it takes away the ability to understand art, to be having an open mind, its a matter whether you care or you don't. This is just one example, everyone in life faces some like these and many fall to them.

  • @Appletank8
    @Appletank8 Před rokem +942

    I'm reminded of a story concept I ran across about a guy who gains the power to reshape rock and concrete. At first he uses his powers to fix damage caused by fights, which makes him extremely popular. Then he started making homes for marginalized people and all the funding stopped, and got jailed when he tried to push it. He gives up trying to be "heroic", and since his jail cell is made of the same material he has power over, he walks out and starts breaking out everyone jailed near him.

    • @marcusvale5783
      @marcusvale5783 Před rokem +69

      O yea I believe that was a Tumblr story

    • @Appletank8
      @Appletank8 Před rokem +34

      @@marcusvale5783
      yup, that's the one

    • @nyala9824
      @nyala9824 Před rokem +274

      Interesting! I wish writers would be more creative with what their characters can do. There's a video by Tom Scott 'So You've Learnt To Teleport' on youtube where he explains just a handful of the things you could do with just one superpower:
      ”So you can teleport. Congratulations. Welcome to the club, You are a superhero. But superheroes are boring: they just go and save a few lives, You can do so much better than that...
      ...Find something big, heavy and magnetic, get up high and drop it through a massive coil of wire. You're generating free electricity. Or better yet, if you're one of those people who can create portals in mid-air, there’s a much better thing you can do. Get your something big and heavy and magnetic, create an infinite loop. There we go. Put a coil around that, infinite free energy generation. That ought to save a few million lives. Or better yet jump to orbit, make the cost of putting something into space nothing more than your time. Or jump to Mars, with some colonists and some equipment. You could kickstart the colonisation of the solar system. Or you could do what every other superhero does, and fight crime in one city, in one country, on one planet. Superheroes have no imagination.”

    • @Randomdudefromtheinternet
      @Randomdudefromtheinternet Před rokem +1

      Sauce?

    • @StarlightMoss
      @StarlightMoss Před rokem +79

      While interesting, being forced to teleport in an eternal loop to generate power would be a living nightmare. It’s one thing to be able to place portals, but another thing entirely to be forced to teleport manually.
      And quite honestly, some powers would just be too taxing. Say you have the power to heal anyone of anything. You’d be working every second of every day and every time you took a vacation you’d be wracked with guilt for letting people die.
      I agree that some Marvel superheroes are small minded, but if your power is having DID with a monster (the hulk) then I’m not sure how much you can do.

  • @snowballeffect7812
    @snowballeffect7812 Před rokem +580

    The part about the sympathetic villain crossing a line so that the audience is alienated by them is really frustrating. I never put my finger on it before, but now I'll be sure to look for this.

    • @kahkah1986
      @kahkah1986 Před rokem +13

      tbf, the 20th century, especially the 1930s when superheroes really got started, is littered with historical figures who did exactly this, they talked a good talk about truth, justice and 'reform' and then got people killed. The status quo, messy, often unfair and complicated, got ridiculed by autocrats on the extreme left and right who promised a changed world.

    • @snowballeffect7812
      @snowballeffect7812 Před rokem +21

      @@kahkah1986 Thatcher, Churchill, Franco, etc. : all were very clearly bad people. They were ending kids' lives from episode one of their careers.

    • @kayakat1869
      @kayakat1869 Před rokem +36

      It would be funny to see a superhero movie where a hero asks someone who is trying to change the world, "Oh you say all that stuff, but when are you going to snap and kill a bunch of people?" And the social reformer is like "wtf, why would I do that?", and they end up just being a good person.

    • @Wastelander1337
      @Wastelander1337 Před rokem +9

      @@kahkah1986 true, but when the writers create this kind of media and write these villains I doubt they have realism in mind. At best, they are creating something that can comfortably be invested in and advertised, and at worst they are actively trying to push a narrative that reform and violence is 100% inexcusable and humanity has reached its peak.

    • @kahkah1986
      @kahkah1986 Před rokem +7

      @@Wastelander1337 Captain America was explicitly created by artists who were repulsed by Nazi Germany, even before the US had entered the war, though. They consciously made their baddies Nazi-type villains, i.e., villains who promise the earth but are actually committing crimes against innocent people. For obvious reasons, at the time people felt suddenly, deeply protective of the status quo, as it was threatened by Nazism and Communism (they were allies until halfway through the war, remember). Of course, hindsight gives us a more nuanced picture of the status quo, but that was where the original Marvel template came from.

  • @ZhoRZh37
    @ZhoRZh37 Před rokem +231

    For MCU, status quo means 'world established in the comics that we shouldn't alter because we cannot build another world due to our complete lack of creativity'

    • @Ash-Winchester
      @Ash-Winchester Před 11 měsíci +23

      Your comment reminds me of Kay and skittles third video covering the legend of korra series where he talks about the red lotus. He's talking about how the creator of LOK are purposefully misrepresenting anarchists and he says "The boys are so deeply instilled in the ideological framework of capitalist realism, they can't even *imagine* an anarchist revolution that isn't top down. That isn't being thrust upon the people without their consent or involvement by a few great men."

    • @Mahlak_Mriuani_Anatman
      @Mahlak_Mriuani_Anatman Před 7 měsíci

      Yup

    • @trianglemoebius
      @trianglemoebius Před 6 měsíci +3

      While you're right, Marvel is comically incorrect in seeming to think this to be the case. The worlds of the comics and their status quos did change drastically over time. Marvel is stuck in the status quo at the beginning of the "Silver Age", with a few modifications here and there. We've had five eras since that, all of with distinct events and societal changes to these events, so it's extremely odd to me that the MCU refuses to move beyond.
      Like, even if their excuse was lack of creativity, they already doing plots for eras beyond the silver age - why not just adjust the world to match?

    • @Olivman7
      @Olivman7 Před 6 měsíci +8

      Yeah, I think that these conversations underestimate the "we need our world to look like the real world so we can keep selling these movies" factor.
      Like, a world with infinite free energy, no world hunger and everybody lives for centuries and is vaccinated against cancer would be really cool to live in, but it would be pretty low on terrorism and bank heists and fascist regimes and alien assassins and all that stuff we go to marvel movies for.

    • @kant.68
      @kant.68 Před 10 dny

      @@Olivman7
      That’s why all this mofos complaining in the comments about “heroes are defending the status quo” are dumb. Is a story, all stories need conflict. That’s it is not that deep

  • @MsDarkspyro
    @MsDarkspyro Před rokem +109

    I always hated it when a bad guy or character has an idea that would actually help people but then randomly start killing people, innocent people as well not even the ones holding power.

  • @ellentheeducator
    @ellentheeducator Před rokem +909

    The problem isn't that there are characters who want to change the status quo who are villains. The problem is that there are only villainous people trying to change the status quo in these movies.

    • @Newfiecat
      @Newfiecat Před rokem +92

      Very true! Why can't there be a movie where the superheroes are working together for some cause that will change the world for the better and the villains are reacting to that with violence?

    • @Dysiode
      @Dysiode Před rokem +54

      @@Newfiecat Which would be more aligned with reality, thinking about it, considering recent events like the destruction of power relay stations to stop a drag event

    • @dragonstooth4223
      @dragonstooth4223 Před rokem +29

      when you look closer at Tony Stark's character, he is essentially every instagram influencer and kardashian rolled into one. look at me and my rich life and how great it is. Why would he deep down want to change that? stop being rich and let others live amazing lives too? Changing the world would be hard but being a superhero on insta ... totally easy ... at least in the marvel world

    • @hashuvan425
      @hashuvan425 Před rokem +12

      @@dragonstooth4223 he tried to though? Ultron was the result. Tony tried to make a "suit of armor around the world", which ended up causing more harm it should

    • @carso1500
      @carso1500 Před rokem +16

      @@hashuvan425 also he does changes the world and comercializes his technology, we see him installing an arc reactor to power the stark tower and in that same conversation mentions that he is in works to power half of new york on that technology by next year, he builds robots to try to keep the population safe that is the iron legion, we see that he gives grants and advanced technology to universitites, hehas programs to give free university of students that show promise and give works on stark industries, he tries to improve the world with his technology and resources the movies just center on his super hero technology because its more exciting and whetever they center on his more altruistric efforts is because something goes sideways

  • @softiejace
    @softiejace Před rokem +1600

    i was thinking about this recently, how in both black panther movies, the oppression of colonized peoples is addressed by the villain. the ideology behind it is really is quite transparent and keeps the movies from telling truly inspiring stories imo. just imagine what wakanda could've come up with if they hadn't been distracted by fighting other marginalized people.

    • @stemcareers8844
      @stemcareers8844 Před rokem +167

      To be fair, its also addressed by Nakia. I haven't seen the second film yet (no spoilers please) but in the first movie, she basically makes all the same points as Killmonger but is on the side of the heroes.
      (Someone pointed out that this mirrors real world dynamics, like real life civil rights struggles. The women of the movement, like Martin Luther King's wife to give an example, often make important contributions but are overshadowed by the men on both sides.)

