Target, MasterCard, power tools, and everything else. I knew a lot of these companies were in bed with each other, but it's a disturbing thought to consider Target as part of the MCU canon.

  • Sea_Gull [they/them]
    hexagon
    ·
    2 years ago

    I remember the early 2000s movies being cool enough to show complexity. I mean the first movie has magneto turn a senator into a mutant. This far into post-9/11 hellmerica, I'm certain that they wouldn't want to put a message like that out to so many disaffected people.

    Also, favorite X-Men character?

    • UlyssesT
      ·
      edit-2
      12 days ago

      deleted by creator

      • Sea_Gull [they/them]
        hexagon
        ·
        2 years ago

        Yeah. They were interesting characters in a setting where most of the persecuted people were pretty and white. It's also (one oh the reasons) why I liked Beast. He was a genius who was treated like a, well, a beast. Though I always hate the way he's written. A bad case of Thesaurus Mouth.

    • Sea_Gull [they/them]
      hexagon
      ·
      2 years ago

      My favorite X-Men character is Rogue, particularly the 90s version. In that phase of her characterization, she had just absorbed the powers of Avenger Ms Marvel, but something happened where she permanently had the powers of super strength, durability, and flight in addition to her power/memory absorption.

      So her main power is that by physical touch, she can absorb the powers and memories through someone's skin. Her power has three complications:

      • She cannot turn it off so she has to wear clothing at all times to avoid absorbing the powers and memories of someone by accident.

      • Her power hurts whoever she touches. This can be fatal. Her power first manifested as a teenager when she kissed a boy and put him into a coma. The process is akin to taking a person's soul or personality away from their body.

      • And if that's not enough, her power can hurt herself. Absorbing powers and memories can easily overwhelm her. They can affect her mind, her personality, and her sense of self. She carries the mind of Ms Marvel for some time, with the very real threat that Rogue could be killed or mind wiped from the inside.

      To me, Rogue is a walking metaphor for navigating trauma, mental health, invisible disabilities, and loneliness.

      She cannot touch others despite desperately wanting to. Her good love interests are characters who try to reach out and be with her even if it's hard. People who want to help her and who are willing to meet her where she's at.

      In this time period, she has super strength, flight, and durability. She basically gets the powers of Superman. And due to how gender codes everything, she was coded as less feminine during this period. But the thing was, she didn't want that or see herself as that at all. She had tomboy traits, but because she's not strong and durable all the time, she is treated like her pain doesn't matter as much. Like imagine how fucked up it would be if people stopped reacting to you getting hit by a car. It's like 'yeah, I didn't die, but you didn't even flinch when you saw me roll over the hood of that minivan.' so now not only is it dangerous for people to get close to her, she's seen as needing less help in other areas of her life.

      I like stories where Rogue has to come to terms with her powers not working or making it hard to be close to people. I was at disappointed when they took away her Ms Marvel powers and let her control her powers completely. Some things don't have a cure and I thought it would have been cool if she made a romantic relationship work with where she's at.

      But her main power is so interesting too. Not only can she copy powers, but she can copy memories and she doesn't get to discard them whenever she wants. Echoes of those thoughts stay with her. To make herself more useful to the people she cares about, she's basically subjecting herself to psychological harm. She's literally making herself go crazy to help the X-Men.

      Her character is clever too. She knows all this and then she keeps this in mind when choosing a power to copy for a given situation. Touch Wolverine and she can heal herself but gets anger issues. Touch Nightcrawler and she can teleport but turns blue for a day. Or she can attempt to absorb the current opponent and risk hurting herself or others by doing a lethal drain. If she holds contact for too long, she'll just have a mental copy of her opponent layered over her own mind. If she's not careful, she can take magneto's power and then use it on her friends because that's what magneto would want.

      I love characters like rogue and it makes me really sad to see what current writing is doing to characters

      • robot_dog_with_gun [they/them]
        ·
        2 years ago

        i really like her and the goth one from that other show.

        not a :libertarian-approaching: i was younger than that one when i was watching it.

        • Sea_Gull [they/them]
          hexagon
          ·
          2 years ago

          I liked her version because they really leaned into her teen angst. The show wasn't perfect, but it was fun. I was probably a similar age as you when the show aired, but my daddy issues drew me to Cool Dad Wolverine.

    • axont [she/her, comrade/them]
      ·
      edit-2
      2 years ago

      I always liked Forge, because I thought his ability was more clever and unique compared to the others. He has the ability to put together any technological device he can imagine, even if he doesn't precisely understand the science of it. He can visually intuit how mechanical energy works. He was sometimes used as an explanation for why the X-Men have stuff like lightweight body armor and advanced gadgets, or as a plot device to create some gizmo to save the day. I thought it was cool how they'd use clever scientific ways to solve dangerous situations if brute force didn't seem to work. I also used to think he was a positive portrayal of a native American, but now I'd probably feel differently. He was portrayed as also possessing magic powers and talking to ancestral spirits, or he was good at tracking animals, stuff like that. Stereotypes of how Native people are portrayed in cowboy movies. Runners up are Kitty Pryde and Nightcrawler. They're also cool.

      Gert and Old Lace aren't X-men but they're my favorite Marvel characters ever, forever

      • Sea_Gull [they/them]
        hexagon
        ·
        2 years ago

        Characters where they actually try explaining how they're smart are really cool to me. Like having the mutant power to reverse engineer an invention in your mind. Forge is so much cooler than say Reed Richards because the only way his power made him smart was using his elasticity to pump more blood to his brain.