Ellis has some interesting ideas here, but the bottom line is without the earlier "capeshit" there wouldn't be room for whatever Ellis wants to write. He's got a lot of anger directed at something thats a personal preference and not exactly a problem, without offering much a solution in that snippet.
I think most people want to read good comics of whatever variety.
Looking at Manga it's not all super shit, Aside from the obvious My Hero Academia there's variety in a sense and just enough. Even with
Steven Spielberg talking about Superhero movies going the way of the western, Marvel is still on track to dominate the box office, even if the reaction to the Eternals is mixed. People like SuperShit. There's nothing wrong with that. You're not an elite for hating on them.
I'd argue it's gone beyond just enjoying superpowers and bad guys, but the characters that embody that. Look at the fury at any casting announcement or speculation for Wolverine, and there will be pages of discussion, go back to Ben Affleck being announced for Batman, and you will see more than anything, a love for the established characters, and their lore. Not just a love for anyone who can fly and shoot lasers out of their eyes. Henry Cavil's casting remains in doubt and widely speculated on after the black Superman news or whatever is going on with that. It's important to get a character people have been reading since 1938 right. They still buy his comics after all.
Wanting to read 300 good comics even if they wear capes isn't something you need to seek help for. It's that kind of disillusionment that's lead to all the deconstruction we're seeing get popular now, The Boys, Invincible, and Jupiter Rising all successful TV series airing at the same time for example. Those are all pretty good entertainment in one way or the other, and kind of refreshing after a decade of good but unsurprising marvel movies. There's a place for deconstruction and thankfully its turned into a good product in its own right.
The Matrix is Superhero fiction. Even has the dreaded "chosen one" trope everyone should be tired of by now. The Matrix just did it with trench coats and sunglasses, with a little 1337 hacker speak thrown in. It's aged like milk in comparison to Superheroes.
If you don't like Superheroes thats fine, but its not a medical issue, or some kind of fiction faux pau to read or write them. Nor is it a medical emergency. I'd say that level of cynicism is much worse than "Superhero fatigue"
I have a problem with these Spielberg quotes linked by
@Mecha:
"We were around when the Western died and there will be a time when the superhero movie goes the way of the Western."
"These cycles have a finite time in popular culture. There will come a day when the mythological stories are supplanted by some other genre that possibly some young filmmaker is just thinking about discovering for all of us."
It's kind of odd how Spielberg compared the western to the superhero genre, kind of stupid in fact. Movie genres are unique because they're made from a changing technology. Silent film is an entire medium of cinema that 'died' due to technological change, and I would argue westerns are the same or similar.
Westerns arguably died out because after Star Wars, dirty sci-fi replaced it. You can even trace it somewhat in Moebius, how he transitioned from gritty western comics (inspired by 60s spaghetti westerns) to the Jodorowsky Dune project and seminal cyberpunk and sci-fi work in the 70s.
Now the thing with superhero movies is that they weren't really possible before this century, and before CGI.
But what, technologically, is going to make them obsolete like westerns, or silent cinema?
There's nothing. The only real dampening effect comes from 'glutting', ie the practice where Hollywood copycats and rips itself off so much that a popular trend kills itself by becoming unbearably cliched from endless hackjob rehashing.
You can see this with horror movies, where one good movie will kick off a mini-boom that then peters out as more crap is produced. You can also see it with creators like Tarantino becoming a pseudogenre which then becomes a cliche, and even with individual movies like The Matrix causing a 'Matrixification' of all the action movies that came out in its wake.
So there might be reactions against
aspects of the superhero genre that become cliche. But other than that, I see no reason why superheroes won't dominate cinema henceforth, as they have dominated the imaginative space of comics since the 60s if not earlier.
The only thing holding them back was the technology!
So listen here @Spielberg, there might well be a point where audiences are totally fed up of watching pretty people in tight costumes flying around and fighting and zapping and smashing things. But I'm going to go ahead and say that will NEVER happen, and you Spielberg, are COMPLETELY wrong!
Superheroes will dominate cinema for the entire rest of the twenty first century! I'm calling it now. Look at the facts, the box office facts. Superheroes have won cinema this century, and we're not even a quarter of the way through it.
MUA Ha ha, foolish mortal Spielberg. Do you know nothing at all, silly big shark man?
Face facts - twenty first century cinema is, and will continue to be, a complete and utter CAPESCAPE!
And monsters too, of course - they got to fight something.