Again, I will say my pitch for a new Chris Evans movie.
Basically, do a standalone historical movie/prequel, ala The First Avenger. But we follow Steve as a middle-aged dude with kids, trying his best to keep incognito so as not to screw up the timeline/let others know about his superpowers. I'd personally set the movie in 1968, but arguments could be made to put it in other places.
Aside from Peggy Carter, the movie could bring back Howard Stark as a friend who helps Steve keep a low profile. Most interestingly, they could involve Isaiah Bradley as a young-ish man. Steve would also have teenage kids.
What I like about this idea is there are two great aspects of internal conflict that need to be resolved:
- Steve is a guy who wants to do all he can for what is right, but he knows he needs to not be a superhero - publicly - if he wants to ensure the timeline doesn't get screwed up.
- Steve has been changed by his time in the 21st century. Where he was formerly a fish out of water when it came to how "old fashioned" he was, now he's a man ahead of his time. How will he deal with the blatant racism of many during the Civil Rights Movement for example?
I honestly felt FaWS would've been a better Captain America 3
Karli was a terrible villiain, but if you made John Walker into the central antagonist, I think it would have worked quite well as a movie.
Karli was a terrible villiain, but if you made John Walker into the central antagonist, I think it would have worked quite well as a movie.
Woke up to see that even the projected low of $47 million dollars for opening weekend was too high and $45.5 million is more realistic. If that is true, there is now an outside chance that the domestic run struggles to beat the opening weekend for the Taylor Swift concert film.
Regardless it will likely finish at about $100 million (domestic). With those sorts of numbers, I would think that Thunderbolts is dead or at least heavily reworked.
- Steve has been changed by his time in the 21st century. Where he was formerly a fish out of water when it came to how "old fashioned" he was, now he's a man ahead of his time. How will he deal with the blatant racism of many during the Civil Rights Movement for example?
By this logic, they should never have made more movies about Captain America after First Avenger because that film wasn't some super smash.
Quite a difference between "Not a super smash but made money" and "one of the biggest bombs in modern cinema".
Knock off the Doommongering, we're not talking about Batman V Superman here.
Quite a difference between "Not a super smash but made money" and "one of the biggest bombs in modern cinema".
I don't see what the complaints were with Karli, that people thought she should've been portrayed as 100% Psychotic from the very start even though she had legit grievances with the GRC?
John Walker doesn't work as a villain for me.
I'd fear a film with a 21st century-aware Rogers involved in a critical point of American history (specifically one dealing with race) would tend to lead certain writers to have Rogers make speeches / take action from the platform of modern day sociopolitical sensibilities (as if he attained a level of wisdom those in the struggle cannot see / comprehend), which would be quite offensive to many black movie-goers.
You know, it's weird how this so-called "bomb" made more than five times as much money in the opening weekend as anything else: https://www.the-numbers.com/box-office-chart/weekend/2023/11/10
Looking at this chart of weekend box office so far this year, it seems that profits have been down for months. In the past three months, the only films to do better than The Marvels on their opening weekends were that Taylor Swift tour movie and Five Nights at Freddy's. It seems likely that moviegoing in general is down, perhaps due to the actors' strike inhibiting the promotion of new films.
And look at that last column. As a percentage of the weekend's total box office, The Marvels opened proportionally better than the smash hit Barbie, getting 55% of the weekend's total box office while Barbie only got 52% in its debut (though that's because Oppenheimer got a fair chunk of the rest). Percentage-wise, that's the weakest opening for a Marvel movie this year, but it's better than Indiana Jones or Mission: Impossible's opening percentage, and just slightly below Across the Spider-Verse.
So despite the narrative some people are eager to spin, it seems the problem is not with The Marvels, the problem is that moviegoing is down overall.
the only films to do better than The Marvels on their opening weekends were that Taylor Swift tour movie and Five Nights at Freddy's.
Knock off the Doommongering, we're not talking about Batman V Superman here.
It's actually kind of shocking to me how much money Marvel Studios has historically wasted on reshoots. In some cases it seems like (as is the case with Secret Invasion) they essentially made a product twice, with the first version never seeing the light of day. It would be way easier to make a mid-budget film if they just stuck to the final script and filmed in a more orderly fashion.
* Friday Nights at Freddy's cost $20 million to make, has taken $251 million, with a video on-demand release on the first friday.
* The Taylor Swift movie looks to have cost $10 - $20 million to produce and has taken $240 million.
* The Marvels looks to have cost about $250 million to make and looks to make about $180 million.
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