Is there anything AMERICA CHVEZ cannot do?!

>on an untrained purely intuitive level already more powerful than old white man Dr. Strange
>independent and strong daughter of two strong empowered warrior scientist queens from a multiverse without toxic masculinity

I see a very bright future for America Chavez in the MCU

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  1. 11 months ago
    Anonymous

    be white

  2. 11 months ago
    Anonymous

    The best part is it would be all okay if she was hot. Instead its some kid

    • 11 months ago
      Anonymous

      >Instead its some kid
      Kids become adults eventually

      • 11 months ago
        Anonymous

        Woah how do you know that anon? Also his point is its an ugly actor and yes if your sexy you’re allowed to one shot the universe, just like irl

    • 11 months ago
      Anonymous

      A hot kid

      • 11 months ago
        Anonymous

        She's uglier than usual in that pic. I'm curious as to why you chose that one to champion her.

    • 11 months ago
      Anonymous

      Holy shit, I thought she was in her 20's. She was like 15 when she filmed Doctor Strange? That makes me feel weird, but my penis can't tell the difference.

  3. 11 months ago
    Anonymous

    She wouldn't be able to kill Dagoth Ur.

  4. 11 months ago
    Anonymous

    Not ballon to 180 lbs after she turns 20

  5. 11 months ago
    Anonymous

    > Is there anything AMERICA CHVEZ cannot do?!
    have a movie or show

  6. 11 months ago
    Anonymous

    I follow her on Instagram and tiktok despite being twice her age.

    • 11 months ago
      Anonymous

      unless you want to live in parasocial fantasy forever, stop following people you dont know. If you want to have actual sex, an actual girlfriend, stop doing that crap at a minimum

      • 11 months ago
        Anonymous

        >letting a woman control your life
        gay
        I've been married for 5 years to a woman 2 years younger than me, but I've my alt instagram account where I follow teenage bawds for much longer

        • 11 months ago
          Anonymous

          nonce

        • 11 months ago
          Anonymous

          a woman control your life
          no one said that lol, sorry you're such a wimp that instead of simply confronting your wife you escape to pixels

          • 11 months ago
            Anonymous

            >confronting your wife
            Your point is contradictory, gay.
            And no, I'm not going to "confront" my wife about the fact that I want to jerk off to 17 year olds sometimes. You're the biggest virgin homosexual cucklord here if you think that would work out with anyone, ever
            Even for a dude who beat his wife all the time to "control" her, it wouldn't end well.

            • 11 months ago
              Anonymous

              you're the one that admitted to letting your woman control your life dude kek you're moronic, don't go full watts on us ok bro?

              • 11 months ago
                Anonymous

                Nice virgin cope
                Post your hand

        • 11 months ago
          Anonymous

          so you went through the trouble of getting married to someone but you are a pedophile and you dont actually love them
          wow you are going to burn for an eternity you worthless fricking freak. I hope someone kills you soon so you can go to Hell faster.

          • 11 months ago
            Anonymous

            brown

        • 11 months ago
          Anonymous

          the only gay here is you. hope your wife divorces you are you lose all your shit.

    • 11 months ago
      Anonymous

      If you’re going to be a creep, at least do it for a girl who’s actually hot. Like I’m a couple of years shy of being twice Isabela Moner’s age, but the things I would do to her…

    • 11 months ago
      Anonymous

      Pick up McKenna Grace so together they add up to 34

      • 11 months ago
        Anonymous

        >Gatsby themed party
        How can the themes of the book still go over the heads of Americans?

        • 11 months ago
          Anonymous

          nobody thinks about the meaning of a book in a party

        • 11 months ago
          Anonymous

          >Wealthy people party while the plebeians are stuck at home during quarantine
          I don't know, seems on point

      • 11 months ago
        Anonymous

        Where is her other hand?

      • 11 months ago
        Anonymous

        Where is her other hand?

