Anyone else appreciate this era? I recently re-read this, and think it holds up pretty well. The ongoing that followed fell off the rails pretty quickly, but Sarah Byam & Co. were off to a good start...
Without doing a deep-dive into her origins, based solely on my impressions and personal understanding of cultural iconography, I would say that Black Canary, when first introduced was created using the imagery of "bad girls" or delinquents and rebels who had been lead astray with the sex and drugs, etc that came with greater freedoms of the time. It was the prototype for bikers, the way James Dean was but you wouldn't think of James Dean as joining the Sons of Anarchy. Biker culture in the present is a more specific culture that Black Canary doesn't really fit at this point. (imo at least) I'm not saying it's impossible to make her more of a modern biker chick and still try to have her feel like the same character, but as a creative decision, the filmmakers might have just wanted a modern iteration of the original type in terms of essence rather than take the literal modern iteration of the biker culture that came from it.
If the goal was to stick with Dinah's "bad girl/off the street" origin, I think they still failed. Nothing about that outfit says "bad girl" to me on any level. In fact, most of that outfit seems to be "higher end/quality/overpriced fashion" than "bad girl."
Of course, the "leather, fishnets, and spikes" fashion has grown well beyond bikers; it's now the default for metal and rock musicians (real rock, not that emotionally hollow sh*t they try to pass off as rock these days) and that's about as fitting for Dinah as it gets.
Dinah looks like some sort of pop music hipster in these photos. I dont care what cultural shifts have come and gone since the 40's, that doesn't fit Canary.
But again, these are just photos without context. I'm not going to say the film is way off the mark since we haven't seen the movie yet, but I'm not filled with hope here either.
"We all know the truth: more connects us than separates us. But in times of crisis the wise build bridges, while the foolish build barriers. We must find a way to look after one another, as if we were one single tribe."
~ Black Panther.
Yeah, Dinah just isnt Dinah if she's in a costume. She's a badass bitch who'll kick your ass if you scratch her Harley (the bike, not the psychopath with the hammer).
I appreciate the hell out of it for two reasons; first, I like seeing "my" people represented as something other than nameless thugs to get punched. Bikes, leather jackets, grease stains....that was childhood man! And we're not all criminals. Hell, the nicest, best people I know almost all ride. And secondly, I feel like Dinah walks the line between the "super" world and the "normal" one. According to Max Lord, there's thousands of metahumans on earth....but only a few dozen who wear spandex and get into fights. What about the rest of them? You never see stories about "Glenn; the telepath who works at Target!" or anything, but Dinah kinda has a foot in both worlds; "super" enough to hang with the League and kick crime's ass, but "normal" enough to not have a cape or be totally disconnected from the real world. I think that's a really interesting place for her and it provides a pretty unique perspective.
"We all know the truth: more connects us than separates us. But in times of crisis the wise build bridges, while the foolish build barriers. We must find a way to look after one another, as if we were one single tribe."
~ Black Panther.
It's possible they're playing off the success of "Black Panther" or that they're trying to distance their BC from the various blonde caucasions who've played her on tv. (they even took away the new BC's canary cry on "Arrow" - possibly to avoid more confusion?) Ironically, maybe they didn't want people accusing the studio of whitewashing a character called "Black Canary"? (it happened with some who assumed Green Lantern was black because they only knew the cartoon) I'd like to think they just cast the best person, but that's not the world in which we live in...