Dear All
I wanted to start this post by using the
immortal line; ‘Thank fuck this shit is over’ but it is not.
If you happened to love comics, action and
Sci fi you would have seen plenty of movies and tv shows over the last decade
to keep you more than happy. But ever show which has potential doesn’t always
make it. As some examples, two series spring to mind immediately to me, The
Brave, starring Anne Heche, well made, engaging actors, decent plots, and
Pitch, the story of a female black baseball star. Pitch was also well made with
good production values and like the Brave, a decent cast. In the world of Tv,
what is important is ratings, because ratings is what drives the industry.
High ratings means big brands will want to
place their products within the show or during the breaks where you watch adverts.
To add to the cash pot, great shows have spin offs and others merchandise like
toys, books and even movies to keep the money rolling in. Find the right show
and you can become a major star, become wealthy and use it as a launch pad for
other projects.
Casting the right lead in a TV show or
Movie is critical, a lot rides on picking the right person, pick the wrong one,
and the show will tank, pick the wrong writers and even a great actor, male or
female will not save it. CW makes many shows, Supergirl, Arrow, The Flash and
the ill fated Batwoman. In Batwoman, the producers wanted Ruby Rose, actor and
model who has some decent movies in her CV such as John Wick 2 and Resident
Evil, the Final Chapter. In John Wick 2, Ruby Rose played a bodyguard to a
Mafia figure who yearns to sit at ‘the High Table’ of organised crime. Although
Ruby Rose didn’t speak, it was a great part for her playing an action character.
After John Wick 2 under her belt, it would
seem obvious that someone would take a chance on her and give her something
better which led her to becoming Kate Kane, aka Batwoman. The supporting cast
was a mixed bag of talent featuring, the ever good Dougray Scott, alongside
other actors like Rachel Skarsten, Meagan Tandy, Camrus Johnson and Nicola
Kang. Skarsten stole the show with her portrayal as Batwoman’s mad killer
sister, which was the only saving grace for this show.
So, what was Batwoman’s problem?
The producers decided to write Batwoman as
Bat-lesbian, having a lesbian lead however that wasn’t the problem; it was the
forcing down people’s throats of an LGBT agenda. People thought they were
getting a crime fighting show but in reality they were getting fed a lesbian
show sprinkled with a few approved heterosexuals to pad it out. The subtext which ran through the show was
that heterosexuals were bad, they were the enemy. In a crossover with other CW
shows, Crisis on Infinite Earth, Ruby Rose’s character is one of the special
people who are needed to save our world. Batwoman was written as the paragon of
courage, this is despite not having done anything really to merit this title.
At this point of the first season, who had she really saved? And also where was
her courage as her mass murdering homicidal sister killed her way across the
city using her butterfly knife? Where was Batwoman, the “paragon of courage”
and defender of the truth, well she was sitting about being an unhappy lesbian
with angst. She was upset that an ex girlfriend was getting pumped senseless by
a heterosexual called her husband. Oh, and as the “paragon of courage” and
defender of the truth, you get special rights to break up a happy home being a LGBT
hero. Contrast this with Superman Returns; Superman comes back to earth after 5
years, Lois Lane has a kid and living with another guy, does Superman attempt
to break up a happy home? Funnily enough, he doesn’t. In the lore of the
Superhero, sacrifice is a burden not shunned but to be carried, except in
Batwoman.
As Batwoman continued through-out the first
season, another incident which caught my eye left me baffled, it was what
people call a WTF moment. Batwoman and the ex girlfriend are in a high end restaurant
working their way through their angst of feelings. A waiter pops up and what
must be the most contrived piece of anti heterosexual writing objects to them
holding hands. If you saw a woman crying and another woman holding her hands
would your first thought that they must be a pair of lesbians? I doubt it. What
makes this scene so interesting is that Batwoman says to the waiter, she is
Kate Kane and one of her relatives is an online critic with millions of followers
and she will have the restaurant boycotted.
So basically, Batwoman, the “paragon of
courage” is willing to have a restaurant boycotted leading to its closure which
could put what 30 innocent people out of their jobs? Does that sound like a
superhero to you? Does that sound like someone who is the paragon of courage?
In total, the sum of this show is so bad from a writing standpoint it was
little wonder that people turned away from it almost immediately. Warner Bros.
TV, the CW, and Berlanti Productions tried to sell the public a crime fighting
show that was not a crime fighting show. The public felt cheated, and felt
their disapproval had to be heard which prompted a backlash from the LGBT
community who decided that labeling everyone who complained as homophobe was a
good way to plaster over dissent.
Despite the show tanking in the ratings and
Ruby Rose getting the bulk of the blame, incredibly the producers decided to
green light a second series. But in season 2, we will not be seeing Ruby Rose
as Batwoman, Rose said that:
'This was not a decision I made lightly'.
So, what does she see that the producers
don’t? Well I would suggest she sees that the first season has so badly damaged
any chance of this being turned around that the only sensible option is to
scrap it. Rose added:
"I have the utmost respect for the
cast, crew and everyone involved with the show in both Vancouver and in Los
Angeles. I am beyond appreciative to Greg Berlanti, Sarah Schechter and
Caroline Dries for not only giving me this incredible opportunity, but for
welcoming me into the DC universe they have so beautifully created. Thank you
Peter Roth and Mark Pedowitz and the teams at Warner Bros. and The CW who put
so much into the show and always believed in me. Thank you to everyone who made
season one a success — I am truly grateful."
And with that Ruby Rose is hanging up the
cowl way sooner than anyone expected because to continue would completely
damage her career. Having made one mistake, the producers seem to be hell bent
on repeating this by not addressing the issue of why the show was so bad, they
even released a statement promising to cast an LGBTQ actress in the titular
role for season 2. If you had to sum up in one sentence what Batwoman is, I
would suspect that many people would venture this, ‘Batwoman is Bat-Lesbian using
an established franchise in an attempt to hijack loyalty to cherished comic characters
for ratings to justify their existence with an underlining subtext that heterosexuals
are bad and oppressors.
Finally, LGBT characters aren’t new in Tv
shows, in the show, Fear The Walking Dead, a lead character in the show is
called Victor Strand, he is played by a black actor called Colman Domingo who
also happens to be gay. He called the show’s handling of Victor Strand’s
sexuality “brave” and “courageous,” and “very normal.” The character’s main
angst is like everyone else’s, to keep living, sexuality plays a back seat just
as it does with the straight actors. Batwoman was all about forcing an LGBT
agenda with an anti heterosexual subtext down people’s throats, and the public reaction
was all too obvious and predictable. Something that major brands will take note
of when they book time slots for their adverts further down the line. Batwoman
as a series is completely ruined which is why Ruby Rose was smart to leave and
the public won’t support it when it returns for a second series.
Yours sincerely
George Laird
The Campaign for Human Rights at Glasgow
University
2 comments:
Just seen the trailer for season 1. I think it's pretty unfair that Ruby Rose was blamed for this. It wasn't her fault that the script - therefore the show - was shit.
What a lot of media executives forget that for an action genre, that is what most viewers want to see.
Blue is the Warmest Colour is an excellent film, albeit with some rather explicit scenes. But the script is powerfully written and is about relationships. The fact that the main characters are lesbian doesn't detract from the plot and it makes for a powerful drama. It won a prize at the Cannes film festival. Not because it had elements of LGBT but the story itself was powerful.
Quest for Lost Heroes is one of David Gemmell's best novels. Two of the main characters are in a gay relationship. In one short paragraph Gemmell subtly introduces the relationship allowing the reader to get a better understanding of the characters.
People should be free to lives their lives as they wish, but not in a manner designed to upset anyone else, and not with some TV executive deciding to push an agenda thinking it will up the ratings.
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