I hope Ben worked "It's clobbering' time" into his first words on the Moon.
I hope they do better than the last movie, where that line turned out to be what his abusive brother said before he beat him up...
I hope Ben worked "It's clobbering' time" into his first words on the Moon.
You know that that line will be used twice in the movie--once at the beginning, probably as a joke or right before Ben gets beat up, and then at the end as the team is about to take on the hordes who are working for whomever the big bad is.
You know that that line will be used twice in the movie--once at the beginning, probably as a joke or right before Ben gets beat up, and then at the end as the team is about to take on the hordes who are working for whomever the big bad is.
That's how the Josh Trank movie did it, establishing "It's clobberin' time" as what Ben's abusive older brother said before beating Ben up, which was horrible and totally ruined it. So please, please, no, don't let them do anything remotely like that.
Or maybe this version of Ben decided after all these years of being abused, he decided to take one part of that and made it his own. As part of his healing process. I'm not saying that is the best way to deal with it, but everyone needs to deal with their trauma in their own way without judgement.
I'm all for it, too. With rumors circulating that the Blade film will at least partly be set in the '70s, and with the Ant-Man flashbacks being set in the '80s and Captain Marvel in the '90s, I'd love to see the MCU's take on the '60s to keep filling in the gap of time between Cap going on ice at the end of World War II and Stark inventing the Iron Man armor in the modern era.
And Dum Dum Dugan.I would love to Peggy Carter as the head of SHIELD and Howard Stark in the 60's Fantastic Four era.
And then in the first media article about the box office.You know that that line will be used twice in the movie--once at the beginning, probably as a joke or right before Ben gets beat up, and then at the end as the team is about to take on the hordes who are working for whomever the big bad is.
Iron Man might be a close second. His origin literally takes place in Vietnam. Many of his early foes were Russian and Chinese agents.The FF were characters with origins so intrinsically formed by the Cold War (unlike any other Marvel Silver Age creation),
Count me in for the 1960s also!
Iron Man might be a close second. His origin literally takes place in Vietnam. Many of his early foes were Russian and Chinese agents.
I've been wanting a '60s FF since Peyton Reed was connected. I'm actually pleasantly surprised if they truly end up going this route. Yes, there will be a time jump at some point ala Captain America, but I won't complain about that.
At least 6 of us here are in agreement.This.
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Except the time frame wasn't the problem. The problem, in part, was focusing on the origin, so a good way to set it apart is not to do that again. I was hoping the MCU would do with the FF what it did with Black Widow, Black Panther, Spider-Man, and the like, introducing them in the background of a few earlier films to establish their presence in the universe before giving them their own movie.
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As I've said, I have no intrinsic issue with the idea in and of itself; I just don't see how to reconcile a period setting in the MCU with the intrinsically cutting-edge, highly public nature of what the FF do. It's one thing when the characters operate in secret, but that's out of character for the FF. Surely that's the overriding concern -- to be true to the characters and the spirit of the series. I just see a period setting working against that, unless it's an alternate reality.
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That's how it's been presented to me, and I've been reading FF comics since '76-'77.
Reed = Water
Sue = Air
Johnny = Fire
Ben = Earth.
It might have been retroactive on Stan Lee's part, or it may have come from Roy Thomas or Gerry Conway, the writers who replaced Lee on the title.
That's one way to look at it. Another one is...
Reed, who already had doctorates by the time he was twenty (yet doesn't call himself a doctor and is always seeking to learn more) has an elastic mind. Sue, at least at first, had self-esteem issues and was shy to the point of being 'invisible' around people. Johnny, as already mentioned, is a hothead. Ben, stubborn and solid as a rock. In other words, their powers were outgrowths of their personalities.
It's not that they need to be tied to the 60s, it's that they already are. When folks picture the Fantastic Four, the platonic version that swims into their heads is often the 60s version in a way that isn't true for most other Marvel characters. Just look at this thread.
(I'm not in favor of a period piece myself. I'm explaining the 'why,' not agreeing with it. I have little time for nostalgia in general.)
I'm "folks" too, and I've never seen them that way, so please don't overgeneralize. Sure, I saw the '60s and '70s animated series from time to time growing up, but my familiarity with the FF is mostly from the '90s and '00s animated series and various 21st-century comics. Most of the FF content I've read or watched in my life does not depict them in a retro or nostalgic way. I haven't read them as extensively as some other characters, but I gather that the John Byrne era from 1981-86 is considered a "second golden age," just as classic and influential as the original Lee-Kirby run, and a lot of the most admired FF comics work has been done post-2000.
So that's what I'm asking. You're asserting that people associate the FF with the '60s, but if that's so, why do they see it that way? That's what I'm trying to understand, where that alleged association comes from, because it's absolutely news to me that it's a thing.
So is that official art, or just some fan art that looks pretty cool?
You know that that line will be used twice in the movie--once at the beginning, probably as a joke or right before Ben gets beat up, and then at the end as the team is about to take on the hordes who are working for whomever the big bad is.
As you just pointed out, the writing of that movie, by twisting "good things" into bad sank it.... not that they used the origin -- but rather, like the part YOU just pointed out, a lot of good stuff was trashed (rather than "updated" in a way that would still work -- like Tobey's organic webshooters)That's how the Josh Trank movie did it, establishing "It's clobberin' time" as what Ben's abusive older brother said before beating Ben up, which was horrible and totally ruined it. So please, please, no, don't let them do anything remotely like that.
True; the MCU would feel expansive if it had more films not all chained to the present day. The FF were characters with origins so intrinsically formed by the Cold War (unlike any other Marvel Silver Age creation), that attempts to shoehorn them into the present day (with its often rinsed and repeated scripting and characterization) gutted the essence of what a Cold War-aligned Fantastic Four meant to the early years of a Marvel Universe.
It would be a challenge to get right but that would be an interesting direction to takeView attachment 38661
The reason different creative keep coming back to the period setting is that it's so clearly appropriate for this bunch.
They don't.Since when do movie audiences decide which movie to watch based on the production cost?
Recast NamorWell..... that sure ain't happening int he MCU... even if they had a FLashback to SUbmariner, we now have issues with that actor, so it's not worth a Retcon for him.... Bucky Disappeared before he could really be brought in (at least to this group), and apparently the HUman Torch was retired by the time Steve enlisted.
If it looks like a movie that is worth that much. .. usually those that had a lot of money spent, like Avatar or any of the Avengers. And most executives wouldn't spend a lot if they didn't think it was worth it.Since when do movie audiences decide which movie to watch based on the production cost?
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