hippie_hunter
The King is Back!
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Trilogy:
Thor
the Mighty Thor
the Avengers
Thor
the Mighty Thor
the Avengers
What you are doing there is describing every movie ever, not just comic films. Next you're going to tell me that water is wet.Upper_Krust said:It is a rule that the majority of people will not have heard about a comic character before they see that character in the movies.
Ah, just like Doctor Doom.Loki is a schemer at heart, I agree with you in that respect. However, he is much more versatile.
He has fought *insert superhero here* hand to hand.
He has fought *insert superhero here* with his magic (great visual potential).
He also works in the background messing things up fo *insert superhero here*.
He is also cannot be killed, so he makes a good nemesis.
In certain cases he probably has something akin to diplomatic immunity.
LOL! Superman is lacking in the villian stakes, but to say that Thor has more potential in his rogue's gallery than Spider-Man or Batman is mental. That's right, mental.I have to disagree - its a stone cold fact, Thor is worthy of 9 movies based upon his Rogue's Gallery. More than Batman, more than Superman, more than Spiderman.
Epic does not need to be based soley on how much CGI you can cram on screen. I'd call Rocky v Apollo Creed 'epic', and that was two dudes in a boxing ring.Since when? The only epic battle spidey ever fought was against the Sinister Six. In terms of an 'epic battle' Batman is nowhere to be seen. Superman has some potential, but to be honest its almost never been realised in the comics (feel free to come back at me on this point with examples).
All of which mean nothing, unless your sole aim is be Eragon.Now I know you are off your rocker. So many great Thor arcs end in some awesome epic battle! No other comic character has anywhere near the same potential for wondrous battles and creating such a visceral spectacle...
There is no come back to this. You free to think what you want.I think he is unique in his ability to tackle ideas such as religious freedom.
Spider-Man, Batman, Superman, the Fantastic Four, Captain America, Hulk, Daredevil, The Punisher, the X-Men...But by all means tell us who is better qualified in that respect?
Must you bring Superman Returns into every argument?Some more so than others. Who are the strong women in the Batman movies? I would concede Lois Lane (though not the Bosworth incarnation) is a strong character.
See Eragon.The point I was making is that the female demographic is covered, the action adventure demographic is covered, the younger generation demographic is covered.
Except that no-one knows who they are. Possibly, because they're crap.I disagree. I don't think there are truly that many villains who are visually interesting/impressive. Spidey has a half a dozen or so (Doc Ock, Sandman, Venom, Hydroman etc.), Batman has a handful (Scarecrow, Mr Freeze), Superman maybe has one or two (60 storey tall Metallo for instance). But Thor has lots.
Again, a film is more than what is on the screen. It needs to connect with audiences, something which battles and villains (more of than not) fail miserably with. Please do not cite LOTR, as that is the exception to the rule, plus, likening the works of Tolkein to that of the writers of a Thor movie would be quite embarrassing.Nonsense.
No other character has as many visually impressive villains.
No other character has the same scope for epic battles.
Then what good are they if they aren't there to support?I don't think they are as much of a crutch as say for instance Batman, Superman or Spidermans supporting cast.
If they are written well, ie. better than they are in the comic. If they were so good and so rich, you'd think comic fans would know who they were and that the book wouldn't ge cancelled every few months or so.Again you are confusing a lack of recognition with a lack of merit.
One the supporting cast is established onscreen people will see the merits of them.
So good, that we have no idea what there names are.Not more - simply better ones.
Whereas in the case of Thor, 1 visit is 1 too many. Going by sales of the comic, anyways...Obviously any series runing from the 30s with a mult-book strokefest in operation will have lots of villains. Thats not the point. How many of those villains are worthy of a return visit. Not that many in Supermans case.
If you'd actually read the rest of thread instead of flapping your gums at the first available opportunity, you would've A. read that I also stated that 100mil would still be a lot, given that Thor is a relatively unknown commodity, and B. that 100 mil would still be a lot, given that Thor is a relatively unknown commodity.K.B. said:I'm for a trilogy and that marvel should pull theyre heads outta theyre butts and get good talent on the films. ie; Peter Jackson for Thor.
Some said it would take a boat load of money to make a good Thor movie (I beleive the quote was "superman returns money") Your wrong..all 3 LOTR movies together cost 300 million. Thats 100 million per movie. Watch just one scene from any of those flicks and tell me A. Jackson could EVER make a bad Thor movie and B. He couldn't make one for 100 million.
