One of the weirdest things about being a black comics fan, other than basically being invisible a lot of the time, is that you’re more likely to find a comic starring an alien or animal than you are a black man, and good luck finding a comic starring a black woman! Black characters are seen as harder to write, too. Sometimes writers, big name A-list writers, will explain that they just don’t feel comfortable writing black characters, because what if they mess up or the characters are inauthentic or they are accidentally racist?
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The funniest part, and by that I mean funny “awww” and not funny “ha ha,” is that Marvel’s movies would not be what they are now without a black man: Wesley Snipes as Blade. They were a stepping stone, proof that you could make successful movies starring comic characters. And in the years since, we’ve gotten movies starring Spider-Man, Iron Man, the Punisher, the Fantastic Four, Daredevil, Elektra, Hulk, a second Spider-Man, Ghost Rider, Captain America, a second Hulk, another Punisher, the X-Men, Man-Thing, another set of X-Men, and the Avengers. Soon, we’ll have Ant-Man, sequels to a couple more movies, and a movie featuring the Guardians of the Galaxy. The biggest bone thrown to black fans was an animated adaptation of Reginald Hudlin & John Romita Jr’s run on Black Panther, which was announced in 2008, eventually aired on BET in late 2011 after being aired on Australian TV in early 2010, and was eventually shoveled onto Netflix.
C’mon.
Sometimes, being black and being a fan of comics means that you have to like them in spite of yourself.
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David Brothers, “Just How Hard is a Black Panther Movie?”
http://www.comicsalliance.com/2012/07/20/just-how-hard-is-a-black-panther-film-anyway/
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That last line. Sigh.
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depressing and accurate.
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(Source: fyeahlilbit2point0, via sisoula)