    • @bampo8436
      @bampo8436 Před rokem +16

      This was my main problem with the movie

    • @wesleywallace4426
      @wesleywallace4426 Před rokem +48

      @@stemcareers8844 Because Nakia wants to help people with Wakanda, Killmonger wants to fight people against Wakanda.

    • @softiejace
      @softiejace Před rokem +4

      @@stemcareers8844 oh yeah that's a good point!

    • @croisaor2308
      @croisaor2308 Před rokem +3

      Killmonger's grievences were legitimate, but his methods were not.
      He wanted to create a new colonial order but with Wakanda at the top rather than European powers.
      His path would create the same problems he wanted to amend, only for other people instead of his own. He was no different than the people he hated.

  • @mag-pt3bj
    @mag-pt3bj Před rokem +396

    As a child I was fascinated by the villains. It seemed to me that they had a more complex background story (we always got to know why they were evil and/or how they became villains) and in a way they were brave, risk-takers, fought for their course and usually had the cooler and extravagant outfits 😀

    • @Drip_Wooper
      @Drip_Wooper Před 8 měsíci +3

      I mean, in these more episodic and black-white shows (moustache-twirling villain and always good hero), the heroes are the ones supposed to have the coolest attacks and sickest designs since we're going to see them every episode, but the villains, who only shows up once every 10 or so episodes/once a season/once in the entire show's runtime will have visuals that are always fresh and their powers are always new (and thus more appealing), so no matter what the shows runner try to do... the villain always will have the coolest design XD
      pretty much what the video says, Innovation is the differential to a villain, plus having liberty to have more cool and 'gray' backgrounds since they're not supposed to be used as role models (and if the villain's a staple of the series instead of sharing screen time with other villains, some watchers will also take in consideration their determination, they always lose yet always get back up, while usually the hero needs to get a rehabilitation arc whenever they lose once)

  • @victorparent
    @victorparent Před rokem +1189

    That was hands down the best critic of the MCU I have seen in 15 years. Good job and thank you!

    • @RollingSTAAAART
      @RollingSTAAAART Před rokem +10

      It makes me want to storm a heavily populated gov. building so I can have the person I want in power, in power.

    • @danielolsen3514
      @danielolsen3514 Před rokem +6

      I disagree.
      My issue is it conflates that the heroes not using extreme methods to fix the stats qou is somehow wrong.
      Or that the heroes should impart their will and ideas on the world.
      It's a nice sentiment if the power is controllable and the heroes' ideals are just.
      But it falls apart otherwise.
      Should Dr. Strange really use the time stone to fix issues? Where would he stop? It was a last-ditch effort to correct a cosmic problem. It's not something to just use off hand.
      This is a big crux of CA: Civil War's debate. Who should act and who should decide? Everyone would have their own agendas.

    • @74oshua
      @74oshua Před rokem +16

      ​@@danielolsen3514 The problem isn't that the hero's actions are unjustified within the context of the story (most of the time), in fact it's almost the opposite. The MCU universe is constructed to justify heros who refuse to allow social progress. As mentioned in the video, the hero's actions seem rational in the context of the stories because we're either shown or told outright the alternative is worse.

    • @Just_normal_youtube_channel
      @Just_normal_youtube_channel Před rokem +3

      @@74oshua That’s mainly because there’s only one way a super powered individual could combat the “status quo”.
      A way that the creator of this video understands is absolutely immoral, therefore he didn’t mention it.

    • @danielolsen3514
      @danielolsen3514 Před rokem +2

      @74oshua
      Sure. But is it the heroes job to push progress? (Who says they would have the correct view? I don't expect to put pressure on firemen to be the forerunners in great social changes).
      We also only see snapshots of their lives. Avengers :cspan might be a good world building in the context of society changes. But it would be a terrible movie.
      My issue with the overall premise of this video and the source it's referencing is that it's using 4th wall meta knowledge to judge and contextualize the stories.
      Do the movies have the villains go too far to help justify the heroes stopping them? Yes. Because if they didn't, it wouldn't be a story. No conflict, no story.
      That's the story structure.
      Heck, the MCU set up the Avengers solely on the idea of having a response team to the threat of Loki, not a long-term global task force. They rejected Furys' initial pitch.

  • @marioalfredo5542
    @marioalfredo5542 Před rokem +595

    This kind of thing makes it understandable why shows like The Boys catch on, the characters actively challenge the status quo and treat the idea of beings with unfathomable power as realistically as it can.
    Even as someone who likes these movies, this was a neat perspective and one I wouldn't have thought of before. Thank you for sharing.

    • @ShadowSonic2
      @ShadowSonic2 Před rokem +53

      The problem is, even the Boys fell into the trap of maintaining the status quo. Season 3 shows this.

    • @gur262
      @gur262 Před rokem +17

      They started out strong , then had way too much condemning of violence, then busted Hughie's political bubble but still just didn't go back to the _ by all means_ approach of season 1. They mellowed out.

    • @PapaphobiaPictures
      @PapaphobiaPictures Před rokem +15

      That's because The Boys comic was a superhero comic created by a guy that hates superheroes

    • @virtheon
      @virtheon Před rokem +25

      Although season 3 did mostly roll-back potential disruptions to the status quo, they did plant the seeds for some *major* changes. Now, Homelander can execute people in public without losing support, Ryan who is just as powerful has joined him, and Edgar's adopted daughter is becoming vice president (iirc). Things are set to become very dystopian, and they have very little choice but to go all out.
      Also, people seem to forget this, but Soldier Boy was nearly as dangerous and unhinged as Homelander. Even if they had successfully killed him, it wouldn't have changed much.

    • @pietzsche
      @pietzsche Před rokem +9

      @@PapaphobiaPictures The Boys is a rip-off of Pat Mills' Marshall Law, just with the actual politics removed.
      Marshall Law is a critique of hero worship propaganda, using Superheroes as allegories, The Boys is just a very cynical superhero story.

  • @aneshaw6964
    @aneshaw6964 Před rokem +2288

    I would love a part 2 of this video. There is definitely more to be talked about, in the MCU and the real world.

    • @PopCultureDetective
      @PopCultureDetective  Před rokem +738

      Depending on this video goes over, I have plenty of other MCU videos in mind

    • @DracoMoriarty
      @DracoMoriarty Před rokem +71

      Maybe even follow it up with a part 3 that talks about superhero shows/movies that do have heroes/villains actually changing the status quo (for the better or worse).

    • @Zakaria3400
      @Zakaria3400 Před rokem +7

      @@PopCultureDetective Can you make a Stark Industries Commerical please ?

    • @TheMiklos
      @TheMiklos Před rokem +4

      @@PopCultureDetective And More Star Wars videos please!

    • @TomWDW1
      @TomWDW1 Před rokem +3

      I second this! There is SO much more to talk about! I hope this video does well so he will do a part two

  • @MaggiDaC
    @MaggiDaC Před rokem +120

    "Stopping something bad is very different than creating something good."

  • @burger_person115
    @burger_person115 Před 11 měsíci +129

    You literally did a video which is a much better formulated version of the argument I have made to everyone I am close to in explaining my statement that I dislike superheroes. Now I shall send it to EVERYONE I know because I always knew I wasn’t alone in thinking this. Thanks for validating that

    • @burger_person115
      @burger_person115 Před 10 měsíci +1

      @chandllerburse737 I know. I dont really argue with people much about it its more a when it comes up and the topic is similar(often its just me defending MCU villains for fun usually).

    • @zillva
      @zillva Před 9 měsíci +6

      The video fails to address how the heroes would implement the change though. Do you have examples of that? Its the single most important part of the discussion surrounding this topic, because unlike Tony (who was even shown in this video to take steps for cleaner energy btw) most heroes don't have the power to change the world without being tyrannical dictators.

    • @Johnnysmithy24
      @Johnnysmithy24 Před 8 měsíci +7

      @@zillva Anarchists are more concerned with tearing shit up than with creating. This is what they don’t admit to themselves. They just kinda expect to “go along with it and see what happens”

    • @barabaramoo
      @barabaramoo Před 6 měsíci +2

      ​@@zillva But isn't it the writers', artists', and creators' job to dream up of ways the heroes can change the world? Why is it the audience's responsibility to fix the story? This video is a critique, it's not a "how to".

    • @zillva
      @zillva Před 6 měsíci +1

      @@barabaramoo Its unconstructive criticism. It fails to bring up a single suggestion as to how you would fix the issue, and is therefore unhelpful

  • @syeina
    @syeina Před rokem +346

    Honestly the way they have the villains turn around and murder a bunch of people to establish them as the villains when usually what they seek to change is a legitimate issue has made me more and more uncomfortable over time because of how it frames social justice causes over and over as villainous in nature.

    • @shcdemolisher
      @shcdemolisher Před rokem +33

      Agreed. It’s a form of saying that it’s not possible to enact real change that the world needs. Which is horrible and needs to be stoped in fiction, give us the message that we CAN get change moving. Otherwise we’re nothing but mindless sheep unable to help ourselves stuck in a cycle.

