Revolution Marvel Style
According to the back cover, “Scarlet is the story of a woman pushed to the edge by all that is wrong with the world… A woman who will not back down… A woman who discovers within herself the power to start a modern American revolution!!” Wait a minute, a REVOLUTION? Against ALL THAT IS WRONG with the world?? In a MARVEL comic book?!? Yeah right, a politically relevant, socio-critical comic book published by Disney-controlled Marvel: as if… But wait, it’s by Bendis and Maleev – hmm, I kinda like those guys... Bendis is a smart guy, writes great dialogue, and he might actually get away with stuff lesser-known writers would not get away with, subversive stuff… And it’s published through the Icon imprint, doesn’t that mean more creative control? Who knows, maybe Bendis and Maleev have actually pulled this off! I mean, maybe even Disney, one of the world’s largest media conglomerates, is finally forced to acknowledge that radical change is desperately needed, maybe the time is ripe for Scarlet… I must read this!!
Well, I can be naïve sometimes. I guess the hip, stylish, scantily-clad, sexy, gun-toting chick on the cover should have been a hint – is this really going to be about politics and revolution? But okay, it’s just a cover, let’s open the book and read Scarlet’s analysis of the situation:
“Everything is broken. Everything. Good people are victims. Bad people are heroes. Dumb is a virtue. Food is poison. Corruption is a national past time. Rapists rape. The poor are left to rot. Religion is business. No one is safe and everyone thinks it’s funny. Why is the world allowed to be this way? (…) Why is it like this? Why did it happen? And then it hit me. It doesn’t matter why. ‘Why’ is the cloud. The redirect. The shell game. ‘Why’ is the bullshit. (…) The question is… what am I going to do about it? I’m going to stop it. All of it.”
Sounds cool, doesn’t it? A little vague, maybe, but some of this rings true, and it certainly sounds ambitious and ready for action. Attagirl, we’ve had enough, it’s time for action, too much thinking is for pussies! The only problem is, how exactly are you going to stop “all of it” if you don’t know anything about the “why”? I mean, what exactly are you gonna do if you have no idea why things are as messed up as they are? Well, apparently the answer is simple: why, you’re gonna kill a few corrupt cops, of course. That should solve it, right? At least that’s what Scarlet decides to do, and Bendis ensures that her victims are despicable enough for us to cheer her on.
But is killing corrupt police officers really the answer to the “everything-is-broken” dilemma? There are two contrasting sociological theories about the roots of widespread forms of corruption – the bad apple theory and the iceberg theory. According to the bad apple theory, corruption arises from the flawed personalities of “bad” individuals, and all you need to do in order to get the problem under control is to remove these “bad apples” so they do not spoil the whole barrel. In contrast, the iceberg theory argues that the known cases of corruption are merely the tip of the iceberg, and that the real problem is a system that encourages, and possibly even relies on, corruption. As you can imagine, the bad apple theory is favored by those who do not want the system to be investigated and ultimately changed, and thus have an interest in the creation of scapegoats, while the iceberg theory makes a case for the necessity of actual social change.
Despite her observation that “everything is broken,” our sexy self-proclaimed revolutionary decides to embrace the status-quo friendly bad apple theory. At least in this first volume of the series, she devotes herself exclusively to the removal of bad apples, claiming that it would be “bullshit” to investigate the “why,” that is, the bigger picture, the macro-level roots of the sorry state of affairs. Ultimately, then, she is not a revolutionary at all. She does not try to change the status quo but merely takes extreme measures to clean up its ugly excesses, desperate for it to shine in new splendour after the restoration.
I guess it was silly to hope for a truly revolutionary Marvel comic book, one that actually provides a critical in-depth analysis of the topics that really do call for a global revolution – environmental degradation and mass poverty. I should have listened more closely to Gil Scott-Heron’s 1970 proto-rap anthem, “The Revolution Will Not Be Televised.” It will not be televised, and it certainly will not find its way into a mainstream comic book. But hopefully, we'll make it happen anyway.