Marvel’s Cinematic Universe Continues to Expand. Here Are Five Exciting Additions.

A whole host of new heroes making their way from the more obscure corners of the comic universe onto the screen.

Two new Marvel heroes have been brought to the big and small screens that may be quite new to many people. The first is the titular character in the Disney+ series Moon Knight, starring Oscar Isaac, which is set in the main Marvel Cinematic Universe. The other is Morbius, an unlucky vampiric doctor, played by Jared Leto, who is the newest villain-turned-good-ish guy in the Sony Spider-Man Universe to get a film, after Venom.

These are stories featuring violent male anti-heroes – who are also characters fairly unknown to the general public. When the first Venom was released, the Hollywood Reporter noted: “The MCU makes it easy to be a Marvel fan without having ever read the source material”.

Morbius has not fared so well, bringing in the lowest box office numbers compared to its Spider-Man counterparts. Critics suggest that this might be due to the character’s “relative obscurity”. On the other hand, Moon Knight has garnered good reviews.

Like it or not, the Marvel Cinematic Universe is expanding and there are a whole host of new heroes making their way from the more obscure corners of the comic universe onto the screen. Here are five such characters who will be headlining new films and TV series as part of numerous forthcoming Marvel projects, from Disney’s Marvel Studios, and Sony.

1. Ms Marvel

The world’s first female, teen, Muslim superhero, Ms Marvel received a lot of praise when she made her debut in 2013 in a Captain Marvel comic. Critics praised the character as a positive representation of a young Pakistani American woman who is also Muslim. This outing was so successful, the teen got her own comic the following year. She will also officially be joining Marvel’s Cinematic Universe in June 2022 with her own series on Disney+.

The series revolves around a young woman called Kamala Khan, who is a huge fan of superheroes. When she mysteriously gets powers, Khan is inspired by Captain Marvel to become a hero herself. Ms Marvel will be appearing alongside Captain Marvel and Photon in the 2023 film The Marvels.

2. She-Hulk

In the comics, lawyer Jennifer Walters receives a blood transfusion from her cousin Bruce Banner after she’s shot by a mobster. Afterwards, she also turns green when angry. First appearing in 1980, and one of the last characters created by Marvel impresario Stan Lee, She-Hulk comics often lean towards comedy, with characters breaking the fourth wall.

While the Guardians of the Galaxy films are more comedic than their stablemates, and the two Deadpool movies were black comedies, this is the first Marvel Cinematic Universe project to overtly use this genre. So, like WandaVision which used the sitcom format as a jumping off point, this is an interesting experiment for the Marvel brand. The She-Hulk show, set for release in late 2022, is expected to have audiences laughing more than any hero before her.

3. Werewolf by Night

Following the cinema release of Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness, this will be the Marvel Cinematic Universe’s first horror themed TV show. Featuring the somewhat prosaically named Jack Russell, Werewolf by Night ran for four years in the 1970s, following a relaxation on censorship of horror comics, which allowed for the creation of Marvel’s vampire characters Blade and Morbius in the first half of the decade.

A sometimes-friendly lycanthrope, Russell joined up with other Marvel horror characters to form the Legion of Monsters appearing in various comics on and off since 1976 to fight evil. The TV version, set for release in October 2022, will also feature this helpful werewolf, played by Gael Garcia Bernal.

Werewolf by Night will be MCU’s first horror outing. Photo: Marvel

4. Kraven the Hunter

Kraven is the orphaned son of Russian aristocrats with a penchant for hunting big game. While hunting in Africa, he ends up drinking a potion that gives him superhuman strength, speed and the instincts of a jungle cat. Bored of hunting animals he sets his sights on larger prey, Spider-Man.

Kraven first appeared in comics as Spider-Man’s foe in 1964. The maniacal hunter will be the third villain to lead a live-action Spider-Verse film. However, unlike Venom and Morbius before him, Kraven is not known in the comics for performing good deeds, so it will be an interesting challenge for Marvel to make an anti-hero of the artistocrat.

