tom holland just posted a video on instagram like “I’m sorry that there’s no new news on the spiderman sequel but I just got the script I’m about to read it!!” and he held up the script and it said “spider-man: far from home” so yeah he just spoiled the spider-man sequel title while announcing he had no news on the spider-man sequel,, good job tom
React just did an episode where their reactors got to see a full screening of the movie, and it’s great! Especially since over half of the reactors they had (Danny, Morgan, Sharon, Jonathan, and Dionte) are gay and shared their stories and how much the movie affected them. Also everybody was crying.
The 17 000 km journey takes about 327 hours. That’s over 13-and-a-half days. [x]
ROAD TRIP!
Bring lots of snacks. And no babies.
I scrolled past this, just thinking ‘oh, yeah, babies crying for two weeks would be annoying’. And then I saw that it was @copperbadge who reblogged it and my mind went to The Snowpiercer Place. Sam, no.
Young Avengers has a kind of rocky publication history. A lot of times they’ve only existed as tie-ins to events, so we’re missing a lot of backstory for the characters (as far as I know we still don’t know how Billy and Teddy met, for example, which was actually a plot point in the last run). There are a couple of sketchy plotlines too, and I’m still annoyed that Eli was written off the team — we were told at the time that it was for a very good and specific reason, but since then, that reason has appeared to be “we wanted to replace him with a white dude”.
That all said, I’ve thoroughly enjoyed what I’ve read of Young Avengers. I’d give the Young Avengers And Runaways titles a miss, there’s way too many twee youths to keep them all straight (I am perhaps biased in that I think the Runaways are grindingly boring as comics, even though I like Victor and Molly). But the original Young Avengers run and the most recent one are both pretty awesome. Children’s Crusade is part of a larger story that may not be a hundred percent comprehensible in terms of plot, but it still has a lot of fun content, like Tommy having a race with Pietro and the “Clint fucked a doombot” scene.
But yeah, I think it’s worth finding the original run at least, and if you like that, you’ll enjoy the rest.
With the greatest respect, I’m going to have to disagree with you on Young Avengers, as someone who recently read it for the first time in order and loved it.
I think if you read the run without reading things like the Children’s Crusade and the crossovers with the Runaways in Civil War and Secret Invasion, you miss out on a lot. I found Children’s Crusade contained enough and was self explanatory enough that I didn’t need to have read any House of M to understand it. It’s really important origin stuff for Tommy and Billy – Billy especially, as it shows you what he’s capable of and adds weight to his storyline in Volume 2 (McKelvie/Gillen’s run). It also gives you grounding information for Prodigy’s depowered state when he arrives in vol. 2. (It also explains what happens to Cassie Lang, who otherwise would disappear without explanation.)
Likewise, the Runaways crossovers are vital for Teddy’s backstory and origins, and the Civil War run in particular gives Noh-Varr (another Vol. 2 character) his origin. I also just plain loved seeing the group interact with another group of powered kids under extraordinary circumstances. Given that Vol. 1 only has them interacting with adults and villains, that was really important to do, I think. The only run I’d say is unneccessary to read is the tie-in for Dark Reign. I actually actively disliked that. It was gratuitously violent, filled with all kinds of bigotry, and mainly focussed on a bunch of villain YA-wannabes and barely showed the actual YA team at all. Plus, when you haven’t read the major Dark Reign run, Osbourn’s team are SUPER-CONFUSING in terms of brand confusion. I wondered why Hawkeye and Iron Man were suddenly being such douchecanoes. You can probably skip the tie-in one-shot for Siege, too, since it’s tiny and just a fragment of a larger story. It doesn’t really add anything.
