CyclopsWasRight
Well, he was.
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- Oct 9, 2005
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T"Challa;28945779 said:Not to mention the absolutely ludicrous treatment of Darwin in X-Men First Class. I love that movie but there aren't many scenes in CBM's that i hate more than that death scene.
Until now Avengers was my 2nd favorite superhero film after Watchmen. Now its 3rd with DOFP coming in second
Love me some Watchmen. When I want emotional depth and layered social commentary in a CBM, that's my go-to. Nothing gets me more than when Rorshach yells at Oz to end his life.
I thought it was a little bit of bothI just figured Magneto controlled the sentinels by manipulating the metallic rods. Not truly reprogramming.
Love me some Watchmen. When I want emotional depth and layered social commentary in a CBM, that's my go-to. Nothing gets me more than when Rorshach yells at Oz to end his life.
DOFP is the epitome of diversity for the sake of it. Storm, Bishop, Blink, Sunspot, and Warpath are all disposable with no depth and characterization. All the important characters who drive the plot are white. It's ironic that you discount Fury, when he's practically far more developed as a character and hold greater importance not just to his film but also to his universe than any of the characters you mentioned.
I also give the diversity credit to Avengers and Marvel studio movies than to DOFP or X-men movies.

I just figured Magneto controlled the sentinels by manipulating the metallic rods. Not truly reprogramming.
How so?! Every single one of their leads are white males and they only have one female lead in the entire universe. The only other one (Maria Hill) is a barely developed supporting role.
The only other African-American characters outside of Fury are also in supporting/side-kick roles. Also, the one time they do hire an African-American actress, she's being painted green.
They aren't breaking any diversity barriers anymore than the X-Men franchise and with Ant-Man and Doctor Strange now on the horizon is doesn't look like they have any interest in doing so either.
How so?! Every single one of their leads are white males and they only have one female lead in the entire universe. The only other one (Maria Hill) is a barely developed supporting role.
The only other African-American characters outside of Fury are also in supporting/side-kick roles. Also, the one time they do hire an African-American actress, she's being painted green.
They aren't breaking any diversity barriers anymore than the X-Men franchise and with Ant-Man and Doctor Strange now on the horizon is doesn't look like they have any interest in doing so either.
How so?! Every single one of their leads are white males and they only have one female lead in the entire universe. The only other one (Maria Hill) is a barely developed supporting role.
The only other African-American characters outside of Fury are also in supporting/side-kick roles. Also, the one time they do hire an African-American actress, she's being painted green.
They aren't breaking any diversity barriers anymore than the X-Men franchise and with Ant-Man and Doctor Strange now on the horizon is doesn't look like they have any interest in doing so either.

DOFP is the epitome of diversity for the sake of it. Storm, Bishop, Blink, Sunspot, and Warpath are all disposable with no depth and characterization. All the important characters who drive the plot are white. It's ironic that you discount Fury, when he's practically far more developed as a character and hold greater importance not just to his film but also to his universe than any of the characters you mentioned.
See, that's one thing that drops the movie's grade for me. There were so many little things like that that just made no sense. I wasn't on board with him putting the rail road track into the sentinels to begin with. But after watching him fully control the sentinels' robotics afterward... sorry, I'm not buying that.
I picked X-Men: Days of Future Past but I'm also an X-Men fan so my opinion may be biased. I loved The Avengers but I haven't watched it since my initial viewing in the theaters and I own it on blu-ray.
The story just wasn't meaty enough for me - it's all about the spectacle, set-pieces, joy and action with very little emotional punch or storytelling. Even the one emotional moment they immediately retconned in Agents of SHIELD.