I was hoping that Homecoming would be more like One Crazy Summer or Better Off Dead.
No, that's the Han Solo movieI was hoping that Homecoming would be more like One Crazy Summer or Better Off Dead.
It's not lazy to not do something 99.99% of the audience is going to neither notice nor care about. That's just called an efficient use of effort.It's just lazy. Shows a lack of effort and respect for the audience. I can't not notice it, so now I am going to be annoyed by it.
It's no different than the sliding timescale that the comics have been using for decades. Did the caption stating that Iron Man 2 (2010) took place "Six Months Later" from Iron Man (2008) annoy you equally?It's just lazy. Shows a lack of effort and respect for the audience. I can't not notice it, so now I am going to be annoyed by it.
Google "marvel movie timeline" and tell me how much effort it takes.It's not lazy to not do something 99.99% of the audience is going to neither notice nor care about. That's just called an efficient use of effort.
That doesn't conflict with anything previously established. This does. It also doesn't make any sense. Now Avengers takes place months at most from the first Iron Man, and there are 3-4 years between Avengers and Civil War that can't be accounted for.It's no different than the sliding timescale that the comics have been using for decades. Did the caption stating that Iron Man 2 (2010) took place "Six Months Later" from Iron Man (2008) annoy you equally?
The latter is sloppy storytelling and entirely avoidable.
These aren't split-second decisions made in the heat of a moment by one of 50 people in the world with the skill to pull it off. They had years and dozens of people with their fingers in it, any one of which could have spent two minutes to Google it.
I just tried to do exactly that and I don't think it's as easy and simple as you suggest.Google "marvel movie timeline" and tell me how much effort it takes..
If it was a stage production of Dark Shadows you'd almost be obligated to have such moments intentionally written into the script.I once saw a production of a Dracula stage musical where, when Jonathan Harker stabbed Dracula in the climax, the tip of his stake broke off and fell to the stage. They didn't suddenly bring the whole production to a halt and redo the scene. They just kept going and ignored the blooper, and trusted the audience to forgive it and continue to suspend disbelief.
Effort required is not a factor. It's simply that nobody* cares, so why bother?Google "marvel movie timeline" and tell me how much effort it takes.
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