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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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I never said physical media was dead, I said it was dying a rapid death.

And my point is that it's premature to assume its death is inevitable, because that's what people said about vinyl decades ago and they were proven wrong. The point is, don't make assumptions ahead of time. They often end up embarrassing in retrospect. There are as many forms of media whose imminent death has been predicted as there are forms of media. Print is dead, theater is dead, movies are dead, it's all been claimed. So I have good reason to be skeptical of any such prediction.
 
And my point is that it's premature to assume its death is inevitable, because that's what people said about vinyl decades ago and they were proven wrong. The point is, don't make assumptions ahead of time. They often end up embarrassing in retrospect. There are as many forms of media whose imminent death has been predicted as there are forms of media. Print is dead, theater is dead, movies are dead, it's all been claimed. So I have good reason to be skeptical of any such prediction.

So you battled something I didn't actually say and accused me of moving goalposts, and are now backtracking to say, "Well, actually, I was saying this."
 
And my point is that it's premature to assume its death is inevitable, because that's what people said about vinyl decades ago and they were proven wrong. The point is, don't make assumptions ahead of time. They often end up embarrassing in retrospect. There are as many forms of media whose imminent death has been predicted as there are forms of media. Print is dead, theater is dead, movies are dead, it's all been claimed. So I have good reason to be skeptical of any such prediction.
Vinyl might have made a comeback, but 8 track, VHS, and laser disc seem to be pretty much staying dead.
 
And my point is that it's premature to assume its death is inevitable, because that's what people said about vinyl decades ago and they were proven wrong.
Vinyl is dead as a commercially viable product for home media consumption. Aside from the relatively tiny market of audiophiles and a few quirky artists, there's no one buying or selling vinyl.
It's a niche of a niche.

I believe Blu Ray will survive long term as will DVD's, in the face of VSOD the market is nowhere near as robust as 10 years ago, but BR has the advantage of, once you own it you own it and don't need to worry if your favorite streamer no longer licenses your favorite shows, or ads or whatever.
I do agree that every day run of the mill shows are less likely to get a BR or DVD run as "blockbuster" and tentpole shows will, but I don't think the market is disappearing as fast.
People have realized that streaming is a lot more fickle than it used to be which means more people will be buying physical media.
 
I believe Blu Ray will survive long term as will DVD's, in the face of VSOD the market is nowhere near as robust as 10 years ago, but BR has the advantage of, once you own it you own it and don't need to worry if your favorite streamer no longer licenses your favorite shows, or ads or whatever.

My PS3 (Playstation) which is two generations behind the current just got a patch just to update the blu-ray player to be able to play newer discs. So it's encroaching a little bit even on the physical media out there. It would be possible to have a blu-ray movie and a player and they won't play without updating the license keys.

It will be interesting to see where this goes as we had into a future with less and less permanent media. Will there be any changes going forward to define and protect digital purchases?
 
Vinyl is dead as a commercially viable product for home media consumption. Aside from the relatively tiny market of audiophiles and a few quirky artists, there's no one buying or selling vinyl.
It's a niche of a niche.

HMV shops in the UK stock a lot of vinyl and most new albums by big artists seem to come out on vinyl, here at least.
 
You have to admire the balls on Feige. Reading a live-blog of his CinemaCon presentation he's still doing his usual routine acting like it's 2019 and last years of failures never happened.

Cap 4 is “a grounded political thriller” which was what they called "Secret Invasion" and we saw how well that went.

Calling the Thunderbolts movie Thunderbolts was apparently too sensible an idea so it's now officially Thunderbolts*

Fantastic Four will be shot 100% in IMAX format.
 
You have to admire the balls on Feige. Reading a live-blog of his CinemaCon presentation he's still doing his usual routine acting like it's 2019 and last years of failures never happened.

Cap 4 is “a grounded political thriller” which was what they called "Secret Invasion" and we saw how well that went.

Calling the Thunderbolts movie Thunderbolts was apparently too sensible an idea so it's now officially Thunderbolts*

Fantastic Four will be shot 100% in IMAX format.

I love how things are a tad lackluster and suddenly it's "Years of failures", I love how fickle you are.

Phase 4 was better than most of Phases 1 and 2.
 
Small spoiler from the Captain America footage from CinemaCon

It seems there are indeed no Avengers at this time, because in the footage Ross asks Sam to help rebuild the Avengers.
 
Small spoiler from the Captain America footage from CinemaCon

It seems there are indeed no Avengers at this time, because in the footage Ross asks Sam to help rebuild the Avengers.
That's pretty rich considering the events of Civil War. :lol:
 
That doesn't follow. SI didn't fail because of its genre, but because of its execution. After all, Captain America: The Winter Soldier was a relatively grounded political thriller, and it was a huge success.

Political thriller? Please. It was a story about a chemically boosted super soldier fighting a brainwashed uber-assassin with a cybernetic arm and ultimately saving the world from a bunch of flying aircraft carriers armed with artificial intelligence programmed to eliminate any and all potential threats to Hydra hegemony.

Just because Robert Redford was in it in no way makes The Winter Soldier a "political thriller."
 
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