Tawny Newsome said that, Mariner at least, will not be as hyperactive/exaggerated like she is in Lower Decks. I imagine Boimler will also be toned down a bit.As for the crossover. We shall see. They will be portraying the characters live action.
Tawny Newsome said that, Mariner at least, will not be as hyperactive/exaggerated like she is in Lower Decks. I imagine Boimler will also be toned down a bit.As for the crossover. We shall see. They will be portraying the characters live action.
Yeah, for once I actually agree with you. The Cap movies have by far been the most grounded stories in the MCU so far, and I really can't see them changing that tone, and I think suddenly throwing a giant alien that was petrified halfway through breaking out of the Earth would be taking things to far from the tone of the first 3 movies.
I love the fact that the different MCU series have such different tones and styles, and that they seem to be making a point of adding even more in the latest phases. One of my favorite things about shared universes like the MCU, the DCEU, and Star Trek and Star Wars is that they are open enough that you can tell pretty much any type of story in them, from darker grounded stories like The Winter Soldier, Discovery, or Rouge One to outright goofy comedies like She Hulk, Shazam, or Lower Decks.
TREK_GOD_1 said:Its not new at all, as I recall Star Wars fans rejecting the Ewok TV movies and '85 cartoon as being nothing more than content designed to make money and not a legitimate (or influential) part of the OT.
Some still do...Its not new at all, as I recall Star Wars fans rejecting the Ewok TV movies and '85 cartoon as being nothing more than content designed to make money and not a legitimate (or influential) part of the OT.
I would think the Star Wars cartoons would be a lot easier to accept since tonal and stylistically they're not that far off from the live action productions.I'm not into the cartoons that much. Lower Decks was too futurama-ish for me. I know people think it's in the same continuity but I don't agree with that. Prodigy yeah I COULD see it. Lower Decks no. I feel the same way about the SW cartoons. Everyone says they are canon. But it seems producers cherry pick what they consider canon from the cartoons. So I look at it with a very big grain of salt.
As for the crossover. We shall see. They will be portraying the characters live action.
That was pretty much what I was expecting.The producers treat it as existing at an elevated place than what would "really" happen. It's canon, but an exaggeration of in universe events. So the crossover will look differently.
I don't really see where it would need to be though, it's really not that complicated of an idea, it's just a super strong metal. And if they stick to the comics, Wolverine would have gotten it implanted decades ago, so it's not like it would be some brand new thing that would totally change the political landscape, it would have been around for ages.In theory, CA4 should not go in that direction, but Wolverine must happen, so the Adamantium plot also has to take the stage, which--by its nature and history in the past 40+ years of Marvel comics--is not some B-plot.
Yeah, but other than Thor & Cap, they haven't changed the tone of the different series. What we're talking about is different series having different tones from each other, which is not the same thing.Fans tend to create their own continuity when productions with tone / stories far removed from what was a standard are inserted into the series. Its not new at all, as I recall Star Wars fans rejecting the Ewok TV movies and '85 cartoon as being nothing more than content designed to make money and not a legitimate (or influential) part of the OT. That certainly happened in Bond and Salkind/Superman fandom, where--for a few examples, Octopussy or Superman III and IV have been ignored to the point of never referring to their plots when discussing the overall series.
Jenner Renner was plowing snow in Nevada when the snow plow ran over his leg. He's in critical but stable condition.
https://www.cnn.com/2023/01/02/entertainment/jeremy-renner-snow-plow-hospital/index.html
https://www.tmz.com/2023/01/02/jere...nowplow-accident-critical-condition-hospital/
Fourth wall breaking aside, are they intending Deadpool 3 to be part of the MCU? If so, you've already got a fully established Wolverine.JD said:And if they stick to the comics, Wolverine would have gotten it implanted decades ago, so it's not like it would be some brand new thing that would totally change the political landscape, it would have been around for ages.
Jackman left behind a huge legacy and it will be hard for the new actor to follow in his footsteps as Jackman's Wolverine was universally praised ( even those complaining he is too tall shut up at some point).
Not at all -- I can praise his performance and insist he's too tall at the same time. Jackman was good, but he was good as a character very different from the comics' Wolverine, far more of a handsome leading man type. The easiest way the MCU could distinguish their new Wolverine from Jackman is by going for something closer to the comics' version, an almost animalistic wild man. And yes, someone short would be good, just so that the name would make sense. A wolverine is a small carnivore, disproportionately strong and dangerous for its diminutive size. Giving the name to someone of Jackman's height was incongruous, although the Origins movie managed to concoct a decent handwave for it.
I'm not sure Marvel will go this far because they may have concerns that a true to the source short, hairy, bad tempered character and actor might not get accepted as readily by the general, non comic book reader, audience.
Jackman's shadow might be too large and the audience might expect something similar in qualities to him. Personally i would be really ok for the new Wolverine to be closer to the comics, might bring in a good contract to the otherwise poster model actors they mostly choose.
I'm not sure Marvel will go this far because they may have concerns that a true to the source short, hairy, bad tempered character and actor might not get accepted as readily by the general, non comic book reader, audience.
I find it hilarious that twenty plus years later there are still people who talk about Wolverine's "incorrect" height.
It really does not matter.
It's backward reasoning to suggest that something can only work if the audience is already predisposed to like it. Good actors and good movies make the audience like them. Nobody would've thought Guardians of the Galaxy had a chance in hell of working. Nobody would've thought a TV show about a lead actor who hardly ever shows his face would work, but The Mandalorian is a hit. Heck, just keeping it within Jackman's co-stars, a lot of people in 1987 were skeptical that the Star Trek audience would accept a middle-aged bald Englishman as a starship captain. Audience acceptance is something you earn by offering them something worth accepting.
Peter Dinklage is a short, fairly hirsute actor who plays his share of bad-tempered characters, and he's quite successful. Heck, Dinklage would make a terrific Wolverine. He's actually an inch closer to Wolverine's height than Jackman is, just in the other direction.
The point I'm making is that Wolverine is not intrinsically a leading-man part, but a character part. Heck, he borders on being a movie-monster part. It would be a failure of imagination on the MCU's part if they just tried to copy how Jackman reinvented the character, rather than offering their own distinct approach. As I said, going closer to the source is the easiest way to offer something very different and thus avoid comparisons with Jackman.
I'm not sure Marvel will go this far because they may have concerns that a true to the source short, hairy, bad tempered character and actor might not get accepted as readily by the general, non comic book reader, audience.
Jackman's shadow might be too large and the audience might expect something similar in qualities to him. Personally i would be really ok for the new Wolverine to be closer to the comics, might bring in a good contract to the otherwise poster model actors they mostly choose.
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