Sounds to me like severe dilution of the X-universe concept for negligible narrative gain.So fitting the X-Men in there wouldn't be too hard. <snip>
Do not want.
Sounds to me like severe dilution of the X-universe concept for negligible narrative gain.So fitting the X-Men in there wouldn't be too hard. <snip>
if the new FF film fails Fox does not have to give the rights back. there is no clause that guarantees they have to make a 'good' film. but, they may let those rights expire if the film is a colossal failure. again, if.
Sounds to me like severe dilution of the X-universe concept for negligible narrative gain.So fitting the X-Men in there wouldn't be too hard. <snip>
Do not want.
I wasn't saying that they couldn't fit the X-Men in. I just don't think they should because the hatred the population has for Mutants doesn't make sense when you have figures such as Thor, Spider-Man, and the Fantastic Four running around. Fuck, the fact that the Fantastic Four are celebrated while Mutants are loathed, alone, is beyond ridiculous as the only difference between them is that the former got their powers through a freak accident of science while the latter got theirs through a freak accident of genetics
Sounds to me like severe dilution of the X-universe concept for negligible narrative gain.So fitting the X-Men in there wouldn't be too hard. <snip>
Do not want.
How? Having there be more to the world than just normal Humans and Mutants doesn't mess up anything and serves as some background stuff in the other movies.
That's like saying having the expanded Galaxy seen in Guardians of the Galaxy dilutes the Earth stuff.
Thor isn't that widely known (and Asgardians probably wouldn't be that well regarded after Loki's attack), Spider-Man usually is hated (it's something he and the X-Men bond over) and the FF are loved because of Reed Richards' past contributions to society. They figure his good outweighs his freakiness.I wasn't saying that they couldn't fit the X-Men in. I just don't think they should because the hatred the population has for Mutants doesn't make sense when you have figures such as Thor, Spider-Man, and the Fantastic Four running around. Fuck, the fact that the Fantastic Four are celebrated while Mutants are loathed, alone, is beyond ridiculous as the only difference between them is that the former got their powers through a freak accident of science while the latter got theirs through a freak accident of genetics
And anyways, I always found the mutant hatred in the Singer movies too 1-Dimensional and lacking in nuance.
I re-watched all of the X-Men movies fairly recently and I have yo say that I don't really like them. The comics I read had multiple plots, a huge cast, and varied in tone and subject from story to story. The X-Men movies are mostly about Wolverine, the minority persecution angle, and completely lacking in the character interaction, sense of family, sense of humor, sense of wonder, and wish fulfillment that made me love the comics.
I wish Marvel could take over the X-Men on screen, but I think the only thing that could do it justice wouldn't be a film series, but rather a TV series with the old fashioned and largely unfeasible 26 episode seasons Trek used to enjoy. Maybe with a film every few years to do the sorts of stories that'd require blockbuster film budgets.
Eh, it'll never happen.
Sounds to me like severe dilution of the X-universe concept for negligible narrative gain.So fitting the X-Men in there wouldn't be too hard. <snip>
The stigma against the mutants does not make sense if there are a zillion meta humans around.
Cynthia....Bus Gang? Phil and Friends? We as a global fan base really need to come up with a single name for the AoS team...
I'm just going by the movies here, but from what I've seen, the whole point of the X-universe is that mutants are so different and weird and uncanny from the rest of humanity. If you throw in lots of cosmically/radiation-enhanced humans and stuff, not to mention other costumed heroes and mortals whose gadgets should but somehow don't kill them eighteen times before breakfast (Stark in your tin can, getting smacked around, I'm looking at you), the very existence of mutants becomes less out-there and colorful.How? Having there be more to the world than just normal Humans and Mutants doesn't mess up anything and serves as some background stuff in the other movies.Sounds to me like severe dilution of the X-universe concept for negligible narrative gain. Do not want.
The difference is, the MCU has always been about all kinds of different exceptional individuals, whereas the X-CU has always been about just mutants.That's like saying having the expanded Galaxy seen in Guardians of the Galaxy dilutes the Earth stuff.
I'm just going by the movies here, but from what I've seen, the whole point of the X-universe is that mutants are so different and weird and uncanny from the rest of humanity. If you throw in lots of cosmically/radiation-enhanced humans and stuff, not to mention other costumed heroes and mortals whose gadgets should but somehow don't kill them eighteen times before breakfast (Stark in your tin can, getting smacked around, I'm looking at you), the very existence of mutants becomes less out-there and colorful.
The difference is, the MCU has always been about all kinds of different exceptional individuals, whereas the X-CU has always been about just mutants.
But, if you'll pardon the pun, clumsily mashing the X-CU into the MCU (Stryker not an Army colonel after all? No way, Jose) would certainly be the worst of both worlds.![]()
This first...X-Men verse Avenger, 2038. It'll rock.
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