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Spoilers Marvel Cinematic Universe spoiler-heavy speculation thread

What grade would you give the Marvel Cinematic Universe? (Ever-Changing Question)


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The cast for this looks great. I adore Vanessa Kirby; she'll make a wonderful Sue Storm. And Pascal can do no wrong at this point.*

If it's really set in the 1960s, that's, uh, marvelous. The FF are very much at home, there.


*Don't throw WW84 at me. He was fine.
 
The cast for this looks great. I adore Vanessa Kirby; she'll make a wonderful Sue Storm. And Pascal can do no wrong at this point.*

If it's really set in the 1960s, that's, uh, marvelous. The FF are very much at home, there.


*Don't throw WW84 at me. He was fine.

Actually, he was great in that role - definitely fit the TOm Vu 80's infomercial personality . "Life is goood. but it could be better! {finger point} "
 
Reed is smart. Sue is pretty. They’re in love. Johnny is young and Sue’s brother. Ben is gruff and Reed’s best friend. . They have superpowers. ;)

Also: Reed sometimes gets too much into his science stuff to be a good husband/dad (Sue suspects he's autistic). Sue's the glue that holds the whole team/family together. Johnny's a hothead, has a running Legolas/Gimli-type banter with Ben, and is... to put it mildly... a bit of a playa. Ben's got a heart of gold, but he's also the only one of the four who can't pass himself off as an ordinary human (he's stuck in orange-rock form) and is kinda salty about that.
 
I mean invisibility or telekinesis representing air isn't an uncommon idea (still a cheat, though), but we're seriously saying Reed's powers represent water now? That's a stretch.

That's how it's been presented to me, and I've been reading FF comics since '76-'77.
Reed = Water
Sue = Air
Johnny = Fire
Ben = Earth.
It might have been retroactive on Stan Lee's part, or it may have come from Roy Thomas or Gerry Conway, the writers who replaced Lee on the title.
 
That's how it's been presented to me, and I've been reading FF comics since '76-'77.
Reed = Water
Sue = Air
Johnny = Fire
Ben = Earth.
It might have been retroactive on Stan Lee's part, or it may have come from Roy Thomas or Gerry Conway, the writers who replaced Lee on the title.
Yeah, it was retroactive thing that caught on after Lee and Kirby's run. Not unlike Prof. X and Magneto being analogs of MLK and Malcolm X.
Kirby originally designed the Thing as having rough scaley skin like dinosaur. It evolved in to plates and then the "rocks" we know so well. Sinnott's inks really sold the rock look. Johnny was really the only "elemental". (Not counting Crystal of course).
 
That's how it's been presented to me, and I've been reading FF comics since '76-'77.
Reed = Water
Sue = Air
Johnny = Fire
Ben = Earth.
It might have been retroactive on Stan Lee's part, or it may have come from Roy Thomas or Gerry Conway, the writers who replaced Lee on the title.

That's one way to look at it. Another one is...

Reed, who already had doctorates by the time he was twenty (yet doesn't call himself a doctor and is always seeking to learn more) has an elastic mind. Sue, at least at first, had self-esteem issues and was shy to the point of being 'invisible' around people. Johnny, as already mentioned, is a hothead. Ben, stubborn and solid as a rock. In other words, their powers were outgrowths of their personalities.
 
Are you kidding? Reed and Sue got married and had two superpowered kids. The team has changed membership multiple times, with She-Hulk being the most prominent member outside the core four, and built a sprawling extended cast. They've built up long, complex histories and relationships with Namor, Black Panther, the Inhumans, Galactus, the Watcher, the Skrull, etc. That's hardly static.

Most of which pales in comparison to how much other characters have changed and evolved across decades. The Fantastic Four are probably stuck under the shadow of the "classic" stuff (in their case, the Lee/Kirby run) more than any other major Marvel property. Even that list of associates you give is entirely composed of characters and concepts they met in their first few years.
 
Most of which pales in comparison to how much other characters have changed and evolved across decades. The Fantastic Four are probably stuck under the shadow of the "classic" stuff (in their case, the Lee/Kirby run) more than any other major Marvel property. Even that list of associates you give is entirely composed of characters and concepts they met in their first few years.

Even so, that's a metatextual point, not a textual one. I don't see anything about those characters and elements that's particularly tied to the 1960s as an in-story setting, given how many of them have already appeared in the modern MCU, or at least the 1990s. The only element that really feels tied to that era is the space-race origin story, and you know I consider the origin story the least important thing about the FF.
 
Jesus, Reed Richards is a dead ringer for Bob Dobbs, visually speaking and in terms of smugness the quintessential 60s white dude. He was even a pipe smoker.

1962 would be just right for this gang.

upload_2024-2-15_20-21-20.png
 
‘The Fantastic Four’ Could Be the Fresh Start Marvel Needs, From an Epic Cast to a (Possible) 1960s Setting

Christopher Nolan recently proclaimed that the decision to hire Robert Downey Jr. to play Tony Stark in “Iron Man” was “one of the most consequential casting decisions that’s ever been made in the history of the movie business.”

By the end of this decade, the same might be said for the four actors who were just cast as the titular superheroes in Marvel’s “The Fantastic Four”: Pedro Pascal, Vanessa Kirby, Joseph Quinn and Ebon Moss-Bachrach. Like Downey, all of these actors have had recent experiences with big-budget productions — Pascal with “The Mandalorian” and “The Last of Us,” Kirby with the two most recent “Mission: Impossible” films, Quinn with “Stranger Things” and Moss-Bachrach with “Andor.” But, also like Downey, none of them have headlined their own studio action blockbuster before signing up with Marvel.

What is most tantalizing about Wednesday’s announcement, however, is the way Marvel went about it, with a playful illustration of the actors as their characters celebrating Valentine’s Day. From the retro title treatment, to the mid-century modern costumes and furniture, to the fact that Ben appears to be reading an issue of Life magazine from December 1963, it seems pretty clear that “The Fantastic Four” will be set in the 1960s.
 
Jesus, Reed Richards is a dead ringer for Bob Dobbs, visually speaking and in terms of smugness the quintessential 60s white dude. He was even a pipe smoker.

1962 would be just right for this gang.

And Tony Stark was originally modeled on Howard Hughes. Of course characters looked like they were from the 1960s when they were drawn in the 1960s. But they've been published continuously ever since, and their character designs and personalities have evolved with the times. Reed isn't portrayed as a pipe-smoker in present-day comics, any more than Sue is portrayed as a weak and timid helpmeet in present-day comics.

And it's weird to imply that Reed is defined by whiteness so soon after Pedro Pascal was announced in the role. Before that, he was voiced in the early-2000s animated series by Hiro Kanagawa. I've often thought Phil Morris would've made an excellent Reed.
 
I looked through my issues of 'Marvels' by Alex Ross to see who he based Reed Richards and Susan Storm on, and sometimes it looks like Hugh Beaumont and Barbara Billingsley and others it looks like Reed is modeled after Russell Johnson.
 
I looked through my issues of 'Marvels' by Alex Ross to see who he based Reed Richards and Susan Storm on, and sometimes it looks like Hugh Beaumont and Barbara Billingsley and others it looks like Reed is modeled after Russell Johnson.

And that was set in the '60s and '70s and meant to look retro. It's not an exemplar for how they're normally depicted in modern comics.
 
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