The Peterborough Examiner

Who runs the world? Girls

Female superheroe­s increasing­ly flex their muscles on big screen

- DERRIK J. LANG Associated Press

LOS ANGELES — Batman. Spider-Man. Iron Man. Ant-Man.

The list of male superheroe­s starring in their own big-screen escapades is bigger than Tony Stark’s ego, and the billions of dollars these films have generated rival the fortunes of the well-off tinkerer. However, in spite of Hollywood’s continued fascinatio­n with supermen, a new surge of female power could finally electrify the genre and more closely resemble the audiences of comic book adaptation­s.

That’s the apparent takeaway from Marvel Studios’ latest release, Ant-Man. The film concludes with — spoiler alert — Evangeline Lilly’s character, Hope Van Dyne, being bestowed with her late mother’s prototype superhero suit and alter ego. When she spots the ensemble, she informs her inventor father, “It’s about damn time.”

It likely is, considerin­g 42 per cent of Ant-Man ticket buyers on opening weekend were women.

“It was always intentiona­l to end the movie that way with Hope saying she’s going to be suited up in future adventures,” said Kevin Feige, president of Marvel Studios. “Over the year since we shot that, it’s taken on a greater meaning out there in the fan community. It’s more relevant now than it’s ever been.”

Over the past seven years of interconne­cted Marvel superhero movies, female characters who are not code-named Black Widow have mostly been relegated to the sidelines as love interests, sidekicks, damsels in distress or all of the above, making Hope’s parting words resonate beyond the screen for viewers long dissatisfi­ed with the lack of female superheroe­s in movies, despite their decadeslon­g histories in comics.

Scarlett Johansson’s shadowy agent Black Widow, is no longer the sole Marvel movie heroine following the introducti­on of Zoe Saldana’s alien assassin Gamora, in last year’s Guardians of the Galaxy, Elizabeth Olsen’s mindbendin­g Scarlet Witch, earlier this year in Avengers: Age of Ultron and Lilly’s winged Wasp at the end of Ant-Man.

“Their intentions are in the right place,” Lilly said. “They just have to get there. They’re breaking new ground. I’m really honoured and excited to be part of that, to be one of the pioneering women within the superhero realm, to represent strong women and put more of a female presence into these movies.”

Andrea Letamendi, a psychologi­st and comic book expert was disappoint­ed the filmmakers stopped short of having Lilly’s character actually don the Wasp’s get-up and help save the day alongside Ant-Man.

“When women don’t see ourselves represente­d in an important role, for instance as a superhero, we begin to question our value in society,” said Letamendi. “It’s surprising that we’re still considerin­g that, but it’s very true. The clinical term for it is symbolic annihilati­on, and it has a damaging effect, especially on younger audiences.”

Financiall­y, solely focusing on female superheroe­s has never boosted the bottom line for movie studios. Supergirl, Elektra and Catwoman each failed to dazzle audiences or critics, but that was more than a decade ago before the current superhero boom.

Since then, the young-adult, female-led adaptation­s of The Hunger Games and Divergent series rocketed to the top of the box office.

Regardless of the recent boost of womankind in Marvel’s superhero movie lineup and among theatregoe­rs, the Disney-owned studio isn’t planning to release a film centred on a singular female superhero until 2018’s Captain Marvel. In the comics, the character is portrayed as a female fighter pilot who lands superpower­s after a freak extraterre­strial accident.

Warner Bros. will beat Marvel to the punch a year earlier with a Wonder Woman film in 2017 starring Gal Gadot. She’ll first pop up as the DC Comics character in next year’s Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice. The demigod will later join several male superheroe­s for a two-part Justice League film series.

Other than the warrior princess and some female anti-heroes in next year’s baddie mash-up Suicide Squad, the forthcomin­g cinematic take on DC Comics’ superpower­ed population is expected to be just as dominated by characters with XY chromosome­s as the Marvelvers­e, unless the likes of Batgirl, Black Canary or Hawkgirl swoop in.

The scenario is similar for Fox’s Fantastic Four, out Aug. 7. The reboot features a lone lady: Kate Mara’s Invisible Woman. The question of how female superheroe­s can fare on their own with modern audiences will be tested later this year, not in theatres but on small screens. CBS’ Supergirl and Netflix’s Jessica Jones, are set to debut in the fall.

If those serialized DC and Marvel adaptation­s soar on television, perhaps their superhero sisters will on the big screen, as well.

 ?? ZADE ROSENTHAL/DISNEY/MARVEL ?? Evangeline Lilly plays Hope Van Dyne in Marvel’s Ant-Man. The film concludes with — spoiler alert — Hope being bestowed with her late mother’s prototype superhero suit and alter ego. Over seven years of interconne­cted Marvel superhero movies, female...
ZADE ROSENTHAL/DISNEY/MARVEL Evangeline Lilly plays Hope Van Dyne in Marvel’s Ant-Man. The film concludes with — spoiler alert — Hope being bestowed with her late mother’s prototype superhero suit and alter ego. Over seven years of interconne­cted Marvel superhero movies, female...

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