detective pikachu looks like a nightmare, literally speaking it looks like something iād see in a nightmare about pokemon being real
and i canāt fucking wait to see it and see just how scary all of the other realistic pokemon will look. mr. mime looks horrifying. jigglypuff looks wrong and all hairy. some of the bird pokemon have realistic beaks and it looks really uncanny. the greninja has white in its eyes to match the cartoon model but it just makes it look scary since real frogs donāt have those and the greninja head is otherwise rendered so realistically. this movie is gonna be awesome and i canāt wait. itās gonna be the Mario movie all over again.Ā
Ā So after the many many posts mourning the passing of Stan Lee earlier today Iāve started seeing an inevitable wave of backlash about how he actually wasnāt a good person and we shouldnāt be mourning them. And these posts are par for the course when a celebrity dies because no one is all good or all bad, and thatās fine. And Stan Lee was human, he was a person with a complicated life and a complicated legacy, and Iām not here to whitewash any of that. However, Iād like to refute a couple of the points Iāve seen people making.Ā
And while your mileage may vary on how much you agree with him there, itās a far cry from him cruelly declaring Peter Parker having a boyfriend would be an affront before God and man and an insult to his authorial intent or whatever. Also, I think the original post that started this story was about Andrew Garfield saying something while doing press for Amazing Spiderman 2 and Stan Lee writing the contract as a result, but the contract is from 2011 and the first Amazing Spiderman came out in 2012, so the timeline doesnāt work. I could be misremembering the post though. Thereās also this implied narrative that Andrew Garfield got axed for saying his Peter Parker was bi, but uh, no. No, they cancelled the franchise because Amazing Spiderman 2 bombed at the box office.Ā
Now, to wrap it up, was Stan Lee a good and perfect man? No. His legacy is very much a mixed bag, especially when it comes to his relationship with his long-time co-creator Jack Kirby (although thatās a whole other suitcase to unpack some other time). I would like to point out, however, that the posts praising him arenāt all just blindly hero-worshipping him and being willfully ignorant. When someone you admire dies itās natural to forget about the bad parts of them for a bit and get a little misty eyed, and not everyoneās gonna be totally objective about this man that they never met but who represents something important to them. I think that speaks more to the way we interact with celebrity as a culture than it does about the way Marvel fans see Stan Lee frankly.Ā And hey, we gain nothing by pretending that Stan Lee wasnāt an important figure in comic book history, one who co-created the first black character in mainstream comics just two years after the Civil Rights Act was passed, who fought the Comic Code Authority censors to use comics to tackle heavy subject matter, who helped bring legitimacy to the art form and humanity to its characters. So as long as Iāve got you here Iām gonna leave you with his thoughts on racism in 1968, words that feel just as relevant today: