We saw the Torch himself in Captain America the First Avenger (at the 25 second mark)...
Appropriate, since Chris Evans had previously played the other character known as the Human Torch. I wonder if that was an intentional nod.
We saw the Torch himself in Captain America the First Avenger (at the 25 second mark)...
That was it, thanks. I had thought it was just a mannequin wearing his costume, I didn't realize it was actually him.
In his original appearance in the comic, he had to be kept in the tube or else he would... burst into flame.I had always thought it was just a mannequin. It is kind of mean if it were the actual torch. Maybe it is just an early prototype. I would love to see a WWII Invaders movie.
That would be fantastic. Kerry Condon is a terrific actress and I would love to see her have a bigger role in the MCU.Next up Kerry Condon as F.R.I.D.A.Y.?
Always a guest star after one film. Frank Price must be smiling about the level of control one studio had/has over a property.After what feels like years of made-up leaks it looks like hard facts about the next Spider-Man movie are finally out there courtesy of information being given to potential merchandisers.
The film's villains are (so far)
Scorpion, Tombstone, and Boomerang and... the Hulk. (Green, not red.)
Just...no.Hmm, if that's the case:
introduce Wolverine...
I think it's interesting to note that three out of the last four MCU movies released gave the impression of needing to know about Disney+ content in order to be enjoyed.
All of these movies underperformed. The only movie during this period which was a smash hit (Deadpool and Wolverine) pretty much ignored Disney+, other than using some of the background of Loki, like the TVA, though other than Hunter B-15 having a brief cameo, we didn't see any of the characters from that show.
- The Marvels involved characters and plot lines from Ms. Marvel and Wandavision
- Captain America: Brave New World involved background from The Falcon & The Winter Soldier
- Thunderbolts also involved The Falcon & The Winter Soldier
An alternative narrative is there were too many earlier missteps like Quantumania and Love and Thunder, which burned casual fans enough that they tuned out to "Mid CU" Or perhaps that even a lot of superfans are fine waiting a few months to see them on Disney+.
FF will be an interesting test, because the marketing is explicitly screaming "fresh" and "new" in such a way as to make it clear you don't really need to have prior MCU experience to get much out of the film. If it's a success, it would suggest that "MCU films got to be too much work to follow" is the correct narrative.
It's continuity porn in the same sense that No Way Home was continuity porn, though, largely built up on nostalgia for an older set of Marvel movies.
I wouldn't be surprised if more people overall have seen the Netflix era shows than the Disney+ shows, however, given they've been out for awhile, and Netflix had much deeper market penetration.
I would love to see a WWII Invaders movie.
Process of elimination: remove the endless tethers to previously released productions which were considered important enough to tie into new productions, and you end up with Deadpool and Wolverine.
Overall, the Netflix Marvel series were more enjoyable than the bulk of the D+ content.
Do we really have to go around and around and around this circular exchange again and again and again?You end up with gutless, soulless fanservice that isn't worth more than 1 watch and relies on decades old movies rather than anything creative or smart?
Nah, they were made for people ashamed of comics. And all of them except DD fell apart in less than 1 season. Netflix never would've had the balls to make something like "Agatha All Along".
Do we really have to go around and around and around this circular exchange again and again and again?
That would be asking for too much. This is the internet after all.Do we really have to go around and around and around this circular exchange again and again and again?
gutless
I always forget Jenna Coleman is (briefly) in the first Captain America film.We saw the Torch himself in Captain America the First Avenger (at the 25 second mark)...
Now THAT would be a deep cut callback. I wonder if Marvel would be willing to do it at the same time that they're reintroducing Johnny Storm?
'Desperate', 'grasping at straws', hell, even 'lazy' is a better description of the behaviour you ascribe them.What would you call it, bringing back old characters out outstayed their welcome?
I just think that if people are wrong about something, the rest of us shouldn't change the way we do things to pander to their wrongness, but should stick to our guns and stand up for what's right. How are they ever going to learn they're wrong if we all act as if their opinions are actually valid?
Except NWH was more than that, because it used the continuity in an effective way that served the characters. D&W was more just wallowing in self-referentiality for its own sake. I definitely feel nostalgia and reference are overused these days, but NWH was the only one of the Holland Spidey trilogy that I particularly liked, because it told a good story with what it used, and that matters more than where the elements of that story came from.
As I often say, what matters isn't what a story does, but how it does it. The same story device can be brilliantly utilized in one movie and poorly in another. Which is why it's misguided to try to find some generalized formula or factor that explains why movies do or don't work. The only thing that determines that is each film's individual merits. And of course, there are many cases where excellent movies like The Marvels fail at the box office through no fault of their own. Just try Googling for lists of now-classic movies that were box-office failures, and you'll get plenty of hits. There is no way to define a universal formula for success, any more than there's a formula for winning at slot machines. It's always a gamble.
Correlation does not imply causation. And you're making the profound mistake of ignoring the high percentage of casual moviegoers who don't closely follow MCU continuity anyway but are just looking for somewhere to take a date or their kids for a night out, or who are there to see an actor that they like. Casual audiences are far more decisive to any film's success or failure than dedicated fans.
My only point is featuring a character/plot previously in a TV show is not a guaranteed draw for general audiences.
Also. as others noted, Feige and other Marvel insiders have decided this is the cause. They very well might be wrong - finding the cause for a "vibe shift" is often pretty difficult. But they're groping around for the reasons for the box office slide, so some sort of retool is inevitable.
Next up Kerry Condon as F.R.I.D.A.Y.?
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