I personally find the Kang variant thing really diminishing to feeling anything about any specific one (especially going forward). After Loki and now this "Oh well, Kang's dead/defeated... Just bring in the next one."
I don't disagree. But it's fairly impossible not to see the trailer. Even if I don't go out of my way to watch the trailer it will pop up on social media, advertisements on the internet, TV, Billboards, trains etc.I don't understand why people watch trailers. I avoid them so that I'm actually surprised when something cool happens.
On top of that, Marvel just has to put the title and date of release. We'll be there. Like anyone who say Infinity War really needed a trailer to get them to go see Endgame? Waste of advertising dollars.
I personally find the Kang variant thing really diminishing to feeling anything about any specific one (especially going forward). After Loki and now this "Oh well, Kang's dead/defeated... Just bring in the next one."
I suspect that this is the story that the MCU wanted to tell, especially in regard to the Multiverse. I'm not familiar with the comic book tale, but what exactly were the variants' goal?
After seeing Jonathan Majors' appearance on Colbert the other night, I realized there's one thing from the film we haven't discussed here:
Do we think Kang was being truthful about some great big threat in the far future or was it just something to goad Scott about? I probably would've thought the latter until Scott had his anxiety attack about it at the end of the film. Maybe that was played for laughs but what if there was something to it? And if so, what or who would that threat be? Galactus feels like small potatoes in comparison to the existence of Kang and my knowledge of the greater cosmic realms of Marvel is limited.
That... is not an easy question to answer. Perhaps this will help.Can you elaborate? I haven't read comics regular in nearly 30 years and everything I know since then I've picked up because of the MCU or related content that encouraged me to read up on specific storylines well after the fact.
Can you elaborate? I haven't read comics regular in nearly 30 years and everything I know since then I've picked up because of the MCU or related content that encouraged me to read up on specific storylines well after the fact.
I'm sort of with them.
Someone being trapped in the Quantum Realm doesn't need to happen 3 movies in a row.
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