I’d read:
Young Avengers volume 1 #1-#8, Annual, #9-#12
Young Avengers/Runaways Civil War #1-#4
Young Avengers Presents #1-#6
Young Avengers/Runaways Secret Invasion #1-#3
Young Avengers Children’s Crusade #1-#9 + OneShot
Young Avengers Vol. 2 #1-#15
You and I also have different feelings on Eli Bradley. I wouldn’t go so far as to say I actively hate him, but there’s little love lost there, for me. The only think I liked about him was his backstory – basically, all the stuff about his grandfather and the history of racism in the super soldier program. I did like the way he called Cap onto the mat over that. Otherwise? He’s misogynistic. He’s a bully. He’s someone who wanted so hard to be superpowered he was willing to take backstreet drugs to do it, which is played for the sadness and pathos angle, but then, magically, he gets to be superpowered anyway. I see very little to like in him, very little that’s a positive portrayal for kids or POC, and very little that hasn’t been done before with other characters. He’s meant to be a strong black teen, but when it boils down to it, he’s all about his own manpain. Also, when he tries to date Kate Bishop? He spends an entire issue whining about being friendzoned. (Seriously, reread Young Avengers Presents #6.) Kate Bishop has VERY good reasons for being reluctant to progress into a sexual/romantic relationship with a man (see Young Avengers Annual from Vol 1.), and given the readership KNOWS this and the writers would have known this, it left a nasty taste in my mouth that we were meant to care more about Eli not getting his dick wet than to care about Kate’s healing process. I like David Alleyne (Prodigy) much better. He’s got an interesting (former) mutation, his relationships with the rest of the YA are positive, and he’s another queer character in the mix.
IN THE MARVEL CINEMATIC UNIVERSE THE AO3 PROBABLY HAS A WHOLE SECTION ON THE CAPTAIN AMERICA ADVENTURE HOUR.
I BET PEOPLE GET INTO FIERCE FIGHTS OVER WHETHER IT COUNTS AS RPF OR FPF
Bucky/Steve was probably the Kirk/Spock of the MCU.
Also? You just know there were little girls who wanted to play and write fic where Betty Carver was a badass lady who worked to take down Hydra no matter what Cap did.
And said little girls were probably told they were doing Betty totally OOC and to stop making her into such a Mary Sue.
HEY SO LET’S TALK ABOUT THIS BECAUSE THIS IS MAYBE THE MOST IMPORTANT ADDITION TO ANY POST ON TUMBLR AND I’M INCLUDING THE PERSON WHO DEFENDED THE EYEBROWS-ON-MONA-LISA PERSON BY TALKING ABOUT PARENTS MEETING IN CLOWN CARS IN THIS ESTIMATION.
Because this is it. This is the meta-statement we’ve been waiting for. This is the explicit textual acknowledgment, within the Marvel universe, that some of the earlier beloved stories about favorite characters got things wrong. They misrepresented things. They played up the accomplishments of (say) the dashing straight white man, while minimizing the role of others.
This is the closest we’re probably ever going to get within the universe, rather than within the metatext, to the idea that women as “Mary Sues” is bullshit, and the real truth is that women were amazing all along and the text was biased towards a straight white male perspective.
This is the permission (not that we ever needed it, but good to be granted anyway) that we can look at early comics and movies and say “Oh, I see, this is the part where Pepper or Peggy or Betty or Jane or whoever saved the day but the story had to pretend it was the guy.” By making this explicit within the MCU, they are (perhaps inadvertently, IDK) giving the same permission to us in the real world.
I’m not saying this is actually what was intended, but I would argue this is a valid reading supported by the text.
This reading works really well on the Fantastic Four. The earliest stories tended to concentrate more on the three men, but Sue eventually got “powered up” so she was on par with them. This can easily be interpreted as the stories slowly having to catch up with what was actually happening.
YES.
Some poor comics editor in this ‘verse had to be like “Sir, we have a problem. People are finding these comics unbelievable.” “Is it the man on fire or the man made of rock?” “No, those are fine, obviously. It’s just- seeing how competent the Invisible Woman is on the streets of their hometowns is making them question the Invisible Girl in our stories.”