There aren't any good ones either.
There are a number of good ones. But personally, I would count Thor 2 and Iron Man 3 as being more bad than good. Ed Norton Hulk was fine, I don't know why people look down on it so much.
There aren't any good ones either.
There aren't any good ones either.
No."Iron Man" and "Captain America: The Winter Soldier" are two of the best superhero movies ever created, only topped by something like "The Dark Knight". "Black Panther" is not just the most successfull comicbook movie of all time, but maybe one of the most important milestones in the movie business of the last fifty years. "The Avengers" is a really great team-up movie, with one of the most charming casts ever. And what "Guardians of the Galaxy" or "Thor:Ragnarok" put on screen is at least widely more creative and imaginative than what Star Trek has put put in the last decade...
And, no, not a single one of them holds a candle to ST09 in terms of intelligence and dramatic weight and pathos. Or really ID, for that matter.
No.
The MCU is cinematic junk food. It's high in salt, sugar, and fat, but offers little sustenance with no nutritional value. They're pressed-out from the same mold on an assembly line and then shoved into expensive, flashy packaging. They taste good when they're fresh, but the flavor is fleeting. And they go stale when left on the shelf too long.
Iron Man is definitely the best of the bunch, but since it was first, it came before promoting the brand juju become more important than instilling creativity. Shit, TMNT90 has greater plot texture and thematic depth and acuity than any one of them.
Guardians is a lot of fun and has great, unique loveable characters, but it's still the exact same film underneath.
Winter Soldier is a convoluted mess.
Black Panther is absolutely of huge sociological and cultural significance, But the film itself is nothing special.
The only stuff that's good about Avengers are the bits Whedon borrows from Buffy and Firefly - sort of his greatest hits. The rest of the film is a hot mess directed by a guy who should have never been allowed to direct action.
Ragnarok is a pretentious, self-indulgent plodding mess. I fell asleep watching it. Twice. And never actually finished it. I was bored out of my gourd.
I think the Spidey movie is the best of the more recent lot, but it is ultimately foiled by a terribly written villain, despite Keaton's best efforts.
And, no, not a single one of them holds a candle to ST09 in terms of intelligence and dramatic weight and pathos. Or really ID, for that matter.
You do know the whole Kelvin-timeline franchise is nothing more than a (mostly successfull) attempt at applying the MARVEL franchise formula to the Star Trek brand, right? ...right??
Totes. But i suspect Marvel knows that.The MCU is cinematic junk food. It's high in salt, sugar, and fat, but offers little sustenance
With one or two exceptions (e.g. iron man) I agree - as you state below:They taste good when they're fresh, but the flavor is fleeting.
Iron Man is definitely the best of the bunch, but since it was first, it came before promoting the brand juju become more important than instilling creativity.
I wouldn’t go that far. It’s a good Cap movie. If you like Cap.Winter Soldier is a convoluted mess
And yet Blade came first and was nowhere near as significant. Weird.Black Panther is absolutely of huge sociological and cultural significance, But the film itself is nothing special.
Yes but it’s a fun movie, Mr Vulcan.The only stuff that's good about Avengers are the bits Whedon borrows from Buffy and Firefly - sort of his greatest hits. The rest of the film is a hot mess directed by a guy who should have never been allowed to direct action.
Again, Ragnarok is fun. But typical Avengers filler.Ragnarok is a pretentious, self-indulgent plodding mess. I fell asleep watching it. Twice. And never actually finished it. I was bored out of my gourd.
Very paint by numbers though. Keaton was great in the role.I think the Spidey movie is the best of the more recent lot, but it is ultimately foiled by a terribly written villain, despite Keaton's best efforts.
Out of curiosity what are you referring to when you talk about dramatic weight and intelligence in ST09?And, no, not a single one of them holds a candle to ST09 in terms of intelligence and dramatic weight and pathos. Or really ID, for that matter.
LOL what?
ST09 finished principal photography before Iron Man hit the screens...
I know it seems like distant past now, but... MARVEL made quite a lot of movies before the MCU. Kevin Feige was really very hands-on involved in all movies involving Marvel property, be it with Sony, Fox or Universal, before he put his focus on an an-house production company.
And JJ Abrams wasn't exactly shy about his influences either, so this really shouldn't be news or anything.
IMO it was also a pretty smart decision. One of the reason why ST09 was so successfull in reaching mainstream audiences was simply because it felt a lot like the comicbook blockbusters of that time.
Also, this Marvel formula (which is basically just the super optimization of the Syd Field/Save-the-Cat plot point structure for screenplays) IMO fits pretty good with the Trek property - much better than, say, with Star Wars.
First superhero comic movie with a poc in the lead role iircI keep forgetting Blade was based off a marvel comic.
First superhero comic movie with a poc in the lead role iirc
I keep forgetting Blade was based off a marvel comic.
Doesn’t spawn predate it?
Yes. Also, so does Steel. And Meteor Man.
Wrong.l
You do know the whole Kelvin-timeline franchise is nothing more than a (mostly successfull) attempt at applying the MARVEL franchise formula to the Star Trek brand, right? ...right??
Of course they do. They know perfectly well what they're selling is the branding. To their credit, they (and Disney especially), have completely mastered how to best channel a dopamine effect from a film. (Like junk food.) But the high from the experience people feel when coming out of a theatre is being confused for quality cinemacraft.Totes. But i suspect Marvel knows that.
People make this argument. But Panther is more than just "a black guy in a suit." It's significant because it's basically an African superhero movie.And yet Blade came first and was nowhere near as significant. Weird.
I'm not going to get into that here other than to say go rewatch the cold open or considered the magnitude of having the franchise's most popular character literally see his entire world crumble in front of him.Out of curiosity what are you referring to when you talk about dramatic weight and intelligence in ST09?
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