Fathers STILL get the rough treatment in media, from being portrayed as too old to understand the modern day, feckless, violent, cold and just plain absent.
And we all see the fatherless behaviour that in reality causes...
So to celebrate a day that often gets overlooked to the female equivalent, what are some of the best representations of fathers you've seen in media?
Anime My daughter left the nest and Returned an S Rank adventurer: Belgrieve or 'the red ogre' is a perfect example of a positive role model I can think of in Anime. He's strict but fair, patient when he needs to be but not a push over, knows when to be emotional and when to think with a clear head. He's such a good role model that even former enemies switch to following his leads and former friends who fell off the right path immediately get back on the path just knowing He's around.
**As a Reincarnated Aristocrat, I'll use my appraisal skill to Rise in the world **: for the time he's on screen, Raven shows he's not just a great warrior and lord but an excellent father, encouraging his son when he can, traching him the right values and when it matters most, just talking to him when he needed it and that attitude extended to all the other members of the cast.
Western Media: I think the diluge of propaganda over the years is making my mind a bit blank on this unfortunately. Had to delve into my brain for this:
The Fresh Prince of Bel Air (1990s): James Avery played uncle Philip PERFECTLY, he was the greatest role model of a good Black father figure so no wonder they character assassinated him in the 'remake'
What are you're picks as to save it going to long, I should mention there are quite a few 'regression father stories' in Manhwa too where a father who makes mistakes raising their child (usually daughter) regresses in time to raise them properly, it's a genre to itself at this point.
All of the little 1 to 1 stories in Bioshock 2 are more personal, way more so than most else in the series.
Sinclair is setup to be an obvious Judas who would betray you just like Fontaine. But while he is a slimy business man, he isn't a monster and fights to the end to resist being forced into one. The black mammy is lost in her blind bigotry and idolization that she is literally shook by seeing the fact that her "enemies" can think.
Bioshock 1 has this grand story about the literal top of the top Elites and their machinations, and its amazing at times, but none of us will ever be a Frank Fontaine or Andrew Ryan. But a lot of us could be just a simp being abused by a monster (Gilbert Alexander) or a broken father trying to do his best in an awful world (Alpha).