Female supervillain hits out

BADDIE: Amy Adams (Lois Lane) Henry Cavill (Superman) and villain Antje Traue (Faora) in Man of Steel.

BADDIE: Amy Adams (Lois Lane) Henry Cavill (Superman) and villain Antje Traue (Faora) in Man of Steel.

Published Jun 24, 2013

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Zack Snyder’s Man of Steel, the Superman reboot that arrived in theatres last week, is possibly the most feminist action movie of the year. Striking for its absence of naked ladies, it also features a tough Amy Adams performance as Lois Lane and women all over newsrooms and the military, not just in the bedroom.

There’s even an enjoyable feminist supervillain in this battle between Superman (Henry Cavill) on behalf of humanity and General Zod (Michael Shannon), a Kryptonian criminal who wants to rid Earth of its inhabitants to resurrect his destroyed planet. Zod’s right-hand man is actually a woman: Kryptonian baddie Faora (Antje Traue).

We’ve had female villains before, but Faora is evil for reasons that have nothing to do with her gender. She wasn’t sexually betrayed by the hero, like scientist Maya Hansen (Rebecca Hall) in Iron Man 3. She doesn’t use her feminine wiles to seduce men or kill them during sex, like Batman and Robin’s Poison Ivy (Uma Thurman) or GoldenEye’s Xenia Onatopp (Famke Janssen).

Instead, she’s a straight-up believer in the genetic superiority of people from Krypton and tells Clark Kent things like, “You’re weak, son of El. Unsure of yourself. The fact that you possess a sense of morality and we do not gives us an evolutionary advantage.” This while she pummels him.

Snyder and his long-time stunt co-ordinator Damon Caro, along with fight choreographer Ryan Watson – both worked with Snyder on his female-centric action movie Sucker Punch – have given Faora a quick, jabbing fight technique, making her fast to compensate for the fact that, unlike the hunks she’s fighting against and alongside, she isn’t physically imposing.

While she dresses like the other men in General Zod’s forces, Faora’s armour has curves rather than working to disguise her gender – fashion in a functional form. And she’s just as resilient as the guys, machine-gunfire ricocheting impotently off her chest as a highly entertaining rebuke to the idea that you can’t have a female supervillain because you can’t have a man beat her up.

I’m all for strong female characters like Lois, who drink bourbon, hang with the boys, and smooch the hero at the end. But Man of Steel is a reminder that tough female action characters don’t have to be good.

With a whole generation of female actresses as action stars before they even hit 20, maybe we can accept that we’ve got enough role models and enjoy letting some of these girls and women go bad. – Slate

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