She'll only use them for a few minutes in the last act of every episode.A good TV effect house could probably do it from a technical standpoint, but for the two or three dozen shots needed per episode? It just doesn't seem financially viable to me.

She'll only use them for a few minutes in the last act of every episode.A good TV effect house could probably do it from a technical standpoint, but for the two or three dozen shots needed per episode? It just doesn't seem financially viable to me.

That was a fun couple of hours. They made a really fun origin story for Wonder Woman. Pine and Gadot had great chemistry together and Diana and Steve were a great couple together. The WW1 elements were fine but the team of oddballs that Trevor and Diana assemble to help them are pretty derivative of Captain America. In many ways they really are not needed, though a few lines about each to give some hints of the darkness in the world and help Diana see she's come to this fight with a far too simplistic view of the issues in the world beyond Themiscyra. They go by quick, though, couldn't get much exploration without slowing the middle of the film down further than it was. Very entertaining, none the less.

The only MCU character that was somewhat known to the general public prior to MCU being a thing is Hulk, and his solo movie did the worst of them all.
So all this "Marvel doesn't have a popular female character" is empty talk. Where there's will there's a way, but there obviously was no will in the MCU, because for a long time they have made little to no effort to stray away from the straight white male protagonist.
For more than a half century
Heck, Ms. Marvel can't really exist in the MCU in the way she does in the comics without Carol Danvers to inspire her …
To be frank, those are really stupid reasons not to make a movie about Kamala Khan rather than Carol Danvers. Being inspired by Captain Marvel is a rather insignificant aspect of her story. You could pretty much ignore that tiny detail (something they always do anyway when they adapt those origin stories for the big screen) or let her be inspired by another established MCU character if you must keep that aspect. I just think she a more interesting character with the potential to be a bigger hit for Marvel.The only (and I stress "only") problem I have with Kamala being part of the MCU just yet is the plot logistics of her name. That is in the comics she chose the name because she idolised Carol Danvers, who right now is still several years from making her debut.
To be frank, those are really stupid reasons not to make a movie about Kamala Khan rather than Carol Danvers. Being inspired by Captain Marvel is a rather insignificant aspect of her story. You could pretty much ignore that tiny detail (something they always do anyway when they adapt those origin stories for the big screen) or let her be inspired by another established MCU character if you must keep that aspect. I just think she a more interesting character with the potential to be a bigger hit for Marvel.
Sorry, I might have read you wrong there. I thought you said you were “having a problem with Kamala being part of the MCU” because of “the plot logistics of her name”. I understood the “having a problem with it” part as you saying that alone would be reason enough not to make a movie. Again, sorry.To be frank, I never said this is reason enough not to make a movie featuring Kamala.
I guess I still don't see what the problem is, though, and I think you are overstating the importance of how she got her name. There are a number of ways you could have Kamala Khan the character and call her Captain or Ms. Marvel without her having been a Carol Danvers fangirl. I just don't see her backstory and her name as “inexorably tied”.What I *did* say is that it's just a bothersome matter of plot logistics as to how they can use *that* name in the MCU as it is. It is after all the name of the company and just from a branding perspective, not something to be tossed around carelessly. The question is how to get from here to there.
At this point I don't think we'll ever see Kamala Khan, a dark-skinned Muslim girl, as the main character of a superhero blockbuster movie. Marvel just wants to play it safe with this one, unfortunately.It's all rather academic though since the fact of the matter is that the Carol Danvers movie is well underway and even if a Kamala project was greenlit right now it wouldn't be in theatres for several years.
At this point I don't think we'll ever see Kamala Khan, a dark-skinned Muslim girl, as the main character of a superhero blockbuster movie. Marvel just wants to play it safe with this one, unfortunately.
Really? Which is that?In other news, there's a Muslim-American character, played by an Iranian actress, starring on a DC TV show this fall...![]()

