Good reading. Some of it is encouraging, some not so much. After reading through some of this I'm thinking Marvel may have benefited from having to let other studios handle some of their characters. If Marvel was having to do Spidey, X-Men, Daredevil, FF, Blade, Punisher, and Ghost Rider....would they ever have gotten around to Iron Man, Cap, Thor, and Avengers? The situation at WB with DC makes me wonder.
(I will say I wish Marvel was doing Ghost Rider...dammit...)
I want a Flash movie...badly. I hope the GL failure doesn't kill it. Also reading this thread makes me a little more into the idea of a WW movie.
To be honest, Happy Hogan could have done whatever a$$ kicking she did in IM 2, she was there just so that she could get entry into Avengers, the whole movie was a setup to Avengers.
I don't think Hogan beating the crap out of a room full of guys would have worked. It was much better to have him beat that one guy and think he had "helped". (that line made me laugh for 30 seconds straight in the theater) I don't think The Avengers had that big a presence in IM2 myself. After establishing that the characters exist in a shared universe in IM1, it wouldn't make any sense to have Nick Fury go away. Of
course he will continue to keep tabs on Stark.
Iron Man 2 is the Green Lantern movie of Marvel Cinematic Universe.
If IM2 is the "worst one" that's pretty good for Marvel. I would put up Ghost Rider as "the worst Marvel movie character" myself. I had similar thoughts when I watched both GL and GR...."How did they screw this up? These characters should be no-brainers!"
The idea wasn't that bad had they just used an original character as Weapon XI instead of making him Deadpool. There was no reason he had to be Wade Wilson, except to piss people off.
That made me grin.

t: I does make you wonder...why even name him Deadpool?
What they should've done is just used Hector Hammond as the sole villain, and made the story about Sinestro helping Hal defeat Hammond, perhaps with Sinestro starting to turn evil slowly in the process. Then ending the movie with a trip to Oa, having Hal earning his place to be amongst the Lanterns. I would've largely confined the first two acts to Earth, saved the trip to Oa for the end, and made Sinestro the only other Lantern we saw or heard from. I would've also had Sinestro stay in Hal's apartment, maybe make a running gag out of him trying to conceal who this person is from his friends and family. That way, in the next film, they could've really fleshed out the other Lanterns and the Guardians. Green Lantern is far too ambitious with all it tries to cram in. They spread themselves way too thin, and the result is what we all saw.
I like your plot much better than what we got.
In any event, WB had already decided to shelve Superman films because they are not financially feasible. No one seems to be expecting much from MOS. Maybe 400 million? When it costs 200 million to make and maybe 100 million to market that is a bad investment.
This is good for GL. WB is probably right now looking for that franchise to complement Batman. WW and Flash are contenders but GL is probably the only major DC franchise that can do huge numbers.
Just satyin - don't count GL out.
Isn't a 100 million profit pretty good?
I would also
love to see GL get another shot...hope we don't have to wait 10 years.
Superman is worth the risk because if they get things right they will make a fortune. Probably more than any other hero in their stable of characters.
For how bad some of the posters make Superman returns out to be, the film made over 200 million domestic, something that very few comic book films have achieved. Can you imagine what it would make if it got the praise of iron man 1 or batman begins.
Really just to get an idea of his popularity you don't have to look any further than these boards. Go to the iron man and thor boards after the films came out, they were a dead zone. The superman boards, even after there was no sequel in sight still had more posters talking about a film that may or may not have happened.
My thoughts exactly. SR came out one year after BB. Both were preceded by terrible installments in the franchise. BB got great reviews and is widely loved by fans....SR got ok reviews and is widely disliked by fans. SR made about the same amount of money as BB despite that. That should tell you how strong the Superman character is. He made more than Thor, Captain America and X-Men despite having a less loved movie. Imagine how popular a Supes movie would be if they hit it out of the park?
Staggered releases are pretty stupid. That's actually what ruins some movies in terms of box office. And studies have revealed that staggered release dates hurt ticket sales more than piracy.
I wonder about this too. Why are they doing this with movies in the age of the internet? Just have a set release day worldwide. That would make it more of an "event" too.
