Yeah, I think do see what you were saying before now. I guess the people doing the hiring must understand that what we see on screen isn't necessarily the best example of their skills as writers.
It's sad how many movies have been ruined by executive meddling. I can't think of any examples of executives coming in and forcing changes on a movie that actually improved it.
So Box Office Mojo is estimating at $26 million dollar opening in the US, and a total with international at $50 million.
Bob Marley: One Love has been making almost twice as much as Madame Web each day since opening day Feb 14.
You do realize you are responding to Guy Gardener , right?
15 million for the weekend according to IMDB.Hasn't it only made like 6 million dollars so far?
The villain Ezekiel dreams his death constantly. After the invention of facial recognition software, he's able to track down the powerless teen girls in the present before they grow up into super human women in the future who kill him. So we just see snips from his dream over and over again where the Spider-Woman, Arachne and Silk kill him, but the bulk of the movie is just 3 useless winy 14 year olds, squealing and running in bad alternate timelines where Web gets them killed.
Silk?!?
Okay...um...I guess they are either radically changing her origin, OR she's not the same Silk that is pheremonally linked to Peter Parker in a way that makes them want to bone each other?
Ohhh! So not the succubus spider-woman, the drug addict spider-woman, lol.Sorry. I got lazy and guessed.
- Anya Corazon = Arayna.
- Mattie Franklin = Spider-Woman III (J Jonah Jameson's niece.)
- Julia Cornwall = Spider-Woman (From Secret War 1984.)
Ohhh! So not the succubus spider-woman, the drug addict spider-woman, lol.
I checked out a long time with Spider-Man comics.
Last thing I read with a passion was Superior Spider-Man, which is back.
I absolutely didn't want to imply that the '94 cartoon was bad or anything. But it is 30 years old! There are people born after it and who have already had children. I doubt that Venom has entered the collective imagination like Spider-Man or Superman.Quite possibly, and that "old cartoon" was probably at least as influential as the comics. The version of the alien costume/Venom story from the '90s animated series was much more cohesive than the one in the comics, and introduced the idea that that symbiote made Peter psychologically darker and less inhibited, rather than merely draining his energy. I was surprised when I finally read Venom's origin in the comics and saw how bad it was in comparison to the animated adaptation, with Eddie Brock introduced out of nowhere and clumsily retconned into the backstory through extended infodump flashbacks, as opposed to the way the animated series introduced Brock at the start and organically built up his resentment toward Peter and Spidey. That's no doubt why most subsequent screen adaptations, including the Raimi movies and the later animated series, have tended to emulate the '90s series's version of the symbiote/Venom story.
I absolutely didn't want to imply that the '94 cartoon was bad or anything. But it is 30 years old! There are people born after it and who have already had children. I doubt that Venom has entered the collective imagination like Spider-Man or Superman.
it's reasonable to conclude that the '90s animated series was the most important work in establishing that knowledge, both in itself and in the way it influenced subsequent screen adaptations. Although in more direct terms, Spider-Man 3 was probably the primary source of exposure for the largest number of audience members.
In addition to Venom, the 90s Spider-Man cartoon is also where you can find the origins of Spider-Man dealing with a multiverse and multiversal versions of himself.
I've heard it alleged that Blade the Vampire Hunter's appearance in the '90s show was the reason the Wesley Snipes Blade movies got made, and the show apparently introduced the idea of Blade being half-vampire.
So many of those could have been awesome. I love how confident they are in the James Cameron Spider-Man movie being made.I was looking at the wiki page for the Blade movie and entertainingly one of the footnotes was to a Variety article about Marvel project development in 1992 and it's a fun "What If?" in retrospect. LL Cool J as Blade and Wesley Snipes as Black Panther just as a start.
https://variety.com/1992/film/news/marvel-characters-holding-attraction-for-filmmakers-101955/
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