Why Marvel's Gender-Swapped Silver Surfer Was The Right Choice In Fantastic Four: First Steps
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Contains spoilers for “The Fantastic Four: First Steps”

For a certain corner of the internet, gender-swapping a character feels akin to disrespecting dedicated fans and disparaging their favorites. So, understandably, when Julia Garner was announced as the actress playing a female Silver Surfer in “The Fantastic Four: First Steps,” the news was met with some … trepidation, to say the least. Garner herself revealed to Deadline her initial confusion when director Matt Shakman approached her for the role, remarking, “I was puzzled because I thought, ‘Isn’t the Silver Surfer a man?’ I was just like, ‘Okay, well, I’ll play anything.'”

In fairness, Marvel has featured several female Silver Surfers over the years. This version, Shalla-Bal, is connected to the original Silver Surfer, Norrin Radd, who first became Galactus’ herald to save her and their planet. She assumes the role instead of Norrin in this narrative, but it doesn’t significantly impact the film’s storyline. Moreover, as “Fantastic Four: First Steps” unfolds on Earth-828, while most of the Marvel Cinematic Universe operates on Earth-616, there remains flexibility for Norrin Radd to integrate into the MCU within the Sacred Timeline if Marvel opts for that direction.

However, after viewing “First Steps,” it’s evident that portraying the Silver Surfer as a woman was the right choice for this specific narrative to underscore the film’s themes of motherhood and the extent to which parents will go to protect their offspring.

Shalla-Bal’s arc is a testament to the strength of motherhood

Motherhood is at the heart of “The Fantastic Four: First Steps.” The movie opens with a scene of Sue Storm (Vanessa Kirby) presenting a positive pregnancy test to her husband, Reed Richards (Pedro Pascal). Galactus (Ralph Ineson) notes Sue’s pregnancy when the Fantastic Four try to negotiate with him, and in exchange for sparing Earth, he demands that the FF give him Franklin, as he senses a tremendous amount of power within the baby. He wants Franklin to become his successor, to free him of the endless hunger that forces him to devour entire planets. Of course, the team refuses, and Sue later gives birth to Franklin inside the team’s spaceship as they’re returning to Earth.

The population at large gets angry at the Fantastic Four for putting the planet in peril when they could simply surrender Franklin to save everyone. But Sue can’t do that. Even when Reed admits he considered it as a terrible possibility, Sue remains steadfast in her belief that they must find a way to protect both their child and the world. Similarly, we learn Shalla-Bal was offered another perverse deal by Galactus; she would become his herald, and he would spare her planet of Zenn-La and her child.

Both women obviously feel a duty to protect their children, but they’ve gone about it in different ways. Shalla-Bal saves her child and people by dooming countless other planets. Sue could save Earth by surrendering Franklin to Galactus, a situation where her son would eventually adopt his hunger and eat numerous worlds, too. The kids are saved in both cases, but as a result, the mothers have doomed so many other women, men, and children. The realization of what Shalla-Bal has been complicit in makes her abandon her role as Galactus’ herald and help the Fantastic Four send him far away from Earth, atoning for her sins.

Mothers like Sue Storm and Shalla-Bal carry the weight of the universe

In the lead-up to the film’s release, Vanessa Kirby spoke about the complexity of Sue Storm’s character, telling People, “She was absolutely a mother, and of course, in the comics, that’s so definitively her. But she’s also been a team member that defends, that goes up against great threats.” Every familial situation is different, but it often seems like the bar is higher for mothers compared to fathers. Dads can often be called “great” by simply showing up and doing just above the bare minimum, whereas many women have to be great moms on top of being cooks, housekeepers, and whatever they do for a career. Reed Richards can get away with saying he at least mulled over the prospect of handing Franklin over to Galactus, but if Sue had said that, would audiences have forgiven her?

Kirby’s statement highlights how mothers are expected to be not only a provider and protector to their children but also everyone else. Sue could’ve saved the world by offering her son, but there’s no way she could’ve lived with herself. Not only would she lose a son, but he would then become the devourer of worlds. Shalla-Bal didn’t have such considerations. She saved her daughter but sentenced so many others to death, and that number undoubtedly includes plenty of mothers and children hugging each other as they prepared for the end.

Truth be told, there probably wasn’t much Shalla-Bal could’ve done, pre-Silver Surfer transformation, to save her daughter. But when reminded of her motherhood and the worlds she helped destroy, she did the right thing in the end. There’s good reason for Galactus to fear the Silver Surfer, but more than anything, Galactus should never underestimate the power of mothers.



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