No, it doesn't. The DCEU Harley Quinn has entered the cultural zeitgeist in a major way, to the point that she's getting her own movie, and somebody at DC believes the same of Deadshot since there are discussions going on about giving him a solo film as well.
I will certainly agree that Margot Robbie's Harley has entered the cultural zeitgeist; I think this has happened on the strength of Robbie's talents as an actor, on the bold outlines of the character as set out by Paul Dini on
The Animated Series back in the day, and on the strength of the costume design (which is both memorable and sexually charged). But I would still contend that
Suicide Squad failed her as a character: her emotional journey is utter nonsense. She goes from maliciously trying to manipulate and harm everyone around her, to being willing to abandon everyone for the Joker, to bonding with the team and with Deadshot in particular, to running back to the Joker, all prompted by... not much, really. Whatever arc she has in learning to care about others is nullified by the film's ending, and there wasn't even much of a rhyme or reason to why she started to bond with the team.
David Ayers was only given six weeks to write the thing, and it shows.
Deadshot? Was just Will Smith Will-Smithing.
As for
Doctor Strange not on
anyone's best-of-2016 lists… yeah, time for you to reconsider. Check out
#6 (and #10 BTW)…
Well, we're running into some mutual misunderstandings about people vs. critics, then, because I was talking about critics when I talked about
Doctor Strange and
Ant-Man not being on anyone's Top Ten list. They're both competent but middling films.
You (and others replying to me) keep talking about people. I never said anything about people, only about critics (or those who think they're critics in YouTube). Again let's see what critics gave to that disappointment…
Marvel's Avengers: Age of Ultron: 75% fresh tomatometer
Okay, first off, you do understand that Rotten Tomatoes is an aggregate of how many critics gave a movie a score that was on balance positive, rather than an ordinal measurement of a film's quality, right?
Secondly -- yeah, 75% of critics gave
Avengers: Age of Ultron a positive score vs. only like 55% of critics giving
Man of Steel a positive score. Because
Avengers: Age of Ultron, even with its structural problems, is a better movie than
Man of Steel.
It is not that the logo determines whether or not critics like a given movie.
X-Men: Apocalypse wasn't from Marvel Studios, but it had the Marvel logo up front just like the generally well-regarded
X-Men: First Class (86%) and
X-Men: Days of Future Past (91%), and it only got a 48% on RT -- lower than
Man of Steel, I might add. Meanwhile,
The Amazing Spider-Man 2 has a low score at 52%, lower than
Man of Steel.
And for that matter, Christopher Nolan's
Dark Knight films are of course more highly-regarded than the DCEU that followed them, and have higher scores than roughly half the MCU films.
To allege that a film's branding as either a "Marvel" film or not is what determines its critical appraisal is just silly, especially since your preferred metric does not measure relative quality but rather the aggregate of positive vs. negative reviews. It also requires you to ignore several instances in which "Marvel"-branded films have scored lower than non-Marvel branded movies, including one DCEU film.
Meanwhile, every time I and others point out objective problems with the structure, editing, and writing of DCEU films, we're ignored or the flaws are excused away. It's like being on a message board in the early 2000s dedicated to trying to prove that shows like
Mutant X and
Relic Hunter were not mediocre.
Sorry, but the three DCEU films so far have gotten lower scores than MCU films because Marvel Studios is better at the nuts and bolts of basic writing and editing. Their films are structurally more competent than
Batman v. Superman and
Suicide Squad, and they have a greater understanding of and affection for their source material than Snyder has for Superman in
Man of Steel. They get better scores because they are better movies. It's that simple.