    • @lilithgrrrl
      @lilithgrrrl Před rokem +25

      It does make me wonder if billion dollar corporations not-so-secretly think of social progress and any form of redistribution as, indeed, villainous 😅

    • @BillyBasd
      @BillyBasd Před rokem +3

      @@lilithgrrrl they do

  • @Tonytaylormusic
    @Tonytaylormusic Před rokem +494

    I love how this channel gets you to zoom out of the box we are used to living in and exposing the many hidden assumptions outside of the frame

    • @no_peace
      @no_peace Před rokem +11

      That's my favorite thing about media criticism generally and this channel in particular. Propaganda wants you to pay no attention to the man behind the curtain, just accept the justifications they've made within the framing of their media.

  • @akshaykangil7655
    @akshaykangil7655 Před rokem +75

    When i was a kid iron man inspired me to learn engineering. But as an adult what inspired me to keep going on with engineering was the one piece character Tom San, he was a fishMan, an amphibian species superior to humans, but was gentle and kind, unlike the fishmans shown until that point. In that story arc He was to be executed due to his connection with pirates .Still manages to save a remote island country using his engineering skills. No, he doesn't make weapons or super suit to blast invading aliens, but develops a revolutionary transportation system connecting the island to the rest of the world, resulting in the improvement in economic activity and saving the people out of poverty. Due to this, his execution was to be cancelled. But still gets executed due to corrupt people in the government.

    • @barabaramoo
      @barabaramoo Před 7 měsíci +4

      One Piece is peak progressive fiction. Luffy punches unapologetic rich privileged assholes. Marvel makes them one of their heroes.

    • @wrestlinganime4life288
      @wrestlinganime4life288 Před 9 dny

      ​@barabaramoo Can't say the same for naruto. Most the villain literally wanted to change the status quo yet Naruto disagree with their method but didn't really changed anything.

  • @Zistheone2
    @Zistheone2 Před rokem +206

    I kind of feel like this message can also apply to My Hero Academia. Most of the villains we’ve seen in that series were pushed to the extreme due to the various flaws of hero society. However, while the show constantly points out the world’s flaws and implies that the series will end with progress to make hero society better, the recent chapters give the feeling that everything will return to the status quo with the exception of heroes being more virtuous like All Might rather than pursuing fame or money

    • @isabellanajera
      @isabellanajera Před rokem +12

      exactly!

    • @Wet-Milk
      @Wet-Milk Před rokem +11

      Ehhh after the current arc in the manga, i dont really agree. it does seem like true change will happen once All for one/shigaraki is defeated. You can tell by the character actions and how they have seen the villains and what made them that way. IDK how you can read the latest chapters and not see it lmao

    • @donalddarko5807
      @donalddarko5807 Před rokem +15

      I honestly feel like the only hope for the people in mha total quirk erasure.

    • @outlawscar3328
      @outlawscar3328 Před 8 měsíci

      Now Fullmetal Alchemist had a thing or two to say about oppressive systems. Every instance of war and bloodshed is proven unnecessary and for hidden selfish motivations. Every institution is actively hiding a secret. In the end it takes officers actively abandoning their role and duty to reveal conspiracies and remove leaders. But I never read the manga. I wonder how the society puts itself back together when their leader is gone.

    • @RasmusVJS
      @RasmusVJS Před 7 měsíci +6

      I got a similar feeling from Danganronpa. Spoilers for the 2nd game.
      When, after so much of the games has been criticizing the talent = hope dichotomy, and how Hope's Peak was corrupt, it's portrayed as a good ending that Makoto starts a new Hope's Peak.

  • @d-culture927
    @d-culture927 Před rokem +382

    The part about "the public" in the MCU reminded me of something that's always bothered me about Marvel movies and most modern superhero movies for that matter - the selfishness of the heroes and their seeming lack of interest in the general public. When you think about the classic stereotypical image of a superhero, what do you see? A muscular, heroic figure swooping in to save an innocent bystander from a flaming inferno, falling debris or a runaway train. After all, what could be more heroic than saving an innocent life? Risking your own safety to save the life of a complete stranger goes straight to the core of our notions of "heroism". In the original Superman film, Superman doesn't even punch a single bad guy, instead spending the entire time rescuing helpless citizens from danger.
    But how often do you see modern movie superheroes going out of their way to save strangers? They spend most of their time punching bad guys while destroying vast swathes of public property. If they're saving anyone its most likely another superhero and if it's a non-super person then it's someone they're intimately acquainted with. We might see the hero very briefly scoot a faceless crowd out of harm's way in the middle of an action scene, or they might make some one-off nice gesture as described in this video. But a whole elaborate, lengthy set-piece to save a bunch of strangers who the superhero's never met? Forget about it. In MCU films barely any meaningful time is spent with ordinary, common people. All we really see are the beautiful perfect SuperPeople, sitting in their ivory towers high above the common folk. They live among themselves in their SuperSociety completely detached from the lives of ordinary people yet dictate their justice and morals upon them.
    It seems that somewhere along the way we've lost sight of the general public in superhero movies. They are mostly absent, only briefly shown or mentioned in passing. But the common everyday folk are the heart and soul of superhero stories. They are what make Superheroes super. The very concept of superheroes was born from the wish that there could be a divine protector watching over us, risking life and limb to keep innocent people safe from harm. Modern movie superheroes seem to be only interested in protecting themselves.

    • @nic5486
      @nic5486 Před rokem +32

      Stopping villains is almost treated like a step up from helping ordinary folk

    • @lucyferos205
      @lucyferos205 Před rokem +7

      This is why Multiverse of Madness was a breath of fresh air, brought to us by the same guy who directed the good Spider-Man movies

    • @haroldnecmann7040
      @haroldnecmann7040 Před rokem

      They Don't owe us to stop climate change

    • @ZZTopRockman
      @ZZTopRockman Před rokem +28

      This is why I loved Spiderman and why him becoming in my view corrupted by Stark tech was so disappointing

    • @galacticreggie
      @galacticreggie Před rokem +30

      This is the same problem with American police. They are more concerned with stopping a suspect than protecting a victim. It's about the person suspected of a crime. The victim of the crime is just not part of the picture.

  • @RaoulPrompt69
    @RaoulPrompt69 Před rokem +553

    Alan Moore's views on the superhero are available in video interviews and well worth watching as a follow-up to this. The vigilante, great man, and de facto autocrat are just as much an enemy to us as the antagonists they fight. This is why Neil Gaiman's 'Sandman' has been my favorite story/main character. To have a powerful figure who must correct the wrongs they have committed and profoundly grow as a person is something that is rarely seen in a genre which denies the realities of being a standard human.

    • @Hardmanferdead
      @Hardmanferdead Před rokem +12

      Your comment is one of the reasons why I love Valiant Entertainment so much, it really emphasizes that good people are prone to doing bad things for example Peter Stanchek from Harbinger realized how much of an unchecked monster he was after using his powers on his childhood crush.

    • @SniffyTugBoat
      @SniffyTugBoat Před rokem +16

      I immediately thought of Watchmen when he was expanding upon bringing the world back to the status quo. it's the only comic I've read that ends with the world not only completely altered from the status quo, but teases the idea of the truth of what happened during the story could be unveiled and change the status quo even further. I also appreciated that the truth is entrusted to normal people: Rorschach drops his notebook in the mail slot of a newspaper publisher. the supers' job was over with the confrontation with Ozymandias; now it's up to the people to rebuild the world and shape it, perhaps differently than before.

    • @lorcannagle
      @lorcannagle Před rokem +2

      @@SniffyTugBoat Check out Moore's Marvelman/Miracleman, it's contemporaneous to Watchmen and goes in a very different direction around the status quo changes.

  • @level5650
    @level5650 Před 9 měsíci +27

    This sort of “only evil desires to change the way the world works ” mentality is something I really hope Spider-Verse bucks in its final movie.
    A lot of people are theorising that Canon Events don’t really exist, and Spider-Society is just too blinded their collective trauma to see it. I believe a more compelling idea is that really *are* a fundamental pillar of the multiverse, only for Miles to just start looking for a way to alter the very nature of the multiverse itself if that’s what’s keeping from protecting both his universe and his family.
    The idea that Miles’ ultimate enemy won’t be a supervillain, but rather the system that controls the world he lives in demanding he sacrifice constantly to protect and sustain it while giving him nothing in return is a story I think most young people today go through all the time. Something they’d be overjoyed to be told they’re not alone in.

    • @victuz
      @victuz Před 6 měsíci

      Excellent comment, just wish it had more upvotes so more people could see it.

    • @maazkalim
      @maazkalim Před 6 měsíci

      Would that be enough of escapist, though?

  • @manuelka15
    @manuelka15 Před rokem +67

    It's nice to see how Alan Moore's stories are all about this idea exactly. No wonder they are that much appealing!

  • @nont18411
    @nont18411 Před rokem +905

    I consider Vulture as one of, if not the best, villain of the MCU. His struggle is extremely relatable and really criticized the structure of the world we live in.
    It’s a shame that nobody bring this up ever again.

    • @52flyingbicycles
      @52flyingbicycles Před rokem +71

      Vulture and Killmonger

    • @galactic85
      @galactic85 Před rokem +125

      Problem is his "solution" was just basically to become another arms dealer like Tony stark. He has no interest in tearing down the system just cutting out his own slice of the pie so that he doesn't get screwed. Sadly by the end of homecoming and far from home, spider-man doesn't seem that interest in challenging the system either though. :(

    • @nont18411
      @nont18411 Před rokem +55

      @@galactic85 They almost got it right when he rejected the suit
      Then in Infinity War
      “All hail the Iron Spider!”