        >Wealthy people party while the plebeians are stuck at home during quarantine
        I don't know, seems on point

        A hot kid

        So when is their tape leaking?

    • 11 months ago
      Anonymous

      >letting a woman control your life
      gay
      I've been married for 5 years to a woman 2 years younger than me, but I've my alt instagram account where I follow teenage bawds for much longer

      >confronting your wife
      Your point is contradictory, gay.
      And no, I'm not going to "confront" my wife about the fact that I want to jerk off to 17 year olds sometimes. You're the biggest virgin homosexual cucklord here if you think that would work out with anyone, ever
      Even for a dude who beat his wife all the time to "control" her, it wouldn't end well.

      have a nice day.

  7. 11 months ago
    Anonymous

    act

  8. 11 months ago
    Anonymous

    Hey get it right, it's the M-She-U with 200% more girlboss crushing whiney male hero balls.

  9. 11 months ago
    Anonymous

    >Is there anything AMERICA CHVEZ cannot do?!
    Sell comics.

  10. 11 months ago
    Anonymous

    They keep powercreeping. They'll eventually have a character too OP, it turns everyone off.

  11. 11 months ago
    Anonymous

    pufferfish face

  12. 11 months ago
    Anonymous

    Throwing a believable punch apparently.

  13. 11 months ago
    Anonymous

    she cannot fill a c cup bra, get this wet back b***h off my screen

  14. 11 months ago
    Anonymous

    So when is their tape leaking?

  15. 11 months ago
    Anonymous

    They keep fricking doing this with MCU female characters. None of them earned their powers the way all the men did, struggling through weakness and failure to become heroes. They all just started strong, with maybe a flashback to one time when they struggled for a few seconds. She-Hulk has perfect control of her Hulk form, Captain Marvel is just the strongest without trying, Scarlet Witch is The Strongest Witch despite not knowing anything about magic, even Black Widow just gets a few vague allusions to her training days and how hard it was without ever showing it.
    It's like they're afraid to show them actually struggling or earning their power the way the men had to, they just want to have a Strong Female Protagonist right away.

    • 11 months ago
      Anonymous

      >thor earned his power by being born
      >antman literally stole the suit
      >hulk made a mistake
      Iron Man, Cap, Hawk-Eye, & Black Widow earned their power, in that they are just well trained/developed tech. Or did fricking spiderman earn that bug bite? What is this nonsense complaint, there's plenty to b***h about with the MSheU but this aspect I don't get.

      • 11 months ago
        Anonymous

        It's about the power having a cost, or the effort it takes to earn it, the weakness experienced without it, or the consequences of having it.
        >Thor: Stripped of his power due to his hubris and banished to Earth, has to earn it back by learning the wisdom Odin wants him to have. We see him crying in the rain, unable to lift his hammer which to him is the symbol of his power, ignored by Heimdall, stuck in a place he doesn't recognise among strangers who fear him. Then he gets attacked by his only brother and has to fight to protect his new friends. He experiences weakness, helplessness, despair etc. and has to fight to return to where he was.
        >Antman: A former criminal who has no job and no prospects, tries to live a normal life but can't keep a job purely because of his past. All he wants is to see his daughter and help provide for her, but can't find a way to do it legally. Driven back to crime, he finds the power by chance, and has to undergo a whole movie's worth of training to use it properly. A weak loser is given the chance to be powerful, and works to make the power his. He makes mistakes, gets hurt, and the feeling that he's just a stand in for the true hero who made the suit is always present.
        >Hulk: Bruce Banner was desperate and made himself the subject of his experiments to achieve results. Even if it was a simple accident, the Hulk story has the suffering built in. The power is barely his own, he's essentially cursed to become incredibly destructive and violent without control, only a fool would look at Bruce and think he has it easy, or that his power comes without a cost. They've changed this recently, but originally he was a constantly suffering character, the most powerful but with the biggest cost.

        cont.

