I didn't get this from the movie.
Until Kari starts showing him the flashcards and playing the Baby Einstein-like music, noone thinks Jack-Jack has powers. It just kinda struck me as funny. Especially when Joe started showing Em the same flashcards and saying, "Come on Em! Be a superhero!"
The impressions I have from the movie, in general, are inferations (is that word?) on my part. I don't deny that. I was talking to Joe last night about thinking there's something wrong with me that I don't get the "hidden agendas" and "underlying messages" in certain movies that a lot of people do. I just enjoy them for what they are, because they're entertinment to me and not something that I worry about "what it's saying". There's very little in movies and tv shows that ping any of my buttons. I leave that to the real people. Heh.
Not to say that there's something wrong with people who do see the hidden messages and agends in tv and movies. It's just a difference in watching them.
It certainly looked, from the scene where he looks at all the memorabila in his "I Love Me" room, that he wanted the glory and the admiration.
Would you say the same of an actor who had their movie posters up in one room? I used to have the posters of the shows I was in on my walls in my living room. I saw that he had this room, that wasn't the main part of the house, as his refuge. Where he could go and just be him. Not worry about what he couldn't be or had to be. I don't think he was a great guy. I saw him as very flawed. He broke the law by sitting in a car with Frozone and a police radio, trying to help where he could. And I don't think he was completely altruistic, either. Maybe he started out that way, but eventually, I imagine the fame and the glory got to him a bit and he really missed it when he was forced to live a non-Super life. But from what I saw and how I digested it, he doesn't lose it because he's forced to sit in a cubile. He loses it when he's not able to help someone getting mugged.
I understood from the X-movies that the idea that mutants were superior to normals was the bad guys' stance, not the X-Men's stance. It also seems to me that super-smart characters have been good guys in the X-verse (Professor Xavier, Beast), not just bad guys.
But isn't that the same stance Syndrome has? Syndrome took the "Mr Incredible doesn't want my help" to equal "Mr Incredible thinks non-Supers are below him and Supers are superior". IIRC, again, none of The Incredibles say that they are superior to non-Supers. Helen tells Dash in the car that everyone is special. Dash's response "that's just a nice way of saying noone is special" was, to me, a typical child's response when they are told they can't do something they want to. As far as the brain power = bad guy message, I didn't get that from this. I saw it as "jackass gets his due".
I agree that the message was that you shouldn't try to be something you aren't. By that argument, slaves should stay slaves, minorities should stay disenfranchised, women should stay out of the workforce, the lower classes should never aspire to the educational and economic means of the upper classes. It's a very conservative and elitist world view.
Not at all what I meant. I don't get why it's a bad thing to be in touch with your own limitations. I will never be a champion runner. Never. No matter how hard I work out and run and practice. I will never play a musical instrument in a professional capacity. That's not to say that Syndrome couldn't have been a Superhero without powers. Batman is. As a matter of fact, he's my favorite Superhero because he has no powers. But again, it's about choice to me. Syndrome could have made the decision to be "good". To use his brain power for "good". He CHOSE not to. He CHOSE to make his life's work defeating Supers, in particular Mr Incredible. Syndrome killed off a lot of Supers simply because they were. And yet, THAT never gets addressed in (continued...)