TServo2049
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Everything posted by TServo2049
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No greedier than the comic book fans who want to see everything adapted to the screen. And you do realize they were setting up future phases from the mid-credit scene of TA1, right? They were already going to lead up to the Infinity Gauntlet as long as the film was a big hit. If they focused on the same characters over and over, that would defeat the whole promise of Marvel Studios, that they would tap the huge cast of characters, that the possibilities were endless. (And they almost had to do Black Panther and Captain Marvel, or the "not enough diversity" stuff would have just gotten louder and louder.) But you do have great points - after Avengers, it may well have been better to make everything stand-alone, have the new character outings like GOTG be truly separate, and just bring the core team together for an Avengers movie every three years. Though would the Infinity Gauntlet stuff even be possible without interconnectivity? Maybe they could have just done all this stuff as Easter-eggs, and not actually revealed any of it was connected until the Infinity War movie proper? And I still wonder how many of these other eclectic characters would have actually gotten their own movies if the goal wasn't to establish a universe and build up to a huge cosmic crossover. Without expanding further, would we have just gotten Iron Man, Cap, and Thor sequels in between the Avengers films instead? I think that Internet geekdom has fed this beast all along, for good or for ill. I also think we may be seeing some of the problems of the modern comic book industry bleeding into these movies.
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I forgot to mention that while audience reaction was decent for my Ant-Man screening, the one thing which got the most applause was the Force Awakens trailer. I wish my theater would have put that in front of Jurassic World, I'd have loved to have heard the reactions to it from my sellout opening-night crowd. (Hacienda Crossings is weird, this was the first time I saw the BvS trailer also - it wasn't put in front of AOU or JW, even though the trailer was out.)
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It's weird - last year, it was "Marvel can propel anything to success, they're the new Pixar", and in 2015 they seem to be going into a "Pixar c. 2011-13" phase (at least in terms of Internet perception). So I guess they ARE the new Pixar. Anybody wanna take bets on what will be their Inside Out "Marvel is back" film?
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Scott Mendelson's avatar looks like he could play the next Joker. He also looks like more of a young Hannibal Lecter in that one picture than Gaspard Ulliel did in Hannibal Rising. I like Mendelson's historical stuff, and his participation in commentaries on Out Now with Aaron & Abe, but his male-feminist SJW speechifying is getting more and more on my nerves. I had the misfortune of accidentally reading his comments on how and I couldn't stop thinking about it during the movie. If I hadn't read that, I would never have even thought of it.
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Minions is gonna do fine, much as we dislike the movie. $75 million production budget (I assume this is after the French tax credits?), same as DM2. (Though interesting thought: With the exchange rate drop, I wonder if it cost more in Euros than DM2 did? Or would that difference be inconsequential?)
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And once again, Hacienda Crossings seems to be an outlier on the cinema-turnout bell curve. My Ant-Man 7:30pm showing was ~75% full (300 people). Though it's not as much of an outlier as with Interstellar, Pacific Rim and Tomorrowland. Or do I just pick the day/time combo that is usually the most attended showing of a movie in its entire run? Opening night, prime-evening showing in the biggest auditorium? (Though I still wonder - my opening-night showing for How to Train Your Dragon 2 was at AMC Concord Mills 24 in Concord, NC - I was visiting relatives - and it was only about half full, more accurately reflecting the weaksauce opening than my other opening-night experiences - I think it was about as full as my second-Saturday matinee at Hacienda, which was in a bigger auditorium. So not all theaters have bang-up opening nights for every would-be tentpole.)
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I enjoy its silliness. It's a comedy, after all. I consider it the best John Landis movie that wasn't actually directed by John Landis. (And when I saw I Wanna Hold Your Hand, I understood exactly where Zemeckis and Gale were going with the writing of 1941.) Yeah, I know it's a mess, but I've always had a soft spot for it.
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Wednesday: Minions 11.1, IO 2.6, JW 2.2
TServo2049 replied to BoxOfficeZ's topic in Numbers and Data
I remember an article when DM2 came out: So then why doesn't Minions seem to have any potential to break out in Japan? Is it just the mindset that Japanese audiences seem to have that there is no worthwhile non-Japanese animation outside of Disney? -
Wednesday: Minions 11.1, IO 2.6, JW 2.2
TServo2049 replied to BoxOfficeZ's topic in Numbers and Data
Not too surprising, Disney didn't have faith in Frozen merchandise either. Remember how the supply could not meet the demand at Christmas? I do suppose there will be an upswing in IO merchandise due to its popularity (though not on Frozen's scale, of course). Wasn't there a similar "demand > supply" situation with the original Toy Story, that was actually referenced in-universe in Toy Story 2? -
Wednesday: Minions 11.1, IO 2.6, JW 2.2
TServo2049 replied to BoxOfficeZ's topic in Numbers and Data
Certainly. But less money > no money. And it's not like it's playing on the biggest screens. They take a smaller slice of a shrinking gross just to cross that milestone. -
I second Rocky IV.
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What's the best sequel to an average movie?
TServo2049 replied to MrFanaticGuy34's topic in The Speakeasy
I'd agree there. I saw Down Under first, then the original Rescuers (the sequel came out on video about a year before the original), and I always preferred Down Under.