These two videos highlights Captain Marvel’s problem: Telling instead of showing
Mar 19, 2019 14:30:39 GMT
Post by merh on Mar 19, 2019 14:30:39 GMT
She was a kidnap victim for 6 years.
She apparently felt there was a clash in places.
This movie FREED her.
Allowed her to be herself.
She doesn't HAVE to play by the rules the Kree made for her.
She is off om a mission of self-discovery when the movie ends.
When we see her again, she will know who she is better because people wont be there telling her her first instincts are wrong.
We don't
We are as different as the male population
Not unlike the numerous male heroes in Marvel who have traveled their different routes on their hero's journey.
She-Ra and the Princesses of Power is an American animated web television series developed by Noelle Stevenson and produced by DreamWorks Animation Television. It premiered on November 13, 2018, on Netflix.
Development and production of the series began concurrently in April 2016. Showrunner Noelle Stevenson initially pitched it to Netflix on the assumption of creating only one season, but in November 2018 she said that "we now have four arcs of 13 episodes done"
By May 2013, a script for a Ms. Marvel film—the moniker used by the character Carol Danvers before she took the mantle of Captain Marvel—had been written for Marvel Studios through its writing program.[49] Later that year, executive producer Louis D'Esposito said the studio was interested in a female-driven superhero film and had plenty of "strong female characters" from which to choose, suggesting Captain Marvel, Black Widow, Pepper Potts, or Peggy Carter as possible candidates.[50] Kevin Feige, President of Marvel Studios, said that if Marvel was to make a female-led film, he would prefer it to be a new character to the Marvel Cinematic Universe like Captain Marvel, for whom an origin story could be told.[51] In August 2014, Feige stated that Black Panther and Captain Marvel were "both characters that we like, that development work has been done on and is continuing to be done on" and that the studio is often asked about it by the public, "more than Iron Man 4, more than [Avengers: Infinity War]...I think that's something that we have to pay attention to."[
Do I have a bad attitude about He-Man?
Yeah.
My childhood was the 60s.
Speed Racer, Flintstones, Aquaman, Superman, Marvel Super Heroes.
They fought. They beat the bad guys
He-Man was something I read about how there could be no conflict, no pow, bop, boom which sounded RIDICULOUS
In 1976, Mattel's CEO Ray Wagner declined a deal to produce a toyline of action figures based on the characters from the George Lucas film Star Wars, due to the $750,000 license required upfront.[4][5] Following the commercial success of the original Star Wars trilogy and its related merchandise during the next few years, Mattel launched several successful competing toylines which captured the public's imagination and significantly influenced the toy market.[4]
Toy designer Mark Taylor explained that the original design of He-Man in a series of sketches while working for Mattel was inspired by Cro-Magnon men and Vikings. Furthermore, his original design of Beast Man was rejected by Mattel for looking too much like Chewbacca.[6]
In the race to design the next popular action figure, Roger Sweet (a lead designer working for Mattel's Preliminary Design Department during much of the 1970s and 1980s) realized that simplicity was the key to success.[4][5] According to his 2005 book Mastering the Universe: He-Man and the Rise and Fall of a Billion-Dollar Idea, Sweet knew that if he gave the marketing department something it could sell, he had won 90 percent of the battle
Toy designer Mark Taylor explained that the original design of He-Man in a series of sketches while working for Mattel was inspired by Cro-Magnon men and Vikings. Furthermore, his original design of Beast Man was rejected by Mattel for looking too much like Chewbacca.[6]
In the race to design the next popular action figure, Roger Sweet (a lead designer working for Mattel's Preliminary Design Department during much of the 1970s and 1980s) realized that simplicity was the key to success.[4][5] According to his 2005 book Mastering the Universe: He-Man and the Rise and Fall of a Billion-Dollar Idea, Sweet knew that if he gave the marketing department something it could sell, he had won 90 percent of the battle
It was a cheap rip-off that I, as a 22 yr old gal working in a laundry didnt have time to care about.
And, yeah, Carol had her powers & mind wiped by Rogue so everyone tells me in the time after I had a baby & got too busy for comics in the 90s.
But mind-fuck is part of Carol's story.

