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I've always though Cap as a character would be a better fit for around Veterans Day.
Oh wow, what a terrible decision!Well, not exactly, but you get what I'm saying. Instead of being the lead in Django Unchained he did After Earth.
...actually, I would say other than a handful of exceptions (Spidey 2/3, MOS, the Avengers, Iron Man 3), the action in Super filcks have been really lacking. Which is weird.Because CBM has more or less replaced the regular action genre now.
GA knows now that if they want to see an action spectacle, CBM movie will amost always delivers.
What did I dispute? I didn't challenge his opinion that comic films have replaced action films. They did. I just don't think most of them have good action, however.Whether it's lacking in your opinion or not the statement's pretty true. The blockbuster's of the 90's we're all of the pure action genre with the standard action heroes of the 90's who were mostly pretty removed from any super-powers.
It is weird to me because those are the primary films audiences consume to satisfy their action quotient when they tend to excel at drama and characterization on a broad scale over the ingenuity of action, besides the aforementioned exceptions.I thought your point was that you found it weird they were successful despite not having "good action" (again which is debatable). My point is that they are two pretty different genres.
I guess it is the lack of choice. There are hardly action maestros like Cameron or Spielberg around to regularly make films anymore. So audiences settle for the Superhero movie with rich characterization and mediocre action, while rarely getting the best of both.Film audiences change and evolve people want action to have context now and expect an overall fulfilling story.
Wait, I've never said anything about old school or new school action. I simply meant the execution of most of the action in Superhero movies are lacking, style notwithstanding. The action in Spielberg's War of the Worlds and the action in Cameron's Avatar puts most comic book action scenes to shame.It's not about settling it's like i said it's more tastes have changed. If audience wanted old-school action they'd get it. Hell cameron and spielberg are still around and even their "action films" have changed style.
I guess it is the lack of choice. There are hardly action maestros like Cameron or Spielberg around to regularly make films anymore. So audiences settle for the Superhero movie with rich characterization and mediocre action, while rarely getting the best of both.
300M for MoS is still a long shot at this point. A very long shot. I could see it coming up as much as 25M short of that.
I honestly love how people crow over MOS' second Friday dropping 71% and conveniently ignore how Iron Man 3, TDKR, The Hunger Games and even Fast & Furious 6 have had similar if not worse drop-offs.
It's going to get to $300M domestic, whether they like the movie or not. MU and WWZ took a big chunk off its second weekend, but I think it'll stabilize in the third and fourth weekends.