^ How, exactly, does pointing out that there's a double standard in how the DCEU and MCU are being judged constitute " whining"?
There’s no double standard. One works and the other doesn’t.
To each their own.I agree. Some of the DC movies (Man of Steel, the Ultimate Cut of Batman v Superman) are excellent, while the vast majority of the Marvel Studios movies are the exact same movie with different window dressings.
And if the movie does end up losing money I hope the message they get is "make better movies" vs "no more universe movies" or "no more team-up movies" or something silly like that...
It's not like all Marvel comic films were successful from the gate. I know the history telling usually starts with "Iron Man" but there were other films before that that were less than successful.DC really don't appear to have things in order. Trying to catch up with the MCU they have abandoned any efforts to build and jumped in with the main characters already up and running.
Throw in a movie about a group of villains before you've introduced the heroes, talk of out of continuity movies featuring different versions of the same characters, unconnected TV versions of the characters, top acting talent wanting to quit, poor and muddled filmmaking and replacement of creatives and you really do have a hell of a mess.
DC are truly fortunate that Superman, Batman and Wonder Woman are so fantastically high profile and burned into the public consciousness - it's made them bullet proof to some extent. If Marvel had been this inept with what was, after all, their second and third string characters they'd never have reached The Avengers movie.
Marvel as an entity got production credits on IP produced by other studios, but Iron Man and The Incredible Hulk were the first movies made by Marvel Studios.It's not like all Marvel comic films were successful from the gate. I know the history telling usually starts with "Iron Man" but there were other films before that that were less than successful.
And, I get that, and I understand MCU is a new push by that studio to really advance its product and comic book films as a whole.Marvel as an entity got production credits on IP produced by other studios, but Iron Man and The Incredible Hulk were the first movies made by Marvel Studios.
It looks like DC may not be quite as bullet proof as I thought - it's under performing and unlikely to top $100 million opening. If so, it will be the lowest opener in the DC Extended Universe with BvS ($166.0M), Suicide Squad ($133.6M), Man of Steel ($116.6M), and Wonder Woman ($103.2M).
It'll still do the kind of business most movies would kill for, but factoring in how much it cost and it's promotional budget...
For one thing, I think audiences are savvy enough to see that this is far more of a BvS follow-up than a WW one. For another, Downey is the only actor/hero to headline a billion-dollar solo superhero movie apart from Bale's Batman (with IM3), and even Marvel Studios hasn't tried giving us two major Iron Man appearances only half a year apart. So, given the lukewarm audience reaction to BvS and the fact that we just got a colorful, funny, well-received superhero team-up movie two weeks ago, these B.O. returns don't surprise me at all. WB should have pushed this movie to March (and not gone all-in with Snyder after MoS in the first place, of course).It’s surprising and disappointing (for WB, anyway) especially considering obviously not just the line-up of characters but the fact that it’s the first DCEU film since the positively received Wonder Woman.
Perhaps superhero fatigue has finally set in.
If you take every single film into account, then it makes DC look even stupider. All those decades of experience (and several of their films were and are fantastic) and they still fumbled the DCEU?I would rather look at the whole picture, since DC films started well before the DCU films. It tells the story rather than just which studio did what film.
No, people just go to see movies they're interested in. You don't think some westerns did poorly back in the day even though the genre as a whole was thriving? "More of the same" is an easy line to throw out, but it actually speaks to the quality of the film, not the number of releases. People don't get excited about a film that is, "Okay, I guess." Ragnarok seems to be doing just fine for itself. Unless the fatigue set in within the last few weeks?Perhaps superhero fatigue has finally set in.
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