Let me preface this by noting: Superman as a character have never been very important to me. Sure, I saw the Christopher Reeve revival of the story as a young adult and could understand its romantic charm, but I still considered it a slight and fairly forgettable film. I am surprised that it seems there is undue reverence given to it by adults who saw it as a kid. Moving forward, I had no interest in "dark" comic book movies, be they led by Superman or Batman, and feel it's something of a shallowing out of modern culture that grown people should care enough about them to take them seriously.
That said, I was pretty impressed by the trailer for the new Superman movie, because it looked like a distinctive, sharp and colourful visual style with actors who seemed to have some charm. And there's a superdog.
Hence, I expected it to be successful, and largely positive reviews indicate it probably still will be.
But - Right wingers of the "anti-woke" school have leapt into attacking it (and vowing not to see it) because (apparently), Superman helps some non white characters and some pre-publicity made a point of saying he represents the ultimate immigrant story.
I even saw a clip of Australian MAGA tragic Rita Panahi on the (terrible Fox Lite Australian version of) Sky News interviewing Douglas Murray (neither of whom have actually seen the film, surely - given it has only just been released) condemning Hollywood for making another woke film that is going to fail:
Head of DC Studios James Gunn says the new Superman film is about the story of America, following an immigrant who came from other places and populated the country.
“You would have thought the studios would have learnt from the Snow White disaster over the last year,” Mr Murray told Sky News host Rita Panahi.
“It’s always just this tedious, predictable, juvenile politicking being forced on us, whether on flags on the streets, whether by the police, whether by the studios.”
This is really pathetic. Unless a piece of fiction aligns entirely with their culture war views, it has to be condemned sight unseen.
And as for masked men grabbing people off the street - including women who have been there for 47 years without a criminal record - well, Rita and Douglas will happily turn a blind eye to those stories. I mean, this is indefensible:
But the morning of Sunday, 22 June, didn’t go like every other morning. In the early hours, while her husband, Russell Milne, slept inside the house, Kashanian was approached in her yard by plainclothes men who identified themselves as Immigration and Customs Enforcement (Ice) agents.
She was quickly arrested without her family being told anything. They only found out after a neighbor who happened to be awake witnessed the arrest and notified them.
According to the neighbor, Kashanian was handcuffed before being taken away by multiple agents, details Kashanian herself was later able to confirm to her family. Her arrest involved three unmarked cars, including one that appeared to be a lookout, which her neighbor and family believe had been watching for a moment when Kashanian was outside and alone.
“Had the neighbors not walked out at the same time they were pushing her into the car, we would not have known she was taken,” said Russell.
Kashanian was able to call her family about an hour later, when she relayed to them what had happened and where she was. Ice officers told her that she was being taken to a holding center in Mississippi, before eventually being transferred back to a detention center in Louisiana. After that Sunday morning call, her husband and daughter didn’t hear from her again until Tuesday.
She remains in Ice custody in Basile, Louisiana, despite having no criminal record.
The timing of Kashanian’s detention was just hours after US airstrikes in Iran, a move that has coincided with the ramping-up of deportations of Iranians by the Trump administration. It also comes amid a nationwide crackdown by Ice, which has seen tens of thousands of immigrants detained, often by masked agents, plunged many communities into fear and outraged civil liberties advocates.