    • @PauLtus_B
      @PauLtus_B Před rokem +23

      @@52flyingbicycles
      Just watched Black Panther's sequel and again find myself on the side of the villain.

    • @52flyingbicycles
      @52flyingbicycles Před rokem

      @@PauLtus_B did they make sure to include a scene where they killed museum guards instead of pulling off a 100x easier sneaky burglary? IIRC some museums are so low security you can just walk in and take stuff if you look like a maintenance worker and act like you’re supposed to be there

  • @OnlyRoke
    @OnlyRoke Před rokem +86

    The villains are very often like "You know the rich elites and the powerful people? They're kicking down on us and we aren't even trying to stop them." .. and then they just blow up a box full of puppies, because EVIL.

    • @cardy1165
      @cardy1165 Před rokem +18

      They never seem to go after the rich elites, either. When they blow people up out of nowhere, it's random screaming bystanders on the street instead of the people they actually claim to have beef with. Having the villains deliberately only target people in power (who the viewers aren't attached to, so not the superheroes or their families) might make them too sympathetic, or too political, or something.

  • @seisosimp
    @seisosimp Před rokem +50

    This makes me want a spin-off focused on some normal civilian trying to make some normal area in the MCU a better place. Post-Endgame gives lots of possibilities.
    After the Snap, what happens to everybody coming back and finding that their families have changed or moved on without them? What happens if a soldier in the middle of a war suddenly reappears in the middle of a newly constructed plaza?
    During the Snap, what organizations popped up to support those affected by the Lost? How did the underground crime rings shift and change once some superiors suddenly vanish? Which people stayed firm, inspired by the Avengers, and held on to their humanity instead of being tempted by the opportunities provided in the Snap, and how did they fight against those who fell to crime and temptation?
    So many stories that involve the 'public' and all we get are 'Avenger-level' threats. Sure, those are deadly, but what's even deadlier are the threats lurking beneath, what is commonly seen but what is chosen to be looked over.

  • @steven6986
    @steven6986 Před rokem +218

    As always you've made me think deeper and more thoughtfully about things I had taken for granted previously.
    Thank you.

  • @saniakshay12
    @saniakshay12 Před rokem +367

    After the immediate hype of the first BP died down after the cinema. I remember discussing with my brother how they gave Killmonger the "psycho" turn. Everyone agrees with him until the studio decides he's the villain. Same for all the villains related to Tony Stark in some way or the other. It is cool to see you talking about it.

    • @raynajcarter
      @raynajcarter Před rokem +6

      have you seen BP 2? it sort of plays w that aspect of killmonger and turns it on its head, if only for a brief moment. i feel the same way abt killmonger, very compelling character until all of s sudden he kills an old lady lol

    • @deedeedan8681
      @deedeedan8681 Před rokem +33

      Idk, Killmonger was framed very differently than Ironmans villains, at the end of the movie they acknowledge that hes right, T'Challa's father was wrong, and theres a way to do what Killmonger wanted that doesn't require the violence his plan came along with, and then T'Challa just does it, completely changing the status quo

    • @screamingwhales4031
      @screamingwhales4031 Před rokem +41

      the killmonger situation is a little different though, at least from my perspective. as an ethiopian, i've seen so many african leaders promise to liberate black people/ethnic groups with their troops/weapons but do it as a power play. i saw killmonger as a commentary on those kind of black leaders, especially with the burning of the heart-shaped herb garden. the bag was definitely fumbled, though i think coogler has learned somewhat from that mistake.

    • @creed8712
      @creed8712 Před rokem +1

      The core of his beliefs were fine I guess but his entire plot was to start a race war which is horrific

    • @firewolfandrewb
      @firewolfandrewb Před rokem +13

      Tbf Obadiah Stain just wanted to make even more money selling weapons then he already was. Come to think of it, Iron Man 1's the only Marvel movie I can think of where the main conflict involves the hero trying to preserve a positive change in the status quo (Tony moving Stark Industries away from weapons production and toward green energy) .

  • @drv4543
    @drv4543 Před rokem +863

    This is actually exactly why The Boys works. We follow the superheroes’ opposition, the Boys, as the protagonists whose primary goal is to take down Vought, which represents all that is wrong with our current status quo. In Vought’s defence are the superheroes. It feels like the most realistic and compelling depiction of superheroes because it allows them to play their part straight and faithfully to how they would function in our world, and it frames those who challenge the status quo to enact change, ie. the “villains”, appropriately for once.

    • @ShadowSonic2
      @ShadowSonic2 Před rokem +90

      The problem is, even the Boys falls into "maintain the status quo". Look at Season 3.

    • @Beatness121
      @Beatness121 Před rokem +100

      Agreed, which is why the Boys is so frustrating in that they never actually progress, as each season feels like the same cycle with new heroes or villains but nothing actually changing.

    • @drv4543
      @drv4543 Před rokem +74

      @@Beatness121 though I love the show, I can agree that it can be frustrating to watch at times because of that. It's a tough scenario to write out of, but I'm looking forward to seeing how it pans out and how the writers handle it.

    • @ALotOfCancer
      @ALotOfCancer Před rokem +8

      @@ShadowSonic2 season 3 was not that bad stop crying manchild

    • @KantHandleThis
      @KantHandleThis Před rokem +26

      @@ShadowSonic2 SPOILER ALERT FOR SEASON 3 OF THE BOYS, HUGE SPOILERS:
      if you mean butcher and the boys taking V? Yes that was largely disappointing and wish it didnt happen but from a character study POV, somehow it makes sense

  • @happynihilist2573
    @happynihilist2573 Před 2 měsíci +18

    The idea that Tony is only building weapons is simply false. Not only is there the infinite clean energy source longed in his chest but there is also the fact he stopped selling weapons in the first movie yet is still in business meaning he's not only providing the aforementioned clean energy but much of the sicfi tech in the mcu, we just see more of the suits cuz that's the part of his life the movies focus on
    And Tony's actions all have massive changes on the "status quo" changing wars even ending some, introducing the world to new commodities, reducing pollution, changing the economy
    Your analysis of Tony just proves you care more about bending the mcu to fit you lens the weather or not your was accurate

    • @arcanewarrior863
      @arcanewarrior863 Před měsícem +4

      I think the problem is more that they don't focus on Tony's goals of infinite clean energy, or trying to advocate against weapons manufacturers. We just mostly see him as a warrior who only fights situations he gets himself into, and sometimes against hydra when asked.
      We don't see his impact on the world ever

    • @happynihilist2573
      @happynihilist2573 Před měsícem +1

      @@arcanewarrior863 yes we do, i agree it's not focused on but it is there.
      Form avengers tower and it's power sorce to the sci fi tech seen troughout the mcu and the bots keeping civilizations out of danger in Avengers 2

    • @arcanewarrior863
      @arcanewarrior863 Před měsícem +2

      @@happynihilist2573 Sci fi tech has more negative repercussions than positive ones. The best use of the stark sentinels are basically to be a robot private police force. Hardly massive use of the worlds greatest genius. Also what are arc reactors actually used in in society.
      As the avengers as a whole, we see them stop an alien invasion, stop a bunch of robots because of Tony's actions, and aside from that, their general actions seem to be busting arms dealers and terrorist groups, they're less heroic visionaries and seem to act more as a private anti-terror task force .

    • @theIEndYOU
      @theIEndYOU Před měsícem +1

      You just didn't pay attention to the video. That actually comes up later lol

    • @happynihilist2573
      @happynihilist2573 Před měsícem

      @@theIEndYOU No it doesn't, not any meaningful way.
      Saying "the heroes don't do anything to change world except for the occasional act of charity" about Tony is like saying "the Moon is made of cheese, except when its not"
      He's just asserting that it's insignificant to to detract form the fact he dose not explore it as it contradict the narrative he wants to push

  • @chrisblogs5115
    @chrisblogs5115 Před rokem +56

    Ironically though I agree with most of what is said(especially the parts of the villains) but, I think there is a comic book with a great counter POV - Superman: Peace on earth. It's difficult to change a society that is conditioned to think it does not need to change. They need to try ofc but it is very hard.

    • @navaryn2938
      @navaryn2938 Před rokem +10

      isn't the plot of injustice similar too? Superman decides to take over and imposes peace and armony upon the world. And to make that look bad they need him and his soldiers to act unreasonably violently

  • @werothegreat
    @werothegreat Před rokem +337

    It's interesting how superhero stories stand in comparison to the rest of sci-fi/fantasy - in superhero stories, the villain is a disrupting force that the hero has to beat back to preserve our cherished way of life. In most other sci-fi/fantasy, the villain is in charge (the "dark lord"), and the hero is leading a revolution to overthrow them.

    • @PhantasmalBlast
      @PhantasmalBlast Před rokem +36

      One Way Out!

    • @bw1llis
      @bw1llis Před rokem +19

      Very interesting point - proves the reverse model can work!

    • @GuineaPigEveryday
      @GuineaPigEveryday Před rokem +39

      @@PhantasmalBlast Its funny cuz literally the only time in Star Wars (the prequels and Clone Wars) that they're promoting the status quo it goes incredibly wrong enough because the Jedi Republic was incredibly corrupt and internally stagnant. Every other time, changing the status quo is the goal and the hope.

