Exactly. Fear makes people stupid. But making them members (or associates?) of a specific organisation is needless. The clash becomes factional rather than ideological.Simon_Jester wrote: ↑2017-09-22 06:32amI think I'd keep the HYDRA influence, but implicitly rather than explicitly. The Robert Redford guy doesn't have to actually say "Hail HYDRA" to be an evil dickhead who tries to abuse SHIELD's powers. Zola the '70s supercomputer upload doesn't have to have been secretly building a HYDRA conspiracy inside SHIELD to have had a disturbing amount of influence over SHIELD's evolution into what it is today. You could pretty much keep the plot and change the flavor and still get the desired result.
He didn't seem fussed about turning everyone's mobile phones into a surveillance network in Avengers, so he can't be too averse to using technology for tyrannical purposes.I mean, Fury already has characterization that he will reject solutions that involve collateral damage or Hydra-esque "tyranny through technology," as demonstrated by his reaction to the Shadowy Council ordering his forces to nuke New York during Avengers. Making Fury the villain in a story where SHIELD suddenly goes crazy and starts planning to kill people with floaty death platforms then takes that characterization and burns it.
Also, I thought the point of the floating death platforms was that they didn't have a lot of collateral damage, kind of like the promises made about the US' various modern tools of war. At any rate, given that the idea of collateral damage would distract from the central question of "We can identify a lot of potential villains, and bump them before they can get anywhere near anything." Oddly, Insight would have stopped Stark before he could go on to build Ultron and get a whole lot of people killed. So that's something.
An idea I had long after I wrote the posts above was to have Insight not revolve a comic book version of the American drone regime, but something more like SHIELD having hit squads (led by Winter Soldier and Black Widow) going around shooting various potential villains. Winter Soldier is there for the pay, and Black Widow's idealism has led her to see this as the better choice, lest another potentially world ending invasion occur. That could even set up Civil War a bit. A much cheaper film, but fucked if I can think of that act III setpiece.Having Black Widow be on the side of, um, bad SHIELD instead of good SHIELD at first would be a good idea, though. Because conflicting, ambiguous loyalties is entirely how her characterization works and playing it up is almost always advantageous.