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BadAtGender

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Posts posted by BadAtGender

  1. 18 hours ago, TalismanRing said:

    MCU fan support is multitudes that of any comic run support.

     

    To put their audiences/consumers in perspective - Deconnick's CM comics sold monthly in the 20ks (sometimes the teens).   After the film gave her  a boost its now mid 30ks

     

    CM was huge because it was part of the MCU and directly tied into AIW and AEG and MCU's fist solo female lead film.

     

    Black Widow will be huge because of her place in the MCU not her comics runs.

     

     

    For CM, Deconnick personally shepherded in a group of dedicated fans, that existed (and perpetuated) despite basically having no support from Marvel. (This is a common problem: creators often have to do their own publicity for their books.) That means there was a group of very keyed in people that started talking about the film from the getgo, and in unrelentingly positive ways. These hardcore fans aren't the moviegoing audience, but they do start the word of mouth that makes the audience excited.

  2.  

    3 hours ago, cax16 said:

    https://www.etonline.com/henry-cavill-on-his-vision-for-how-superman-would-come-back-exclusive-137373
     

    "I'd like to delve more into the aspect of Superman [that] we traditionally know, coupled with where we left him with Man of Steel," Cavill explained. "It's the hero who is trying to exist in a world where people may say he's not relevant anymore -- where, actually, he's extraordinarily relevant and it's him coming to terms with that and becoming that relevance and showing people that hope does exist without it being too chocolate box." 

    The leading man added: "I wanted to still have an edge but to have some warmth to it and to have some hope to it." 

    Basically ignoring BvS and JL. Which might be the best way forward. WW84 seems to be ignoring at least some of the character beats there, BoP and TSS are probably not going to lean too heavily on Suicide Squad, and I doubt The Batman will go there at all. 

     

    It would probably be a first, too, for an active franchise to effectively discard some of its films. 

  3. 8 minutes ago, LPLC said:

    Is $340M locked for frozen 2 after this week end ? And is $450M or even $500M locked for final domestic run ?

    Nothing is ever truly locked. 340 is likely, tho. Final talky will largely depend on how it holds through the holidays. 

     

    (it's not likely to repeat F1's amazing post New Year performance, so that period won't have a big effect) 

  4. I was going to watch the first film this evening, but after I got home from work, I realized I could hop down to the Pacific Science Center and see 2 on IMAX laser. Totally worth it. 

     

    I listened through the songs a few times earlier today, and they're all growing on me. One interesting thing is that while I like other songs better, Into the Unknown is really strong as a memorable, singalong number. Show Yourself, The Next Right Thing, and even All is Found are emotionally stronger, but ItU is amped up in such a way that I'd expect it to get more play. (Just listen to it and walk. It exudes power. Your steps will be more confident.) 

     

    I wonder if we'll get an every language album of it like Let it Go had. 

    • Like 1
  5. Zootopia getting a sequel will require the directors being on board and having an idea that works. Byron Howard is working on something with Lin Manuel Miranda, and Rich Moore isn't at Disney anymore. So there probably isn't a lot of impetus there.

     

    Despite being slightly more sequel-happy of late, WDAS still isn't super keen on it. The next two films are originals (Raya and the Last Dragon and the Howard/Miranda joint) and then it's probably the four other originals announced.

     

    This is a similar situation as Pixar. There are two announced originals, and four other directors working on other originals. If I was taking a guess, it's probably that Jennifer Lee and Pete Docter (as the head of story, post-Lasseter) are more keen on original ideas, rather. Lee (and Buck) seemed resistant to doing Frozen 2 at first; it took over a year for it to be announced. So I can't imagine that they'd be keen to work on a third, not anytime soon, at least. And Docter, when asked about doing a sequel to Inside Out, pointed out the difficulty with that as a concept, because the characters had been developed entirely with that story in mind; figuring out a second story is not necessarily easy.

    • Like 3
  6. I'm not even sure it's worth it for me to do a top five. I've seen so few films this year, relative to my normal. (God, I miss having free time.) There was an over 3 month gap between Hobbs & Shaw and Frozen 2. 

     

    Yeah, just checked and it looks like I've only seen 12 films this year.

    • Like 1
  7. It's too soon for me to rank the F2 songs with F1. I'm very familiar with the songs from Frozen, because I've listened to them so many times. Where for the second, I've seen the film once and don't yet own the soundtrack.

     

    However, it feels like F2 has a better balance of songs throughout the movie, with two happening in the third act, and both have full emotional impact. In F1, only Fixer Upper is in the third act. And I think that all the F2 songs are a better fit thematically or storytelling-wise.

     

    Do any of them have the showstopping power of Let It Go? I'm not sure, but even if not, overall it's a stronger, more balanced selection. 

    • Like 4
  8. 46 minutes ago, Damien said:

    Well I stopped watching after civil war but considering next two Avengers have the same directors as civil war, I wouldn't be surprised.

