That's how I did it.Your thoughts on Putting Captain America and Captain Marvel at the beginning before Iron Man?
That's how I did it.Your thoughts on Putting Captain America and Captain Marvel at the beginning before Iron Man?
I’m burnt out on the MCU. Looks like I’m not the only one. Time for another movie trend to replace it.
Your thoughts on Putting Captain America and Captain Marvel at the beginning before Iron Man?
The Spider-man movies have been surprisingly good. But the MCU from DisneyOversaturated the market - especially over covid, no compelling story, no compelling new characters, and they've run out of ideas.
It was great upto Endgame, and far from home was fine as a coda to the entire series. I'd have liked to have seen Black Widow released post Civil War, pre Infinity War (obviously minus the end credit) too, but it should have taken a 10 year break after wrapping up with Far From Home, with maybe, at most, No Way Home and GotG 3 released around the time they were released.
but it should have taken a 10 year break after wrapping up with Far From Home, with maybe, at most, No Way Home and GotG 3 released around the time they were released.
There will only be one Marvel theatrical release in 2024, and I do expect Deadpool 3 to bring in the business. Hopefully that will give the public a bit of a breather and rekindle interest.You know, after Star Trek Enterprise was cancelled in 2005, the pundits confidently asserted that "franchise fatigue" made new Star Trek unviable and they should retire it for 10 or 20 years before trying again. And then the 2009 Star Trek movie became the most profitable film in the history of the franchise up to then, and in the past 18 years we've had more new Trek series than ever (albeit with fewer episodes apiece).
I can see some logic in the idea of Marvel slowing their pace a bit, but stopping entirely for a decade? That seems excessive.
Sexism is one hell of a drug.Posted this in the Marvels thread but it actually fits better here, I think:
Even Stephen King's taken notice of how strange the reaction to the movie has been (again, almost exclusively from those who haven't seen it because it's tough to find people who despise this movie as much as they appear to after actually having watched it)
"I don’t go to MCU movies, don’t care for them, but I find this barely masked gloating over the low box office for THE MARVELS very unpleasant. Why gloat over failure?"
Devolved? Kind of, yes. But, this has been around for a long time, and is a part of humanity. "Black and White" thinking is among the more common thinking errors.We've devolved to just "good or bad?" results
In short, because it proves a person right, even in their own mind. That the MCU is bad, or doing poorly or making the wrong creative choices and so they want to see punishment for the perceived bad choices. It's the same idea as hoping the guy speeding gets pulled over because he cut you off."I don’t go to MCU movies, don’t care for them, but I find this barely masked gloating over the low box office for THE MARVELS very unpleasant. Why gloat over failure?"
I think that's one of the problems right there. People are getting used to waiting for movies to come out on the streaming services they already have. We went to see The Marvels on Saturday night and THE WHOLE PLACE was nearly empty.Soon as it is on Disney Plus, no point in paying separately. My next two IMAX trips will be to Dune and Napoleon.
I truly don't understand this. I wouldn't say this was the "worst" anything. I quite enjoyed it and thought it was tight and funny.Watched the "final trailer" on youtube which I don't normally to avoid spoilers. I'd already decided to skip this and wait for it to come onto Disney Plus though.
However then youtube came up with this:
View attachment 37283
I'm tempted to go see it just to spite the usual crowd
Strongly disagree; I think weekly releases are far better to build up/maintain buzz, as regular people can discuss the latest episode without worrying that the people they're talking with have seen the whole season already. And, for popular shows, this incentives fans to subscribe for the duration of the season. Netflix pioneered this model to stand out and become known as a TV show producer, but even they're making gradual but clear efforts to evolve from it.My problem with the Disney + Marvel programming is they don't stream all of the episodes at once. I'm not interested in those characters that much to invest my time to wait every week to see the show. I believe these programs would do a lot better, ratings wise, if they went with the Netflix format; there I can watch 2 maybe 3 or 4 episodes at a time and if I really enjoy it... like STRANGER THINGS, I'll re-watch immediately and chat with my friends about it.
Yup.While sexism is absolutely a factor in the gloating over The Marvels flopping (with a significant boost from those amplifying toxic voices in order to dunk on them), sometimes the general public just enjoys a nice bit of schadenfreude, and it's been a while since there's been a particularly tasty bomb -
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