Instead of Renner and Johansson this is 1000% how I picture Clint and Nat
Tag: clint barton
Hawkeye #15 – “Fun and Games”
written by Matt Fraction
art by David Aja
“Mornin buddy.”
–
Insert reason other than cuteness and buff arms here.
Aw, Clint. Phil is going to that thing through the garbage compactor at this rate…
maybe they’re all in prison
Is it reading waaaay too deeply into this that I find this really moving? I mean, yes, maybe all the people Clint looked up to over the years are in prison, but I like the idea that the reason Clint fights as hard as he does to be as good as he is is because he knows that some day, some kid is going to latch onto him. This kid isn’t going to have super powers, or money, or privilege or enhancements. They’re going to be a kid from the wrong side of the tracks who never got any of the breaks. That kid is going to look at the Avengers, and see Clint, and think to themselves, “Maybe, just maybe…” and dare to aim a little higher, and CLINT knows that, and that’s one of the reasons he never gives up and can never miss, because for all that he doesn’t value himself, he values that kid and knows how important he is to that kid.
Earth’s mightiest heroes
Clint Barton
1. Clint is an unreliable narrator.
I think Clint bullshits himself a lot, and will tell himself one thing, even while acting out another. “What’s it to me?”, or “This is isn’t my problem,” for instance, even while going to huge lengths. I think this is especially true for situations that involve letting his emotional guard down, even to himself.
I think his thoughts have to come through his actions, so a Clint-POV driven narrative is hard, because he’s often telling himself things that are complete and utter crapola.
So, even in other POVs, with Clint it’s actions, not words.
Steve is the pep talk guy. Clint is the foot-in-mouth guy who is, as Fraction says, “Genuinely good. He’s the guy who will help you move your couch in the rain.”
2. Clint is good, and selfless, and brave, but doesn’t know it.
Clint’s the guy who became a good guy, through no supporting circumstance (uncle killed by criminal to put him on the straight and narrow, witnessing death by weapons he’d built, etc), but just because he wanted to be good.
I think Clint acts for others—his motivation is someone needs him, or needs him to do a thing, rather than self interest—and if something needs to be done, Clint will do it, and he won’t think about if or how it’s bad for him, or how he might get hurt.
But he’s still always trying to play catch-up to a bar of heroism that he’s already reached. Also because he’s probably internalized a lot of bad messages he’s heard about himself. I think in a lot of ways Clint is one of the most worthy Avenger, but he probably hears a lot that he’s the least.
3. Hurt is normal.
I don’t think Clint angsts too much. Sometimes, you need that moment of, “Look at these things I have done,” but I think a lot of the time, Clint expects things to come out badly, so he’s not shocked or upset when they do. Like that saying, “pessimists can only be pleasantly surprised,” I think Clint’s the guy who’s (seemingly inappropriately) cheerful when things go kinda wrong, because you guys. I thought it would be so much worse.
This also goes for relationships. I think Clint’s surprised when it doesn’t go bad, when he doesn’t get kicked out of the Avengers for his latest mess-up, when Cap says something to praise him. I think those mean a lot to Clint, because he doesn’t really expect them.
Also, sort of related to 1. I think he’s running constant damage control, engaging in negative self-talk to downplay emotions/attachments in case he loses them, even though he’s already totally attached, which I think results in a kind of unacknowledged loneliness and lone wolf type behaviour.
4. Clint is funny, and weird.
Clint isn’t sad. Sad things happen to Clint. I think he’s a guy who jokes in bad situations, especially if they’re his own. In this way, I think he’s a lot like Tony, but I think the tone and reason behind his humor is different.
I think he’s crankier than Tony’s happy-go-lucky randomness front, but also amusingly awkward. Probably from Clint’s POV, it’s not that amusing. Probably, Clint is like, “God, act normal, Barton. Just act normal. Goddamit,” but externally, I think he’s probably pretty entertaining.
I think he also probably has weird knowledge. Like the kind of thing, where people go, “What?” and all you can say is something like, “HEY. I JUST KNOW STUFF, OK?
You’re oddly socialized, Barton. It’s ok.
5. Clint acts on emotion.
Which is good, because he’s always telling himself bullshit, but bad because it means he’s always acting on un-thought out impulse and is always instantly in over his head, because it’s emotional investment that made him act in the first place.
Also, I think Clint has a lot of emotions and he doesn’t understand most of them. I think that could make him easy to manipulate, if someone knows the strings to pull.
Wee, this is my 10,000th tumblr post! o/ Naturally, I wish to celebrate with Clint/Coulson feels, so I made this.
Clint/Coulson AU – when SHIELD falls, Clint Barton barely makes it out alive, suffering retrograde amnesia in the process. Phil Coulson and his team find Clint, and attempt to teach him about the man he is, by showing him the man he used to be. However, in a misguided bid to spare Clint unnecessary pain and provide him with a fresh start, Phil decides to leave out a few details about their relationship…
Oh my god are you kidding me? This is gorgeous! Love it! Particularly Clint’s dream/memory and then Phil’s “we were”. Damn I love gif fic. *____*
work in progress… C Evan’s lips are impossible to draw.
So I’m rewatching Avengers tonight, and—especially in light of Cap 2—I was really struck by the moment on the helicarrier when Steve comes looking for Natasha and sees Clint out of restraints post-brainwashing. Steve is about to head into a war zone, this guy was Loki’s right hand ten minutes ago, and Steve’s reaction is:
a) to look to Natasha for her judgment on whether Clint can be trusted, and
b) when she gives him merely a nod, to immediately accept and trust her assessment and go into war with Clint not only at his back but flying the damn jet.
Just in case we were wondering exactly when Steve started trusting Natasha with his life.
Seriously though, like…
Try to imagine literally any other SHIELD agent convincing Bruce to come in, with just the right balance of truth.
Try to imagine Steve trusting Clint without her go-ahead.
Hell, try to imagine them being able to stop Clint AND clear out the brainwashing in a manner that didn’t kill or long-term incapacitate him.
Try to imagine the chaos of NOBODY ELSE in their much less-cohesive (and less powerful) group being able to go up to prod at the device keeping the portal open, given that they were all doing serious damage control.
Without Natasha, the Avengers don’t exist and the battle of New York is lost.
She is literally the lynchpin of the plot – without her, NONE of it works.
Now who’s fucking eye candy?
And if you think she’s just eye candy, you’re obviously HYDRA.
Yeah, Ward, I’m talking to you.