That's not a accurate reflection of what normal non-fans/normal audience members who they are trying to target will know about.
The 1980 movie was pretty popular and everybody knows the Queen soundtrack.
That's not a accurate reflection of what normal non-fans/normal audience members who they are trying to target will know about.
There was a 1980 Flash Movie?The 1980 movie was pretty popular and everybody knows the Queen soundtrack.
There was a 1980 Flash Movie?
Ah, IC.I assume it's a joke about the Dino De Laurentiis Flash Gordon movie.
I'm not sure if I'm being clear here, I'm not talking about fans of the TV show specifically, all I meant was that a lot of people must have been aware of and interested in the character since the show's pilot and early episodes, which would have been before people had any attachment to that specific version of the character, did really well.
So obviously The Flash was not a totally unknown character that nobody care about, since people were able to make the show's early episodes a success based solely on the fact that it was The Flash.
OK, yes technically this version of the character was introduced on Arrow, but I think The Flash did a lot better than Arrow, so obviously a lot of people who didn't watch Arrow did watch The Flash.
Also, the Flash movie just sucked.
Also, the Flash movie just sucked.
I feel like geek fandom was a lot more aware of Miller's issues than was the general public, which is where the real money is made for a tentpole feature like this. IOW, I question how much effect it actually had.
People who read Variety are a different flavor of geek.I'm sure his issues probably were reported by places like Variety and other entertainment sites that don't focus on geek fandom.
People who read Variety are a different flavor of geek.
Right. Average "let's go see a movie" guy/gal on the street is lucky if they know who Ezra Miller is, much less the allegations against them.People who read Variety are a different flavor of geek.
True, they like romcoms or musicals as well.Though probably far wider in interests than your garden variety TrekBBS geek.![]()
Right. Average "let's go see a movie" guy/gal on the street is lucky if they know who Ezra Miller is, much less the allegations against them.
Yeah, but when it comes to names like this, spelling in important, so technically SuperGirl would be a different character from Supergirl.I know it doesn't work that way by "Official English Language Rules".
But I'm going to do what I want based on what I desire.
So yeah, there's that.
And to keep this in the comic book realm, nobody but the most hardcore Marvel readers had ever heard of the Guardians of the Galaxy before 2014. I was originally going to use Iron Man as an example, but I think he had at least a little bit of name recognition by the time the first movie came out, especially compared to the Guardians, who were complete unknowns.Which shouldn't matter. Nobody had heard of Indiana Jones before 1981. Nobody had heard of John Wick before 2014. Successful movies make their characters popular, not the other way around.
The character was also referred to quite a bit on The Big Bang Theory, which was one of the most popular shows on TV for a while.No, that's insanely reductionist. Yes, Flash is a b lister compared to Batman. No, that is not the same as z listers who most people have never heard like the gotg. Flash has been a comics mainstay for most of DC's history, a cartoon mainstay for decades, a video game mainstay for many years, the star of two live action tv shows, and regularly referenced on other (non-dc) shows as well as had tons of prominent merch ever since 'nerdy' became 'cool'.
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