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We're looking into the avatar thing.
We're looking into the avatar thing.
James Cameron after so many years being asked about the sequels.
We're looking into the avatar thing.
At this point, I think there's close to 0% chance it will be good, so it's really a choice of: "Run-of-the-mill Fantastic Four 2005 bad or spectacularly Fant4stic bad?"
If the concern is damage to the brand, I actually think spectacularly bad might be preferable. A spectacularly bad film will come and go very quickly and won't be seen as broadly. A run-of-the-mill bad film will be more credible and be seen by many people and serve as the legitimate follow-up to Age of Apocalypse and be accepted as part of the X-Men canon.

Today Fox outlined some of its plans for "New Fox" post-Disney merger. Hopefully Disney give us some updates on Tuesday at the investor call.
https://deadline.com/2018/08/new-fo...rship-tca-dana-walden-gary-newman-1202438665/
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Jean Grey can get thrown off a bridge by the Green Goblin and snap her neck and Gwen Stacy can turn into Dark Phoenix. There are only 2 storylines in Marvel and this is the way to vary them.![]()
You don't have to retell the same story at all. Jean is a well rounded character, not just a death vehicle. The comics repeat that story every so often, but we get years of regular material for the character in between and there is no burning need for the MCU Jean to be set up to die within 3 or 4 films. Build for the long term future, not just towards one story that's already been told twice in a short space of time.
It's not just him. Other people have that avatar too and it is stretching their ones as well in other threads.
I think that now that Disney have bought Fox, they're going to issue something to this effect:
The offensive directing and writing discovered in Simon Kinberg's Dark Phoenix are indefensible and inconsistent with our studios values, and we have severed our business relationship with him.
This.
The Dark Phoenix/Death of Jean Grey story is like Civil War/Death of Captain America for a lot of fans. Both have become the be-all, end-all tales for the characters and some fans can't see past that. People started rooting for Steve Rogers' death from the moment Marvel announced the first Cap movie as if his death was the sole reason for his existence. The same is sadly even more true of Jean.
Happily for the MCU, Feige and his team never saw Steve Rogers as a hero whose greatest destiny was to die in order to make way for another. I believe they'll take a longer-term view of Jean's place in the MCU, too. Many fans seem to forget, or maybe never knew, that Jean was bonded with the Phoenix for several years before it overwhelmed her. More importantly, she was a hero for years before encountering it. Rushing to that part of her story won't allow enough time for the audience to become invested in her as a person. How will we care what happens to Jean if we don't know her well enough to care about her?
Really hoping Cap continues to buck this trend in Avengers 4, LOL!
You misspelled Bucky.
Bucky Cap is garbage. It never worked right, and he was replaced not soon after he got the mantle. Only Captain America for me is Steve Rogers. When he is gone, I'd rather they retire the mantle. He IS Captain America.
Bucky Cap is garbage. It never worked right, and he was replaced not soon after he got the mantle. Only Captain America for me is Steve Rogers. When he is gone, I'd rather they retire the mantle. He IS Captain America.
Bucky Cap is garbage. It never worked right, and he was replaced not soon after he got the mantle. Only Captain America for me is Steve Rogers. When he is gone, I'd rather they retire the mantle. He IS Captain America.
Actually, Bucky was Cap from about 2008-2011 (when killed by Sin), so he was Cap for a decent amount.
BTW, your sig reminds me of a marvelous rant that Martin from Double Toasted went into in defence of Spider-man 3 and what in his opinion Spider-man 2 was not that great.
This.
The Dark Phoenix/Death of Jean Grey story is like Civil War/Death of Captain America for a lot of fans. Both have become the be-all, end-all tales for the characters and some fans can't see past that. People started rooting for Steve Rogers' death from the moment Marvel announced the first Cap movie as if his death was the sole reason for his existence. The same is sadly even more true of Jean.
Happily for the MCU, Feige and his team never saw Steve Rogers as a hero whose greatest destiny was to die in order to make way for another. I believe they'll take a longer-term view of Jean's place in the MCU, too. Many fans seem to forget, or maybe never knew, that Jean was bonded with the Phoenix for several years before it overwhelmed her. More importantly, she was a hero for years before encountering it. Rushing to that part of her story won't allow enough time for the audience to become invested in her as a person. How will we care what happens to Jean if we don't know her well enough to care about her?
