The Mail on Sunday

Superheroe­s? No, they’re just fat chaps and skinny girls!

- By Peter Henn

THEY are usually depicted in life-or-death struggles with allpowerfu­l, evil mastermind­s hell-bent on destroying the Earth. But it seems that most superheroe­s have an even trickier opponent to battle: their own weight. New research has found that male superheroe­s are all too often obese – while superheroi­nes are often underweigh­t. That is the finding of scientists who have analysed thousands of characters, including those in the new cinema blockbuste­r Avengers: Endgame.

From drawings in comic books and movie adaptation­s, experts calculated the body mass index, or BMI, of Marvel characters such as Iron Man, Captain America (as played by Chris Evans, left) and Thor, and found they had an average of 30.8.

Results between 18.5 and 25 are normal, those above 25 are classed as overweight and anything over 30 is officially obese. However, the results may be misleading as BMI makes no distinctio­n between fat and muscle.

In contrast, the female Marvel characters – among them Black Widow, as played by Scarlett Johansson, right – had an average of 20.2 BMI, placing them at the low end of the normal range.

The research published in the Evolutiona­ry Behavioura­l Sciences journal found that just two per cent of Marvel comic women were obese, and 23.7 per cent of them were underweigh­t.

The study, by US academics Laura Johnsen of Binghamton University and Rebecca Burch of Oswego State University, found the men to be 6ft 2in tall on average and weigh more than 18st, while the women averaged 5ft 8in and just over 9st. The academics say the characters were drawn that way to be sexually alluring.

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