superheroesincolor:

Mulan: Revelations (2015)  //  Dark Horse Comics

Though the future boasts endless technological wonders, only a very few can afford access to them. As a new virus rages through the rich and poor, threatening all of humanity, a warrior is awakened to stop the evil puppeteers behind it all! Centuries after her ancestor and namesake fought for China, a new Mulan has been chosen by the ancient Chinese immortals in a final battle for the world!

Story: Robert Alter, Marc Andreyko, art: Micah Kaneshiro

Get it now here


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So this seems pretty amazing, and what I really like is that not only is the Mulan from Ancient China treated as a serious character who goes into battle ready and doesn’t have to stay looking pretty – but her cyberpunk counterpart looks pretty amazing too:

– wincenworks

World of Warcraft (the Movie)

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clearlyiwaswrong submitted:

I don’t know if you’d seen these already but my eyes just rolled into the back of my head. Thanks for the crotch shot.

And of course the male equivalent is the opposite of sexualised. 

image

Those posters sum up PERFECTLY the problem with gendered double standard in depicting fictional characters and how it traverses through various media, as an MMO gets adapted into a movie.

Everything about those characters that should be equal, isn’t: makeup, costume, posing.

@nicholaskole took notice way back of how male orcs are big and unequivocally monstrous, while female ones are just conventionally pretty ladies painted green with small fangs (and that Garona’s mixed ancestry is not given justice either). Basically this:

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Also reminds me strongly of @krudman’s take on sexual dimorphism in character design.

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We assure you, WoW the Movie, designing big badass orc women (and/or sexualized orc men) isn’t that hard! We have a couple examples in our orc tag.

~Ozzie

edit: A number of people have rushed to remind us that in according to the character’s particular lore, she’s a half orc.  While correct, this doesn’t address any of the key problems such as her pose and attire, that audiences unfamiliar with the lore won’t know that or that the character is essentially promoted as a sexy orc-like lady in juxtaposition to a powerful, well protected and dangerous orc man.

World of Warcraft (the Movie)

image

clearlyiwaswrong submitted:

I don’t know if you’d seen these already but my eyes just rolled into the back of my head. Thanks for the crotch shot.

And of course the male equivalent is the opposite of sexualised. 

image

Those posters sum up PERFECTLY the problem with gendered double standard in depicting fictional characters and how it traverses through various media, as an MMO gets adapted into a movie.

Everything about those characters that should be equal, isn’t: makeup, costume, posing.

@nicholaskole took notice way back of how male orcs are big and unequivocally monstrous, while female ones are just conventionally pretty ladies painted green with small fangs (and that Garona’s mixed ancestry is not given justice either). Basically this:

image

Also reminds me strongly of @krudman’s take on sexual dimorphism in character design.

image

We assure you, WoW the Movie, designing big badass orc women (and/or sexualized orc men) isn’t that hard! We have a couple examples in our orc tag.

~Ozzie

edit: A number of people have rushed to remind us that in according to the character’s particular lore, she’s a half orc.  While correct, this doesn’t address any of the key problems such as her pose and attire, that audiences unfamiliar with the lore won’t know that or that the character is essentially promoted as a sexy orc-like lady in juxtaposition to a powerful, well protected and dangerous orc man.

Tidy Up Tuesday #34


A reminder that many of our posts include rhetorical questions. Thus, not everything we ask in on BABD needs to be answered literally.


That being said:
When we ask why there are little to no positive female design examples with certain characteristics, while we appreciate being directed to one, acting like a single game/comic/book makes a difference to the overwhelming amount of sexist depictions isn’t what we agree with


Things we addressed before:


~Ozzie & – wincenworks

Tidy Up Tuesday #34


A reminder that many of our posts include rhetorical questions. Thus, not everything we ask in on BABD needs to be answered literally.


That being said:
When we ask why there are little to no positive female design examples with certain characteristics, while we appreciate being directed to one, acting like a single game/comic/book makes a difference to the overwhelming amount of sexist depictions isn’t what we agree with


Things we addressed before:


~Ozzie & – wincenworks