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Joss Whedon says militant feminists didn't drive him from Twitter

Director Joss Whedon deleted his Twitter account on Monday following criticism of his film Avengers: Age of Ultron, but says militant feminists had nothing to do with it.

Director left social media network to focus on his work, not to flee trolls

Director Joss Whedon, seen here on the set for Avengers: Age of Ultron, deleted his Twitter account on Monday after being deluged with angry and abusive messages over the film, especially its treatment of Scarlett Johansson's character Black Widow. (Jay Maidment/Disney/Marvel/Associated Press)

Director Joss Whedon deleted his Twitter account on Monday following criticism of his film Avengers: Age of Ultron, but says militant feminists had nothing to do with it.

Clicking on a direct link toWhedon's account, which had over a million followers as of Sunday, currently leads to a blank page that reads, "Sorry, that page doesn't exist."

His final tweet on Monday simply read,"Thank you to all the people who've been so kindand funny and inspiring up in here."

Many speculated that hisdeparture wasprompted by a flood of angry and abusive tweets in the wake ofthe North American debut of Avengers: Age of Ultron, which has grossed more than $230 million in North America since it launched last Friday.

While Whedon did say in an interview with BuzzFeed on Tuesdaythat his decisionwas motivated, in part, to get away from Twitter's"steady stream of just like, 'you suck, you suck, you suck,'" he made it clear that feminist criticismhad nothing to do with his decision to leavethe platform.

"That is horseshit,"hetoldBuzzFeed News, addressing speculationthat he"left Twitter due to militant feminists angered over the film's depiction of Black Widow."

"Believe me, I have been attacked by militant feminists since I got on Twitter. That's something I'm used to," he said. "Every breed of feminism is attacking every other breed, and every subsection of liberalism is always busy attacking another subsection of liberalism, because God forbid they should all band together and actually fight for the cause."

Twitter 'addictive'

Whedon said that his primaryreason for quitting Twitter wasto concentrate on his work.

"Twitter is an addictive little thing, and if it's there, I gotta check it. When you keep doing something after it stops giving you pleasure, that's kind of rock bottom for an addict," he said."I just had a little moment of clarity where I'm like, You know what? If I want to get stuff done, I need to not constantly hit this thing for a news item or a joke or some praise, and then be suddenly sad when there's hate and then hate and then hate."

Much of the onlineabuserecentlyappears to centre on thetreatment of Scarlett Johansson's character, Natasha Romanoff, a.k.a. Black Widow, inAvengers: Age ofUltron.

In the film, Romanoffbecomes romantically involved with Mark Ruffalo's character, Bruce Banner, a.k.a. the Incredible Hulk. But their romance is rocky from the start thanks in part to their roles as superheroes, with little hope for a normal life.

One compilation of angry tweets directed towardWhedon included dozens of messages littered with profanities.The tweets accused him of being sexist, ofmisogyny, and ofruiningBlack Widow by making her a love interest or damsel in distress.

Scarlett Johansson's character Black Widow, a.k.a. Natasha Romanoff, was heavily criticized for her role in Age of Ultron in part because of a romantic subplot with Mark Ruffalo's character Bruce Banner. (Jay Maidment/Disney/Marvel/Associated Press)

Johansson's Black Widow has been a mainstay of Marvel's filmssince her first appearance in 2010's Iron Man 2, but she's never headlined a film of her own.

Age ofUltron, as well as its stars, hasbeen under the PRmicroscope, with criticism of actors Chris Evans and JeremyRennercalling theRomanoffcharacter a"slut" in an interview, and Robert Downey Jr.'s character Tony Stark,who is regularly portrayed with an acerbic attitude, making a one-off joke about prima nocta.

Whedon has described himself as a feminist over the yearsand has been generally praised for elevating female characters, especially with his television show Buffy the Vampire Slayer. So for some, attacks calling Whedon a misogynist were treated with confusion or ridicule.

Some articles described the harassers en masse as "angry feminists" or "angry fans," though as with any Twitter mob, it's difficult to single out any one characteristic other than abusiveness.

Salon's Mary Elizabeth Williamstakes issue with these characterizations, arguing that heightened vitriol and even death threats have become commonplace on Twitter, no matter what the subject matter.

"[T]here isn't a single social group in the world that doesn't contain deeply disturbed jackasses with thumbs, ready to actively hate you for whatever you say or do," she writes. "And while I'm sorry to see Whedon depart Twitter, because his exit once again shows the worst of it, I'm not surprised he got fed up with it."

Aaron Taylor-Johnson, left, as Quicksilver/Pietro Maximoff and Elizabeth Olsen as Scarlet Witch/Wanda Maximoff are newcomers to the Avengers films. (Jay Maidment/Disney/Marvel/Associated Press)

James Gunn, who directed theMarvel film Guardians of the Galaxy, posted a lengthy noteon his Facebook page, lamenting how "the angry contingent of fandom is getting more aggressive all the time."

"Whatever these angry tweeters are in need of, I don't think it's more anger and more rage thrown back at them on Twitter. I actually think that's what they're seeking. But what they need is something different. Compassion, maybe?"

Actors who have worked with Whedonquickly came to his defence online, including Ruffalo, who responded to criticisms of the Hulk-Widow storyline, andPatton Oswalt, who appears on Marvel's Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D., and Jewel Staite, who co-starred in Whedon's cult hit Firefly.

This isn't the first time Whedon has left Twitter. Hedescribed walking away from his account in an interview with Entertainment Weekly in 2013, calling the social media platform"afascinating social phenomenon" that ended up feeling like a second job. He also said that he originally joined Twitter to promote his 2013 film adaptation of Shakespeare's Much Ado About Nothing.

"The moment I joined, oh my God, what a responsibility, this is enormous work very fun, but it really started to take up a huge amount of my head space," he said at the time.

Age of Ultron marks Whedon's final project for the gargantuan Marvel films franchise, and Twitter isjust be another part of the job he's content to leave behindat least for now.