James Gunn: The Solution to Superhero Fatigue according to Parents
HBO Max, but it wasn’t because it was the launch of a new DC Universe; it was because they recognized the name of James Gunn.
To them, James Gunn was the man behind Guardians of the Galaxy, their favorite Marvel movies, because they were bright, colorful, off-the-wall, and looked like living comic books. The trauma of Vol. 3 was worth it at the end for the shot of Rocket leading the animals to freedom, the type of bonkers crowd-pleasing visual that Disney’s house style typically stays away from, but that Gunn embraces in every single one of his films.
The man is not perfect, he’s made creative decisions I’ve disagreed with, but hearing my parents explain why Superman looked interesting, and then comparing it to the disappointing box office success of Fantastic Four and Thunderbolts, made me realize that with his revamp of DC, Gunn’s master plan might just work.
After all, my parents want the comic book VFX spectacle in bright, primary colors, they want to see things they’ve never imagined would be on the big screen, and echoing the biggest criticism of Marvel these days, it can’t feel like homework. They did the homework, even watched Quantumania, but catching a film that stands on its own is especially appealing to them. I did have to explain that Superman introduces a lot of new heroes, and no, there’s no backstory to them right now, you get names and demonstrations of their powers without any explanations, and you just have to go with it.
Jame Gunn’s reimagining of Superman is a throwback to those early Marvel movies of Phase 1 where we were all discovering this new connected universe together, but unlike those movies, Gunn isn’t scared to toss absurd characters at the viewer, from Guy Gardner and Hawkgirl, to Metamorpho, a character that even as a fan of Justice League International I never thought would ever make it to live-action. Gunn’s plan to toss everything and the kitchen sink at viewers right out of the gate by skipping the origin stories and jumping straight into the action is the secret sauce that’s going to help combat superhero fatigue.
Superman was a success at the box office, but only because the bar had been lowered compared to its Marvel contemporaries, and every sign is pointing to the sequel, Man of Tomorrow, becoming a billion-dollar blockbuster. James Gunn’s unique approach that embraces the strangeness of characters like Guy Gardner and Metamorpho managed to turn a talking tree into a household name and an anthropomorphic raccoon into a merchandise machine, but it’s that very sense of being abnormal, different, and a few degrees off from mainstream heroes that makes them so appealing.
If Warner Bros. hadn’t handed Gunn complete creative control, there’s no way The Authority’s Engineer would be on screen, and Guy Gardner’s haircut would have never made it past the first test screening. Gunn isn’t always right, but he’s willing to take creative risks most major studio directors wouldn’t even entertain, and he knows how to send a crowd home happy.
I never would have imagined that James Gunn’s Guardians of the Galaxy, and now, Superman, would be what helped turn my parents into superhero fans. My Mom and Dad prefer Landman, Tulsa King, The Americans, and Columbo when left to their own devices, so I’m already excited for next year when I can take them to see Supergirl.
Who knew that it wasn’t really superhero fatigue? Instead, it was a need for superhero movies to break free of the mass marketing box Disney had shoved them into, which would finally get even non-comic book fans excited for capes and tights all over again.
And no, I’m not going to show them Peacemaker.