I think Nolan is the worst thing that could have happened to DC when it comes to it's comic department. He doesn't want a shared DCU, which is now not going to happen. Batman "realism" is not really Batman. You can make the comic Batman work on film if done right.
I too would love to see the comic Batman onscreen at some point. In a way, you're right about Nolan. His success may put his opinions too high in WB's eyes. He may not have the best vision for non-Batman characters. "Dark" gets old after a while.
I'm trying to understand how Superman isnt considered a mega franchise, with its 5 films and the fact that it STARTED THE CBM GENRE, yet GL, with its one flop film is.
It...dosen't make sense.
Agreed. (Though I do love GL and want him to have another chance) I think Supes could really surprise people if they do it right.
I'd also say Ozy was the worst thing in Watchmen. Not that the performance was bad, but because the character was completely wrong. Soon as you saw him you could tell he was a villain, or at least shady. Ozy was meant to be the golden boy, the Captain America, the Superman. That's what made his reveal at the end all the more shocking.
As a person who saw the movie with no prior knowledge of the characters (I never read the GN), I never saw it coming. As a matter of fact....I wasn't really that sure Ozy was a "villain" after the movie was over!

That's why I love it so much.
I'm probably one of the few who considers
Watchmen the best comic book movie ever made though. (tied with
Kick Ass on my list)
I am almost positive that Justice League would fail.
DC is too complicated and their heroes are over-powered except for a few like Batman and.....???
The Avengers has the same problem (Thor and Hulk are over-powered and Capt America, Hawkeye, and Black Widow are lesser powered), but from all accounts, Whedon makes it work. No reason why JL wouldn't work as well. The only difficulty I see is that Batman is the most popular and many of his fans want to see him as the "biggest, baddest dude on the planet"....that would look silly in a JL movie.
http://www.worldofsuperheroes.com/f...inventing-batman-after-the-dark-knight-rises/
"Robinov has said that a new Justice League script is in the works. Also being written for Warner are scripts featuring the Flash and Wonder Woman."
Just looking at that logo at the top of the article is exciting. Make the movie with that vibe!
I do appreciate he tried to do some new things with the character, but Superman will always be about hope, not dark and brooding.
Synders version isnt getting me excited either. Theres a whole universe out there - Brainiac, Darkseid, Metallo, and we're getting Luthor, Zod, origin story again.Oh, and dark and brooding Superman ala Batman influences. Superman doesnt have Batmans dark psychology.
sigh.
Agreed. The love affair with "dark" is getting on my nerves. Superman became the biggest icon in superhero history being based upon optimistic concepts.
I'd like WB to listen to pitches from directors passionate about the properties, it's no good setting up some internal structure within DC Entertainment to do it, find directors who actually want to make the movies and let things evolve organically, once you do that don't force things to happen, don't leave things out for future movies, just make the best damn movie here and now. Part of where GL went wrong was WB were so sure of themselves they planted seeds for future GL movies. I hate that mentality, don't plant seeds, don't leave things out, make the best effing movie first and foremost, deal with sequels when they come around.
Agreed! That was also a problem for me with Capt America. It never felt like it was its own entity. (Really the only Marvel movie that gave me that vibe)
For some reason, the movie studios think that comic characters have origins, and then their adventures stop.
I simply do not need to see Superman or Batman's origin ever again, and anyone on earth who doesn't already know Batman and Superman's origins will likely not bother to see their movies anyway.
Same with Spider-Man. I am wondering why ASM is going that route. Who doesn't know his origin? I would say he's got the 2nd most well-known origin after Superman.
find GREEN LANTERN's failure to be a bit of an anomaly, myself. It's a fairly safe movie, but it didn't make a lot of money. I don't think it's because audiences suddenly developed critiquing skills, so I can't say it's because it wasn't a good movie. It was a decent film. Personally, I think GREEN LANTERN suffered from a Summer of Superheroes and Action.
I think it was the movie. Capt America came out
after GL and did better.
What Whedon describes as Marvel having a "base" to build on in Iron-Man, DC had in the Dark Knight, they just refused to recognized it as their base, and saw it and the rest of their franchise as separate.
I think this was their biggest mistake.
You might be right.