I'm surprised, you'd think Disney would want to have the more family friendly version on there too.
I read speculation that it's an asterisk on a computer and the title of the film will be changed midway through or at the end to 'Dark Avengers'.Just realised there was no mention of 'Blade' at the presentation of Marvel's upcoming movies. It's never getting made, is it?
And allegedly (so could be total bull) the "*" in Thunderbolts will be replaced by "Part One" on release.
Not that, so much as I'm surprised they didn't choose the include the more family friendly version that is closer to their usual image.Fear of people showing their kids the R-rated versions by mistake?
Not that, so much as I'm surprised they didn't choose the include the more family friendly version that is closer to their usual image.
Yeah, but in most of those cases they didn't actually use the Disney name, unlike Disney+. But I think now people are maybe a little more open to things like Disney expanding beyond what they're known for.
I think maybe at one time it was about branding (see Disney creating Touchstone label to keep the more adult stuff away from the 'mouse')
Michael B. Jordan was a better Johnny.
I think that's the first positive thing I've ever seen anyone say about that movie.
That pretty much all I got.I think that's the first positive thing I've ever seen anyone say about that movie.
I have absolutely no idea what you're talking about.EW.com has an interview with Joseph Quinn about playing Johnny Storm in the new Fantastic Four and about the movie in general.
They talk quite a bit about the two '00s movies, but I couldn't help but notice there was no mention of Fan4stic. So are we all just pretending that one never happened now?
I can't agree.Originally, Disney tried releasing PG-rated films like The Black Hole, The Watcher in the Woods, Dragonslayer, and TRON under their own name, but the audience's prejudices attached to the name hurt those films' box office.
No matter the motivation it seems the result was the same: to keep it away from the mouse.No, it wasn't to keep it away from the "mouse." Originally, Disney tried releasing PG-rated films like The Black Hole, The Watcher in the Woods, Dragonslayer, and TRON under their own name, but the audience's prejudices attached to the name hurt those films' box office. So the motivation behind the Touchstone name wasn't about the studio's desire to keep the Disney name pure, it was about getting around the audience's preconceptions about the name. Disney themselves would've happily embraced a reputation for a broader, more adult selection of films, and spent several years attempting to build that reputation, but the audience wouldn't go along with it. So they had to give up trying to change their image and just started releasing the more mature stuff under a pseudonym.
I didn't realize all of that stuff aired on Disney+ outside the US.
I can't agree.
The Black Hole was eagerly awaited and hopefully received, but the film was too awful to be more successful than it was. The fault lies in the film itself.
Tron was actually quite successful, regardless of the Hollywood accounting practiced by Disney; it simply didn't achieve major blockbuster success.
No matter the motivation it seems the result was the same: to keep it away from the mouse.
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