If he can’t make an Indiana Jones film a guaranteed hit…Help us, Harrison Ford, you're our only hope!
If he can’t make an Indiana Jones film a guaranteed hit…Help us, Harrison Ford, you're our only hope!
Audiences flat-out rejected “The Marvels,” so it’ll struggle to rebound as the holiday season heats up with “The Hunger Games” prequel “The Ballad of Songbirds and Snakes,” Disney’s animated “Wish” and other family-friendly films in the coming weeks. That’s a problem because these comic book tentpoles don’t come cheap; “The Marvels” cost $220 million to produce and roughly $100 million to promote the film to audiences across the globe.
“This is an unprecedented Marvel box office collapse,” says David A. Gross, who runs the movie consulting firm Franchise Entertainment Research.
Does this mean that superhero fatigue has plagued society, once and for all? Not necessarily. But the disastrous turnout for “The Marvels” could force a reckoning at Disney now that audiences aren’t willing to see any ol’ superhero movie on the big screen. Earlier this week, Disney delayed the next four MCU installments, “Deadpool 3,” “Captain America: A Brave New World,” “Thunderbolts” and “Blade” (because of strike-related production delays), which gives the studio time to tinker with its strategy before Earth’s Mightiest Heroes return to the multiplex.
Old joke: How do you make a million bucks in the entertainment industry? Spend two million bucks.People were like "Marvel should make MCU series." Marvel did that. Now people are like "The Marvel shows are too much homework for understanding the movies." Now Marvel is slowing/backing down on that. Marvel Studios just can't win.
One could just as plausibly posit it's unfair of you to suggest that if they'd only seen Larson, Vellani, and Parris share a few yucks with Colbert and/or Trevor Noah, tens of millions of potential theatergoers would have changed their weekend plans, and gone out to see a movie with a mediocre 50/100 Metacritic score. Trust us, we get it that you like these characters, and hope to see more of them, but that doesn't mean general audiences share your interest.I think you're failing to take into account that the actors were unable to promote this movie until just days before it opened, due to the strike. It's really unfair and unreasonable to compare its first-weekend box office to the typical state of affairs, given that handicap in Marvel's ability to build word of mouth for the film before now.
Dude, a movie that loses hundreds of of millions of dollars at the box office is almost always a financial failure when all's said and done. To paraphrase your own words to JoeZhang, "To pretend [otherwise] is grossly disingenuous."First off, why does every Marvel film have to be a "blockbuster?" The MCU is expansive and eclectic. Why can't there be room for some of its films to be smaller than others without being condemned for it? It's unfair to call something a failure
Disney’s superhero sequel posted by far the worst opening in the 15-year history of the Marvel Cinematic Universe (MCU) with only $47.0M.
Compared to Marvel’s rival DC Comics, The Marvel also opens below some other recent DC Extended Universe underperformers: -14% below June’s The Flash with $55.0M and -29% below 2022’s Black Adam with $67.0M.
https://www.boxofficepro.com/weekend-box-office-the-marvels/
So Joe, are you actually going to watch the film and tell us what you thought of it separate from its box office performance?
Spellman is on record saying Cap4 is going to be a "paranoid political thriller", so that's right in the vein of the existing Cap films (with the exception of the Avengers 2.0 part of Civil War). If Spellman shot that kind of film, that's exactly what the film needed in consideration of the Cap end of the world leaning in on its strengths. Re-shoots are concerning; for all we know, it may be an attempt to hard link the film into the broader MU than anything originally intended.They're spending 5-6 months reshooting Cap 4. It's basically going to be a new film now. Hopefully they take some cues from the tone and approach to Winter Soldier.
One could just as plausibly posit it's unfair of you to suggest that if they'd only seen Larson, Vellani, and Parris share a few yucks with Colbert and/or Trevor Noah, tens of millions of potential theatergoers would have changed their weekend plans, and gone out to see a movie with a mediocre 50/100 Metacritic score. Trust us, we get it that you like these characters, and hope to see more of them, but that doesn't mean general audiences share your interest.
Furthermore, while actors' promotion may well have a modest salutary effect on a box office take, I'm certainly not aware of any research showing this could be worth hundreds of millions of dollars in ticket sales. Are you? Or are you looking for reasons to defend the movie first, and looking for arguments to support those reasons second?
Dude, a movie that loses hundreds of of millions of dollars at the box office is almost always a financial failure when all's said and done. To paraphrase your own words to JoeZhang, "To pretend [otherwise] is grossly disingenuous."
So you are saying it will leg out to same numbers? See you in a couple of weeks...
They're spending 5-6 months reshooting Cap 4. It's basically going to be a new film now. Hopefully they take some cues from the tone and approach to Winter Soldier.
The Avengers might not, but the Young Avengers do since the whole point of the team is that they are all or mostly younger counterparts to the Avengers.
I doubt that the term Young Avengers will ever be used in the MCU even with Kamala recruiting Kate. Whatever larger group that fully materializes out of their teaming up will probably just assume the legacy of the Avengers and take the group's place using that moniker (the Avengers).
Great Lakes Avengers?
That's another option, if the story puts them in that part of the country. Maybe they could even introduce Squirrel Girl for the team.
West Coast Avengers is a similar one, as well.
Although the fact that Kamala lives in Jersey City and Kate in New York and Eli Bradley in Maryland kind of works against those.
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