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Join Date: Jan 09, 2001
Posts: 125,621
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than good
https://www.theverge.com/2022/4/27/2...el-disney-plus The Marvel series has taken great care in portraying Oscar Isaac's magically empowered superhero Steven Grant's Dissociative Identity Disorder, in which someone’s personality and sense of self fragment in response to severe psychological trauma. That includes bringing on a board-certified psychiatrist as a consultant. Moon Knight creator Jeremy Slater has emphasized that he and his producing team want “to be ultimately good and uplifting and have a positive message about mental health.” But, as Charles Pulliam-Moore explains, "it’s interesting to consider what all 'taking care' means when telling thoughtful stories about DID, a disorder whose complicated realities have been eclipsed by sensationalized fiction." Pulliam-Moore adds: "Moon Knight’s far from being the most salacious depiction of DID Hollywood’s ever produced. When you compare it to Iron Fist’s spin on Typhoid Mary — an American army soldier who develops DID as an adult after being captured in Sokovia — it’s a marked step-up for the MCU just by virtue of framing Steven as a troubled man rather than a dangerous villain. But Moon Knight, like so many other stories about DID, is meant to be an exciting story of triumph where the challenges Steven faces push him to become an extraordinary superhuman. Ultimately, that may be the best that these sorts of shows can do. But it’s important to acknowledge the potential consequences that can come from mining these narratives for storytelling’s sake over and over again." ALSO:
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