GL1 said:If you are actually going to sit here and say that Thor has more villains and story types to draw on than Batman or Superman, then honestly you're pretty ignorant on those two heroes. Each of them has Dozens and dozens of villains and has explored every genre, including fantasy on their own, unassisted.
GL1 said:I'm not talking about gross, I'm talking about number of movies and Thor simply can't hold a candle to Superman and Batman... even on his best day.
GL1 said:Thor can be a strong franchise if given the chance, I'll agree with that. I'd prefer a single awesome movie rather than three good ones... or nine good ones... or 15 good ones... whatever.
GL1 said:I like Thor better with the Avengers, basically.
Fried Gold said:What you are doing there is describing every movie ever, not just comic films. Next you're going to tell me that water is wet.
F G said:Ah, just like Doctor Doom.
F G said:LOL! Superman is lacking in the villian stakes, but to say that Thor has more potential in his rogue's gallery than Spider-Man or Batman is mental. That's right, mental.
F G said:Epic does not need to be based soley on how much CGI you can cram on screen. I'd call Rocky v Apollo Creed 'epic', and that was two dudes in a boxing ring.
F G said:All of which mean nothing, unless your sole aim is be Eragon.
F G said:There is no come back to this. You free to think what you want.
F G said:Spider-Man, Batman, Superman, the Fantastic Four, Captain America, Hulk, Daredevil, The Punisher, the X-Men...
F G said:Must you bring Superman Returns into every argument?
F G said:See Eragon.
F G said:Except that no-one knows who they are. Possibly, because they're crap.
F G said:Again, a film is more than what is on the screen. It needs to connect with audiences, something which battles and villains (more of than not) fail miserably with. Please do not cite LOTR, as that is the exception to the rule, plus, likening the works of Tolkein to that of the writers of a Thor movie would be quite embarrassing.
F G said:Then what good are they if they aren't there to support?
F G said:If they are written well, ie. better than they are in the comic. If they were so good and so rich, you'd think comic fans would know who they were and that the book wouldn't ge cancelled every few months or so.
F G said:So good, that we have no idea what there names are.
F G said:Whereas in the case of Thor, 1 visit is 1 too many. Going by sales of the comic, anyways...
Upper_Krust said:Hey GL1!
apologies for the delay in getting this post finished.
Be careful you don't bite off more than you can chew.![]()
I'm sorry mate I don't understand the context of this sentence.![]()
It is a rule that the majority of people will not have heard about a comic character before they see that character in the movies.
The exceptions are characters who have already featured in movies - see how that works!![]()
Loki is a schemer at heart, I agree with you in that respect. However, he is much more versatile.
He has fought Thor hand to hand.
He has fought Thor with his magic (great visual potential).
He also works in the background messing things up fo Thor.
He is also cannot be killed, so he makes a good nemesis.
In certain cases he probably has something akin to diplomatic immunity, in that he is an Asgardian prince.
I have to disagree - its a stone cold fact, Thor is worthy of 9 movies based upon his Rogue's Gallery. More than Batman, more than Superman, more than Spiderman.
Since when? The only 'epic' battle spidey ever fought was against the Sinister Six (and that pales in comparison to Lord of the Rings style battles). In terms of an 'epic battle' Batman is nowhere to be seen. Superman has some potential, but to be honest its almost never been realised in the comics (feel free to come back at me on this point with examples).
Now I know you are off your rocker. So many great Thor arcs end in some awesome epic battle! No other comic character has anywhere near the same potential for wondrous battles and creating such a visceral spectacle.
I think he is unique in his ability to tackle ideas such as religious freedom.
But by all means tell us who is better qualified in that respect?
Some more so than others. Who are the strong women in the Batman movies? I would concede Lois Lane (though not the Bosworth incarnation) is a strong character.
The point I was making is that the female demographic is covered, the action adventure demographic is covered, the younger generation demographic is covered.
I disagree. I don't think there are truly that many villains who are visually interesting/impressive. Spidey has a half a dozen or so (Doc Ock, Sandman, Venom, Hydroman etc.), Batman has a handful (Scarecrow, Mr Freeze), Superman maybe has one or two (60 storey tall Metallo for instance). But Thor has lots.
Nonsense.
No other character has as many visually impressive villains.
No other character has the same scope for epic battles.
How is it not both?
I don't think they are as much of a crutch as say for instance Batman, Superman or Spidermans supporting cast.
Again you are confusing a lack of recognition with a lack of merit.
