version

Well-known member
Except that they're not supposed to be wiser than everybody else, they keep fucking up and getting civilians killed.
Yeah, but nobody can do anything about it. The little people just have to accept that they're essentially ants in their playground.
 

luka

Well-known member
the films do make gestures towards collateral damage (characters look sad for 2 mintutes) and 'why do they hate us' (remember those teenage balkan villans in bad tracksuits in avengers, uh, 2, 3?) but it's just to add a soupcon of moral complexity, ultimately america cannot let herself be restrained by a framework of global law.
👅👙💋
 

version

Well-known member
Every now and then one of them does end up being blessed with some technology from on high which allows them to ascend though, e.g. Ant-Man.
 

Corpsey

bandz ahoy
That's a running theme in the MCU. In Spiderman: Homecoming e.g. the villain is selling alien weapons to civilians to even the odds with the superheroes.
 

Corpsey

bandz ahoy
It's unavoidable really when you've got superpowered people, they're essentially Greek Gods (only less interesting, because they always end up doing the right thing).
 

version

Well-known member
That's a running theme in the MCU. In Spiderman: Homecoming e.g. the villain is selling alien weapons to civilians to even the odds with the superheroes.
Yeah, I was gonna mention him. He's part of the crew dealing with the aftermath of the big fight at the end of the first Avengers and ends up nicking a bunch of alien tech from both the wreckage and Tony Stark, building his own weapons and selling them to support his family. He basically does exactly what Tony does, but he's the villain partly because he's a little guy selling to little criminals whereas someone like Stark sells to governments and corporations and doesn't disturb the day to day.
 

luka

Well-known member
Wasn't that into that film but the ending was the best ending of any film I've ever seen
 
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