I wonder what lesson Sony will take from this...
Probably that Morbius, Madame Web and Kraven needed more Tom Hardy.
I wonder what lesson Sony will take from this...
Jokes aside, I don't understand why they never tried to make these movies part of a "Venom-Verse" or something.Probably that Morbius, Madame Web and Kraven needed more Tom Hardy.
They made a lot of wrong moves on these films, why not one more?Jokes aside, I don't understand why they never tried to make these movies part of a "Venom-Verse" or something.
All the wrong ones, probably.I wonder what lesson Sony will take from this...
Madame Web has 11% on Rotten Tomatoes. Does he really think there is a colossal conspiracy of critics and audiences against him???If he honestly thinks these are not bad films...
Madame Web has 11% on Rotten Tomatoes. Does he really think there is a colossal conspiracy of critics and audiences against him???
Same reason WB kept making DC movies without their A-list characters that the general audience would recognize.Well, that's what people on the internet say every time something they like gets a bad review. (Hi, Snyder fans!)
Seriously though, it does answer the question of why they kept making these movies in spite of everything.
These people believe any comic book property would turn in Spider-Man, Batman or Iron Man numbers at the box office. No matter how obscure the character.
Everything not produced by him.Y'gotta wonder what movies that dude does consider to be bad.
There’s an interview here with outgoing Sony CEO Tony Vinciquerra, who, to his credit (IMHO) defends the quality of Kraven and Madame Web, rather than throwing the movies and their makers under a bus. Less creditably (also IMHO), he seems to think that their failures are down to a press vendetta
Great question. I'd be curious to know how involved he is in the production of these films. Maybe he watched the dailies every day and gave directions and advice and now he really believes he contributed to creating misunderstood masterpiecesSeriously though, it does answer the question of why they kept making these movies in spite of everything.
Iron Man was an obscure character to the general public when his first movie came out. The Guardians of the Galaxy were even more obscure when their movie came out. It's getting it backward to say a movie's success depends on the character's prior popularity. Good movies make their characters popular.
The 1990 Captain America feature film was such a dud it wasn't even released theatrically in the US. The 2011 Captain America feature film was such a hit that it spawned an enduring franchise and elevated its lead to superstar status. It's not the character that decides the movie's success. It's the movie that decides the character's success.
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