So how are you currently feeling about the perfect storm that is Voltron: Legendary Defender Season 7?

ptw30:

My original statement about Season 7 still stands – An Open
Letter to DreamWorks and the Voltron Crew

While I see progress in Mr.
Dos Santos and Ms. Montgomery addressing claims of queerbaiting, that had never been my issue with
Season 7. I think they overhyped Shiro and Adam’s relationship. I think Adam –
as well as Zethrid and Ezor – dying was unnecessary as well as offensive, and
though I had wished Adam and Shiro to have met, I had hoped they wouldn’t
end up together.

(Ultimatums are not healthy in any relationship, and as a
former caretaker of someone who had a degenerative disease, I loathed that Adam
walked away from Shiro when Shiro needed his support.)

My issues with Season 7 were
mainly:

  • Shiro was demoted from the head of Voltron, and he could have flown Black in Season 7 as we see the paladins flying their lions from beyond their bodies. So Shiro missing arm could not – and should not – have stopped him from piloting. 
  • He was ousted from the “found family” team, and he
    has no one else. And his mantra has always been and was again in Season 7 – “we’re stronger together.” Yet he’s no longer part of Voltron. He has no other family on Earth. How sad is that?
  • He was almost killed three time and even flatlined once this
    season.
  • He was not allowed to strike back against Sendak and even got
    laughed at when using his human hand. Keith needed to “rescue” him rather than
    empowering Shiro to stop the abuse against him – this post explains it
    perfectly
    .
  • Shiro – the paladin whose lion saved him from death and who lived
    in the “infinity of Voltron’s quintessence” – is not a paladin? That doesn’t make
    sense.

Oh, and this all happened in the season where Shiro to shown to be LGBTQ+
representation. 

That’s not taking into account Allura being demoting literally
to a foot soldier when she was a commander. She should have risen to the role of
commander of the Atlas and bridge Earth and Altean technologies/forces. That also doesn’t discuss how every paladin-lion bond “victory” is actually a defeat of another kind (Re: VLD: Why it’s hard to rewatch.)

It also doesn’t
discuss how Shiro’s whole storyline revolved around whether he was worthy to be
a paladin, and the story’s answer is no – even though there is more than evidence to prove he was and still is. (Re: Shiro is Still the Black Paladin, and Here’s Why.)

TL;DR: They took a disabled, minority, mentally ill, LGBTQ+ representative character, and said he couldn’t be a paladin. 

I didn’t like this season, and I doubt I’ll like Season 8. I wish DreamWorks would see the mess that this season was and create a Season 8 to address all this. I would be willing to wait for it, but they won’t lose that much of their investment, I would assume. 

emeraldincandescent:

Sometimes writing is like having an enormous lake in your head, and you want to get it out of your head and into a proper place for a lake so other people can come and go swimming and ride jet skis and stuff, except all you have to move the lake is a teaspoon. So you’re just sitting there frantically flinging water out of the lake with your teaspoon and telling people, “Guys, this lake is going to be so cool when it’s done,” but it will never be done. There is so much lake.

Hey Marvel: poverty exists because of power structures, not people, thank you very much

mikkeneko:

postmodernmulticoloredcloak:

(Not actually spoilery, just discusses the basis of Thanos’ actions in the movie.)

They say a story is only as good as its antagonist, and I’d add, a story is only as good as the motivations of its antagonist. Black Panther was perfect because the motivations of Killmonger mirrored very real, very important issues of our world. The Winter Soldier worked because ‘we’re using an algorithm to analyze people’s internet activity to collect data about citizens and subtract all freedom from them’ is quite a familiar thing, so is white men in position of power disregarding others’ bodily autonomy and abusing them. In Iron Man 3 an American white man seeking profit convinced people that the enemy was a made-up islamic terrorist. In Thor Ragnarok Hela represented the militaristic past of a society that grew wealthy with imperialism – her motivation was literally death, but that mirrored the blood-thirst of imperialistic nations.

“I need to kill half the population because resources are scarce, there’s too many people so they live in poverty, if there were less people resources would be enough for people to live comfortably – but don’t worry, it’s not evil, because I’m going to kill with equality, rich and poor alike!” is a shit motivation, which utterly, incredibly misses the point of why poverty exists and how scarcity of resources works.

People aren’t poor because there aren’t enough resources for them. People don’t starve because there’s not enough food. (Before you argue, maybe that’s the case on other planets in the Marvel universe: stories exist for us on earth.) Resources aren’t scarce in themselves, scarcity of resources is artificial. It’s a matter of power, discrimination, profit, who has the weapons and controls the ways to manipulate people’s imagination. Of course, if half the planet’s population were to die suddenly (think of some dramatic event like the epidemic that killed a third of the population of Europe in the span of a few years), there would be some drastic consequences on the immediate term, but not necessarily positive for who survives. It’s no longer the 1300s – the economical issues aren’t the same, I’m not going to go in depth because I’m not an expert and I don’t want to say something wildly incorrect, but in short, the problem with our planet is not that not enough cereals pop up from the soil, it’s a deliberate devaluation of labor and non-privileged human life. That’s not automatically solved by diminishing the population, because labor does require less people than in the 1300s, so less people wouldn’t necessarily mean higher contractual power. But that doesn’t really matter, that’s not the point. The point is that “overpopulation” is a problem not in itself, but because of how resources are distributed, and that depends on power structures.