        • 11 months ago
          Anonymous

          [...]
          The others follow this theme:
          >Spider-Man: His origin wasn't shown in the MCU, but his first stand alone movie is all about learning to use Stark's tech without fricking up. Of course he eventually realizes that he doesn't truly need it or Stark's approval, and is able to fight with his own strength. In terms of suffering or weakness, we see him have to lift a collapsed building off of himself, overcoming the hopelessness and feeling of failure in that moment.
          >Dr. Strange: Top surgeon who loses his skills due to his own stupidity and hubris. Goes on a long journey to heal himself before learning that it isn't possible, but in the process discovers talent in a new discipline. Again, failure, weakness, effort to recover or exceed his current self.
          >Starlord: Opening scene is him as a kid running away from his dying-of-cancer mother before being abducted by aliens. Clearly a simple earth kid who's had to learn and adapt to his circumstances. Doesn't have any real power in the first movie aside from tech anyone could have.
          >Black Panther: Is literally stripped of his power and almost killed in the course of his movie, has to slowly make his way back to a place of power to reclaim his throne.
          >Shang Chi: Trained as an assassin by an abusive father, runs away from home to try and live a normal life, has to defeat him and use his training to claim the power from him.

          Weakness, failure, suffering, effort, growth; every male hero has in some way had to earn their power while suffering through low points.
          Compare that to Cpt. Marvel: Starts the movie powerful, remembers in a 30 second flashback that she didn't used to be powerful, ends the movie even more powerful than before. No loss, no effort, no cost. This is why so many viewers complained about her seeming arrogant; she just shows up and effortlessly becomes the strongest and somehow also the first member of the Avengers, never seems to struggle or work for anything she has.

          I get what your saying, but I think its a disservice to include Scarlet Witch and Black Widow with the likes of Captain Marvel or really any woman in the marvels movie coming out. Scarlet Witch and Black Widow are both shown going through some rough shit and while it is framed as a flashback I don't think that's a big deal.

          • 11 months ago
            Anonymous

            >Scarlet Witch and Black Widow are both shown going through some rough shit
            That's true, but part of the problem is purely because they didn't get their own origin movies the way most of the others did. We don't actually see Scarlet Witch go through her hardship and earn her power, at least not until WandaVision and even then it's in flashbacks. Sure her brother died, but that his suffering, not hers.
            Same as Black Widow, we know the training she went through was basically torture, and they also sterilized her which is pretty dark, but we don't actually see her go through it. I have less of a problem with those characters though, it's more about the pattern. They should have come out with a Black Widow prequel before Endgame (a real prequel, not a midquel with a few flashbacks), and given Wanda a stand alone movie somewhere after Ultron. Following the pattern Wanda would normally lose her powers, or come up against a magic user much stronger than her, but find a way to overcome the difficulty anyway.

      • 11 months ago
        Anonymous

        It's about the power having a cost, or the effort it takes to earn it, the weakness experienced without it, or the consequences of having it.
        >Thor: Stripped of his power due to his hubris and banished to Earth, has to earn it back by learning the wisdom Odin wants him to have. We see him crying in the rain, unable to lift his hammer which to him is the symbol of his power, ignored by Heimdall, stuck in a place he doesn't recognise among strangers who fear him. Then he gets attacked by his only brother and has to fight to protect his new friends. He experiences weakness, helplessness, despair etc. and has to fight to return to where he was.
        >Antman: A former criminal who has no job and no prospects, tries to live a normal life but can't keep a job purely because of his past. All he wants is to see his daughter and help provide for her, but can't find a way to do it legally. Driven back to crime, he finds the power by chance, and has to undergo a whole movie's worth of training to use it properly. A weak loser is given the chance to be powerful, and works to make the power his. He makes mistakes, gets hurt, and the feeling that he's just a stand in for the true hero who made the suit is always present.
        >Hulk: Bruce Banner was desperate and made himself the subject of his experiments to achieve results. Even if it was a simple accident, the Hulk story has the suffering built in. The power is barely his own, he's essentially cursed to become incredibly destructive and violent without control, only a fool would look at Bruce and think he has it easy, or that his power comes without a cost. They've changed this recently, but originally he was a constantly suffering character, the most powerful but with the biggest cost.

        cont.