    • @juanausensi499
      @juanausensi499 Před rokem +2

      @@bw1llis Both work, but one can be repeated more times. That's the curse of superheroe fiction.

    • @ChangedMyNameFinally69
      @ChangedMyNameFinally69 Před rokem

      Moreso the problem is that the heroes come before the villains

  • @zimitnin
    @zimitnin Před rokem +2806

    I hate the trope of activists as villains SO much, and not many people even realise this trope exists. It has been very present in media for a long, long time. I feel like the number of media in which activists are "allowed" to be heroes (as they are in real life) increases nowadays. But there's still a very long way to go, as long as these sort of films are the mainstram norm. Thank you, Jonathan, for another excellent video.

    • @secuter
      @secuter Před rokem +107

      I agree, it is a bad trope. Imo, some of the movies that frame activists as villains have them transform into terrorists.

    • @michaeldenieu4525
      @michaeldenieu4525 Před rokem +223

      The goal is to convince people that there's a "right" kind of social change. The kind that imagines Dr. King as a complete pacifist and paints the successes of the civil rights movement as being due to asking nicely through established systems rather than what actually happened.
      This is because most real change can't really happen within established systems, but if people feel they can't go beyond that lest they become the villain, those systems are safe for those in power.

    • @lampyrisnoctiluca9904
      @lampyrisnoctiluca9904 Před rokem

      propaganda at its finest. that is the whole deal. you don't want the people who want a change be good people, because that way the people would look up at them and not the reactionary conservatives. American government is influencing what kind of movies are being made in Hollywood, using the tactics such as blacklisting to stop people from making movies they don't like, and is even funding movies to have a certain "hidden" message inside. Hollywood is like the Korean music industry. The only reason it is successful is because it is heavily funded by the government. Here in Croatia we have a similar "problem" with our sportsmen and sportswomen being surprisingly successful. You would normally expect the country of 30-40 times the our size to make that many medals. Newspapers write about sports too much, sport trainings are quite cheap for both kids and adults to enrol. Why would the foreign language classes cost 4 times as much as sports classes with the groups of the same size? You think an American thing with sporty kids being the most popular is bad? Here the majority of kids are playing some sport. You are judged based on which sport do you play, not if you play any. If you are good at sports, you may even attend a special highschools, with small classes, better teaching methods and everything nicer than what you would get in the normal school. If as an adult you are successful, you will have a paycheck just for being a good sportsman. You will not have to work, but would be free to train like crazy. If you also manage to get a good sponsorship, you are set for life. If not, once you are not young enough to compete anymore, you can train the next generation. Sports are getting more funding than education. The American government is even more obsessed with Hollywood. Billions are spent every year on it, so the movies could be better, while at the same time, of the kind what the government would want them to be.

    • @rutyqutykandi1361
      @rutyqutykandi1361 Před rokem +28

      Transformers Megatron comes to mind. Especially in the comics where it's explained he started out as a freedom fighter that then went corrupt.

    • @GingeryGinger
      @GingeryGinger Před rokem +28

      Bro just called activists irl heroes 💀

  • @jurassicjas
    @jurassicjas Před rokem +44

    When I clicked on this video I had 0 idea what to expect. But wow, you make incredibly valid and backed up points, and it really does make you reflect on the superhero genre as a whole

  • @laurenmasters
    @laurenmasters Před 2 měsíci +18

    This whole video is a self report

  • @ARKumalarkey
    @ARKumalarkey Před rokem +535

    There's an entry in TV Tropes called "Reed Richards is useless" which points out that usually superheroes use technology to beat villains instead of solving real problems. One motivation for writing stories that way is to not trivialise such problems by presenting them as simple to solve. This becomes especially apparent when you think about how Jane Foster lives in a world with unbelievable magic and technology, and yet she struggles with cancer. I feel like you should have addressed how a solution from a superhero movie would be insensitive to those who struggle with a real issue.

    • @michaelramon2411
      @michaelramon2411 Před rokem +98

      I think "doesn't want to trivialize the issue" covers a lot of this. If they made an MCU film in which the hero fought racism the whole time, and at the end of the two hours they'd fixed racism, it would come off as bizarre and insulting. I know in the X-men comics they made an HIV/AIDS metaphor disease in the 80s that has resisted the best superscience and magic the multiverse could offer because the authors didn't want it cured while real HIV was still uncurable.
      I also think that people sometimes overestimate the practicalities of advanced technology. We live in an astonishingly technologically advanced society, but cancer is still hard to stamp out because it is a naturally diverse and difficult problem. Even if Tony Stark creates immensely powerful clean energy arc reactors, actually converting the world's energy grid to arc power would be a Herculean task that would require enormous effort and resources and regulatory approval and time. He can't just snap his fingers and cause instant worldwide adoption. (At least, not without an Infinity Gauntlet.)

    • @vicshephard9231
      @vicshephard9231 Před rokem +26

      @@michaelramon2411 it could've happened by now had they started in 2008. Climate change and energy are 2 things superheroes can easily solve.

    • @ElectronicCalifornia
      @ElectronicCalifornia Před rokem +63

      ​@@michaelramon2411 It doesn't have to trivialize issues.
      Like a Super Hero who attempts to solve "big structural problem", but then realizes it's much bigger than a lone Super Hero, especially because there are villains working to keep the Status Quo and reactionary villains that have a different idea of what progress looks like. The Hero uses their powers instead to expose institutions and media that perpetuates "big structural problem" and with the help of the people, and a lot of work and mobilization, attempt to make real progress.
      The Hero doesn't have to be a magical wand, it can just be a very powerful tool that is dangerous in the wrong hands. Something like what we see in "The Boys" tv series.

    • @michaelramon2411
      @michaelramon2411 Před rokem +8

      @@vicshephard9231 Is there any indication that the MCU has NOT starting using arc reactors in their electrical grid? I feel like that could have altered many of their power plants already and it wouldn't make much of a visually obvious difference. Unless some recent Marvel product had a character making a big deal about climate change, I feel like we can probably assume that that problem has been addressed.

    • @vicshephard9231
      @vicshephard9231 Před rokem +14

      @@ElectronicCalifornia there's a Superman comic where he tries to solve world hunger and he couldn't do it.

  • @katsmith-riply9862
    @katsmith-riply9862 Před rokem +358

    I’ve been meaning to read Utopia of Rules and I have an audible credit burning a hole in my pocket. I absolutely adore Graeber. Humanity shared a tragic loss when he passed away.

    • @pejsacek
      @pejsacek Před rokem +2

      Wholeheartedly agree. Started reading Dawn of Everything a while ago and damn, was the guy smart and a great human being.

  • @behelitquest
    @behelitquest Před rokem +25

    Wow I didn't expect such a good critical video, it really changed my point of view and narrator is flawless

  • @milkenobi
    @milkenobi Před rokem +36

    Wow, I'd never noticed this pattern before, of the villains being the chief faction wanting progress and change. I totally get that for a super hero world to work they need to be defending a mirror of our world. And if the fictional world changes to the point it doesn't strongly resemble ours, some of the immersion is gone. But it does raise a bit of a dillema that is interestingly highlighted in this movie.

  • @GLC48
    @GLC48 Před rokem +320

    Honestly one of the most impressive aspects of your videos is the amount of footage you use. Like you will literally have specific clips of specific quotes selected for dozens of movies, all in one video. Do you look through all of it yourself or do you have someone to help you?

    • @SilverScarletSpider
      @SilverScarletSpider Před rokem +9

      He didn’t answer the question, just hearted the question 😔😒

  • @ScarletSerenade
    @ScarletSerenade Před rokem +187

    This became glaringly obvious to me when I watched The Falcon and the Winter Soldier. I remember finishing the series and thinking, “They really missed the mark on this one.”
    The next time I recognized it was when my partner and I watched Moon Knight and he commented on how much he was sick of villains with good intentions and good ideas but carried them out in such an extreme way. I definitely agree.
    I think Jim Gordon in The Killing Joke comic is a good example of this, where after everything Joker puts him through, he still tells Batman to bring him in “by the book”. This perpetuates the point most superhero stories make that “we’re not the same as the villains we fight because we don’t stoop to their level by still following the rules”. But then they neuter their attempts at every turn so that the impact they could have made is unfortunately diminished.

    • @jerryballstein
      @jerryballstein Před rokem +8

      Well said. It also works under the belief that the best way to improve the system is to work *within* the system to change it - when the system is specifically structured to resist change. It assumes the system is inherently good, just off track or misguided. In reality it's fundamentally flawed and needs radical change, not incrementalism. The people who rule within the system are, almost universally, the last ones who will bring about necessary change.

    • @NAFEDUDE
      @NAFEDUDE Před rokem +1

      ...if you think "stop evil in the world by simply profiling people and preventing them from being evil" is a good idea with any execution, there's something wrong with you. A lot of our real-world systemic issues literally boil down to thinking you can just predict who is bad and preemptively punish them. There's no "nonextreme" version of Arthur's ideas, they are inherently extremist. Minority Report did a similar plot decades prior. There is no "good idea that's executed poorly to make it look bad" unless you broaden literal profiling to just the vague concept of crime prevention. The comparison to the more toothless neoliberal politics of FaWS is nonsensical because anarchism is a thing you can actually believe in without blowing up buildings. You can't believe in predetermined, immutable good and evil within a person without being some sort of fascist.

