sacripanta
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Yes, a live action Avengers movie will never, ever happen
Gotta love those old posts.
t:Yes, a live action Avengers movie will never, ever happen
t:Which is the pessimists way to view things: what went wrong rather than what went right.
Me, I tend to think that since both movies were unthinkable not many years before, and potentially unfilmable unmarketable disasters even up to the point they were released? They should not be compared to some hypothetical perfect movie.
Gotta love those old posts.t:
Captain America - Steve Rogers is a weedy american who really wants to fight those nasty Nazis. Give him a thing to make him strong! Give him a flimsy character arc. There's a "cosmic" McGuffin he's trying to maybe get or stop someone using. Love interest, maybe? Also add in some easter eggs for fans.
Right from the off Cap is instantly laboured by the fact that it's an origin movie for a character with years worth of background to try to filter. Indy can do whatever the hell he wants because he just existed in that film. Other films will build upon what that film did and create a bigger universe. Caps universe is already made.
Thank you, Captain America was a weeeeaaaak movie. I don't think the background was what weighed it down, as it could interepret the comics pretty freely for various effects. What weighed it down was that it was already in the MCU, and it had not only certain restrictions on what the story had to be and what the conclusion had to be, but it also had a very strict deadline to meet. That made it rushed in writing and production, leaving us with no pop/wow/gee-whi, no escalating drama and no compelling action.
Captain America was a casualty of the Avengers.
I think its a toss up, myself. Captain America had a little better writing, Thor had a little better acting.
While I love both movies, I think that CA:TFA was the stronger of the two overall. Thor had great performances from Hemsworth, Hiddleston and Hopkins, but the plot and specifically the pacing was very weak. Condensing a fall/redemption story into a mere two days did not allow for believable character development for Thor, nor for a realistic progression of his relationship with Jane Foster. It was just too rushed. Loki, on the other hand, was given terrific material that allowed Hiddleston to chew the scenery like no other Marvel villain. The result was an unbalanced movie in which the titular hero came off second best to the villain, which should never have happened.
lol right. Both were well liked among critics, fans, and the general audience. Why only express that, "they had their problems".
Yes. I'm a rather new member and I had so much fun I read the whole durn thing! Heres to hoping that this thread will live on!