But Marghe, you could say, Thanos is the antagonist, so we’re supposed to assume that his ideas are bad. Yes, but the movie does never address why his ideas are bad other than a generic ~killing billions and billions of people might not really be ethically great, dude~. When he expresses his ideas, the characters just dismiss them as crazy, because killing innocents en masse is bad. No one really addresses the fact that less people doesn’t automatically mean more resources for the ones who remain, or that poverty isn’t the fault of people who suffer from it. Gamora argues that it’s better to be poor but ‘free’ and with your loved ones, but the idea is that your loved ones dying and an evil dude using you for his evil plans is bad, which is a pretty obvious concept and politically irrelevant.

What’s politically relevant is the unspoken concept underlying. The idea that poor people are poor (especially in certain areas of the world) because they make too many children, leading to overpopulation compared to resources, is very real and widespread in racist societies – a lot of Europeans, for instance, believe that ~Africans~ (as Africa is supposedly a homogenous place where people are automatically poor and children starve, and also neo-imperialism and neo-colonialism are not a thing, actually exploitation of African countries has never been a thing, right?) are poor because, forgive the crudeness, women won’t keep their legs closed and they make too many children. It’s their fault they’re poor, they’re stupid and won’t think that if they make too many new people they won’t be able to feed them! (I wonder where anti-contraception propaganda comes from, uh? Oh, wait) Even someone like Macron expressed that idea recently, despite France still draining money and resources from its former colonies. But nooo, it’s the Black people’s fault for being promiscuous and stupid.

So, yeah, your antagonist’s motivations suck, Marvel. Also, mind, it’s not a matter of the unrealistic-ness of magic stones or whatnot – I can make a suspension of disbelief for all the things in the MCU from Steve’s serum to vibranium technology to the Hulk to Asgard and gods and talking raccoons and all. It’s a matter of the underlying implications of the character’s motivations. From a merely logical point of view, halving the universe’s population won’t solve the universe’s problems, because the amount of people isn’t the problem. It just makes no sense – it would make sense if the narrative actually addressed it, if someone said ‘wait Thanos that’s not how things work’, but it doesn’t happen. What we’re left with is the idea that Thanos’ solution is not good (killing innocents=bad), we aren’t led to question his idea of where the problem lies.

My train of thought on hearing what they had changed Thanos’ motivations to be:

1) that is such a White Dude way to think

2) wait, the Russos actually thought this motivation would make him more sympathetic?

3) that is SUCH a White Dude way to think

lost-shoe:

Clark Kent/Superman + perseverance

One of the many, many reasons why I love Snyder/Cavill’s Superman is his determination to keep going, keep fighting, keep protecting. It doesn’t matter what he’s endured or what he’s up against, he’ll keep trying. And you can see the brief moments where he feels overwhelmed, afraid, sad, exhausted, questioning both himself and his actions, and then he renews his resolve and presses on. it’s these very human moments that make the character all the more inspiring and heroic.

charlemane:

The thing about TLJ, specifically the Admiral Holdo bit, is that yes, her refusing to explain her orders to anyone in the face of low morale and mass confusion was stupid.

But that’s not character stupid, that’s writer stupid. That’s Rian Johnson “I can’t think of a way to propel this plot without an easily avoidable miscommunication between professionals who should really goddamn know better” stupid. That’s throwing in a woo-oo-oo plot twist that shouldn’t be a goddamn twist just so you can demand a cheap emotional reaction stupid. That’s an easy and almost definitely unnecessary way to write out a female character stupid.

So when I call it stupid, I’m not calling Admiral Holdo stupid. But TLJ supporters keep reacting like it is a direct attack on that fictional character, like ooo you’re just mad that there’s a WOMAN in POWER!!!

