Chris Wallace
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- Joined
- Jul 13, 2001
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Ah. Ok. But I think I covered that by suggesting that it IS avoidable.
Ok. My apologies.Ah. Ok. But I think I covered that by suggesting that it IS avoidable.
What I meant by that was that a 3rd entry would inevitably end up being panned, no matter the effort put forth by the creative team, so they're powerless and it would be pointless to embark on making a 3rd film. I don't agree with that because it implies that it is impossible to solve 3rd entry problems.Ironically, you said that to call it a curse takes the power out of the filmmakers' hands, which is actually part of the problem.
And I'd disagree completely![]()
(with Mr. Wallace, regarding Batman)
Batman certainly avoided it. While not as universally loved as The Dark Knight, it IS well loved, critically acclaimed and made a billion dollars.
As Eddy says, being that Iron Man already had a pretty bad second film (which is kind of unusual these days) hopefully the third will restore the series. It looks great so far.
And I'd disagree completely![]()
(with Mr. Wallace, regarding Batman)
The badness of IM2 is vastly exaggerated. Yes, it wasn't as good as the first movie, but it still did decently in both critical response and moneymaking. If it were the third movie in a trilogy, it'd be considered an *aversion* of the curse trope.
I disagree here. Iron Man 2 actually committed some common 3rd act mistakes, with the overloaded plot, unnecessary villain alliances and seeming to be more interested in a down-the-road spin-off than in its own plot. The only thing it DIDN'T have was the gratuitous death of a major character. It is my hope that with those mistakes out of the way, the 3rd will shine brighter than either of its predecessors.
Batman evaded it. Iron Man may be the next hero to successfully do so.