by TheLionPrince » February 18th, 2015, 1:23 am
Good news, Sony has loaned Spider-Man to be featured in the Marvel Cinematic Universe! Unfortunately, it's another reboot film, and some of the upcoming films have been pushed back.
I've been loving the Marvel Cinematic Universe since summer 2011, when I finally put the pieces together on how the stories of Captain America, Iron Man, Thor, and the Incredible Hulk intertwine and build upon each other. I've been watching Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D. since its inception, though I'm growing bored with it midway through season 2. The mid-season reveal of both seasons were interesting, and I cannot wait to see how the rest of the series builds up to the events of the future MCU films. Agent Carter is a limited series that I really like (since Peggy Carter was an interesting new character I grew fond while watching The First Avenger), although the episodes are very slow-paced. I'm not sure how I will be watching Daredevil, Luke Cage, or A.K.A. Jessica Jones since I don't want to bother with a Netflix subscription.
Avengers: Age of Ultron and Captain America: Civil War are films I cannot wait to see in theaters. Ant-Man, I believe, will hopefully surprise a lot of people, and catch a positive word-of-mouth like Guardians of the Galaxy did since it had a tumultuous production history and Ant-Man is one of the "black sheep" superheroes of the Marvel catalogue.
Nevertheless, I share disappointments with the Marvel Cinematic Universe especially with its villains. For example, Iron Man 2 spent most of its screentime building up Whiplash, and he is defeated within less than a minute. Thor: The Dark World had an underdeveloped villain in Malekith that felt more of a plot device than an actual character. Some of these villains fail to provide menace and a sense of fear for our heroes because in some cases, their scenes get cut from the movie and the movies spend much of their time developing the heroes. And all we know a movie is only as good as the villain in most cases. This is why I hope Ultron lives up to the hype given the scale of villainy hinted in the trailers. There's also the problem that Marvel's films have too much light-hearted humor, which I can agree since Guardians of the Galaxy was somewhat too jokey for my tastes. Iron Man 3 squandered a potentially great villain for its twist, which was played for laughs.
In the end, Marvel has a bright future ahead of itself, and I'm glad it inspired Warner Bros./DC Entertainment to invest in their catalogue of superheroes, and produce a shared universe of their own. Nevertheless, I feel the market for superhero films will eventually become too saturated down in the line.
Last edited by
TheLionPrince on February 19th, 2015, 1:14 am, edited 1 time in total.