Whatever the reason, it was for the best, because things werent working out. And they had a helluva long time to get things in order.
Again, until very recently, things were working out, so, maybe it's not for the best. Maybe someone made a bad call.
article says it was a mix. Wright and Cornish were handed rewrites to their script, at the last minute. those rewrites completely changed the movie. and some department heads left because they sensed a delay in production. as much as I like Ant-Man, I can't fault Wright in being insulted by having his movie yanked out from under him.
I give a lot of credence to that rumor too. Especially since Marvel Studios has strong armed other directors out of their creativity in the past.
But it's not HIS movie.
Now I understand perfectly that, after 8 years, you'll feel a certain way about and project and will want it done a certain way. And to have things change to where you can no longer make it the way you want would want to make some one leave the project all together, but he had to know that it wasn't his project to do as he pleased anyway.
It has nothing to do with 8 years. When an artist makes something good they put a lot of themselves into it, it becomes their baby. When the other parent doesn't allow them custody, and says 'it's not your baby cuz legal reasons' then that hurts, and it doesn't make it any less a product of the director (or writer, or actor, or painter or singer's) heart mind and soul.
That's art vs commerce. You don't own the work, it's just your baby that someone else owns.
It's been 8 years.
Marvel didn't just discover who Wright was at the last minute.
What is it you think that Marvel discovered about Wright? Does your theory conflict with all the rumors we've heard so far?
Tit for tat. What's good for the goose is good for the gander. Wright knew how Marvel Studios did business as well. They need team players who can be flexible as this business is rather fluid. They don't need any auteur prima donna's who think they are the last word when it comes to these films.
Personally, I'm apt to trust Fiege's judgment 10X more than ANY of the writer's/directors/actors that MS has hired. The studio is the auteur here.
The studio keeps experiencing that when it gives the directors freedom, and makes them the auteur it gets Avengers, Iron Man 3 and Captain America 2. When it doesn't, it gets Thor, Captain America 1, Iron Man 2, The Incredible Hulk and Thor 2. They do need "autuer prima donnas" like Black, Gunn and Whedon, they need more of those guys involved. If that means they can't do last minute rewrites and renege on the approval they gave creative directors previously, then maybe they're demanding too much flexibility in some cases to get films on par with the best they've done so far. I thought they'd learned by now, but it sounds like they're okay making mediocre movies so long as the universe-spanning story remains as they have forseen it up until 2028 based on their own limited ideas. Too bad. Our loss.
^^ TheQuestion You gotta pick a side, saying both might be right/wrong is a cop out to me. Youre either for the good of the MCU or youre for Edgar Wright. Dont know why youd doubt Feiges call with his excellent track record.
Because he makes bad calls sometimes, because he's a human being. Because Wright is not the first talented successful artist who felt jilted at how Marvel treated them. Because there's no proof that Edgar Wright's vision was not for the good of the MCU, but there is evidence to the contrary since both Feige and Wright were excited about Wright's vision.
If Ant-man causes this much debate, imagine if it was for a superhero people actually cared about.
Awww, lol!
Guys, really, its over, we all know it. Youre just beating a dead horse now.
Im just trying to save you the stress of pushing this on and on. If you really want to pick it apart forever, go ahead. I'm done with it.
Wait, didn't you just make a rallying cry to choose sides, like, an hour ago? Like not choosing sides was a cop out, but now it's over?
Okay, sure, as long as we understand that the new director will still be working under Wrights 60's Pym/To Steal An Ant-Man vision that Marvel has always been excited about and is the only reason they're making this movie at all.
Source
We're choosing a director to continue in Wright's footsteps. So you're right, either way you slice it, the idea of Wright's story and plot and vision being a odds with Marvel and Feige is a dead horse.
The problem, from Marvel's perspective is that they need a director (and senior crew) for Wright's Ant-Man. Nothing more, nothing less.