Nothing to do with anything, but I put on this retrospective about the MCU on the background while I did other things, and when the guy got to Black Panther, he was extolling diversity and representation and all that, the typical "I'm a white guy who's always had heroes who looked like me but now black people have them too" and so on
And he points out he looked around the theater on opening day and "saw a black lady with her two kids; maybe the dad was getting the popcorn, I don't know"
Yeah, big maybe.
Accidentally noticing things, and not noticing he noticed.
It almost feels self aware in the most subtle way possible. It would be comical if he said "maybe he was off getting milk/smokes. I dont know".
Just to show that even the brain of wokester morons notice these things, even if its on the subconscious level.
Compare this to the Tobey McGuire Spiderman films, where most of those films were just Peter Parker dealing with his life issues more so than cgi action scenes.
The hero movies around that time, like the X-men, Spiderman, Blade and so on, tried to give a realistic edge to the characters and make them feel like they live in our world, having them face real life issues. Sure, a lot of these come from the comics but they could have ignored that for mindless action but I say the people behind these movies back then were doing mostly for the passion and the fact they legit grew up with these characters and feel like their powers are cool and all but their humanity is what keeps us coming back.
They were able to strike a balance between having reasonably grounded action and human takes of these characters.
Also CG wasnt as "good looking" (and I mean this in the most subjective way possible since there is CG from the 90's that I think look better than modern CG) yet so they had to be creative with what was in action scenes and to keep suspension of disbelief reasonably intact. It still had some green screen but it was mostly still stunt men and actual props being handled by crew (just look at Spiderman 2 behind the scenes and a lot of the times Doc Ock's arms were practical effects, which made them look so much more threatening).
There is a reason why Maguire is still considered the better Spiderman all these years later, because his humanity alone carried his trilogy even when other aspects failed and you can tell this role meant a lot to him. We could tell he was one of us deep down.
Nowadays it doesnt cost much to make action scenes so you might as well throw them whenever you can, who cares.