    Oh yeah I did see black panther. That was nice.

    Eh. CACW is probably worse than either. And CAWS is better than either, so the Russos can do some things okay. The fadeout at the end of IW was well done, and Thor was great. Endgame had some enjoyable sequences, too. Ant-Man is a big plus in the movie.

     

    Both of them suffer because Thanos' reasoning is just so, so stupid, which makes it almost impossible for me to take him seriously. Oh, and the ending of Endgame is terribad, effectively ruining Captain America as a character.

     

    None of the Avengers films are good, but they're enjoyable enough popcorn fare, worth a watch with an invested crowd. And, I suppose, good fodder for significantly better written and realized fanfic.

    • Like 2
    • ...wtf 1
    • Disbelief 4
    • Knock It Off 1
  9. 1 hour ago, Webslinger said:

    After a year of seeing so many would-be crowd-pleasers not really play to much of a crowd, I'm really rooting for Knives Out to find a big audience at the box office. Even a fairly small Wednesday afternoon crowd was tons of fun to watch it with; I can't imagine how wild it would be with a full house.

    KO was a lot of fun with a pretty full house when I saw it on Saturday.

    11 minutes ago, Damien said:

    Not to bring this topic up again but I actually liked Age of Ultron than most MCU movies. But I also didn't have sky high expectations from it. Fun time. Civil war though argh.

    Good numbers for Frozen 2.

    Each Avengers film is worse than the previous.

    • Like 1
    • Haha 1
    • Knock It Off 1
  10. On 11/12/2019 at 2:15 PM, dudalb said:

    Some Star Wars fans bitching that Frozen 2 is getting all the attention,publicity  and marketing from Disney instead of The Rise Of Skywalker.

    Let's see, Frozen Two opens in around two weeks, TROS in Six. What the hell do they expect Disney to do? Hurt Frozen 2 for the sake of TROS?

    And, probably the day after Thanksgiving weekend, we will be flooded with TROS stuff.

    That is the problem with some fanboys:Nothing exists outside whatever they are fans of.

     

    In 2015, they basically did give up on advertising The Good Dinosaur in favor of TFA. Which wouldn't make sense here, but I suppose in the minds of some fans, anything that isn't totally focused on their own franchise is blasphemy. 

  11. 8 minutes ago, cdsacken said:

    Apple has nothing. Disney has tons. Netflix domestically will lose subscribers starting in 2020

    Netflix keeps with their documentaries and massive discounts . Stranger things and their orignals I don't even watch . It would be hard to drop Netflix though. I've had it for almost 20 years.

     

    Disney's back catalogue doesn't really entice me. If there's something very specific I want to watch, I'd probably either opt for a rental, library check-out, or, if I really want it (like most WDAS entries), I'll just buy it. The comparison of service original programming is mostly what I look at. Netflix has a massive advantage there, because it's been doing it for a lot longer. And there are several active originals that I follow. (It's seriously a great service for original animated shows.)

    • Like 2
  12. 57 minutes ago, AndyK said:

    What does that even mean?

     

    They don't do "prints" any more and the studio don't get to choose what ads are shown by a theatre chain.

     

    I believe the studio can set two trailers that must be shown with their own features (or to give the theater a choice between a few). The other trailers shown are up to the theater. 

     

    The studio trailers might be included in the movie hard drive, which is essentially like including it on the print.

  13. 3 hours ago, Webslinger said:

    That's a shame; seeing The Dark Knight and Dark Knight Rises on that format there were two of the most technically impressive theatrical experiences I've ever had. Then again, PacSci is such an outstanding venue that I can't imagine a movie not looking mightily impressive there. (Still haven't found the time to venture over to Cinerama on any of my Seattle excursions, though.)

    The last film to have a 15/70 release was Interstellar. They closed the theater for about three or four months to upgrade in time for the opening of AOU. Part of that was switching the projector to IMAX laser. Which is still really good. (Cinerama uses a Christie 6P laser.)

     

    I saw Interstellar 1 & ⅔s times there. The first time there was a fire alarm that went off right. as. everything. was. about. to. happen. (It was just before they "took a walk".) Since they couldn't get it sorted, they refunded us and gave us free tix for another show.

     

    I kinda wish they'd have kept it around, if only for Nolan. Cinerama showed Dunkirk in 70mm, which was cool, but it wasn't quite the same as the full IMAX.

    3 hours ago, Webslinger said:

     

    In an age where just about every big movie runs in IMAX, I keep forgetting that Frozen didn't get IMAX screens when it first opened (thanks to Catching Fire). It would have been impressive on a giant display, so I'm sure the sequel will look great there too.

    Frozen would have been cool, but it was also the final pre-Hyperion film, so it probably wouldn't look as good as newer features. Zootopia was fantastic there, though.

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