Death's Door Prods

Joss Whedon Thanks His Peeps For Avengers’ Success

Having made over $700 million since opening five days ago, it’s fair to say that The Avengers movie did pretty well for itself. And writer/director Joss Whedon felt the best way to show his appreciation to his devoted fan base would be a thank you letter posted on the Whedon fan site Whedonesque.com… Ok, that works. I could do what the other sites have been doing and just copy a few sentences here and there while summarizing the in-betweeny bits, but fuck that. Here’s his entire thank you letter up to his to totally legit and real Q&A segment.

“Dear Friends,

Well, it’s been quite a weekend. Someday, long from now, I will even have an emotional reaction to it, like a person would. I can’t wait! But before I become blinded by this “emotion” experience, there’s a few things I’d like to say. Well, type.

People have told me that this matters, that my life is about to change. I am sure that is true. And change is good — change is exciting. I think — not to jinx it — that I may finally be recognized at Comiccon. Imagine! Also, with my percentage of “the Avengers” gross, I can afford to buy… [gets call from agent. Weeps manfully. Resumes typing.] …a fine meal. But REALLY fine, with truffles and s#!+. And I can get a studio to finance my dream project, the reboot of “Air Bud” that we all feel is so long overdue. (He could play Jai Alai! Think of the emotional ramifications of JAI ALAI!!!!)

What doesn’t change is anything that matters. What doesn’t change is that I’ve had the smartest, most loyal, most passionate, most articulate group of — I’m not even gonna say fans. I’m going with “peeps” — that any cult oddity such as my bad self could have dreamt of. When almost no one was watching, when people probably should have STOPPED watching, I’ve had three constants: my family and friends, my collaborators (often the same), and y’all. A lot of stories have come out about my “dark years”, and how I’m “unrecognized”… I love these stories, because they make me seem super-important, but I have never felt the darkness (and I’m ALL about my darkness) that they described. Because I have so much. I have people, in my life, on this site, in places I’ve yet to discover, that always made me feel the truth of success: an artist and an audience communicating. Communicating to the point of collaborating. I’ve thought, “maybe I’m over; maybe I’ve said my piece”. But never with fear. Never with rancor. Because of y’all. Because you knew me when. If you think topping a box office record compares with someone telling you your work helped them through a rough time, you’re probably new here. (For the record, and despite my inhuman distance from the joy-joy of it: topping a box office record is super-dope. I’m an alien, not a robot.) So this is me, saying thank you. All of you. You’ve taken as much guff for loving my work as I have for over-writing it, and you deserve, in this our time of streaming into the main, to crow. To glow. To crow and go “I told you so”, to those Joe Blows not in the know. (LAST time I hire Dr. Seuss to punch my posts up. Yeesh!) Point being, you deserve some honor, AND you deserves some FAQs answered. So please welcome my old friend and certainly not-on-my-payroll reporter/flunky, Rutherford D. Actualperson!”

You can read his Q&A segment, which I cannot stress the legitimacy and realness of enough, here.

Speaking for myself, I think this is a great way for Whedon to show his appreciation to his peeps. That he took the time out of his day (presumably less time than it took me to write up this post but he still took the time out) to personally thank the people who have been going to see his movies and watching his shows and building him up to monolithic status in the nerd community is awesome. What’s even awesomer is in the Q&A he does in fact say that Dr. Horrible 2 is coming.

Add comment

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.