Detective Conan
Avenger
- Joined
- Dec 28, 2017
- Messages
- 17,578
- Reaction score
- 25,258
- Points
- 103
Comcast getting Sony would be a nightmare scenario imo. They would likely take Spider-Man away from the MCU and reboot him a third time.
I don't doubt that they will. They'll almost have to do something, and at the moment the likely candidate would be Viacom given how CBS wants nothing to do with them, and several parties would prefer to see them gone.If Comcast loses, maybe they should just go after smaller studios. Go after Sony, Paramount, MGM etc.
Doesnt Comcast own CNBC? lol.
Yep. And I do have that in the back of my mind when I watch. They're probably the most reliable source out there, but there could be small, subtle ways their bias comes through - even if they're not overtly aware of it themselves.Comcast getting Sony would be a nightmare scenario imo. They would likely take Spider-Man away from the MCU and reboot him a third time.
What's the point if it's not good though?
Oh right, of course thenI'm just saying that under the assumption that it is good
It'll be interesting to see how fast an X-Men reboot happens. There were exactly 24 months between Amazing Spider-Man 2 and a completely different Peter Parker showing up in an MCU film. That suggests a willingness to reboot characters in Dark Phoenix as soon as May 2021.
In that context, it's interesting to note that Wolverine will be the major character with the longest "rest."
It'll be interesting to see how fast an X-Men reboot happens. There were exactly 24 months between Amazing Spider-Man 2 and a completely different Peter Parker showing up in an MCU film. That suggests a willingness to reboot characters in Dark Phoenix as soon as May 2021.
In that context, it's interesting to note that Wolverine will be the major character with the longest "rest."
The difference is they don't have to rush anything regarding the Xmen. They would flat out own it unlike Spidey.
If Comcast loses, maybe they should just go after smaller studios. Go after Sony, Paramount, MGM etc.

I think an X-Men film is a considerably bigger undertaking than a Spidey or F4, especially when trying to place it in a mature MCU universe with a lot of existing history. For that reason I think the gap would be longer, although that wouldn't have to stop them dropping cameos in as soon as they wanted.
I don't doubt that they will. They'll almost have to do something, and at the moment the likely candidate would be Viacom given how CBS wants nothing to do with them, and several parties would prefer to see them gone.
Comcast getting Sony would be a nightmare scenario imo. They would likely take Spider-Man away from the MCU and reboot him a third time.
All I want is the rights locked down. Beyond that, I can be patient as things play out.
Comcast getting Sony would be a nightmare scenario imo. They would likely take Spider-Man away from the MCU and reboot him a third time.
If Comcast got Sony, they would not reboot because 1) Marvel Studios would be putting money into their pocket 2) it would fail because Spider-Man is now part of the MCU in the public consciousness. Pulling him out would do major damage to the franchise
Sony deals with them and has these other Spidey-related movies because they forked over the merchandising rights. There's additional payments made to them if the co-produced movies make a certain amount.1. Comcast would not care at all. Even though their Monsters Universe crashed & burned they still have lucrative properties that they rake billions of dollars out of which they maintain full control to like the Fast & Furious and Jurassic Park franchises. Heck, both of the last installments in those respective franchises made more than any Spider-Man movie-- Sony doesn't have that safety net which is a large reason they even did the deal with Marvel in the first place.
I will definitively say that had Sony not given Disney the merchandising rights back(which is an extremely stupid move in hindsight way, way, more stupid than refusing to pay 25 million for Marvel characters that were at the time considered low tier characters) then Spidey would not be in the MCU right now. That I am certain of.Sony deals with them and has these other Spidey-related movies because they forked over the merchandising rights. There's additional payments made to them if the co-produced movies make a certain amount.
Or perhaps one of the stipulations that Disney agreed to in order for them to buy the merchandise from Sony(the dumbest thing Sony ever did which is way, way more dumber than refusing to pay 25 million dollars for characters considered at the time to be low tier is sell off the toy rights) is that the film rights be transferable in case of a buyout. Disney might have agreed to that since the real money isnt in the movies but the merchandise.Maybe when Disney renegotiated the deal with Sony for Spider-Man they put in a provision that would stop the licence transfering to a new (potentially hostile) corporate owner.
We know Marvel didn't consider studio ownership change when they made the original deals, but I like to think Disney would have sought a condition on that issue when they had a chance to alter the deal.
I will definitively say that had Sony not given Disney the merchandising rights back(which is an extremely stupid move in hindsight way, way, more stupid than refusing to pay 25 million for Marvel characters that were at the time considered low tier characters) than Spidey would not be in the MCU right now. That I am certain of.