One the supporting cast is established onscreen people will see the merits of them.
So, by your logic, if you have multiple villains it must be camp, because Batman & Robin - was camp.
I thought you said you were not that familiar witth him!
Not more - simply better ones.
Obviously any series runing from the 30s with a mult-book strokefest in operation will have lots of villains. Thats not the point. How many of those villains are worthy of a return visit. Not that many in Supermans case.
I'll finish the rest of your comments later.
Upper_Krust said:Not at all, obviously a superhero who has been around 30 years longer than Thor and has been engaged in a multi-book strokefest for the past decade or more is going to have more villains.
But how many of those villains are genuinely worthy of returning again and again in the comics and more to the point worthy of being seen on the big screen?
Batman has had 5 movies in the modern era and already they are returning to the Joker!
I don't need to tell you how many times Luthor has shown up in Superman movies.
In fact its weird that in recent interviews over the past year or so with Morrison and then Busiek, both have stated Superman doesn't have a great Rogues Gallery.
Whereas Thor not only has the strength and depth for nine movies, it can be nine movies with 4 villains in each.
Obviously one is the main villain, one might fulfill the henchman role, another could simply be a plot device, and one other could be handled through a flashback or somesort. So its not a case of too many cooks spoiling the broth.
Thor's Rogues Gallery is so good they actually used a Thor villain in the Hulk movie! Thor donates his villains to other less fortunate heroes.![]()
Rubbish. We have already seen how Batman and Superman are forced to recycle villains. You wouldn't have to do that with Thor.
This is the sort of attitude I don't understand, why can't we have 9 great movies!?
You cannot have an Avengers movie before you have at least one Captain America, Thor and Iron Man movies.
Isildur´s Heir said:I find this all irrelevant.
First, the all trilogy thingy...
Trilogies are very popular now, but the same goes to not wanting them.
Trilogies are the perfect way to tell a story, because they are big movies, divided in 3 parts, a begining, middle and the end.
Now, when you don´t have that big of a story, now then i agree that it becames stupid to try and make a trilogy.
About the all "no one knows who Thor is"...
Who cares?
If you make a great movie, people will see it, or you guys think they will see just because they know the character?
Perhaps you should keep up, as no-one ever said that Thor should not have his own movie.Upper_Krust said:Try to keep up FG.
I was replying to the point made that Thor is not as well known a character as Batman or Spiderman, and therefore shouldn't have any movies about him made - which is idiotic.
Yeah, it would be a shame to only use him once...Absolutely. Hes almost on that level. Doesn't quite have as cool a look, but you can't have everything I suppose.
And lots of posters in the discussion so far came to these boards before you. Your point being... ?Incidently Loki appeared before Doctor Doom.![]()
Green Goblin, Doc Ock, Venom, Rhino, Kingpin, Scorpion, Man-Wolf, Morbius, Vulture, Sand-Man, Hydro-Man, Carnage... obviously those over in the Spider-Man forum are a bit dim, then.Not at all, I am familiar with all the characters mentioned so far and I can honestly say Thor has the superior Rogue's Gallery.
Case in point. A few months ago I replied in the Spiderman forum about what people would do with regards the sequels. People struggled to concoct 9 movies - struggled! With Spidey!
To you. And to me, Thor would struggle with 3.Superman (as far as I can see) struggles with 6.
Penguin could carry a movie, as long as you did not turn him into a sewer dwelling monster, but instead made buisiness-like with ties to the mob.Batman has potential for at least 6 (I haven't done an indepth study yet) although there are some villains who cannot carry a movie all on their own (like Penguin) so you need to double-team them.
LOL!Remember with Thor I propose 9 movies with 4 villains in each!
And?Although in fairness its much easier to challenge the likes of Batman and Spider-man with less because a lot of their villains are combined schemers and brawlers.
Have you seen Eragon yet?Under your criteria anything could be epic.
I meant epic in scale.
Granted, but after 9 movies, each cramming in 4 villians, I think audiences would tire rather quickly of it.Not at all, simply that Thor can bridge the gap between Superheroics and Epic Fantasy. Which is a dimension that Batman, Spiderman and Superman cannot encroach upon.
Are you saying that Thor does? Oh sure, it employs Norse mythology, but not necassarily religion as we know it in Western culture. Unless you're Swedish.So, let me get this straight, according to you, the Hulk is a better vehicle for having a strong religious freedom subtext than Thor - is that what you are honestly saying!?
