Unless they got an animation department that as ambitious as the film department (Marvel Stud10s), then okay but Into the Verse is a Sony production and its a film not a cartoon tv series, and we know how Sony is milking their Spider-Man rights.Cartoons are pretty important for getting characters into the public consciousness. TAS and Evolution were pretty proactive in this respect, while the Disney toons are reactive to whatever is trending in the MCU and I think the quality suffers because of it.
Evo was a great X-men cartoon! It had character development, world building, soap opera drama, and a great line-up. WotX was an absolute mess that had some decent ideas and character designs.
I hope that Spider-verse creates an investment in animation again. I really love animation and don't like seeing superheroes flounder in that medium.
What's the Wanda/Chthon story, for those of us out of the loop?
They should hire the best director that they can find regardless if they are a man or a woman.
My top criteria is knowing what to do with the X-Men and if the director has a good resume. I don't care if the director is a man or a woman. I don't know why things like what Lip said, needed to be posted. I know/watch plenty of shows that are directed/created by women, but I don't go here and make a big deal about it.
So are you saying Kevin Feige won't handle the X-Women well under his wing? Well Chris claremont handled the X-Women well and put women in the forefront.You're acting like "knowing what to do with the X-men" is something that is clear and objective, when it's really vague and doesn't mean anything. I want to see the X-women shine. I do not trust men for that job.
So are you saying Kevin Feige won't handle the X-Women well under his wing? Well Chris claremont handled the X-Women well and put women in the forefront.
If I suggest to hire the director of Ms. Bala to direct the X-Men, would you be okay to it right away without knowing her filmography as a director?
I hope they have seen the light after Spider-verse.Into the Spider-Verse was a game changer, a big success and won an Oscar for Best Animated Movie.
While I understand that Marvel's recent shows are underwhelming and that Into The Spider-Verse was produced by Sony also, I see the potential this movie has to open the eyes of Marvel to invest more in the animation department (including shows).
If Marvel will indeed invest more in animation, I don't know. But I can see things "suddenly changing" after the sucess of Into the Spider-Verse.
I think the Duffers would do well with diversity and representation in X-MenI don't think the sex of the director matters much to me or really the ethnicity. But I do think being able to convey strong female characters and minority characters is vital to whoever lands this job. Whether that be man, woman, or whatever. The X-Men cannot just be about a bunch of white dudes and needs a broader perspective.
I think they should hire a director who's qualified, available, and enthusiastic about the project, regardless if they are "the best."They should hire the best director that they can find regardless if they are a man or a woman.
You may not care whether it is a man or a woman, but it is not a crime to advocate for a female perspective especially when no woman has directed X-Men before and also because X-Men movies female characters are usually weak.My top criteria is knowing what to do with the X-Men and if the director has a good resume. I don't care if the director is a man or a woman. I don't know why things like what Lip said, needed to be posted. I know/watch plenty of shows that are directed/created by women, but I don't go here and make a big deal about it.
I think the Duffers would do well with diversity and representation in X-Men

And no one is saying not to consider women, at least I don't. Again I've seen plenty of shows and films directed and written by women. Grey's Anatomy, Scandal, Kung Fu Panda, the Twilight movies, Jessica Jones, etc... I've also seen shows and movies directed by guys that handled women well. But I don't go around selecting a specific gender on I think who should direct the film.I think they should hire a director who's qualified, available, and enthusiastic about the project, regardless if they are "the best."
Women are qualified to direct movies. If they can pluck the Russo bros. from obscurity, they can hire all the women they want. And if they're not considering women, then they're not looking for the best.
No one is saying women aren't qualified for the job. At least in my part and I haven't heard anything from Marvel Stud10s that they only let guys do the directing job. Patty Jenkins almost directed Thor 2 and I don't exactly remember her leaving the film because she's not a dude.The MCU has not done a great job with its female characters and the lack of women behind the camera has contributed to that. Chris Claremont wrote in another medium 40 years ago, and even there he wasn’t infallible. I would not trust an MCU production to represent the X-women well if it had few women directing, writing, and designing.
Apparently just being dudes was good enough to get the Russos hired for TWS so I dont get your point.
I mean, I think Max, Lucas, Joyce and Nancy are all strong characters. Eleven is basically the main character of the show considering everything is built around her. I think they have potential to do right by representation in the X-Men movie.I was throwing shade at them
By the way, I know we both disagree in this subject, so I don't intend to beat up a dead horse, but I can't resist and have to ask: why do you think the Duffers are a good choice to represent diversity when they literally have 1 black character among 10+ regular characters, no gay characters, a series of controversy regarding female characters, and in two seasons can't barely pass the bechdel test.
I can understand when people bring them up when it comes to dealing with ensemble. But dealing with diversity? I'm curious...