        The others follow this theme:
        >Spider-Man: His origin wasn't shown in the MCU, but his first stand alone movie is all about learning to use Stark's tech without fricking up. Of course he eventually realizes that he doesn't truly need it or Stark's approval, and is able to fight with his own strength. In terms of suffering or weakness, we see him have to lift a collapsed building off of himself, overcoming the hopelessness and feeling of failure in that moment.
        >Dr. Strange: Top surgeon who loses his skills due to his own stupidity and hubris. Goes on a long journey to heal himself before learning that it isn't possible, but in the process discovers talent in a new discipline. Again, failure, weakness, effort to recover or exceed his current self.
        >Starlord: Opening scene is him as a kid running away from his dying-of-cancer mother before being abducted by aliens. Clearly a simple earth kid who's had to learn and adapt to his circumstances. Doesn't have any real power in the first movie aside from tech anyone could have.
        >Black Panther: Is literally stripped of his power and almost killed in the course of his movie, has to slowly make his way back to a place of power to reclaim his throne.
        >Shang Chi: Trained as an assassin by an abusive father, runs away from home to try and live a normal life, has to defeat him and use his training to claim the power from him.

        Weakness, failure, suffering, effort, growth; every male hero has in some way had to earn their power while suffering through low points.
        Compare that to Cpt. Marvel: Starts the movie powerful, remembers in a 30 second flashback that she didn't used to be powerful, ends the movie even more powerful than before. No loss, no effort, no cost. This is why so many viewers complained about her seeming arrogant; she just shows up and effortlessly becomes the strongest and somehow also the first member of the Avengers, never seems to struggle or work for anything she has.

        • 11 months ago
          Anonymous

          there are so many examples my brother

          Not just superhero movies, any movie. Teen girls are wise beyond their years and practically take care of their parents. When was the last time a teen boy was even depicted in a movie? All women main characters are the best in the room at whatever they are doing.

          >Every single arc for these female characters (house of the dragon, star wars, all marvel movies, pixar movies, ring of power, greys anatomy, stranger things) is simply getting the other characters in the show to realize what is supposed to be obvious to the viewer from episode 1: the girl is the strongest and most capable person and anyone who disagrees must be embarrassed and exiled and is a bad person.

          Contrast this to Dune, maybe the only recent example of a “teen boy” hero in movies. He spends 3 hours on screen f
          to go from literal sniveling child to finally making a decision for himself without his mommies help.
          >spoiler, his arc will be better and more emotionally powerful than any of the female characters ive referenced.

          • 11 months ago
            Anonymous

            Fair points, but I don't really agree with Stanger Things being included if you're talking about 11. She starts as a horribly abused feral child who can barely speak english and doesn't understand most of the world around her. She's also being hunted by forces she can't hope to defeat. She displays more and more power as season 1 continues, but still needs her friends' help to accomplish what she needs to do. Her power also has a cost; the nose bleeding and fatigue it seems to bring if she uses it too much. 11's actually a pretty good example of the kind of hero story I like, starting from a place of weakness and earning the power over time, not just plopping down as a super confident badass who wins all the time.

  16. 11 months ago
    Anonymous

    I enjoy that leftists are without a sense of irony and can keep making these terrible original characters that are worse than tumblr sonic fan fiction.

  17. 11 months ago
    Anonymous

    Why are Latinas so popular on Cinemaphile?

  18. 11 months ago
    Anonymous

    The only characters who really had any proper development of earning their powers or whatever were Iron Man, Cpt American and Thor. Yes Thor started off powerful but in the first movie he was stripped of his power and had to learn and shit.

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