Defining a superhero as someone who can routinely accomplish physical feats no ordinary person can do. A few off the top of my head:
The Good, The Bad, and The Ugly
Harry Potter
Ghost
What are some you can come up with?
Defining a superhero as someone who can routinely accomplish physical feats no ordinary person can do. A few off the top of my head:
The Good, The Bad, and The Ugly
Harry Potter
Ghost
What are some you can come up with?
Ace Ventura.
The guy could talk to animals and catch bullets in his teeth (while driving), was able to shrug off taking a spear in each thigh. He was a Child of Light, which allowed him to communicate w. his mentor in a metaphysical manner.
Darkman
The Shadow
Conan
Solomon Kane
Unbreakable/Split/Glass
Highlander
Robocop
Dune
VforVendetta
Any movie involving 007 (especially GoldenEye):
So would Jedis from Star Wars also count. they are called space wizards.
Superheroes are a sub genre of fantasy. I think some fantasy fans may not be too appreciative of putting some characters like harry potter in the superhero bubble, when the term Wizards can be argue to be a more iconic term than superheroes
Xavier and magneto are superheroes, also I think it is because we hardly ever see xavier and magneto fight physically. their fight was more about intellectual and about social differences, than needing to punch each other, so their dynamic always came off as what we can not call the most generic definition of super heroes, that it was all about doing things what ordinary humans cannot do physically. which is more ironic because Magneto and Xavier are two of the most powerful mutants in terms of physical feats.
Additionally though, I never used to read xmen because of their power physical feats, I always thought that was why Avengers comics existed more. the soap opera part of the comics and themes, were always ,more interesting than that the power feats of some...many mutants
How times have changed. In my prime Marvel reading days (1970s/1980s), Magneto was still considered a super-villain--and the X-Men were such big sellers that nearly every other Marvel character was redefined as a mutant, just so they could be considered worthy.
I don't think nearly every other character was ever considered as a mutant. X-MEN in the 70/80s era which was no doubt their best era in terms of actually quality comic book story because those were the Chris cLaremont eras, their universe started to build the stand alone universe, that it has sort of completely become now.
Never heard of anyone thinking Hulk, Daredevil, Fantastic 4 were nearly called mutants. infact that was the era, marvel was sort of selling the narrative their heroes were just ordinary humans, that had extra ordinary human things happened to them. exposed to gamma rays , radio active spiders or cosmic rays and they are meant to be more relatable than the DC heroes
From the moment Rambo goes nuts in the Cop Shop, I'd say First Blood qualifies.
There's probably a case for all the Indiana Jones films based on the mysticism the hero encountered, plus his sheer stamina and durability.
Push which is a way under appreciated movie IMO.
Attack of the Fifty-Foot Woman
Any Star Trek film where Mr. Spock demonstrates superior Vulcan strength, the Vulcan nerve pinch or the Vulcan mind-meld
Abbot and Costello Meet the Invisible Man. Lou Costello becomes invisible himself for part of the film.
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