Monday, April 18, 2016

O is for …Obi-Wan Kenobi

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I first "met" Obi-Wan Kenobi when I was six years old. I was sitting in the dark with my parents, watching Star Wars, and having my world rocked.

Obi-Wan wasn't my favorite character then. At age six, I think I liked C-3PO and Princess Leia the
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best. But I liked him. With all those crazy kids running around, it was good that there was a grown-up on the scene: someone who knew what he was doing and could help keep the rest of them alive while they figured it out.

Of course, I had no idea who Alec Guinness was. He wasn't big with the playground set before Star Wars. But that didn't mean I didn't understand presence. As Obi-Wan, he seemed weary and sad, like my Grandpa when you asked him about the war. He also seemed like there a lightness to him beneath. Like he used to be fun.

Gravitas. That's what it was. In a world full of pew-pew and "it's so crazy it might just work!", Guinness as Obi-Wan had dignity. Thanks goodness there was Obi-Wan. He really was our only hope.

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This post is part of the A to Z Blogging Challenge. I'll be writing about superheroes I love all month. You can check out other bloggers and see their creative takes on the challenge here.

Don't forget to check out my own superhero stories:





Saturday, April 16, 2016

N is for…Nick Fury

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Nick Fury, as played by Samuel L. Jackson in the recent Marvel movies is one of the best revisions of a character in comic book history.

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He's always been tough, and had the eye patch, though he used to look more like J. Jonah Jamison in tights, down to the half-eaten cigar and white wings in his hair. He's a hard man to pin down. He's a soldier, a spy, a mercenary, a hero and an anti-hero, all rolled into one man.

There are sacrifices he's willing to make, to protect his vision of right. Careful. You might be one of them.

I was so happy when Jackson got the role. No one does dangerous like Jackson. The writers really got the "wheels within wheels" intrigue of the character, and Jackson understood the manipulative nature of the man, whom we hope is still on the side of right in his heart.
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This post is part of the A to Z Blogging Challenge. I'll be writing about superheroes I love all month. You can check out other bloggers and see their creative takes on the challenge here.

Don't forget to check out my own superhero stories:




Friday, April 15, 2016

M is for …Ms. Marvel

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Ms. Marvel is more of a title than a character. Or maybe a job description. The big boots have been filled by several women in the comics: Carol Danvers, Sharon Ventura, Karla Sofen, and now Kamala Khan. In all these versions, Ms. Marvel has been a character I knew little about. But recently, I picked up a few graphic novel collections that have me hungry for more of her stories.

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First I picked up Captain Marvel: Higher, Further, Faster, More. People were talking about it on one of my Goodreads groups and I was intrigued. Plus that cover. So much swagger.

And Carol Danvers, at least in this collection, is quite the swaggering hero: confident, righteous, and headstrong.  She's a grown woman in a way that superheroic women seldom get to be. She's got a love life, a history, and a lust for adventure. I liked her a great deal.

But then I started to hear about Kamala Khan, who after being exposed to the Terrigen Mist became Ms. Marvel.

So, I checked out Ms. Marvel Vol. 1: No Normal and Vol 2: Generation Why. It's been a while since I
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was really drawn to a teenaged character, but I loved Kamala right away. For one thing, she's totally geeky. She's an unapologetic gamer girl, who squees all fangirl over superheroes. She writes FanFic.

She's happy with who she is, not angsty or pouty, wishing she were a blonde cheerleader. While her feminist tendencies might get her in trouble at the mosque, it's clear that her family loves her for who she is and that she is surrounded by good friends.

I'm looking forward to more of her adventures.
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This post is part of the A to Z Blogging Challenge. I'll be writing about superheroes I love all month. You can check out other bloggers and see their creative takes on the challenge here.

Don't forget to check out my own superhero stories:



Thursday, April 14, 2016

L is for…Leonardo

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The Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles are some of the most fun, creative, and original characters of the comic book world. And fans all have their favorites from various comic books, television, and movie versions. My favorite is the version on Nickelodeon currently. My husband and daughter were watching it together and I got pulled in. I even finally learned which turtle was which, something I've always had trouble with.

Leonardo is the leader, the guy with a blue mask, a pair of katana, and the difficult job of trying to lead his brothers in their battles. Of all the turtles, he's the one who takes the whole hero-gig the most seriously, aspiring to the be the best he can be and help the most people he can. I enjoy this young idealistic character, trying hard to be responsible, but still also be little more than a kid himself.