I guess I still don't see what the problem is, though, and I think you are overstating the importance of how she got her name. There are a number of ways you could have Kamala Khan the character and call her Captain or Ms. Marvel without her having been a Carol Danvers fangirl. I just don't see her backstory and her name as “inexorably tied”.
Honestly, I think it's inevitable. It'll just take a little while is all. Even at three movies a year plus several TV shows on the go, Marvel has one hell of a backlog of characters to get through.At this point I don't think we'll ever see Kamala Khan, a dark-skinned Muslim girl, as the main character of a superhero blockbuster movie. Marvel just wants to play it safe with this one, unfortunately.
Really? Which is that?![]()
To be frank, those are really stupid reasons not to make a movie about Kamala Khan rather than Carol Danvers. Being inspired by Captain Marvel is a rather insignificant aspect of her story. You could pretty much ignore that tiny detail (something they always do anyway when they adapt those origin stories for the big screen) or let her be inspired by another established MCU character if you must keep that aspect. I just think she a more interesting character with the potential to be a bigger hit for Marvel.
Doesn't Carol has a "problem " similar to Ms Marvel? Her comics origin is tied to Mar-Vell.
While I do like Kamala, I largely agree with Kirk (Hey! It happens sometimes!) that Carol is the better character.
Also, I would also ask a similar question of a Kamala movie that I did of a Natasha movie-- What does this bring to the MCU story-scape? Again, like I said with Natasha, I have no doubt that a good movie could be crafted around Kamala, I just don't see what it will bring to the larger MCU other than the story of a teen-ager super-hero and Spider-Man is the far superior and much more obvious (and profitable) choice to do that.
Besides, Kamala is an Inhuman, and that particular story-point is rather confined to the TV shows.

I'd hardly call teenagers or women "a very narrow niche" audience. I'm pretty sure together they make up a large chunk of the existing audience, never mind the population in general.RE: Teenage superheros-- I'm thinking in terms of Marvel Studios and their output. They have a very narrow niche and a limited amount of slots open every year and tend to struggle from repeating themselves as it is. If they hadn't gotten Spider-Man, then Ms. Marvel would be less repetitive. Everyone says "Marvel should make this movie and Marvel should make that movie" as if the thought were all there was to the process.
You're assuming a consistency of plotting from a studio that just last year hired a freakin' trailer company to re-edit Suicide Squad, and which had no idea while making Man of Steel that Gotham and Metropolis practically adjoin each other.I find it much more plausible that the movie's happy, pretty-sunset coda was a reshoot to send the audience out on an upbeat note, rather than the downbeat and narratively consistent one they'd originally intended. Or maybe it wasn't a reshoot at all, and Jenkins was ignoring that clear implication of BvS from the start. Either way, I'm about zero percent convinced that Snyder didn't mean for Diana to have turned her back on humanity in general when he made BvS.
Why is Diana said to be at "school" if she's the only child? Wouldn't it just be "tutoring", then? And when was she born? Given that the rest of the women are apparently immortal, why are some women about adult Diana's age while others are older? Was she a child for centuries?
Where has Zeus been this whole time? Is he still alive? How was Ares able to kill all the gods except him? And why does he want to destroy humanity when he's the God of War who, y'know, loves war and warriors (see: Homer)? He's not the classical Ares at all, but instead a mix of Satan and Ultron, I guess?
Why was the German ship listing/sinking? If it ran aground/hit a rock, what happened to its crew? Also, how was a ship only minutes behind a biplane? And why the day/night change? Is Themiscryra merely cloaked, is it cloaked and impenetrable, or can it only be entered sometimes? Was it penetrable because Diana did her bracelets shockwave? If so... why?
To be frank, those are really stupid reasons not to make a movie about Kamala Khan rather than Carol Danvers. Being inspired by Captain Marvel is a rather insignificant aspect of her story. You could pretty much ignore that tiny detail (something they always do anyway when they adapt those origin stories for the big screen) or let her be inspired by another established MCU character if you must keep that aspect. I just think she a more interesting character with the potential to be a bigger hit for Marvel.
Wouldn't be the first time.es, Gotham and Metropolis adjoined each other across a bay-so what? This is a rebooted universe, for all we know, they've always been like that.
We use essential cookies to make this site work, and optional cookies to enhance your experience.