Marvel Comics Universe Phase 3.......
Discussion
GarryDK said:
Good: Because it's fricking awesome and he's important for Civil War. Bad: Because we've had a lot of Spiderman over the last decade and now we have to have a new one. Again.
Beefmeister said:
Another new Spidey? Jesus, talk about ruining a franchise.
I actually thought Andrew Garfield was good in the latest reboot.
I'd happily keep him on but it screws up continuity as you couldn't really have two such major events happening in NY without referencing the other. Shame. I actually thought Andrew Garfield was good in the latest reboot.
I hope we can just skip the origin story and get on with it, we all know who he is where he comes from. Just a shame Sony and Marvel didn't get their st together earlier.
Those charts earlier on in the thread are so depressing, where's the creative process? To have it mapped out like that for the next SIX years, it's like some project plan with targets to be met by a deadline, so that the studio makes $X million dollars by year Y, rather than anything remotely creative or spontaneous going on.
How someone can be excited about a project plan like that I do not know.
The same is happening with Star Wars now Disney has it (massive SW fan), and that saddens me too.
Studios dictating the release schedule for entire franchises far in advance, is destroying the movie experience imo.
How someone can be excited about a project plan like that I do not know.
The same is happening with Star Wars now Disney has it (massive SW fan), and that saddens me too.
Studios dictating the release schedule for entire franchises far in advance, is destroying the movie experience imo.
Edited by ReallyReallyGood on Tuesday 10th February 09:54
ReallyReallyGood said:
Those charts earlier on in the thread are so depressing, where's the creative process? To have it mapped out like that for the next SIX years, it's like some project plan with targets to be met by a deadline, so that the studio makes $X million dollars by year Y, rather than anything remotely creative or spontaneous going on.
How someone can be excited about a project plan like that I do not know.
The same is happening with Star Wars now Disney has it (massive SW fan), and that saddens me too.
Studios dictating the release schedule for entire franchises far in advance, is destroying the movie experience imo.
The creative process is making them all link with an overarching storyline. So rather than the Batman films of the 90's etc that were just rubbish after the first one, you get a mix of characters that all link and come together. How someone can be excited about a project plan like that I do not know.
The same is happening with Star Wars now Disney has it (massive SW fan), and that saddens me too.
Studios dictating the release schedule for entire franchises far in advance, is destroying the movie experience imo.
Edited by ReallyReallyGood on Tuesday 10th February 09:54
Yes it is a bit of a money making thing, but I really enjoy it.
ReallyReallyGood said:
Those charts earlier on in the thread are so depressing, where's the creative process? To have it mapped out like that for the next SIX years, it's like some project plan with targets to be met by a deadline, so that the studio makes $X million dollars by year Y, rather than anything remotely creative or spontaneous going on.
How someone can be excited about a project plan like that I do not know.
The same is happening with Star Wars now Disney has it (massive SW fan), and that saddens me too.
Studios dictating the release schedule for entire franchises far in advance, is destroying the movie experience imo.
Really??How someone can be excited about a project plan like that I do not know.
The same is happening with Star Wars now Disney has it (massive SW fan), and that saddens me too.
Studios dictating the release schedule for entire franchises far in advance, is destroying the movie experience imo.
Edited by ReallyReallyGood on Tuesday 10th February 09:54
I see it the complete opposite way. Marvel are actually making the effort to make the larger effort pay off, the overall story of that Universe. It's not just one movie after another, with no real plan (see DC).
They've actually sat down at some point and mapped it all out. You know, creatively.
MiniMan64 said:
ReallyReallyGood said:
Those charts earlier on in the thread are so depressing, where's the creative process? To have it mapped out like that for the next SIX years, it's like some project plan with targets to be met by a deadline, so that the studio makes $X million dollars by year Y, rather than anything remotely creative or spontaneous going on.
How someone can be excited about a project plan like that I do not know.
The same is happening with Star Wars now Disney has it (massive SW fan), and that saddens me too.
Studios dictating the release schedule for entire franchises far in advance, is destroying the movie experience imo.
Really??How someone can be excited about a project plan like that I do not know.
The same is happening with Star Wars now Disney has it (massive SW fan), and that saddens me too.
Studios dictating the release schedule for entire franchises far in advance, is destroying the movie experience imo.
Edited by ReallyReallyGood on Tuesday 10th February 09:54
I see it the complete opposite way. Marvel are actually making the effort to make the larger effort pay off, the overall story of that Universe. It's not just one movie after another, with no real plan (see DC).
They've actually sat down at some point and mapped it all out. You know, creatively.
Inertiatic said:
MiniMan64 said:
ReallyReallyGood said:
Those charts earlier on in the thread are so depressing, where's the creative process? To have it mapped out like that for the next SIX years, it's like some project plan with targets to be met by a deadline, so that the studio makes $X million dollars by year Y, rather than anything remotely creative or spontaneous going on.
How someone can be excited about a project plan like that I do not know.
The same is happening with Star Wars now Disney has it (massive SW fan), and that saddens me too.
Studios dictating the release schedule for entire franchises far in advance, is destroying the movie experience imo.
Really??How someone can be excited about a project plan like that I do not know.
The same is happening with Star Wars now Disney has it (massive SW fan), and that saddens me too.
Studios dictating the release schedule for entire franchises far in advance, is destroying the movie experience imo.
Edited by ReallyReallyGood on Tuesday 10th February 09:54
I see it the complete opposite way. Marvel are actually making the effort to make the larger effort pay off, the overall story of that Universe. It's not just one movie after another, with no real plan (see DC).
They've actually sat down at some point and mapped it all out. You know, creatively.
Well played Marvel!
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