Ah, so that's it... you rile up Superman fans in order to detract from your subjective views.I like twisting a kryptonite shank into the dreary, dank carcass that is Superman Returns and then kicking it while its on the ground - since thats all its good for.
That and I know it winds you up - Singer fan!![]()
You obviously want to.Do I have to?
You keep hammering this point home as though we aren't aware of it. What we are questioning is if a book that is routinely cancelled, not that well known even within comic circles and with a central character so embroiled within mythology that he's almost more alien than Superman could sustain 6758454 movies. I do not believe it could.Anyone who has read the material will know who they are.
You don't because you haven't read it and yet from this position of ignorance still try to argue your case.
You can't expect people to know characters before they read about them or see them on screen. People are not clairvoyant.
You are aware that 96% of 'blockbusters' are crap, right?I never said big battles necessarily make the audience connect better with the character, simply that they add to the epic spectacle (which is one reason why people go to see 'blockbusters')
Pity.Well for one thing it means we don't have to use all of them, all the time, unlike for instance the same characters in Batman and Superman for instance.
Nah, the humour will come from a made-up human character who witnesses Thor's antics. Mark my words.If we want to have some sort of romantic sideplot we an have Balder/Karnilla. If we want to add some humour we can bring in the Warriors Three.
Just in time to get cancelled again.Don't worry, he'll be back.
But it does mean that he, and his band of cronies, are not strong enough to sustain a successful comic run.Just because hes not 'always round' doesn't mean hes not a great character.
You could, but anyone outside of a die hard Thor fan, would not listen.Well I could easily outline my ideas for the first 9 Thor movies (incidently I have also outlines for 6 Superman movies, albeit with a few recycled villains) although I forsee that would raise more questions than answer ("whats so good about villain #A?" etc) and I don't currently have the time for a full page synopsis on each movie (like I did with the first movie on my website).
So where's the human element? Y'know, to make us care what's happening other than seeing some no-name extras getting in the way?Heroes need to be challenged both mentally and physically. Thats why some could carry a movie on their own (like Green Goblin, Doc Ock, Joker, Bane) and others cannot (Sandman, Venom, Penguin, Poison Ivy). Characters like Superman and Thor add a third facet in that their almost certainly needs to be some sort of world level threat/plot device to sort out. For Superman this is usually going to be some sort of natural disaster (Earthquake, Growing Island) whereas Thor its probably going to be one of his villains (Destroyer, Surtur etc.)
No, one of the reasons Superman failed was that it did not utilise the dichotomy of brains over brawn to it's maximum potential. That, and they gave Superman a kid.One of the main reasons Superman Returns failed miserably was in that it didn't challenge Superman physically. Nor is Lex a visually interesting foe. So it skipped on two key criteria.
Harry is there as a by product of the first two films. Venom could carry a movie just as easily as the Green Goblin, if not more so. Just because we are not seeing this in Spider-Man 3 does not make it not possible.Neither Sandman nor Venom alone could carry a Spider-man movie. Both are predominantly brawlers rather than schemers - hence the reason we have Harry Osborn.
LOL! Alan Rickman portayed one of the greatest screen villians dressed in a nice suit in Die Hard. I wouldn't discount any potential villians credibility based on whether or not they are wearing green and yellow armour and a silly hat.In Batman Begins we had both Ra's Al Ghul and Scarecrow. While Ra's Al Ghul fulfills both the schemer and the brawler roles, he is not 'visually interesting' villain.
So you can immediately look at villains and know whether they can carry a movie or whether you need more than one villain to fulfill all the roles.
Actually, it did. There is a sequel being penned as speak.Whereas Superman with all the comic sales in the world still doesn't make money at the box office - go figure eh.t:
GL1 said:Yo, Upper_Krust... it's all good.
GL1 said:I say you're ignoring other merchandising and exposure, especially cartoons, when released 5-15 years prior to a movie's release, the prime audience is then familiar with the character. Iron Man. Fantastic Four. Heck, even Blade was in the 90's Spider-Man cartoons. That familiarity, while not determinant, IS a strength of the franchise, a strength which a Thor franchise would not have. A previous movie is only one of the MANY things that Thor does not have.
GL1 said:The same can be said of Lex Luthor (except the Asgardian Prince), and of course, it is technically possible for him to be killed, yet somehow practically impossible. That said, while Loki is a great villain, he's simply not the awesomest... simply a worthy opponent with Norse references.