    • @bryanmay4070
      @bryanmay4070 Před rokem +5

      FatWS was such a letdown. The way the Flag Smashers make total sense in their purpose until the leader decides to randomly kill someone, Sam's weird antagonism towards his own Blackness, his downplaying of Isaiah's very real mistreatment by the US government. Truly could have done without because the very blatant neoliberalism made me like Sam's character waaay less

  • @belindaluna2067
    @belindaluna2067 Před 7 měsíci +9

    Feels like this is a result of the whole "complicated villain" fad, where the movies try to have their cake and eat it too by having villains who have more complicated motives but still are pure evil in their _actions_ . A big problem is that these movies need to pick either a sympathetic or pure evil villain and stick with it because when they don't everything gets muddled.

  • @alexirwin2135
    @alexirwin2135 Před rokem +28

    Superman 4, the quest for peace, may be a movie with a lot of problems, but seeing a superheroic character grapple with attempting to denuclearize the world is a really good premise

  • @matheus5230
    @matheus5230 Před rokem +520

    Some of the best Superman stories are about the character having inner conflicts with how much he should intervene in the world, and the ethical implications in changing the status quo by force and might. So, he wants to inspire people to be better people in general. He is himself a simple man, who would much prefer a simple life taking care of a farm than the busy city, much less super-heroics, but he feels he has a duty to help.
    Batman is an interesting character, and full of nuance in his actions and personal drama, sacrifice. Batman The Animated Series, and the movie Mask Of The Phantasm, are definitive portrayals of that nuance. He is a hero, but at the cost of ruining his own personal life and happiness.

    • @sydposting
      @sydposting Před rokem +40

      The Superman story "Red Son" handles this particularly well, I think! "Why don't you just put the whole world in a bottle?"

    • @tristentomlin8613
      @tristentomlin8613 Před rokem +14

      Exactly! I was going to make a similar point, which is raised by you and within the video, about how these heroes already hold immense power so what gives them the right to shape the world. The conundrum comes from the fact that by already choosing to align themselves with institutions that uphold the status quo, like law enforcement agencies like the police, military or federal law enforcement like CIA, they put themselves in a box because they are playing by the state and that institution's rules. I guess one last point that is interesting is that if the (partial) thesis of the video is that seeking change, whether progressive and or radical, makes one a villain then that would mean if these MCU heroes preached and or acted in more progressive and radical ways, for the public no less, then they would be deemed villains (at least by the state probably not the people).

    • @salomonmutanguha9128
      @salomonmutanguha9128 Před rokem +2

      I've read red son but could you recommend some more superman stories that are like what you said. I would love to read more.

    • @ekki1993
      @ekki1993 Před rokem +29

      For all of his "personal drama an sacrifice", Batman is still a multi-billionaire who chooses to punch bad guys in the street in his free time (which is almost all the time since he's a billionaire).

    • @LifeInJambles
      @LifeInJambles Před rokem +34

      @@ekki1993 I always love when people bring up Elon like he's not a rich boy playing superhero for funzies rather than spending his immense wealth helping to create substantial systemic reforms... oh, sorry, I meant Batman. Honest mistake.

  • @Merlin3623w
    @Merlin3623w Před rokem +356

    I think it's important to mention that the heroes can and do bring about sweeping changes to their worlds, as long as that world is not earth.
    It shows that making drastic change doesn't have to be seen as a precursor to villainy in Marvel; which makes the excuse more obvious

    • @PopCultureDetective
      @PopCultureDetective  Před rokem +131

      Very true. Actually had a section about that but ended up cutting it for time.

    • @kennethhwang3425
      @kennethhwang3425 Před rokem +52

      And in some fictions, when more advanced and progressive alien societies (some advanced by super beings) they also just randomly happen to be, in some aspects, less "spiritual aware" (or some junk like that) than the visiting Earthlings despite having been previously shown to be spiritually developed aeon before Earth. It's just a very Earth-centric narrative that promotes the Earth status quo as ultimately right.

    • @GOATEditz204
      @GOATEditz204 Před rokem +3

      @@kennethhwang3425 What is spiritual aware?

    • @jackhoman1281
      @jackhoman1281 Před rokem +1

      That makes it seem almost like an analogy for America and the rest of the world; Earth and it's heroes fight against change on earth while going out of their way to make change on other worlds based on their own authority, much like how America and it's police and military will actively fight against change domestically but will have an active hand in regime change abroad.

    • @carloszapata847
      @carloszapata847 Před rokem +23

      I think this is because of the real reason is because authors like to have their stories take place on "The Real World", so they can address things that are happening at the time. This in turn means they will ignore the changes made by other authors or the potential implications of other characters or technology also existing in the same universe.
      The most famous example is the X-Men and other Mutants being subjected to prejudice other characters are exempt from. The original Days of the Future Past storyline brought the implications to light by explaining that the Sentinels also targeted aliens, superpowered beings and technologically enhanced people as Mutants.

  • @ADiretoria100
    @ADiretoria100 Před rokem +9

    "The passion for destruction is a creative passion too"
    With all this comic book talking, this exact quote not only reminded me, but maybe explained why, when Destruction from the Endless left his family, he started... painting
    Wow.

  • @galactic85
    @galactic85 Před rokem +221

    A lot of this can be blamed on mark miller's the ultimates. That comic alone set the trend for viewing the avengers as basically American "super police/super soldiers" but supposedly Millar meant to write the book as a satire. It was meant to be critical of the idea. Then marvel studios starts making an avengers movie and looks at the ultimates and goes "hey....this aesthetic is cool and modern and slick. Let's make it more like this!"
    It's sad because superhero stories used to be more imaginative and critical of the status quo. I think back to the early fantastic four comics especially and how characters like Reed had to use their creativity to solve problems. A lot of jack kirby's comics were characterised by his musings about the world of tomorrow and where the future was going. Or i think of the earliest issues of action comics where superman took down abusive prison wardens and fought labor exploitation. But now the characters and the brand are all that matter. The characters are just products. These aren't stories about imagining the future anymore they're just stories about reinforcing the status quo and placating audiences by offering light social criticisms.

    • @LaigledeMeaux
      @LaigledeMeaux Před rokem +2

      Same thing happened with the watchmen. %100 satire, with Rorschach meant to be a gross incel like asshole. But then you have so many people just adoring and seeing themselves as him and therefore a potential hero.

    • @ShadowSonic2
      @ShadowSonic2 Před rokem

      @@LaigledeMeaux The problem was that Moore made him too sympathetic, that's why.

  • @Thunderscreamer
    @Thunderscreamer Před rokem +1341

    I want to point out an irony: the MCU did not start out this way, with the original Iron Man film representing a hero who disrupts the status quo vs a villain preserving it
    Most specifically it is focusing on the status quo of Stark Industries with a sidebar of military disruption as well. Tony Stark takes his billion dollar military weapons supply company & decides no more. He takes the company on a full right angle pivot into the energy sector, specifically focusing on arc reactors, and while he continues to make weapons in the form of iron man suits, they are explicitly not for sale. Completely shifting the company from one sector to a completely different sector is a massive shift of the status quo, and part of what first puts him at odds with Obadiah Stane, who’s motives from start to finish are to maintain control of the company so that he may continue his war profiteering.
    Regarding the military, Stark introduces a game changing weapon/defense item in the iron man suit, but rather than allowing military access to it he keeps it for himself. This is also a massive disruption of the status quo, as it moves the authority over violence away from the military, and onto himself. This is a large shift of status quo that would ultimately lay the groundwork for the new status quo of power laying in the hands of super powered individuals like the avengers.
    Now, we can argue further as to whether or not there were any benefits to the change in social order Tony was responsible for, but there’s no denying that he is one of the few superheroes that was making attempts to shift it (up until Sokovia). In the light of this essay, it’s incredibly ironic that this is the way the MCU began

    • @ethancox9737
      @ethancox9737 Před rokem +7

      What do you think changed, then?

    • @Stevenwave-
      @Stevenwave- Před rokem +159

      @@ethancox9737 They just told you. It represents a shift of power away from the world's militaries, to an individual, eventually many powered people.
      Iron Man could go toe to toe with a fighter jet and win. The World Security people try to nuke NYC in Avengers, and Iron Man can stop that. Whenever there's a huge disaster, it's a super person who has to be able to stop it.

    • @anothergamer112
      @anothergamer112 Před rokem +25

      And once again, all the issues of the MCU connect back to Tony Stark

    • @ethancox9737
      @ethancox9737 Před rokem +14

      @@Stevenwave- Why did the writers stop having them change things, then?

    • @mylesleggette7520
      @mylesleggette7520 Před rokem +167

      @@ethancox9737 Because the writers are creating a product, not creating art. Unlike the source material (comic books), these films are not made by a creative person who has a story they want to tell or a message they want to promote, they are created by committees that want to maximize sales. Even if people involved have a clear, coherent idea they want to put forth, that inevitably gets watered down by the hundreds of people involved in finalizing production, ending with corporate executives who are the real-world embodiment of maintaining the status quo.