Nah. I’m mad that the woman in power was written by an idiot.

chewvbacca:

if failure is meant to be the theme of TLJ…. then Leia should have admonished Holdo for her failure to lead and communicate effectively. half the crew mutinied against her because she was literally saying “launch yourself out in the escape pods” and they were like “what then?? will we just wait in the pods until we run out of air or until the first order sees us??” and she gave them NOTHING, no sign she had a plan beyond that, just “get in the pods”. she didn’t even tell officers on the bridge what she was planning, because Connix joined the mutiny too!! she literally let them all think she was leading them to their deaths just to go “sike!!” at the last minute, which is remarkably cruel and not the sign of a good leader

vaxleth-vexcy:

sqbr:

concentratedsmartass:

couldnt-think-of-a-funny-name:

Wanna know what really fucks me up??? Like. I remember being in school and learning about animals and where they come from and all that shit, or going to the zoo or something as a kid. And like. People are always so fucking blown away that lions Live On The Continent Of Africa. So fucked up about it. Like, imagine you just walked out of your fucking house one day and there was a lion there??? Absurd! How do the people in Africa do it! They must populate the place like squirrels! How is that possible! Like that was always the fucking group mentality when this was going on. People were so tripped out that some people live in Lion Territory, because lions are Fucking Scary. People would be like, ‘I’m so glad the only Lions around here are safe in the zoos’. But you know what??? You know what fucks me up??? Mountain Lions. That’s just….a whole ass fucking lion living freely in North America. Roaming the fucking lands. That’s a literal goddamn lion. We call them lions because they are fucking lions. But apparently because they aren’t Lions™ they’re supposed to be less scary to us??? You know what a fucking mountain lion is??? It’s a LITERAL FUCKING LION that has adapted to a DEBATEATLY MORE DANGEROUS TERRAIN. Like fucking Lions™ can hide around in tall grass and shit, sure, it’s terrifying, but mountain lions???? HIDING IN DARK FORRESTS AND HILLSIDES AND STEEP SLOPES AND UP HIGH IN THE TREES TO THE POINT YOU CAN’T EVEN SEE THEM??? Fuck off!!!! Like Lions™ can be fucking killing machines but at least they’re fucking up front about it!!! A mountain lion is just gonna fucking mug you in a dark alley or some shit!!!! Why are people in North America just. Straight up IGNORING the fact we have Goddamn lions RIGHT HERE. WHY. WHY DO WE DO THAT. THEY’RE LIONS. WHA TTHE FUCK. 

I grew up in Oregon and grew up on stories about mountain lions and the news always talked about them like “There’s a mountain lion in this area so like… Watch out I guess” and so I grew kind of numb to it? Like some areas had signs that said like ‘watch for mountain lions’ and school taught us what to do in case of seeing a mountain lion (also bears) and it was just… A thing. And my dad grew up in the southwest of the country where they don’t exist as much and one day he was telling me about when he moved to Oregon and saw one of the signs and was like “watch out for WHAT” and he was ready to hightail it out of there and that’s when I realized it’s kinda weird to become numb to an actual lion being a concern in day to day life

You Americans always talk about how scary the wildlife is in Australia but at least we don’t have frigging lions. Or (large) bears! Sure, you’re in danger of venomous bites, but nothing’s going to chase you down and eat you.

Except in Northern Queensland, of course, where every three months, a person is torn to pieces by a crocodile(*).

(*)This is not true. Also there’s dingos and feral pigs. But shh.

It’s fucking wild how certain things become normal while others are completely ridiculous, all based on where you grew up. 

I was raised in Florida and we were told pretty much from the age that we could understand words that we shouldn’t fuck with gators and crocs. 

We were taught to know the difference at a glance because crocodiles are much more aggressive and move faster on land than alligators. 

We knew to run in a serpentine pattern if we ever came across one because they don’t turn very well due to their long bodies and stubby legs. 

We knew that if we encountered one, and couldn’t run for whatever reason, that holding its mouth shut was the best (but not guaranteed) way to keep from getting hurt because they have immense biting-down jaw strength but very weak jaw-opening strength. 

We were taught about the dreaded “death roll”, where crocs/gators will clamp down on whatever appendage they can reach and then go into a spin. In water, this works pretty well to drown their prey because they’re disoriented and can’t escape. On land, it will rip off limbs. 

We learned all of this before we hit puberty. There were signs posted everywhere – parks, rec center sports fields, and anywhere else that had/could have a lake – that said “Do not feed or molest the alligators”. My dad was late for work more than once because an alligator had stretched itself across an entire street and had blocked traffic. We found a baby gator, about two feet long, in our pool one spring after it hadn’t been cleaned all winter. And none of us thought it was weird, it’s just what life was like in Florida.

And yet, when I moved to Georgia and found out that coyotes, wolves, and mountain lions are a Very Real Thing here, I was fucking flabbergasted.

pulpklatura:

I don’t like being negative on social media and this will be the last you hear from me on the current JL debacle, but seriously, WB, what part of “the ultimate edition was superior to the theatrical cut because it allowed the story to develop more” from BvS logically translated to CUT MORE FROM JUSTICE LEAGUE’s theatrical cut!!!!

onafaarm:

My favourite pathetic untrue criticism of the dceu Superman people attempt to come up with is Clark wrecking that guys truck in Man of Steel. The trucker was sexually harassing Clark’s female colleague and Clark asked nicely for the guy to quit it but the guy got violent to Clark. So yeah Clark wrecked the truck because truck’s are replaceable, any limbs or broken bones Batman or literally anyone else would of done to that guy aren’t

But defend the guy sexually harassing the woman I guess