docsilence
Dungeon Daddy
- Joined
- Apr 2, 2025
- Messages
- 2,799
Yeah, it gets deep into the weeds there. I have professional investment in it since I literally make money from writing superhero stories, used to see the industry really WANT redeemable / relatable villains, and then started giving every villain an apology tour. Though MCU actually hasn't been a prime example of that. We didn't get a deep explanation for Red Skull or Justin Hammer or whoever. (Zemo did, but I think that made Zemo's a BETTER story. "You took everything from me, so I shall take everything from you." Some mythological level revenge in that arc.) And even the Thunderbolts don't try to redeem everyone. John's still a tool of a human being.
I really hope they find a way to make Galactus terrifying. I think it's possible, cos we've seen it before - maybe I'm just nostalgic, but Unicron was absolutely fucking terrifying in the Transformers animated film, that relentless force of consuming destruction.
Agree on Loki. He isn't a living human being - he's an IDEA. And making him evolve from the God of Lies to the God of Stories felt like a goddamned gift to storytellers. It was a thank you for everyone staying along for the ride of his journey. In a way, Loki's story is about an Idea evolving past what the world demanded that idea be to become something else.Loki's redemption arc was really good, but I actually like it for another reason; I think it plays on the above. I think it plays off the idea that the Gods - supernatural, super-human beings, do not operate by normal human morality. Just as they don't do in the myths and sagas. Loki -can- murder a bunch of people and try to subjugate entire planets and within the context of his people and his culturally morality - he's not necessarily EVIL, capital E. He's just kinda.. existing. He's 'being Loki' - in all that entails. The ability to joke and be mischievous one day, and violently suppress a human population the next day is part and parcel to what makes them so distinctly not us. And that, in fact, Loki's redemption arc wasn't about becoming more good. Loki's redemption arc, just like Thor's in Thor's first movie, was about becoming more HUMAN.
Galactus needs to be treated as a force of nature. He should be the villain only in the way that a tornado is the villain in Twister. As above, he should be beyond human understanding of morality and ethics. That's a tough movie to make, I think, because the good guys need to mostly play off each other and how to avoid disaster, rather than how to beat the bad guy.
I really hope they find a way to make Galactus terrifying. I think it's possible, cos we've seen it before - maybe I'm just nostalgic, but Unicron was absolutely fucking terrifying in the Transformers animated film, that relentless force of consuming destruction.