  • @matteste
    @matteste Před rokem +50

    This is why I have grown to love the Shinza Bansho series of visual and light novels so much. It constantly challenges the idea that changing the status quo is somehow seen as villainous.
    In one story for instance, the main character has to come to the realization that his single-minded obsession with maintaining the status quo, specifically "his" status quo, makes him no better than the villain who seeks to bring a world of eternal warfare. It is just replacing one hell for another. In the end he ends up fighting for another who seeks to bring change and perhaps a better tomorrow even if it means that he has to play in the hands of another villain, the one who set all these events into motion.
    The story really makes sure to separate the idea from the methods.

  • @FatLingon
    @FatLingon Před rokem +28

    I think there is a problem with changing the world in a franchise like this. When stories are set in present day earth, then some percentage of the audience might not relate to what they see, or they will simply not see it at all, or worse, they might think they see it even if it's gone.
    But there is also a fundamental thing about the super hero genre as it is a sub-genre of the action genre. The heroes and villains in the genre generally fight each other using physical violence. While, if there was a movie with protagonists who did change the world for the better in terms of social improvements, well, I think there are such movies, but they are usually in the drama genre, as social issues are usually deserving of a more serious and grounded tone.
    Another aspect is that a fair share of people go to the cinema to escape reality. They want "stupid" entertainment to forget about all the problems the real world so generously offers.

  • @not26pls
    @not26pls Před rokem +247

    This channel is terrifying to watch. Every time i think you can’t turn something on its head, and make me see it in a truly awful light, you just ram the point home. I love it hahah

  • @bariumdead
    @bariumdead Před rokem +349

    You perfectly articulated the feelings that I have been having for years whenever someone asks me if I want to go watch the newest Marvel movie and I cannot explain to them how *tired* that would make me. Thank you.

  • @evernoob
    @evernoob Před 2 měsíci +16

    Did you watch any of these movies? The scenes you are putting as visuals often contradict your points and not only that you are playing clips without the context of the scene which also counters the claim you are trying to make. You are either being deliberately manipulative to service your point or you are incompetent at following a story. You need to do better editor.

  • @TheSpearkan
    @TheSpearkan Před rokem +18

    A video game I've played recently that I think explores one such theme is Terra Invicta. In the game an alien force is seeking to bend humanity to its will and you can play as seven factions that have different approaches to the new reality.
    The one relevant to this video is the Resistance, an XCOM-esque organisation whose objective is to "resist" the aliens, force them out of the solar system and leave Earth alone. In-story it is very much a status-quo organisation; as while other factions are trying to learn new things about the aliens to serve, negotiate with, or exterminate them, all the Resistance cares about is to "return things to normal" without considering present or future ramifications of the aliens or their technology, not once does the faction consider the possibility of a second invasion beyond "we'll be ready".
    In contrast, Humanity First, the extreme xenophobic faction, fully realises the possibility of a second invasion and uses it as justification to exterminate the aliens, with the mentality of "us or them".
    Conversely, The Academy is a faction trying to seek a peace deal with the aliens so both sides can learn from each other, improving the quality of both sides, you could say they want to change the world. But their idealism is constantly beset from all sides, they even take a massive loss in popularity the second humanity learns the aliens aren't peaceful
    Because that's the thing. Change, true change for good is never easy and will be attacked by cynics and opportunists, but it doesn't mean we can't try.

  • @Alias_Anybody
    @Alias_Anybody Před rokem +497

    I think the issue isn't just ideological but also due to writing constraints. Imagine a hero or villain actually manages to change the world - permanently and irreversibly. Everything taking place afterwards would have to be written like well thought out Sci-Fi instead of basic Urban Fantasy. That's way harder to do.

    • @galactic85
      @galactic85 Před rokem +91

      it's easier to do with some character's than others. Spider-man 2099 literally fights for good in a dystopia world where corporations have absolute power. Thor and the fantastic four frequently travel to other realities and dimensions and across space and time so it's easier to have a villain 'win' and write around their victory. Heck the marvel 2099 line literally had a whole period where dr doom successfully conquoted the united states and it was easy to write around because the setting was already a dystopian future.

    • @carlbonara602
      @carlbonara602 Před rokem +35

      Yeah and by that point their world would be so ideal that they won't be able to make any social commentaries that mirrors the world we live in anymore.

    • @Alias_Anybody
      @Alias_Anybody Před rokem +53

      @@galactic85
      That was the point. If the status quo is "contemporary New York" and required knowledge is "skills and traits of one hero" almost any artist can help with the next episode of the comic. If there's new tech, architecture and a new social system you need to be immersed first.
      Therefore any big deviations are usually one-off things or projects of a specific author.

    • @sagganuts18
      @sagganuts18 Před rokem +35

      I actually think if they permanently change the status quo, there would be so much possibilities for new stories and less for them to worry about-- For example ,if Tony Stark actually give everyone in the world free energy using his battery, we wouldn't have critique about him not really caring for people. There could be capitalist villains trying to kill him so they can keep selling energy. There could be a massive scientific evolution that lteads to new storylines.

    • @Hyaru12
      @Hyaru12 Před rokem +60

      100% agree and this even applies to how the MCU handles the fallout of the Snap/Blip, which arguably has (or should have) irreversibly changed their world. Outside of some jokes, references, and a very clumsy Falcon & Winter Soldier show, the MCU writers have demonstrated they are either uninterested or unable to really engage with the implications of such a global event and how it would change the world.

  • @burping4realz
    @burping4realz Před rokem +215

    This philosophy reminds me of The Legend of Korra, first she's trying to protect the status quo but at the end she always realizes their point and she tries to make it work in a good way

    • @bebbization
      @bebbization Před rokem +46

      The channel Just Write talks about this in The Legend of Korra, using the Hegelian Dialectic! In short, for every season of Korra, a villain challenges the Status Quo with their opposing extreme ideology. In the end of the season, the villain is stopped, but some of that opposing ideology is mixed with the current state, creating a new and nuanced current world. This way, the world is always changing in a iterative way, and some value is given to the villains' ideas. Just Write explains it better in his video, just check it out!

    • @Chorismos
      @Chorismos Před rokem +3

      @@bebbization That video misrepresents alot of Philosophy . The Hegelian dialectic is not Thesis, Anti-theisis and Synthesis.

    • @techissus7449
      @techissus7449 Před rokem +16

      @@bebbization and kay and Skittles explains it better through a materialist perspective that Korra disregards the core message of these villains while only doing surface level changes

    • @bebbization
      @bebbization Před rokem +7

      @Tech Issus Cool, I'll check that out! I think the legend of korra has a lot of lost potential, especially at the end of each season. It's a bit of a letdown to have each season start with an interesting problem, only to be simplified and rushed in the end. Still, I think they do it better than most MCU stories, even though the changes Korra makes should have been more

    • @Chorismos
      @Chorismos Před rokem +7

      @@bebbization Yeah I agree, Hello Future me wrote multiple essays on how that could be remedied. But Ultimately the show's structure make it difficult.
      Also Just don't trust anything Just write says, he has a tendency of making unsubstantiated claims about philosophers like Hegel.

  • @mongoliandude
    @mongoliandude Před 9 měsíci +12

    Me and my black friends coming out of the movie theatre: "Damn, so Killmonger was the good guy all along" 🤔

    • @derigel7662
      @derigel7662 Před 2 měsíci

      he was going to kill kids.........

  • @happynihilist2573
    @happynihilist2573 Před 2 měsíci +11

    "Superheroes usually manage to roll back the various apocalypses, they don't use their powers to build a better world" - from the actual vid
    So in the case of Tony that's straight up false, in his firs movie he's already has a version of the ark reactor used for clean energy, he then stops selling weapons to the military and the personally works to undo the damage they have caused
    The others (Cap, Natasha, HackEye, Falcon ect) however do not "use their powers to build a better world" How would they? They are soldiers, assassins, warriors, they have no real skill related to politics or any expertise on society and it's many problems not to mention they have no political power, they are not elected of officials, the only sway they have is through their fame
    And if you need an explosion as to why Hulk isn't using his power of *uncontrollable & unstoppable anger* to "build a better world" then please just turn on your brain
    Now this point dose has some validity if applied to Thor and Wakanda, Thor never introduces Earth to asguardian technology even after it becomes his home planet
    Wakanda is *worse,* not only could they have stopped the Atlantic slave trade or the colonisation of Africa from happening they could have prevented it from ever even being a possibility and wile the first movie ends with the idea that they'll open up to the world and share their technology to improve it we never see that in the future
    Then ether's "The villains are the ones constantly dreaming up big audacious schemes to transform the universe"
    If by "transform the universe" you mean commit war crimes that cause in mass death and suffering, then yes they do, what's your point

  • @kolotchelemanassanecouliba178

    One day while I was speaking about Black Panther ending my brother asking pointed the fact that while Wakanda hoped to help People in need there first center of help was in America instead of somewhere in Africa

    • @jonanice
      @jonanice Před rokem +38

      Because of Killmonger being brought up there

    • @kolotchelemanassanecouliba178
      @kolotchelemanassanecouliba178 Před rokem +9

      @@jonanice ok thanks

    • @atheon596
      @atheon596 Před rokem +32

      That's because Killmonger was from a neighbourhood in Oakland and so T'Challa decided to start there first in memory of him.