Kraven rarely appears without Spider-Man in the comics so Sony have set themselves a challenge to flesh out the hunter in a film where his nemesis doesn’t appear. Kraven will be played by Aaron-Taylor Johnson, who is no stranger to a tight suit, having previously played the low-rent superhero Kick Ass in two films.

Kraven The Hunter is not a nice guy in the comics but is set to be an anti-hero in his first outing in the Spider-Man Sony universe. Photo: Marvel

5. Silk

The first Spider-Man Sony universe TV show will feature Cindy Moon, a female student bitten by the same radioactive spider that gave Spider-Man his abilities. However, unlike Peter Parker who was left to swing around New York and discover his new powers, Moon was kidnapped and held in a bunker for 13 years.

With Sony’s films only apparently allowing for Spider-Man to be shown or discussed in their end credit scenes, it will be interesting to see how Silk deals with the heroine’s creation without any mention of Spidey – unless given permission by Disney to do so. There has been speculation that Sony may revive Andrew Garfield’s incarnation of the character in the future, so time will tell how Silk proceeds.The Conversation

Silk was turned by the same spider as Spider-Man.
Photo: Marvel

Alex Fitch, lecturer and PhD Candidate in Comics and Architecture, University of Brighton.

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

The ‘Scorsese Versus Superheroes’ Debate Misses the Point

I think Coppola was once, for a short period of time, a great filmmaker, and is now a crazy old coot for saying, “I don’t know that anyone gets anything out of seeing the same movie over and over again.”

When Martin Scorsese stirred up controversy recently by saying that Marvel superhero movies “aren’t cinema,” I groaned inwardly. Superhero movies aren’t my favourite genre, but I’ve liked a few of them, and they continue to make my godsons happy. At any rate, I recognised the storm of stupid overstatements we were headed into. Here’s how it went down, according to Indiewire:

Don’t ask Martin Scorsese his thoughts on the record-breaking “Avengers: Endgame” because he hasn’t seen it, nor will he ever see it. The legendary filmmaker recently dismissed the Marvel Cinematic Universe during an interview with Empire magazine, saying that Marvel movies do not possess the traits that make cinema truly special.

“I don’t see them. I tried, you know? But that’s not cinema,” Scorsese told Empire. “Honestly, the closest I can think of them, as well made as they are, with actors doing the best they can under the circumstances, is theme parks. It isn’t the cinema of human beings trying to convey emotional, psychological experiences to another human being.”

This kind of loaded question is one I know well. It’s common practice to get people associated with some serious effort at making films, or writing about films, or teaching in film studies programs, to weigh in on the topic “Superhero Films: Great Stuff or Pernicious Shit?” My students used to ask me where I stood on this burning question, and I always recognised it as the trap it was. Nobody wants a moderate answer, such as, “A few are good, but in general they suck, like with most things.”

In fact, that’s a version of what director James Gunn (Guardians of the Galaxy) replied in defence of the movies he makes: “Some superhero movies are awful, some are beautiful. Like Westerns and gangster films [of earlier decades], not everyone will be able to appreciate them, not even some geniuses. And that’s okay.”

Nobody wants to hear that kind of tolerant response. (Even I find unendurable the patronising line “And that’s okay.”) Everybody’s ears are sticking up for the uncompromising statement condemning superhero films as a blight on a once-proud medium. Something like what Francis Ford Coppola offered when he heard about MarvelGate and came to the defence of his friend:

When Martin Scorsese says that the Marvel pictures are not cinema, he’s right because we expect to learn something from cinema, we expect to gain something, some enlightenment, some knowledge, some inspiration . . . I don’t know that anyone gets anything out of seeing the same movie over and over again. Martin was kind when he said it’s not cinema. He didn’t say it’s despicable, which I just say it is.

“Despicable!” That’s Daffy Duck’s furious, sputtering insult of choice. Well, now it’s a party.

What I hate about this argument is that it brings us back to the tired old art film vs. genre film wars, from which no one emerges a winner. The issue quickly devolves into snobs vs. populists, auteur artistry vs. mass-produced commercial cinema, education vs. pleasure. But these lines are actually very blurry. As a rule, artists are also preoccupied by commercial concerns (even if not by choice), great art is frequently great entertainment and vice versa, art films can suck every bit as much as genre films and seem every bit as formulaic, and you can actually learn a lot going to see popular films.

