The first Hangover didn't have paper thin characters though. Neither did the Jump Street films. Schmidt and Jenko's relationship in 21 Jump Street is more believable and well written than anything in any Transformer movie.
Do you really believe that?
Cause I don't. I see a character like Bruce Wayne in batman begins having some thick stuff to work out in the traditional/conventional sense. I see Caesar in the apes movie...
Then I see the boy and his car and the basic arc from selfish to selfless in the first TF movie. He's selling family heirlooms during a personal book report, his biggest goal is to be driven into the high end car dealer, he likes the girl but only superficially...by the end all that changed as far as his motivations, It's thin but it's very much there. I say it's thin in relation to Caesar...
I actually see alot of joseph campbell in the second film(if only over long and convoluted), but again, very much there.
For some reason these clowns in the first hangover film are said to be more in the category of the former films and not the later? There is a clear compromise of standards when it comes to how people are appreciating character study and detection of dramatization in the case of the(very self aware) Jenko arc as it compares to Caesar, but that same compromise is not afforded to what Sam goes though from the top of the story into the resolution.
Sorry but I don't agree. That's great that TF's character work is in a lesser category than Caesar but I'm not going to pretend these various other films listed aren't. I'd even toss Godzilla in there with them.
Fortunately not all films enjoyment is measure by this thing. Tons of people love the hell out of say; the Raid, and that's no doubt because it does various other things well as it pertains to film enjoyment.
As for believable, I don't see any of that in 21/22, hangover or avengers, then again that has nothing to do with how I personally measure how good a time I have. Can't speak for everyone though.