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Spider-Man: Far From Home anticipation thread

Please tell us more :)

Well, since you asked . . . .

BATMAN: THE COURT OF OWLS, an original novel bringing back the Court of Owls, is due out February 12th, so I am haunting my mailbox waiting for an advance copy to show up.

And since we're talking growing older and stuff, I did the math and figured out that I have now been writing Batman, on and off, for more than twenty-seven years, ever since selling my first Batman story to DC way back in 1992.

Good thing I never got too old for comics. :)
 
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I definitely plan on checking that one out eventually. I already got the Mad Love novel that's a part of the same set.
 
Well, since you asked . . . .

BATMAN: THE COURT OF OWLS, an original novel bringing back the Court of Owls, is due out February 12th, so I am haunting my mailbox waiting my for an advance copy to show up.

And since we're talking growing older and stuff, I did the math and figured out that I have now been writing Batman, on and off, for more than twenty-seven years, ever since selling my first Batman story to DC way back in 1992.

Good thing I never got too old for comics. :)
In another thread there is a discussion about what makes a great Batman villain. I didn't post, but I was thinking that the CoOs is one of the best additions to the Rogues Gallery in recent years. Congrats on the book coming out!

As for my comics journey, I gave them up going into high school just after CoIE. I returned to them for a view years only to quit again with the Zero Hour. Then in the early 2000's I started having these nostalgic dreams about wandering around in comic book shops. I started reading them again in 2006 and haven't stopped. I am 49 next week.
 
Because it's mindless escapism, and life is too short for that.
Plus, even in my 20s, I felt like I had outgrown most of this stuff. It just had nostalgic value to me because I enjoyed this stuff as a kid. Endgame is a great jumping off point.

Dude trust me, eventually the opposite effect kicks in, you start appreciating the value of the seemingly trivial.
 
The suspicious nature of a hydro, molten and sand man leads me to think that mysterio is putting on a show.

He’s pretending to be the hero while doing something else. Maybe he’s just there to distract the actual crimes ( men with guns)
 
The suspicious nature of a hydro, molten and sand man leads me to think that mysterio is putting on a show.

He’s pretending to be the hero while doing something else. Maybe he’s just there to distract the actual crimes ( men with guns)
Disappointingly I agree and it seems like a somewhat predictable plot. If he was an actual good guy that goes bad I might find that more interesting. I'd like to see more than one villain too.
 
Disappointingly I agree and it seems like a somewhat predictable plot. If he was an actual good guy that goes bad I might find that more interesting. I'd like to see more than one villain too.

An actual good guy that goes bad sounds far more predictable and generic to me in the context of the superhero movie genre.
 
Wasn't this Mysterio's first story from the original comics? That he was pretending to be a good guy with fake bad guys?
 
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An actual good guy that goes bad sounds far more predictable and generic to me in the context of the superhero movie genre.
A genuinely good guy? My mind is coming up blank. Any examples? Winter Solider?

Pretending to be good and creating fake villains is a familiar plot from Saturday morning cartoons.(i recognize the irony in saying that)
 
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A genuinely good guy? My mind is coming up blank. Any examples? Winter Solider?

Pretending to be good and creating fake villains is a familiar plot from Saturday morning cartoons.(i recognize the irony in saying that)

Bucky, Harvey Dent, Harry Osbourne, Otto Octavius, Mr. Freeze, Kurt Connors, Batman (temporarily), Mordo, just off the top of my head. Good guys being pushed over the edge by tragedy or corrupted by magic/technology is hardly uncommon in movies. And if we're counting cartoons, there are probably dozens more examples there, if not hundreds.
 
Disappointingly I agree and it seems like a somewhat predictable plot. If he was an actual good guy that goes bad I might find that more interesting. I'd like to see more than one villain too.

Not to mention that Parker's friends seem to admire Mysterio.

"He's like Iron Man and Thor rolled into one"

Who would admire a villain causing havok? Mysterio is fighting a hydro-man(likely an illusion) and trying to hog the spotlight.

Spider-man intervenes and this irritates Mysterio because someone else is taking all his attention
 
A genuinely good guy? My mind is coming up blank. Any examples? Winter Solider?

Pretending to be good and creating fake villains is a familiar plot from Saturday morning cartoons.(i recognize the irony in saying that)

No one cared this was Syndrome's big plot.
 
Bucky, Harvey Dent, Harry Osbourne, Otto Octavius, Mr. Freeze, Kurt Connors, Batman (temporarily), Mordo, just off the top of my head. Good guys being pushed over the edge by tragedy or corrupted by magic/technology is hardly uncommon in movies. And if we're counting cartoons, there are probably dozens more examples there, if not hundreds.
Thank you. Reminding me of those characters convinces me even more that the fall from grace is the far more compelling story.

Spider-man intervenes and this irritates Mysterio because someone else is taking all his attention
Which sounds like a weak villain motivation for a film like Spider-man.

No one cared this was Syndrome's big plot.
In an animated movie made for all ages. I expect Spiderman movie villains aimed at a more mature audience to have more depth with a strong character arc.
 
The difference to most of those characters would be that they were just relatively normal people.

An actual superhero turning bad I haven‘t seen so often.
 
I don't know about anyone else but I certainly don't show up to a Spider-man movie (or any MCU movie if I'm honest) for the mind-blowingly unpredictable plot. I like the characters, I like the light comedy, I like the action sequences and I like how it's all stitched together into a cohesive narrative.

I mean what was so shocking about the plot of 'Homecoming' exactly? Sure "Liz's dad is The Vulture" was an interesting third act twist, but the whole movie didn't hinge on it. It was by and large (and by design!) a fairly standard coming of age story. We knew going in that Peter would struggle balancing his civilian life with his life as Spider-man, that at some point he'd screw something up and have pull himself up and make good. Doesn't make it a *bad* story.
 
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