Though the suggestion that people flock to the theatres specifically to get educated has always struck me as bizarre. It would make more sense to skip school to go to the movies, to find relief in a sensorium of visceral excitements and pleasures. You can certainly get an education from movies as a byproduct, and maybe you prefer documentaries, but does anyone rush out to see Once Upon a Time . . . in Hollywood or Parasite or The Lighthouse (to name a few exciting films of 2019) for the high-minded lessons they might learn? I hope not.

I love genre films. I think Coppola was once, for a short period of time, a great filmmaker, and is now a crazy old coot for saying, “I don’t know that anyone gets anything out of seeing the same movie over and over again.” Repeat viewing is one of the great cinematic pleasures. I bet I’ve seen certain moves twenty times, easy.

Also Read: Watching the Whistleblowers: Two New Spy Films Tailor-Made For An Age of Paranoia

But genre films are Coppola’s real target here when he says “same movie over and over again.” Those are movies like Westerns, gangster films, war films, musicals, sci-fi movies, and other highly recognized narrative types that follow formulas involving the same sorts of plot, characters, setting, etc., with specific configurations and details changing each time. By expressing contempt for them, he’s attacking the majority of films people actually love. And he’s betraying a profound ignorance of the richness of the genre film experience, which is a real connoisseur’s delight. Only by seeing a large number of films in any given genre can you begin to appreciate the inventiveness and wealth of meaning in an exciting new example of the genre, as each new director takes up the challenge of a long history and addresses the specific cultural concerns always represented in a popular genre.

Joker, for example, wasn’t a huge hit by accident. Writer-director Todd Phillips did exactly what smart creative types working in popular film do: make the genre seem fresh again, newly relevant to audiences. Some critics argued that Joker is good because it transcended genre and became an art film. Nope, it’s an artfully made genre film.

And, ironically, Coppola got established as an important director by pursuing that practice himself, with the revisionist gangster film The Godfather in 1972. He didn’t want to make it — he thought the novel it was based on was an unworthy potboiler. He wanted to make art films instead.

Also, please note that in the 1980s and 1990s, the burning question would’ve been “Action Films: Great Stuff or Pernicious Shit?” I know because I taught an action film course, and it was regarded as a rather daring move given the genre’s supposedly deleterious impact on the world. Most of the scholarship at the time was disapproving. The first academic books on the topic tended to condemn action films as nothing but exercises in misogyny, racism, and imperialism that indicated something was deeply wrong with our cinema and culture. I remember my dissertation advisor once telling me, after the crossover success of her first book on a film genre, that she’d met with a publisher who offered her a lucrative contract for a book on action films — as long as she argued they were fundamentally bad for us.

That stuff sells. It makes the general public angry and the high-culture snobs happy, and a good time is had by all who get in on the argument.

Martin Scorsese has kept the good times rolling with a follow-up opinion piece called “I Said Marvel Movies Aren’t Cinema. Let Me Explain.” In it, he makes some admittedly good points. His list of movies he considers “cinema” are a careful mix of auteur-made art films (Ingmar Bergman’s Persona, Jean-Luc Godard’s Vivre Sa Vie, Kenneth Anger’s Scorpio Rising) and old Hollywood genre films, though he’s careful to choose the ones made by auteurist masters of their genres (Samuel Fuller’s The Steel Helmet, Gene Kelly and Stanley Donen’s It’s Always Fair Weather, Don Siegel’s The Killers). He uses Alfred Hitchcock’s suspense films as his favourite example of someone who successfully combined the auteurist art film and genre film traditions and practices: “I suppose you could say Hitchcock was his own franchise. Or he was our franchise.”

