Posted on 06/27/2018 5:45:19 AM PDT by Ennis85
After the media decided to take Marvel executives to task for not having enough LGBTQIA representation in their live-action films, Marvel Studios runner Kevin Feige was pressured into confirming that there will be more out and about characters in the Marvel Cinematic Universe as a means of attempting to assuage the Rainbow Reich.
Speaking with The Playlist, the outlet practically coerced Feige into confirming that LGBTQ heroes or heroines will be featured in upcoming movies after they complained that Ant-Man and The Wasp didnt feature any flamboyantly gay characters, with the outlet writing .
The context for the interview was for Ant-Man and the Wasp where despite the films San Francisco setting there isnt a gay character to be found (it should be noted it is technically the studios first film with a female lead in the title). With Pride month in full effect, it seemed like the perfect opportunity to ask the Feige when its LGBTQ+ fans would get to see themselves represented on screen
They proceeded to pepper Feige with questions about heroes or heroines who would be out and flaunting their homosexuality on-screen. The exact exchange went as follows:
The Playlist: When are we getting a Gay, Bi, LGBTQ, out character in the MCU? Is it even in the works?
Kevin Feige: Yes.
The Playlist: Thats the answer?
Kevin Feige: Yeah, thats the answer.
The Playlist: Its not someone weve seen yet, Im guessing?
Kevin Feige: Both.
The Playlist: Both?
Kevin Feige: Both ones youve seen and ones you havent seen.
The one character that The Playlist assumes was already confirmed as LGBTQ was Tessa Thompsons character in Thor: Ragnarok, where the actress confirmed via social media that the character was supposed to be a bisexual lesbian of sorts.
The other character who is LGBTQ hasnt been put to film yet, so its going to be someone in either Spider-Man: Far From Home or Captain Marvel. Given the fact that Carol Danvers is portrayed as extra-masculine in the comic books of Captain Marvel, it wouldnt be entirely shocking if she was the first out and about lesbian in the Marvel Cinematic Universe. Comic book fans have long held the belief that this newer Captain Marvel has all the trademark trappings of a lesbian in everything but name. The question is: would Marvel be so bold as to make their leading lady heroine bite the sociopolitical bullet and munch on the carpet of social justice?
I guess well find out who the LGBTQ character is within the next few Marvel films that make their way into theaters. The real test will be whether or not the character is explicitly gay or if their homosexual character trait is little more than background noise.
I wish I still had my old comic books from the ‘50’s....
They hate half their audience and hate making money, apparently.
Marvel fails to realize all their recent success is due to the fact that they’ve not gone SJW in their film-making. In order to guarantee and end to such success, and bring about swift failure, they announce future movies will be spew-inducing homo propaganda.
Well, that’ll be the death of the MCU for me and my family.
The first is the obvious one. In the pages of Alpha Flight, which is the Canadian superhero group, there is Northstar. In the comics, his real name is Jean-Paul Beaubier, a French Canadian. In fact, he is the only married gay person in the Marvel Universe, and his marriage is the one and only time that a gay marriage was shown in comics.
The other gay character is the X-Man known as Iceman. Bobby Drake is the characters name. The only reason he was outed as gay was that Jean Grey accidentally read his mind and found out about it.
And I remember, and still have my Alpha Flight #1...
Bobby Drake was never gay - he was in love with Kitty Pryde. This whole “turn him gay” thing is a “time-displaced alternate version” of him. Uh, well, whatever. It’s comic books, it’s supposed to be fantasy. Frankly, if homosexual people are 6% of the population as many studies suggest, there should be only 3-4 gay superhero people anyway, right? 6% of already .1% of the population of the comic books.
“Frankly, if homosexual people are 6% of the population as many studies suggest, there should be only 3-4 gay superhero people anyway, right? 6% of already .1% of the population of the comic books.”
I thought they were 3% of the population?
I thought we watched movies for entertainment....what’s entertaining about this?
I’ve heard anywhere from 3% to 6%... and some claiming that it’s 10%, which is incredibly high...
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