GL1 said:Alright... while it is convenient that Thor has the well-established Norse mythos as his rogue's gallery and supporting cast,
GL1 said:to say that he has more villains than Batman or Superman, who are, in my experience uncountable is crazy.
GL1 said:Furthermore, to say that rogue's gallery alone can propel a franchise is a bit shortsighted. Franchises need stories.
GL1 said:Hmmm... I think you confused 'epic' with 'number of people' invovled. The damage that goes along with a Superman or Sinister Six battle is on the same scale as anything in Lord of The Rings. Cities fall in both cases. Yes, Thor has battles with more bodies in them but...
Here's an example: I consider a battle between Green Lantern and Silver Surfer more epic than a battle between 2 fourth graders and 2 fifth graders. Numbers don't determine epic, but the scale of the battle, and, budget permitting, Superman and Spider-Man have massively scaled battles.
Now it can be argued that the movies heretofore have not had epic battles. That's fine.
GL1 said:Preacher. The Authority. Heck, Hercules. Wonder Woman. There isn't a sci-fi series worth it's salt that hasn't opened up Religious Freedom a couple times. And while Thor is specially empowered to do so, like other heroes with a religious origin, that's a great backdrop for one epic movie. Not 9.
GL1 said:Well that's subjective. I can simply choose not to feel that Thor's villains are interesting and that Superman/Spider-Man/Batman/Wonder-Woman/Green Lantern's are. And to speak about visual interestingness in movies where all characters get a redesign is silly. Their visual appeal is all but moot.
GL1 said:The actual point, which I hadn't gotten around to, was that a movie with one or two villains can be better than a movie with 5 villains.
GL1 said:Just another way to say that Thor's number of villains is not a significant strength of the franchise, but a minor one... not something that can carry 9 movies on it's own.
GL1 said:Well I'm not familiar with Thor (though I've never said any such thing... I know it's tough to keep arguements straight with multiple "opponents"... it's easy to lump em all together), but I do know that he is a Norse God and thusly can draw on all Norse Mythology, and, honestly, count everything from Norse Mythos in his rogue's gallery, regardless of whether or how it's appeared in the comics. That's fine.
GL1 said:And we all know that Superman and Batman have tons and tons of villains, enough to make an actual numerical comparison useless. At this point the question of their quality is made. How many are worth returning to.
I'd wager at least 60. That's enough for 20-30 awesome movies by your logic. By my logic the total number of villains is irrelevant because a movie is a story, not a villain showcase.
GL1 said:Thor's story, like that of all Norse Mythology, leads to Ragnarok. It can depart if it likes, but Ragnarok is such a powerful and revolutionary mythology that it simply overshadows anything else you try to stack up around it.
GL1 said:Batman is bigger than his back being broken, Superman is bigger than his own death. These characters have story fodder in and of themselves for years. To say nothing of the dozens if not hundreds of great stories already been told.
GL1 said:I could say "I don't like those stories, All Thor's stories are better" but that does nothing to prove that Batman and Superman can't carry a bajillion movies and Thor can.
GL1 said:Wow... so using the same villain in a restart is bad now?
GL1 said:Which brings the question: Why is reusing villains a bad idea in the first place?
Do you really think that in 9 movies Loki would only appear once? Or Enchantress?
GL1 said:Why not apply this logic evenly. Man, Begins SUCKS, they used Alfred AGAIN! Batman must have a pretty weak supporting cast if they keep reusing the same Butler over and over.
GL1 said:And y'know, Superman's Rogue's gallery isn't as stellar as one would assume. Batman and Spider-Man's are better, I'll give you that (Wonder Woman too, if you count all Greek Mythos).
GL1 said:But to say that it's no good is more extremism. Off the top of the head: Lex Luthor, Brainiac, Darkseid, Zod, Doomsday, Maxima, Metallo, Toyman, Conduit, Bizarro, Myxlsptlk and Parasite. Each capable of carrying a movie and the first four capable of carrying a trilogy (like Sauron or Loki) with the others being minor villains of one sort or another.
GL1 said:Superman, Batman, Wonder-Woman and Spider-Man are all capable of carrying 9 movies...
GL1 said:but what's the point if the story being told isn't worth the time and effort to portray. What story is each trilogy telling, what jawdropping moment on the calibre of of LOTR/Matrix/ROTS movie-climax are we building to? What journey is each character taking every single movie? The coming of age/responsibilty story is nice, and with religous freedom you can pull out a great single movie out of that. Perhaps drawing on all of the Thor comics and some Norse Mythology we can put together a set of compelling character arcs that Thor endures while building up to Ragnarok in "Thor 3." But to push the franchise beyond that is... well... pushing it. Thor 4 might ride the wave, but you end up with Thor 5 where everyone says 'why didn't they just let it die."