Scorsese is pointedly ignoring a complexity that André Bazin once formulated to check the auteur-mania of the film critics (and soon-to-be directors) he mentored at Cahiers du Cinéma, such as Jean-Luc Godard, François Truffaut, and Claude Chabrol. Bazin reminded them of “the genius of the system.” He was referring to all the incredibly effective films that came out of the Hollywood studio system that were not “authored” by any lone visionary figure. They seemed to emerge from the process of mass-produced filmmaking itself, and the constant collaboration of so many brilliant specialists in screenwriting, cinematography, editing, sound, production design, costumes, hair, makeup, and so on.

Of course, Scorsese isn’t wrong about the necessity of taking risks in filmmaking. It’s a maddening and expensive form to work with, complicated, labor-intensive, reliant on technological know-how, and full of creative X factors that can make the most surefire effect on paper came out looking like crap on film. Plus, it’s the riskiest business in the world, especially when pursued with independent means, as you find out if you try to make a film and hire a lawyer to draw up the paperwork for potential investors. That’s when you discover that, by law, you must warn them of the extreme likelihood that they’ll lose their money.

The inherent risk factor that businesspeople in film industries have tried to mitigate, spread, and otherwise do away with over the past 120-odd (very odd) years has reached a terrible point among the few media conglomerates now controlling the film industry. As an oligopoly that runs a closed system of profit-making worldwide, they’ve figured out how to spread risk so thin it’s hard to see how they can ever lose on an individual film. Scorsese describes the process of filmmaking now in terms familiar to us all: “That’s the nature of modern film franchisesmarket-researchedaudience-tested, vetted, modified, revetted and remodified until they’re ready for consumption.”

And there’s no disagreeing with a basic concern Scorsese expresses, which is that screens worldwide are completely dominated by the franchise films made by those few conglomerates, with superhero films as the main offering. This leaves little room for featuring ambitious stand-alone movies by filmmakers consciously dealing with riskier material:

It’s a perilous time in film exhibition, and there are fewer independent theatres than ever . . . [S]treaming has become the primary delivery system. Still, I don’t know a single filmmaker who doesn’t want to design films for the big screen, to be projected before audiences in theatres.

The dire situation, in short, isn’t the popularity of superhero films, or their lack of artistry — it’s the lack of a healthy, thriving supply of other varied films vying for equal screen time. If visionary filmmakers had an abundance of opportunities, and we audience members had a wide viewing choice that included plenty of auteurist art films of maximum daring, plus a dose of all the exciting genre films we could handle, there’d be no reason to dwell on how despicable Marvel films may or may not be.

This article was originally published in Jacobin. You can read it here.

Narendra Modi and the Pantheon of Superheroes

The world may be glutted with superheroes but what it desperately needs right now are real-life heroes.

The June sun beat down hard as I walked past a row of shops in the little local market. Chemist… stationer’s…  grocery store… boutique… shoe shop… toy shop…

Toy shop!

I slowed down as I always do in front of toy shops, possibly because they always bring back happy childhood memories. This one even had comic book superhero figurines in the window display.

Superman… Batwoman… the Incredible Hulk… Wonder Woman… Narendra Modi…

Narendra Modi?

I stopped, backed up a bit and stared. Yep, it was him all right. Dressed in a saffron waistcoat and about half the height of Superman and Batwoman – Narendra Modi had finally taken his place amongst the pantheon of comic book super heroes.

I wondered what his superpower was. Winning elections? Creating alternative realities? Getting into the minds of the masses like Charles Xavier from X-Men?

I asked the genial old storeowner how much the figurine cost.

“Rs 700,” he said cheerfully. “The head moves if you tap it. Shall I pack it for you?”   

Also read: Letter from a Teacher to the Parents of His Students in ‘New India’

I politely declined. Then, as an afterthought, I asked, “But if you have any figurines of Mahatma Gandhi or Nelson Mandela, I’ll take one.”

“No, we only have superheroes here,” he said, and as I went on my way, I realised the storeowner had just educated me about a very important distinction: Real heroes and superheroes are entirely different people.

The first and most obvious difference between the two is that superheroes are fictional, but real heroes are real. In every sense of the word.

Superheroes are manufactured. They are clever products of imagination. Real heroes are born out of flesh and blood and genuine struggle. 