I like him, because he's the most like me: responsible to a fault, hard working, with a work before play ethic. He always has a plan, and it's often a good one, if only others would follow it. Like me, he gets picked on for being a stick-in-the-mud or un-spontaneous, but it's not that he doesn't know how to have fun. It's that he loves his brothers so much, that protecting them is his top priority at all times.

Yep, if I were a ninja turtle, I'd be Leo.
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This post is part of the A to Z Blogging Challenge. I'll be writing about superheroes I love all month. You can check out other bloggers and see their creative takes on the challenge here.

Don't forget to check out my own superhero stories:



Wednesday, April 13, 2016

K is for…Kid Flash

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Flash has had several versions out there in the comic-book/TV/Movie universe. He can be a bit of a madcap: a happy, lighthearted, joke-telling, flirtatious sort of fellow. He's always got a good heart, and a lot of love and loyalty. One of my favorite incarnations has been Kid Flash from Young Justice, AKA Wally West.

On Young Justice, Wally is making his first foray out there into hero-dom on his own, having been a sidekick for a while. Despite his joking nature, he wanted to be taken seriously for what he could do.

What I love about Wally is that humor. A lot of superhero stories are dark, about tortured souls and ugly temptations. You see a lot of the theme that power corrupts, or that massive self control and denial is the only way to deal with superpowers. But Wally is full of joy and fun. He delights in his own skill and in making a difference in the world.

And, while he loves to flirt, I don't know what he would do if anyone took him up on it, besides stammer and blush. He's adorable.
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This post is part of the A to Z Blogging Challenge. I'll be writing about superheroes I love all month. You can check out other bloggers and see their creative takes on the challenge here.

Don't forget to check out my own superhero stories:



Tuesday, April 12, 2016

J is for…James Bond

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James Bond is maybe not typically touted as a superhero. There's no supernatural, mad science, or otherworldly explanation for him. But then again, Batman and Ironman are "just human," too. Definitions of what actually constitutes a "super" hero vs. just an ordinary hero are sketchy.

The character definitely plays as a superhero for me, though. A different sort depending on which iteration we're talking about. Clever and slick, charming, sociopathic, with killer instincts (pun intended), he's a dangerous man, who is at least mostly on the side good. His instincts might be his superpower. Or maybe it's luck.

Choosing which Bond is yours is like choosing your Doctor in Doctor Who. It may say more about you than you realize. Whether you prefer the lighter interpretations or the grittier ones, the gadgets or the hand to hand combat, the smarmy or the deadly serious.
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I grew up watching Roger Moore with my mother, but in my head, the voice that says "Moneypenny" belongs to Sean Connery. I saw the Dalton and Brosnan flicks, but they didn't stick with me. I think Daniel Craig might be "my" James Bond though. I like darkness in my heroes, and Craig's Bond is full of that. He's damaged goods, with a heart seeking redemption. He's dangerous, not just for his weaponry, but because part of you wants to save him, even if it gets you killed in the process.

Yeah. That's my Bond.

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This post is part of the A to Z Blogging Challenge. I'll be writing about superheroes I love all month. You can check out other bloggers and see their creative takes on the challenge here.

Don't forget to check out my own superhero stories:



Monday, April 11, 2016

I is for …Ironman


Robert Downey, Jr. as Ironman is one of the most perfect castings in all superhero movies ever. Whether it's that he's a fantastic actor, or that he just understands brilliant, selfish egoists because he is one, I don't know, but it's the first time I ever had any interest in Ironman as a character.

The character, as portrayed by Downey, Jr. comes across in all his self-centered, self-important glory, yet is somehow still sympathetic enough to keep me watching. Generally, I don't have much patience with self-aggrandizing people, in real life or in fiction, so it's a surprise that I'm interested in Tony Stark.
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Maybe it's his enthusiasm, his mania. I do like a good mad scientist character, and Tony Stark definitely qualifies (Hello? Ultron?). Maybe it's that bad-boy charisma. I'm not generally susceptible to that either, but Downey, Jr. suggests a vulnerability beneath, and maybe I am snowed by that, at least a little.

Some characters you love to hate…this one, I hate to love.  But I do.
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This post is part of the A to Z Blogging Challenge. I'll be writing about superheroes I love all month. You can check out other bloggers and see their creative takes on the challenge here.

Don't forget to check out my own superhero stories: