I do wonder this because I have shat on super hero stuff in the past and I do think normies have completely ruined it. At the same time though could it be salvaged in some way? I was thinking in terms of some kind of 3D animated short or movie and yes I am partially floating this idea because I do appreciate simple storytelling and it doesn't even necessarily have to be super hero stuff.
Hollywood and Disney really are fucking up so hard they can't even manage to get such a basic formulae right. I bet these types of movies and shows would be even better if they were uncensored and shocker had blood in them etc. depending on what kind of super hero it was. Graphic gore and blood would probably help keep the normies away from ruining it and they wouldn't let children watch it either.
Recently re-watched Blade 1 and despite its many flaw it is so much better than anything the MSHEU even came close to.
The formula is really simple.
DEI restrictions, and unfirable diversity hire commissars on staff, make this formula impossible to execute for any project that has a significant budget
Good example of "action women" is the Nik Kahn character in Extraction 2. She fights all male enemy combatants through the movie, but it isn't the usual women tossing around men as an equal trope. She is shown being vulnerable to raw physical power when she gets caught out in situations where they can use it on her, and has to dodge and avoid while countering. As the movie progresses you see her get more and more worn down, too.
It would be extremely funny to see a super hero franchise startup that has women and men getting along with each other because especially if the women were attractive that would make feminists seethe and go completely insane.
Blade 1 isn't just a good super hero flick, it's just an all-around excellent action-horror movie where we have the very rare case of a main "good guy" being more badass and ruthless than the actual villains. It's such a rare anomaly that everything about that film came together perfectly -- Wesley Snipes would leave notes around the set saying that he "was Blade", and they could not have cast better (Michael Jai White also had the skillset to be Blade, but there was a silent menace that Snipes possessed that made him a force to be reckoned with on-screen).
Combined with the sharp cinematography from Theo Van de Sande and that opening scene featuring New Order's awesome acid--fusion-techno, plus choreography that was well ahead of its time, the movie is a real trip that just comes together really well. It's one of the few movies from the 90s that was unapologetically masculine.
Yeah iirc the woman in Blade1 had a purpose as well. She wasn't some strong independent woman who don't need no man, but she did have an established skillset that was interesting and useful for the plot (gene therapy to cure vampirism). It wasn't some random skill the plot needed her to pick up in a ten second handwave explanation either.
Almost like back then they knew how to write female supporting characters in a male-centric action movie without going full feminazi on you.
Regarding number 7, I assume that means it's okay if the character was already black to begin with, such as Blade (of course) and Luke Cage.
Luke Cage had some really cool moments in the comics, but I'd never trust them to do him well in a movie or series today.
Actor Nicolas Coppola was a big fan, to the point of changing his surname to honor him...
In my re-watch of Blade with 2020+ sensitivities to race marxism I didn't see a single instance of it through the whole movie.
Colored are fine as a main character and most of the cast even. It is the race baiting that tends to come with a colored cast that makes for a bad movie.