Superheroes are illusory characters who essentially denote an escape from reality; real heroes are men and women who have faced it at its worst.

Superheroes can do absolutely anything. They can repel alien invaders, defuse rogue nuclear devices in the nick of time, save entire civilisations, and routinely perform the impossible. Superhero hai toh mumkin hai.

Real heroes, on the other hand, are acutely aware of their own shortcomings and limitations and consciously work on overcoming them. They don’t try to hide who they really are. Their heroism lies in their ability to first and foremost win deep, personal victories of character in their own lives.

Another big difference between the two is that superheroes entertain, but real heroes inspire.

Also, it is interesting to note that superheroes invariably lead double lives. They are forever ducking into phone booths and donning different identities. Real heroes, on the other hand, are who they are all the time. They strive for integrity and oneness. They walk their talk and are who they say they are.

One is reminded of Gandhi’s speech to the House of Commons in England. Using no notes, he spoke extempore for two hours and brought an essentially hostile audience to a standing ovation. Following his speech, some reporters approached his secretary, Mahadev Desai, incredulous that Gandhi could hold his audience spellbound for such a long time with no notes.

Desai said, “What Gandhi thinks, what he feels, what he says, and what he does are all the same. He does not need notes… you and I, we think one thing, feel another, say a third, and do a fourth, so we need notes and files to keep track.”

Green Lantern, Spiderman, Batman, Superman, Ant Man, Wonder Woman, Thor, and now, Narendra Modi. The world is glutted with superheroes.

It doesn’t need any more. What it desperately needs right now are real-life heroes, those with deep, inner strength of character that those of the next generation can look up to and emulate.

Also read: India and The Cult of Stupidity

We need more heroes like Dr Kafeel Khan of Gorakhpur who saved the lives of 60 children suffering from encephalitis and ended up being incarcerated for his selflessness.

We need more genuinely concerned citizens like Afroz Shah who successfully pulled off one of the world’s biggest beach clean-up projects at Versova Beach in Mumbai. We need journalists like Gauri Lankesh who paid the ultimate price for her absolute commitment to truth and freedom, and we need more peacemakers like Harsh Mander, who actually took his Karawan-e-Mohabbat across India and grieved with the families of those who have gotten lynched in the name of religion.

Superheroes are products of the artist’s pen who live in comic books, TV serials and movies, and who ultimately go on to become merchandise.

Real heroes are the products of tough choices and hard decisions.

Perhaps it is now time for each of us who are seriously concerned about the future of our country to start making some of those choices and decisions.

Rohit Kumar is an educator with a background in positive psychology and psychometrics. He works with high school students on emotional intelligence and adolescent issues to help make schools bullying-free zones.

Farewell, Stan Lee, the True Marvel of the Comic Book World

An unrivalled legend in the comic world who has influenced nerd culture in a way very few have, Stan Lee died on Monday at the age of 95.

If you’ve watched any Marvel movie, television show or even played the video games, it’s almost a tradition to expect Stan Lee to pop up in a cameo. You know it’s going to happen, it’s only a question of when.

As someone who has never quite missed a Marvel movie, or DC for that matter, each future Marvel Cinematic Universe offering is going to bring about a twinge of sorrow knowing that Lee’s amusing, usually cringe-worthy appearances are going to be a thing of the past.

An unrivalled legend in the comic world who has influenced nerd culture in a way very few have, Stan Lee died on Monday at the age of 95. A mischief maker of sorts for much of his career, Lee played an unparalleled role in spawning much of the Marvel Universe as we know it today and created or co-created Spider-Man, the X-Men, Doctor Strange, the Fantastic Four, Iron Man, the Hulk, Thor and the many other superheroes that have nestled themselves well into the collective imagination of generations of fans.

It was under him that Marvel created more nuanced characters in an attempt “to make them real flesh-and-blood characters with personality,” as he told the Washington Post in 1992.

