ernesth100
The Writing Avenger
- Joined
- Mar 7, 2015
- Messages
- 11,123
- Reaction score
- 410
- Points
- 73
Hulk as a past enemy of Rhino or maybe to help Spidey beat Rhino.
Agreed. They're similar but also at other ends of the spectrum in terms of finances and age. I like that mix.Iron Man. He would fit in as an idolized mentor figure for the scientifically-minded Peter Parker. Of the main Avengers, I think he's the one that Peter meshes with the best.
Be "out"?I don't know his personality is boundto change at least a little after AoU and Civil War. He can definitely become a mentor type to Peter since Cap will probably be out after CW.
Something bad will probably happen to Cap after Civil War. He'll probably be arrested or something.Be "out"?
Never say never. What did he cost for the Avengers (a lead role) around 50M? Even to pay him half of that to have a few key scenes in Spidey's solo movie would surley rake in more than it would cost them. RDJ in a Spider-Man movie would be a billion dollar contender.Robert Downey Jr. will never appear in one of Sony's MCU Spidey films, as the studio would have to pay him an exorbitant amount of money for what would likely only amount to a secondary/tertiary role.
One of my biggest worries is that they will fill it with cameos just to prove to the general audience that it's now part of the larger Marvel universe.
Ideally I wouldn't want any. This is a Spider-Man movie, I wouldn't want him to be overshadowed in his own film.
Ironman isnt very mentor-y though
Agree with all of this.I honestly don't mind who comes in, as long as they aren't a mentor. Spidey was never a sidekick or part of a team. What made him interesting was he was a dumb kid all by himself and he made his own mistakes. He's figured out his own way and had to solve his problems on his own. The fact that he was just a kid, in another universe he'd be a sidekick. He'd be a Robin or a Bucky, but instead, he's his own hero. That's what made him so unique.
Hell, Spidey was always something of a rebellious teen figure. Everyone's against him, branding him a menace or a threat, and he's never been part of any real team. He even rejected Avengers membership in the original comics. And the whole power/responsibility thing loses a lot of weight when he can just run to big brother for help.
The whole mentor thing just goes against what makes Spidey interesting in the first place. If anything, it'd feel more true to Spider-Man if Cap or Tony ended up being more of an opposing figure, telling him it's too dangerous for a kid and he should hang up the mask. But a mentor just doesn't sit right.
One of my biggest worries is that they will fill it with cameos just to prove to the general audience that it's now part of the larger Marvel universe.
Ideally I wouldn't want any. This is a Spider-Man movie, I wouldn't want him to be overshadowed in his own film.
Exactly.
Let him play in the Marvel sandbox when he's in their films, but aside from that, I want to see him be alone (minus a few references, like Stark Industries, etc.).