It's like there is some kind of, I don't know, fatigue about the genre?I am only realizing, the buzz for Blue Beetle is so low.... It doesn't even have its own review topic yet.

It's like there is some kind of, I don't know, fatigue about the genre?I am only realizing, the buzz for Blue Beetle is so low.... It doesn't even have its own review topic yet.
I'm starting to realize that, even if they say otherwise, superhero movies are more limited than Westerns in reality.
You can. But you can also make a superhero movie that bucks convention.But in westerns, you can tell about a massacre that lasts the whole movie or just an old man sitting on the porch on his farm thinking longingly about his youth.
The Specials. No villain. No confrontation.In the first case, the protagonist will always have to solve a problem by applying a certain amount of violence. There is always a confrontation with a hostile antagonist.
Well, they are very, very rareYou can. But you can also make a superhero movie that bucks convention.
Well, they are very, very rare![]()
I'm starting to realize that, even if they say otherwise, superhero movies are more limited than Westerns in reality.
And the same at one point, about westerns, people said, "No thanks, that's enough."
It's like there is some kind of, I don't know, fatigue about the genre?![]()
Fun fact: in the Italian version, they removed every reference to supernatural elements. He just comes to the village to avenge "his brother". I found only years after that the main character was supposed to be a ghost or something like that.In fact, it was Eastwood's Malpaso Company that broke that ground with High Plains Drifter, but said ground was paved over in that film's wake.
Saturday AM: Even though this weekend’s new entries – Warner Bros/DC’s Blue Beetle and Universal’s Strays – aren’t coming in at the top of their projections, with respective lower weekends of $25M and $8.5M, the overall health of the theatrical business is still in good shape. It’s being further bolstered by the fifth weekends of Barbie ($20.5M) and Oppenheimer ($11M), which are fueling an estimated $100.7M weekend that’s +28% over the same August frame a year ago. That was a dry spell, led by CrunchyRoll’s Dragon Ball Super: Super Hero ($21.1M). It remains to be seen what the toll will be on Sunday’s box office in Los Angeles from the onset of Hurricane Hilary...
You'd only have to remove the last shot, right?Fun fact: in the Italian version, they removed every reference to supernatural elements. He just comes to the village to avenge "his brother". I found only years after that the main character was supposed to be a ghost or something like that.
Are you referring to the graves?You'd only have to remove the last shot, right?
The scene remained. The next day the stranger leaves and outside the city he meets Mordecai who is writing the name for the grave of Sheriff Duncan killed by the three. Mordecai wants to know the name of the stranger (who had never told anyone) and he replies that he is writing his brother's name ("Sheriff Jim Duncan rest in peace"). Then he rides off and disappears over the horizon.Yes.
How was it? It's a great cast, but I've been burned by that before.Yeah. I'm a big DC fan and even I am not that interested in seeing it. Saw Haunted Mansion instead.
So the only thing different was the audio of what Clint said to Mordecai?The scene remained. The next day the stranger leaves and outside the city he meets Mordecai who is writing the name for the grave of Sheriff Duncan killed by the three. Mordecai wants to know the name of the stranger (who had never told anyone) and he replies that he is writing his brother's name ("Sheriff Jim Duncan rest in peace"). Then he rides off and disappears over the horizon.
It was alright. Better than the Murphy one. It had some good laughsHow was it? It's a great cast, but I've been burned by that before.
I thought that was The Scarlet Pimpernel? Or did he not wear a mask?(Indeed, the first masked vigilante hero in fiction was a Western character, Zorro.)
Spielberg made a similar comparison, and he's not incorrect in the grand scheme of things. Despite some bigger budgeted and/or well-performing Westerns released at the end of the 60s (e.g., 1968's Hang 'Em High, 1969's True Grit, The Wild Bunch, Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid), and into the dawn of the next decade (1973's High Plains Drifter for one example), movie audience across several generations had been soaked in Western movies (and endless TV series) to the point that no new take on the basic genre was going to make said genre fresh and worthy of audiences' precious time as in earlier decades.
Contrary to the simplistic view that the rise of other movie genres (the Disaster movies, gritty police dramas, big-budget horror films, etc.) were the one and only reason for the decline of the Western, the problem was from within, as there were only so many stories the industry could set in the 19th century's American West, Mexico, etc., before it became a repetitious blur. Superhero films of the 21st century have reached that point in less than 23 years, with a flood of productions all wanting to milk as many licensed properties for as long as possible. The issue rests with that desire far exceeding the ability to create compelling stories. If anyone can be truly honest with themselves, would they say 50 to 70% of this century's superhero movies are great? I'm not hearing that from any sizable number of movie goers just speaking their minds. The Western reached that same point, and could not provide a positive answer to that percentage question, hence its rapid decline, so few should be surprised if the superhero film faces a similarly severe drop off (more than what's happening now).
Marvel might have started that way, but I believe it's just as much a part of Disney now, as DC is of WB.Movies, maybe, since studios tend to force superhero movies into a narrower range of story types than you can get in comics or television, like origin stories, revenge stories, and stories that culminate in huge action set pieces. But that's not an intrinsic limitation of the genre, just a failure to take full advantage of its possibilities. I don't blame superheroes for it, I blame movie studios' limited understanding of them. (Which is why the MCU has mostly been more successful than other studios' efforts, since Marvel is a studio founded by the comics company to make movies based on its comics, while other superhero movies are just part of the output of their studios. Even DC Studios is a division of Warner Bros.)
Yeah, the majority of the big movies have been underperforming for the last couple of years at least, so what's happening now isn't unique to superhero movies, it's happened to movies in general. And when there have still been some superhero movies, like Across the Spider-Verse, and GOTG Vol. 3, that have pulled in fantastic numbers.I don't think it's superhero fatigue as much as it is franchise fatigue.
Look at how many supposed blockbusters like Fast and Furious, Indy, and M:I did at the box office as opposed to movies like Mario, Barbie and Oppenheimer, which, according to some, were all supposed to underperform.
I thought that was The Scarlet Pimpernel? Or did he not wear a mask?
Marvel might have started that way, but I believe it's just as much a part of Disney now, as DC is of WB.
Yeah, the majority of the big movies have been underperforming for the last couple of years at least, so what's happening now isn't unique to superhero movies, it's happened to movies in general. And when there have still been some superhero movies, like Across the Spider-Verse, and GOTG Vol. 3, that have pulled in fantastic numbers.
We use essential cookies to make this site work, and optional cookies to enhance your experience.