Youtube tried to get me into a "where marvel went wrong" video, the first 10 seconds asserted that phase 4 had been a flop. Stopped it there and checked - A quick look at the box office dismissed that, putting it ahead of phase 1 and about equal with phase 2 on a budget:revenue basis.
These people. They're like the boy who cried, "Wolf!"
I don't watch any Marvel films, so I have no idea how good or bad they actually are (I'm honestly not into them), but I
wish the current landscape of films would all flop (Marvel or otherwise). I'm dead-serious. When this current era of "Everything has to be a big tentpole filled with superheroes and gigantic budgets!" falls, then maybe they'll start making medium-budget movies again, where they can start taking more chances, a film can flop without hurting them so badly, and they can make more things that aren't just sequels, prequels, reboots, remakes, and spinoffs. "What are you talking about? You're on a Star Trek board! Star Trek's filled with sequels, prequels, spinoffs, and even a reboot!" Yeah, I know. But I don't think
all big films should be those. I don't think all tentpole films should be those. They shouldn't dominate the box office so completely, and I wish that would change...
... but I know that's not going to happen any time soon, so we're stuck with the reality of where cinema's going to be for the foreseeable future. And I agree with Jonathan Frakes: Star Trek's future is on television.
Films in the '50s and most of the '60s became super-extravagant, overdoing themselves to outdo TV, and they overshot the mark. These films started underperforming, allowing studios to take more chances on films that were lower-budgeted and better in-tune with what a new generation wanted, leading to New Hollywood in the late-'60s and the most of the '70s. I hear teenagers talking sometimes, and they're starting to get sick of superhero movies. It's starting. I don't necessarily think films today should go back to New Hollywood (those films were too self-indulgent sometimes). I just want them to do Something Else.
But I suspect what I want and what a lot of the Fandom Menace's audience wants with films in general are two different things. They want to feel like they did in the '70s, '80s, '90s, or whenever, when they went to see movies when they were kids. They think they can relive that experience, but they can't. They're not that age anymore, so they never will. They want to go backward to their childhood (and yet they paradoxically hate it when movies try to do that) and I want to go forward to something else.