I say "muster apathy" because I had to work my way up from disappointment.
I know they are meant as fun summer blockbusters, but so are the movies in the X-Men franchise and I think in some cases, with those, they got it right.
Fair enough. I'm not one to give credit to a single movie based on a necessary investment of watching five or six previous movies to get some character development. If I was coming in cold, never having watched the standalone films, I would find the movie to be weak in that department. Preference obviously has a huge role in it as well, I was referring more to First Class than X2 or even The Wolverine to a lesser extent.Luke wrote:Disagree. They are very well written. So well written that they got away with "Mewling quim" and actually turned the phrase into a cultural meme. The dialogue is witty, sharp, and memorable. The jokes are well punched and tagged as well. The moment when Cap gives Nick a ten spot was great and cute at the same time. Why The Avengers work is because it's a movie about people who happen to be superheroes. It's not just superheroes in a movie. And the character growth is WELL established in the stand alone titles. That's why The Avengers work. It's not from the comics, but from their own movies. We know the back stories, now bring 'em all together and smash stuff.
On the other side of the coin, besides X2, I think the xmen movies are horrendous. So that's where preference plays out.
That's why it's being done as two movies.jp1 wrote:[I'm conflicted because I would love to see something like the Infinity Gauntlet arc brought to the big screen, but I'm reluctant because the story just feels too big to cram into a two hour movie.
This is exactly what's happening. Every Marvel movie has had a little bit of information tucked away in it to tie it to the Infinity War. The 3rd and 4th Avengers movies are Infinity War pt. 1 and Infinity War pt. 2. They've slowly been introducing Thanos and the Infinity Gems, and they've foreshadowed the gauntlet. Heck, Guardians of the Galaxy was the movie that finally, formally explained the Infinity Gems. So, essentially, these other movies are setting some of the stage, and the Infinity War story itself will likely be a 5 hour affair on the whole.jp1 wrote:I'm conflicted because I would love to see something like the Infinity Gauntlet arc brought to the big screen, but I'm reluctant because the story just feels too big to cram into a two hour movie.
I know they have been foreshadowing, although I didn't see Guardians or Ultron yet. I did not see that there were already plans for it though. The thing is, and I'm contradicting myself here, I think that the crossover characters are important to the story line. Do they have plans of bringing in the full lot or are they going to water it down and have the Avengers somehow deal with it on their own? That is a deciding factor for me when purchasing tickets.marurun wrote:This is exactly what's happening. Every Marvel movie has had a little bit of information tucked away in it to tie it to the Infinity War. The 3rd and 4th Avengers movies are Infinity War pt. 1 and Infinity War pt. 2. They've slowly been introducing Thanos and the Infinity Gems, and they've foreshadowed the gauntlet. Heck, Guardians of the Galaxy was the movie that finally, formally explained the Infinity Gems. So, essentially, these other movies are setting some of the stage, and the Infinity War story itself will likely be a 5 hour affair on the whole.jp1 wrote:I'm conflicted because I would love to see something like the Infinity Gauntlet arc brought to the big screen, but I'm reluctant because the story just feels too big to cram into a two hour movie.
That said, I do understand. There are a lot of Marvel movies already, and not all of them are great. The Thor movies haven't been all that fantastic, despite producing the only villain with an actual personality. The Iron Man films have had ups and downs. The first Captain America was weak sauce. It's a lot to take in to be able to appreciate the Avengers films, which are really the highlights of the franchise. But as hokey as the plots often turn out to be, they are still light years better than Michael Bay productions, and the dialogue and inter-character banter is really some of the best to be found in action movies. The protagonists are far better realized characters than most in action movies and put the antagonists to shame.
Hopefully, at some point Marvel/Disney will figure out how to do movie villains. Loki is starting to seem like an anomaly.
Try to never do that.jp1 wrote: I went in expecting...

