Screen Education

Family Values FORGING BONDS IN THE GUARDIANS OF THE GALAXY FILMS

Guardians of the Galaxy (James Gunn, 2014) and its follow-up, Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 2 (Gunn, 2017), heralded a refreshing direction for the Marvel Cinematic Universe (MCU). The relative unfamiliarity of the characters and storylines to a mainstream, non-comic-book-fan audience actually worked in the films’ favour, with the Guardians given the status of loveable underdogs in comparison to the MCU’s more well known heroes. As is true with the best of the Marvel films, great characterisation and an emotional core elevate the experience above pure spectacle. While audience expectations for a superhero film have traditionally been based on stereotypical muscle-bound heroes saving the world, as the genre has matured, audiences have come to expect more diverse portrayals of characters (who are often dealing with their own vulnerabilities and personal tragedies). With characters appearing across several films in the MCU, the series’ capacity to sustain fully rounded personalities and develop strong emotional ties between them has been vital to retaining the element of authenticity that elevates these films within the genre.

In the franchise, we find a group of characters thrown together largely by circumstance within a classic ‘quest’ narrative. They initially present as a group of ragtag adventurers, but, over the course of the two films, their interactions become far more familial in nature. As reviewer Scott Beggs states, ‘Messy family lives are our surest reminder that superhero stories are essentially fairy tales’; he goes on to say that the Guardians represent the strongest incarnation of the ‘chosen family’ theme that is This is initiated by the fact that some of the characters have either lost or become displaced from their own families, while others have never experienced having a family at all.

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Screen Education

Screen Education8 min read
Resting Place SUBVERTING THE PLUNDERER’S GAZE IN ETCHED IN BONE
Arnhem Land. Smoke billows from a small tuft of green ironwood leaves, rustling in the wind. Two men hold a portable hard drive up to the smoke. This hard drive, the narrator tells us, contains the raw files for the film we are about to watch. Etche
Screen Education12 min readAmerican Government
Radioactive Material TRUTH AND LIES IN CHERNOBYL
Not long after its fifth and final episode aired, HBO and Sky’s miniseries Chernobyl became the highest-rated television series on the Internet Movie Database.1 It would be easy to assume that this popularity is at least partially due to the tragic n
Screen Education22 min read
Andrei Tarkovsky
Andrei Tarkovsky is one of the most renowned filmmakers of all time, albeit with a daunting reputation for being a master of slow cinema and the formidably esoteric. When describing the Russian director’s films, it is almost impossible not to reach f

Related