Nordcel9588
IncellianPerspective: A pagan unable to reproduce
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- Joined
- Jan 29, 2019
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Normally I would not post clickbait like this but I thought it deserves a mention because it is sort of related to us and the culture war we find ourselves in.
I'm sure people here remember the movies Captain Marvel and Alita: Battle Angel. The Main Characters, Marvel and Alita, are very much the opposite of each other, which is why the (((media))) hated Alita.
Captain Marvel was what you'd expect from Disney. A shitty overhyped movie about a Mary Sue femoid that can do absolutely do no wrong what so ever at all and Brie Larson was sure to let everyone know. Basically calling every male who did not like the movie a virgin troll. As if that wasn't enough the movie got special protection from every movie-related site controlled by the big media, only their "professional" "woke" take was promoted as valid while every normal viewer's take was silenced.
Alita: Battle Angel was the complete opposite in terms of reception. Almost every professional (((critic))) hated it while it received very warm responses from the audiences, myself included. While Rosa Salazar is a leftist, there is no hidden agenda in the character she portrayed, as far as I can see. James Cameron and Robert Rodriguez did a pretty good job at staying true to the Archetypes, which the movie critics were too dumb to see.
Instead of being a total independent stronk womyn that needed no man, she is a feminine and vulnerable character that is devoted to the one man she is interested in, something that terrifies them. A woman devoted to her one man? That's the worst thing ever. Because that is what men really want. Don't take my word for it, just hear what (((Chelsea Steiner))) has to say about it.
What they are saying that us wanting a loving and loyal girl is sexism and misogyny. According to them, we don't deserve love at all. That's how much they hate us.
I'm sure people here remember the movies Captain Marvel and Alita: Battle Angel. The Main Characters, Marvel and Alita, are very much the opposite of each other, which is why the (((media))) hated Alita.
Captain Marvel was what you'd expect from Disney. A shitty overhyped movie about a Mary Sue femoid that can do absolutely do no wrong what so ever at all and Brie Larson was sure to let everyone know. Basically calling every male who did not like the movie a virgin troll. As if that wasn't enough the movie got special protection from every movie-related site controlled by the big media, only their "professional" "woke" take was promoted as valid while every normal viewer's take was silenced.
Alita: Battle Angel was the complete opposite in terms of reception. Almost every professional (((critic))) hated it while it received very warm responses from the audiences, myself included. While Rosa Salazar is a leftist, there is no hidden agenda in the character she portrayed, as far as I can see. James Cameron and Robert Rodriguez did a pretty good job at staying true to the Archetypes, which the movie critics were too dumb to see.
Instead of being a total independent stronk womyn that needed no man, she is a feminine and vulnerable character that is devoted to the one man she is interested in, something that terrifies them. A woman devoted to her one man? That's the worst thing ever. Because that is what men really want. Don't take my word for it, just hear what (((Chelsea Steiner))) has to say about it.
How Alita: Battle Angel Found Unlikely Fans in MRA Trolls | The Mary Sue
Why did MRA troll embrace alita battle angel over captain marvel? because sexbots and misogyny.
www.themarysue.com
Men who hate women love Alita, but why?
The robot girl warrior taps into several problematic tropes regarding “strong female leads,” including the “born sexy yesterday” cliche, which gives us innocent childlike women who also possess massive power but can’t find their way without a man.
But Alita also taps into the male fantasy of a submissive girl robot devoted to her man. From the moment Alita meets street hustler Hugo (Keean Johnson), she becomes immediately enamored of him. He also happens to be the first male character she meets outside of her adopted father figure, Dr. Ido (Christoph Waltz). Alita’s slavish devotion to Hugo reminded me of one of Futurama’s best episodes: season 3, episode 15, “I Dated a Robot.”
Alita is not a sexbot, but perhaps something even worse. She is a lovebot, a cyborg that is powered by an unshakable and unearned devotion to the first boy she meets. Early on in the film, she opens her chest cavity and literally offers her mechanical heart to Hugo, saying, “I’d do whatever I had to for you. I’d give you whatever I have. I’d give you my heart.”
What Alita offers isn’t sex. In fact, despite her shapely figure she remains innocent and childlike—that is, until she starts going into warrior mode and kicking ass. This tamped down sexuality combined with her fighting skills makes Alita a chaste version of the classic “girls with guns” trope, a superficial read on feminism that equates violence with agency.
And it’s exactly this kind of “female empowerment” that entitled fanboys crave: a hot woman warrior who fights not for herself, but for her man, while remaining utterly devoted to him. No wonder she appeals to internet trolls. For them, she’s a female fantasy come to life.
What they are saying that us wanting a loving and loyal girl is sexism and misogyny. According to them, we don't deserve love at all. That's how much they hate us.