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Media Spin Machine Kicks Into Gear to Make Excuses for Woke Superhero Movie That Could Lose Millions

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Just what we needed: another superhero movie focused more on filling a diversity quota than actual entertainment.

The Warner Bros./DC Studios/Safran Co. film “Blue Beetle,” released Friday, was touted as DC’s first Latino-led superhero movie.

Initially conceived as a streaming-exclusive production, “Blue Beetle” — starring Xolo Maridueña in the title role — found its place as the penultimate chapter of the former era of the DC Extended Universe, which is set to undergo a revitalization under the collaborative guidance of James Gunn and Peter Safran.

So far, fans are not impressed.

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The production budget for the film was about $104 million, according to Collider.

The outlet said the movie will need to double that just to break even — and it has a long way to go.

Over its opening weekend, “Blue Beetle” made only $25.4 million at the box office — good enough for No. 1 overall but less than projected, according to Deadline.

As Koimoi reported, “Blue Beetle has become yet another underperformer at the Box Office and has opened to numbers that are being called the lowest for DC flicks in the almost past 2 decades.”

Why did it underperform?

Deadline’s Anthony D’Alessandro said the box office total “isn’t shocking next to other Latino and Hispanic fueled action pics” and suggested poor promotion was to blame.

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“Why wasn’t this movie even strutted at San Diego Comic-Con?” he wrote.



“[H]ow much does it cost for a studio to rent two movie auditoriums, popcorn and soda, and two-night hotel accommodations for a director so that the movie can be shown off to fans and screamed across social media?” D’Alessandro said.

He also wrote Sunday that Tropical Storm Hilary might keep moviegoers in Southern California from seeing the film.

“If it’s heavy rains, no one is going out,” D’Alessandro said.

The Hollywood Reporter expressed similar concerns.

“It remains to be seen how much Tropical Storm Hilary dampens grosses in Los Angeles — the film’s top market — and other parts of the Southwest, but Warner Bros. expects the impact to be significant,” it said.


A review in Geeks and Gamers by Alex Gherzo has a more plausible explanation.

“However bad you think Blue Beetle is, it’s worse,” Gherzo wrote.

“I was surprised,” he said. “I figured it would be a dull but fairly innocuous superhero movie, forgettable but harmless. It isn’t; it’s one of the most aggressively annoying, poorly written, badly plotted films in recent memory, not so much derivative of other superhero movies as shamelessly cribbing from them to patch together something resembling a story.

“This is what I imagine a film written by AI would look like (at least in the early stages before we get to the horror sentience stage), a soulless patchwork of what a machine thinks is a human story.”

Gherzo then explained why he believes identity politics and entertainment don’t work.

“Blue Beetle leans heavily into identity politics, casting white people as oppressors and colonizers and Hispanics as marginalized and impoverished,” he wrote.

“Every clash between characters is defined in racial terms,” Gherzo said, “with Jaime’s uncle encouraging him to be a hero for his people, as opposed to white people, who have Superman, Batman, and the Flash.

Are you planning on seeing "Blue Beetle"?

“Aside from casting those heroes in a bad light – I don’t recall Superman putting racial quotas on the people he saves – it doesn’t do wonders for Jaime, either, and he never refutes this or declares himself a hero for everyone (Though even in those parameters, Jaime never tries to help his neighborhood or save Hispanic civilians; it’s all about him.)”

“They’re also illegal aliens (because Hollywood seems to think all Hispanic people came here illegally), and they seemingly spend their days whining about imperialism,” he added.

“There’s nothing to be inspired by or believe in with Blue Beetle, just a lot of complaining,” Gherzo wrote.

Many on social media agreed with him.

As a fan of superhero movies, I really don’t care about the race of the lead character as long as the movie is entertaining.

But if the movie is banking on selling tickets for any other reason than the satisfaction the viewer feels at the end, it was made for the wrong reasons.

The jury is still out on “Blue Beetle.”

The final verdict will be written on the box office receipts.

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Rachel Emmanuel has served as the director of content on a Republican congressional campaign and writes content for a popular conservative book franchise.
Rachel M. Emmanuel has served as the Director of Content on a Republican Congressional campaign and writes for a popular Conservative book franchise.




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