GL1 said:Or alternately you save Ragnarok for the second trilogy, which gives the first trilogy an arbitrary epic battle where everything is NOT on the line, letting the audience feel cheated like it wasn't a real trilogy, like their time has been wasted and they've watch 9 hours of thor fight for something he wants instead of the survival of his species.
GL1 said:OR you could decompress the storytelling and trag a trilogy out into a trilogy of trilogies with lots of filler villains, that are great, but don't actually lead directly to the conclusion... like you were making a TV series, you decompress and scatter the meaningful pieces of the story.
GL1 said:OR you take Thor's best villains, best stories and make 1-3 great movies and call it a day.
GL1 said:My arguement is not that Thor does not have a good rogue's gallery, nor is it that he cannot have four villains in a movie. My statement is that the former is not unique to Thor and that the latter is not a strength of a movie franchise.
GL1 said:No you have not. You have seen them choose to reuse villains (in a restart mind you) and then decided to assume that they were forced to do so, not based on any information, but simply to prove/feel you are right. You haven't "seen" anything like this and you're now making up info to prove your point.
GL1 said:You don't have to do that with Batman, Superman or Spider-Man, and yet for a bajillion reasons, most lying in concepts of storytelling, villains get reused.
(Well, we already used Sauron, better get a new villain for Two Towers).
GL1 said:This attitude relies on the assumption that Thor doesn't have 9 great movies in him. Such a conclusion seems to rest on the idea that a large rogue's gallery is simply not enough to carry a franchise, nor should it be.
GL1 said:Thank you for sharing your opinion.
Eros said:I thor movie Imo would be silly, and make a complete mockery out of Norse mythology,
Eros said:the critics will proabbly be disgusted.
Eros said:A god being a superhero works in comics, but you can't have crap like done in a movie.
Eros said:maybe if they go with the Ulitimate version of Thor.
Fried Gold said:Perhaps you should keep up, as no-one ever said that Thor should not have his own movie.
F G said:Yeah, it would be a shame to only use him once...
F G said:And lots of posters in the discussion so far came to these boards before you. Your point being... ?
F G said:Green Goblin, Doc Ock, Venom, Rhino, Kingpin, Scorpion, Man-Wolf, Morbius, Vulture, Sand-Man, Hydro-Man, Carnage...
F G said:obviously those over in the Spider-Man forum are a bit dim, then.
F G said:To you. And to me, Thor would struggle with 3.
F G said:Penguin could carry a movie, as long as you did not turn him into a sewer dwelling monster, but instead made buisiness-like with ties to the mob.
F G said:LOL!
F G said:Have you seen Eragon yet?
F G said:Granted, but after 9 movies, each cramming in 4 villians, I think audiences would tire rather quickly of it.
F G said:Are you saying that Thor does? Oh sure, it employs Norse mythology, but not necassarily religion as we know it in Western culture. Unless you're Swedish.
F G said:Ah, so that's it... you rile up Superman fans in order to detract from your subjective views.
F G said:You keep hammering this point home as though we aren't aware of it. What we are questioning is if a book that is routinely cancelled,
F G said:You are aware that 96% of 'blockbusters' are crap, right?
F G said:Nah, the humour will come from a made-up human character who witnesses Thor's antics. Mark my words.
F G said:Just in time to get cancelled again.
F G said:But it does mean that he, and his band of cronies, are not strong enough to sustain a successful comic run.
F G said:You could, but anyone outside of a die hard Thor fan, would not listen.
F G said:So where's the human element? Y'know, to make us care what's happening other than seeing some no-name extras getting in the way?
F G said:No, one of the reasons Superman failed was that it did not utilise the dichotomy of brains over brawn to it's maximum potential. That, and they gave Superman a kid.
F G said:Harry is there as a by product of the first two films. Venom could carry a movie just as easily as the Green Goblin, if not more so. Just because we are not seeing this in Spider-Man 3 does not make it not possible.
F G said:LOL! Alan Rickman portayed one of the greatest screen villians dressed in a nice suit in Die Hard. I wouldn't discount any potential villians credibility based on whether or not they are wearing green and yellow armour and a silly hat.
F G said:Actually, it did. There is a sequel being penned as speak.