“That’s what any story should have, but comics didn’t have until that point,” he said. “They were all cardboard figures. Make them real, give them personality. Give them problems. You ask the audience to suspend disbelief and accept that some idiot can climb on walls, but once that’s accepted, you ask: What would life be like in the real world if there were such a character? Would he still have to worry about dandruff, about acne, about getting girlfriends, about keeping a job?”

Also read: The Man Behind Marvel – Stan Lee Dead at 95

Comics also became full of snappy, reference-loaded dialogue that struck a chord with fans.

Sure enough, the loners became heroes and all too human flaws were introduced to superheroes. Characters became complex, flawed and conflicted – essentially putting the ‘human’ in the ‘superhuman’. And the fans lapped it up.

The Stan Lee story

Lee started his career as an office boy at Timely Comics, a company which would later morph into Marvel, but he soon began writing. Born Stanley Martin Lieber in 1922, he picked up the pseudonym of ‘Stan Lee’ when he made his comic-book debut with the text filler “Captain America Foils the Traitor’s Revenge” in Captain America Comics #3 (May 1941) because as a budding, and possibly serious writer, he believed he didn’t wish to be associated with such a lowbrow art form.

Years later, he adopted Stan Lee as his legal name.

Lee’s luck changed less than a year after he began to work at Marvel when aces Joe Simon and Jack Kirby quit when they found out that Martin Goodman, the owner, who has been described an “industry boy wonder” was stiffing them out of royalties on Captain America.

It was then that 19-year-old Stan Lee replaced Simon as editor-in-chief despite his meagre experience. Lee, as he has said in multiple interviews, believed that the job was his only temporarily, but he believes that Goodman “forgot” to replace him.

Lee remained in the post for the nearly three decades, helping build the empire that only grew and grew more in stature through the 1960s, 70s and 80s with thanks to the storytelling and art in comics like The Amazing Spider-Man and Fantastic Four. They had stiff competition from DC comics, which had hit it off with its Justice League series. That’s eventually how Fantastic Four came to be – born out of healthy competition between two competitors who are still at it hammer and tongs today.

Stan Lee. Credit: Photofest

Lee eventually became the face of the company but that created a lot of friction with the other members of Marvel’s “Holy Trinity” – famed artists Jack Kirby and Steve Ditko. The latter left in 1966 and Kirby followed him out a few years later. He eventually spoke out controversially about how Lee didn’t write contribute much and just had his name “slapped on to projects”.

This was reiterated later by Daredevil artist Wally Wood who wrote that Lee only ever “came up with two surefire ideas … the first one was ‘Why not let the artists write the stories as well as draw them?’ And the second was ‘Always sign your name on top – BIG!'”

Many believe that Stan Lee cheated Kirby of royalties and credit, but in 2014, Marvel and the Kirby estate reached a settlement and both Lee and Kirby now receive credit on numerous screen productions together.

The rest of the story is something most fans are familiar with. Lee became Marvel’s publisher in 1972 and eventually went on to head the film division. In the realm of the pop culture industry, no one really predicted the Marvel Cinematic Universe becoming what it is today. It was a series of gambles that eventually paid off, but it cannot be denied that it was Lee who became a larger-than-life icon as that journey progressed.

Without the real-life superhero himself, we wouldn’t have Daredevil skulking about Hell’s Kitchen with epic moral battles raging within or Loki stirring up some apocalyptic mischief for Thor or be able to watch Peter Parker’s growing pangs again and again and again with the launch of every new Spider-Man franchise.

In one of his last interviews ever, with the Daily Beast in August this year, upon being asked what’s on his wish list, Lee said: “That I leave everyone happy when I leave.”

“Nuff said”.

§

A quick list of a few of the unforgettable comic book characters Stan Lee created:

Ant-Man
Archangel
Beast
Betty Ross Banner
Black Panther
Black Widow
Blob
Cyclops
Daredevil
Doctor Strange
Hawkeye
Human Torch
Hulk
Iceman
Invisible Woman
Iron Man
J. Jonah Jameson
Jean Grey
Mastermind
Molecule Man
Nick Fury
Odin
Professor X
Scarlet Witch
Sentinel
Spider-Man
Thor
Ultimate Thor
X-Men