    • @isi98ani7
      @isi98ani7 Před rokem

      I think it was intentional to turn the stereotype on its head. And to point out how backwards America really is.

    • @joshuagregoire9504
      @joshuagregoire9504 Před rokem +2

      No, you misunderstood. He helped that black community in America specifically because of Killmonger was raised there (a man with Wakandan blood, born and raised in America) and to complete Killmonger's character story. Also representing how Africans can help Black Americans. And the end he said he's opening his resources and borders to the rest of the world. Meaning other African countries.

  • @PrettyPrincess9609
    @PrettyPrincess9609 Před rokem +543

    This is also why I always been an X-men fan and preferred them over the Avengers since I was a little kid. Before the MCU came out, I hated the Avengers and thought they were corny. I loved reading the X-men comics, watching the shows, and movies. I found the X-men more relatable especially as someone who experienced racism since I was a kid. I related to the prejudice they experience for being mutants just like I was discriminated against for being black.

    • @OteimPrincewill
      @OteimPrincewill Před rokem +16

      Solidarity

    • @amberbaum4079
      @amberbaum4079 Před rokem +15

      I'm from Europe so my exposure to superhero stuff was minimal. Grew up with a different comic culture. When the X-Men live action movies came out they were engaging and were able to stand on their own without being a lover of the X-man universe so to speak. Even my brother and mother liked these movies. Captain "AMERICA" on the other.... You gotta be the most arrogant numb-nut to even create something like that and let it live in modern times.

    • @One.Zero.One101
      @One.Zero.One101 Před rokem +4

      Yeah The Uncanny X-Men was my first love for comic book characters. I didn't even hear about the Avengers until much much later. I knew what Captain America looked like but didn't know anything about him. I didn't know who the other members are. I think the kids in my country had the same experience.

    • @Appletank8
      @Appletank8 Před rokem +3

      @@amberbaum4079
      There were a few times where writers got to give Cap something interesting to say, mainly along the lines of telling America to reform or become reviled.

    • @iche9373
      @iche9373 Před rokem

      It's actually not racism what those X-Men experience, because X-Men are not a "race", it's speciesism.

  • @bigbean1627
    @bigbean1627 Před rokem +14

    I think that’s why the boys works so well. The villains are superheroes who can do whatever they want because they’re so powerful, and the corporation willing to defend and control them. The good guys are either normal people resisting the system, or supes who actually want to do good in the world.

  • @user-zd9il1lr5o
    @user-zd9il1lr5o Před rokem +12

    I firmly believe the other strong message in here is "your idea of a new system might be good, but the way you go about it matters".
    I don't think many of us actually came to a conclusion that social movements are villainous, not from watching superhero movies.

  • @davidbjacobs3598
    @davidbjacobs3598 Před rokem +256

    As a big fan of the MCU and superheroes and comics... I think about this a lot. It is absolutely a genre-wide dilemma across all mediums, and it's really rare to see it challenged.
    I especially love your point that when superheroes DO get fed up and try to change something, they risk becoming the villain. We see this in Red Son (where Superman rules Soviet Russia). Or in the Ion Saga (where Green Lantern seizes unlimited power and attempts to end all war and famine and suffering). Or Zero Hour (where a different Green Lantern tries to retcon continuity to fix a bunch of issues). Or everything with Cyclops in the past fifteen years (he lost faith in Xavier's optimism and murdered him). Or Secret Empire (with Hydra Cap convinced his fascist ideologies will make the world a better place). Or the Cancerverse (where a bunch of heroes literally killed Death and the universe became this freaky melting pot of Lovecraftian horror).
    I would love to see these stories actually embrace meaningful change. Let Wakanda share that cure for cancer that they've got (Mar-Vell sure could've used it). Bring back classic Superman who would wreck slums to force the slumlords to build something better. There's so much cool stuff all these heroes are capable of. Let's see it happen, for real.

    • @zemox2534
      @zemox2534 Před rokem +1

      It won't happen because the stupid writers are scared of change

    • @MeliDMR93
      @MeliDMR93 Před rokem +18

      God do I agree. Its starting to piss me off that the genre seems to only gives the heroes the impulse to change stuff only for the thrill of having them "break bad". And it hasn't helped, I think? , that a lot of the fanbase has embraced the "heroes are bad, actually" narrative as the better quality one. Like, I enjoy The Boys, Invincible, Injustice.... but it pisses me off that our only two options are heroes protect the status quo or heroes break bad, cause they're all power hungry, actually...

    • @alwest4472
      @alwest4472 Před rokem +3

      Invincible, being one continuity with a definitive end, embraces change both with characters and the systems they inhabit should read and watch it if that’s what you want!

    • @glowerworm
      @glowerworm Před rokem +4

      Read Worm, then. You'll get an address to your complaints. Worm doesn't fix those issues but codifies them into the laws and rules of that universe. For example, when a character has plot armor that's because they literally have the power of plot armor (though it's explained more cleverly and within the rules of that world). Or when a character has the power to be forgotten, they are not introduced to the audience, they just happen to be there one day. And they have an extreme amount of character development off-camera (so-to-speak, since it's a book-no camera), because they were developed when you weren't thinking about them (that's their power!).
      Powered individuals in Worm *do* try to cure cancer, fix world hunger, etc. They still don't, largely, but why they don't fix those issues is directly addressed and explained cleverly by Worm using the rules of how powers are divvied out.
      If you've ever watched/read a super-hero story and asked "why doesn't the character just do ____ with their power?", Worm answers your question.

  • @unclejimmy5778
    @unclejimmy5778 Před rokem +221

    I never really considered the public in the new MCU until you mentioned it. Remember in the X-men animated series(one from the 90s), public protests were commonly featured. Additionally, there was not the sort of hero worship bestowed upon the superheroes of today's MCU. The members of the Xmen would constantly be ridiculed or demeaned by the public as "mutants", "freaks", or "monsters" even if they saved them!

    • @ShadowSonic2
      @ShadowSonic2 Před rokem

      Yeah but the X-Men were part of the problem. They hid away in their fancy mansion and rarely went out to do things to try and proactively change the status quo.

    • @navaryn2938
      @navaryn2938 Před rokem +6

      the x-men franchise was supposed to be an allegory for the civil rights movement

    • @unclejimmy5778
      @unclejimmy5778 Před rokem +1

      @@navaryn2938 The show really leans into heavy topics: episodes about Communism, pandemics, marginalization, nuclear war, faith, cultural preservation, etc. I've been rewatching it, made it my Sunday morning ritual

  • @brauliosebastianpazperea4709
    @brauliosebastianpazperea4709 Před 9 měsíci +8

    That's called capitalist realism, or as Jameson said, for Hollywood "it's easier to imagine the end of the world than to imagine the end of capitalism "

  • @tatlioca
    @tatlioca Před rokem +17

    As always, your videos are my favourite combination of social justice, intellectual discussion, and nerding out.

  • @pavarottiaardvark3431
    @pavarottiaardvark3431 Před rokem +67

    I wish they kept the attitude that the first Iron Man film had.
    Tony tries to SHUT DOWN the corporate arms company and the rich and powerful immediately try to freeze him out
    But in later films there's no consideration of whether America's largest arms maker stayed shut down.

    • @nalday2534
      @nalday2534 Před rokem

      Doesn't matter whether it did or not. Tony Stark was, is and will always be a piece of trash

    • @CosmoShidan
      @CosmoShidan Před rokem +3

      The first film still had Orientalism though.

    • @tonystonem9614
      @tonystonem9614 Před 3 měsíci

      So bizarre and how stupid was it to see this guy allegedly a genius go into shock and horror when he discovers the weapons of mass destruction he makes are actually used for mass destruction 💀 and the fact that he thought giving it to the US government was putting it in the right hands

  • @captainbritain7379
    @captainbritain7379 Před rokem +556

    Loved this. Graeber was always a fantastic theorist, and his insight on superhero stories has if anything become more clearly true in recent times. Well done on demonstrating it so comprehensively.

    • @CosmoShidan
      @CosmoShidan Před rokem +25

      Graeber was a phenomenal anthropologist and he will be missed. I need to read up on his superhero work.

    • @Super_Broly
      @Super_Broly Před rokem

      What does it matter?

    • @ajmooretap
      @ajmooretap Před rokem +8

      His death was so upsetting, rest in power

  • @CollegeDroputPowerpoints
    @CollegeDroputPowerpoints Před rokem +10

    To add to this: when you do have a moment where a superhero tries a new idea out of the norm you get something like Iron man's force works or the superman regime from injustice. Most likely the superhero would just be a dictator or attack dog if they ever tried to be on the offensive rather than reactionary

  • @luongmaihunggia
    @luongmaihunggia Před rokem +6

    This is why I like Star Wars. It's about a small rebellion rising up and fighting against an oppressive empire. Their survival literally depends on them defying and challenging the status quo.

    • @TheKeyser94
      @TheKeyser94 Před rokem

      The ironic part is that the Empire is an allegory for the U. S. during the Vietnam War.