Katsuro said:Wow, when this guy first said he wanted 9 Thor movies I really thought he was joking. I mean, 9 movies!?! Has any franchise other than cheesy 80s/90's horror films made it to 9? Oh, and Bond, but those movies are all the same and quite boring (though I haven't seen Casino Royale yet).
Katsuro said:I like Thor plenty, but be freakin' realistic. What the hell are you gonna do for 9 movies?
Katsuro said:It doesn't matter how many villains you have, if they just keep coming up with generic plots and the character never goes anywhere. 4 new villains appear, plot to do evil things, big splosions, Thor wins, movie ends. You really wanna see that 9 times?!?! Where would the story actually go? What would be the point of it? Movies need more than epic battles with swords and magic. They need character development. They need emotional depth. After 9 films, you're gonna run out of all of that.
Katsuro said:Also the obvious point that no actor is going to stick around for 9 films.
Katsuro said:9 films, each of them 3, maybe sometimes 2 years about, you're looking at well over 20 years.
Katsuro said:Dude, stop kidding yourself. You're delusional if you think anyone would come even close to being excited about Thor 9.
kamaldhamal2007 said:I say make it a PERIOD PIECE a good 2.5-3 hour long epic movie becasue i feel in this day and age general public won't except a comic book movie where the central character is some mythological guy.
Again, at no point did I did I say that Thor was not deserving. I merely stated that greenlighting more than 1 movie would be financially risky.Upper_Krust said:You have consistently argued the point that because the character is currently less well known than other characters who have already had their movies, he is somehow less deserving.
I find the idea that you would disregard the use of a villain in either primary or supporting roles based purely on if they had been used before to extraordinarily narrow-minded. A good writer, an inventive story teller, could use the same villain 15 times and still produce good stories.I am fine with using Loki (or Lex Luthor for that matter) more than once in a movie provided they are not used as the key villain.
My post was merely raising the point that he is not unique. Stop being so insecure.I was just pre-empting any suggestions Loki may be a rip off.
The criteria that you made up...Lets have a look at which can carry a movie:
- Green Goblin: Yes, fulfills all 4 main criteria.
LOL We know this because it happened.- Doc Ock: Yes
Error. You forget that you can use Venom and Eddie Brock. Eddie does a pretty good job of messing things up domestically for Pete.- Venom: No (Cannot carry a movie on his own because he does not fill the schemer role)
Possibly, but you never know.- Rhino: No
Because you saw him in Daredevil...- Kingpin: No - and is not a great Spidey villain either, works much better for Daredevil.
So to sum up, unless it's already happened, you dismiss the idea.- Scorpion: No
- Man Wolf: No
- Morbius: Hard to say.
- Vulture: No
- Sandman: No
- Hydroman: No
I rest my case.I'll add a few others:
- Carnage: No
- Chameleon: No
- Kraven: No
- Mysterio: No
- Lizard: Tricky to judge, personally I would say no though.
- Electro: No
Shall we put nipples on the Spidey suit as well?Once you get past Green Goblin and Doc Ock, therer are not that many spidey villains who can carry a movie on their own. Which means what you need to do is pair them up.
For instance:
Spidey 4: Lizard and Kraven
Spidey 5: Mysterio and Chameleon
Spidey 6: Sinister Six (too good an opportunity to miss), new to the big screen would be Electro and Vulture (as well as one villain returning from each of the previous 4 movies)
Spidey 7: Scorpion and Carnage (perhaps in the third act Scorpion is affected by the Venom symbiote)
At this point nothing really obvious springs to mind. I love the character Hydroman, but he can't work on his own. The ideal partner would be Sandman, but we have already used Sandman twice by this point.
I really don't see Morbius or Man-Wolf working individually, but perhaps together...?
I like Rhino, but I am sure everyone can see he can only be used as a mere henchman.
Spidey 8: Morbius & Man-Wolf?
Spidey 9: Hydroman & Rhino?
Not really. I'm not even a massive Spidey fan, but with the knowledge I have gained from over a decade of reading Spidey stories, I can at least see the potential.Or maybe they have just thought things through a bit more than you have.![]()
Obviously not that well versed if you believe that Thor has a better rogues gallery than Spidey or Batman.Thats because you know nothing of Thor. Whereas I am well versed in Thor, Batman, Spiderman and Superman.
Intelligence is more than what you read in a comic book. It's about understanding the market, being realistic, and making qualified judgements bin regards to the idea in hand. In this case, the idea that 9 Thor movies should be made without the benefit of a stand alone movie to test the waters first. An idea that I find ridiculous.Personally I wouldn't have an opinion on perhaps how a Green Lantern movie, or movies might fare, because I am not that familiar with the character. You seem to have the same ignorance of Thor but still believe yourself qualified to offer some sort of intelligent insights on the matter. To that end you are clearly deluding yourself.
Except that you haven't really answered anything. Your posts are basically "THOR Is DA BEZT!!!1!! HE sHUD HAV 575675 FILMS!!!1!1"However, I do enjoy answering a skeptics questions. So from that perspective your posts are not without their uses.
Oh right, yeah, Batman Returns happened so naturally you dismiss the notion.Penguin cannot carry a movie on his own and never will. He is no physical threat, he cannot fight Batman. Therefore he does not cover all the required criteria.
I know. I saw it with my own eyes.Even in Batman Returns, the key fight in the movie is between Batman and Catwoman.
I have, but you choose to pay no attention as clearly evidenced in the first sentence of this post.Yet you have still to invalidate the idea of 9 Thor movies with any objective argument.
Right up your alley, then.No. By all accounts its somewhat derivative, and in the few clips I have seen some of the (over-)acting (in particular Robert Carlisle) seems tongue-in-cheek.
Dude, Dragonslayer was awful. If anything, Thor should be more like Conan or Sinbad.The difficulty with fantasy is that to make it believable you have to make it more serious in tone. Hence the reason Lord of the Rings (and Dragonslayer) works while others, like Dungeons & Dragons fail miserably.
Roles that did not exist until you made up your check list that you seem to live by.A double misconception on your part.
Firstly we are not 'cramming' villains into the movie. Rather these villains fulfill different roles.
4 villians in each movie would be a rehash. It would be a rehash of using multiple villains. Are they trying to kill Thor? Gosh! How exciting.Secondly, I fail to see how audiences will tire of 'variety' quicker than they will tire of the same old villains trotted out again and again (ie. Lex Luthor) rehashing the same plots even!
Ah, sorry, I thought you were talking about religious subtext and not unique subtext. If this is the case, then why did you dimiss my intial response that the Hulk could provide equally interesting material?What I am saying is that Thor provides scope for some unique sub-texts.
I'm a film fan.You misunderstand. I AM a Superman fan. I'm just not a Singerman fan.
Fair enough, I thought it was more than that.I admire your ignorance. Is twice in 43 years routine to you? Even though the 'cancellations' were simply intended as story devices to further fuel the relaunches. The recent delay simply being because Neil Gaiman had prior work commitments and couldn't take over as initially planned.
Slagging off Superman Returns is so last summer.They are not crap simply because they are 'blockbusters'. They are crap because they are crap. For myriad reasons like the ill-judged hubris from the creative team behind the failure that is Superman Returns.
Incidently did you read the latest Joe Fridays column at Newsarama (?) where he slags off Superman Returns.![]()
Again, with the Returns bashing. There really is no need.I wonder which does more damage, a crap movie like Superman Returns, or no movie at all...?
I look forward to it.Only for 43 years and counting.
Thor Returns: August 2007
As oppsed to your tirades? Nah, I think I'll carry on.Exactly, so I would be preaching to the deaf...and dumb. Therefore better just to educate you point by point rather than diatribe.
Didn't they abandon the Donald Blake idea years ago? Also, Blake doesn't really cover the human interest angle, as once Thor is there Blake is gone, and so are the audiences eyes.Clearly thy ignorance of Thor is truly boundless.t:
His alter-ego, Dr. Donald Blake covers all this. I outlined all this in my Thor movie synopsis so, choose not to read it (as you attest in the previous point), thats fair enough but don't try and make assertions without the benefit of facts to back yourself up.
Oh please change the record.Irrelevant Superman Returns bashine
No, you need someone to fill the schemer role.Venom and Sandman are almost exclusively physical challengers. You still need someone to fulfill the schemer role, which, going by the trailer to Spidey 3, does appear to be Harry.
But they could've easily had Hans in an outrageous outfit, but they did not. I'll say it again as you seem to keep on missing it; The villain does not need to be visiually interesting, nor do they need to fill your imaginary criteria to be successful. The villain is dependant on good writing, character design, wardrobe etc and not your egotistical little check-list that only you know about.False logic. John McClane is not a super-hero, therefore he doesn't need a super-villain to showcase his talents.
*Yawn*More irrelevent Superman Returns bashing