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Seems like Nolan got the better deal than Whedon on superhero movies

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I think the criticism to this idea everyone got in their heads is valid tho

we know shit. ultimately that's the truth, but everyone will stick to the story they wanna believe out of the percieved fandom they have for certain people's visions

it's like how everyone created this fairy tale about the Kojima / Konami stuff and how obviously Kojima did NOTHING wrong on any of those projects cause we all love him and omg

that's immediatly what happened with Edgar Wright. I love the dude's work and would have loved for him to be on Ant-Man believe me, but we know shit about what actually went down other than "there were differences", but the studio is always the easier target
true, at the end of the day what went down with Wright is just an assumption
 
the weird part about this is that they then get the Russo brothers to make Avengers 3

the guys who made the captain america movie be a shield-scope kinda spy thriller instead of the big badass superhero film

It still turned big and dumb at the end, the same way Iron Man 3 changed from a PG-13 Shane Black superhero movie into a big dumb Marvel movie at the end, the same way Guardians of The Galaxy changed from a PG-13 James Gunn movie into a big dumb Marvel movie at the end.

That's kinda what these movies do. They start trying to do something, and partway through you can almost literally see the suits injecting that patented Marvel® Branding™ into them.
 

Sephzilla

Member
It still turned big and dumb at the end, the same way Iron Man 3 changed from a PG-13 Shane Black superhero movie into a big dumb Marvel movie at the end, the same way Guardians of The Galaxy changed from a PG-13 James Gunn movie into a big dumb Marvel movie at the end.

That's kinda what these movies do. They start trying to do something, and partway through you can almost literally see the suits injecting that patented Marvel® Branding™ into the movie.

Iron Man 3 was big and dumb pretty much from the word go
 

Corpsepyre

Banned
It still turned big and dumb at the end, the same way Iron Man 3 changed from a PG-13 Shane Black superhero movie into a big dumb Marvel movie at the end, the same way Guardians of The Galaxy changed from a PG-13 James Gunn movie into a big dumb Marvel movie at the end.

That's kinda what these movies do. They start trying to do something, and partway through you can almost literally see the suits injecting that patented Marvel® Branding™ into the movie.

I'll agree with The Winter Soldier bit. The last 30 minutes put me off because they were so cliched and Marvel-like. Everything before the reveal of Bucky was superb, and I was super-intrigued by it all. And then that finale...
 
I dunno Shane Black made a Shane Black film and people lambasted it. I feel like GOTG was very much a James Gunn film. Avengers is positively Weedon, is he upset it wasn't longer?
 
It still turned big and dumb at the end, the same way Iron Man 3 changed from a PG-13 Shane Black superhero movie into a big dumb Marvel movie at the end, the same way Guardians of The Galaxy changed from a PG-13 James Gunn movie into a big dumb Marvel movie at the end.

That's kinda what these movies do. They start trying to do something, and partway through you can almost literally see the suits injecting that patented Marvel® Branding™ into the movie.

could that be a reason..why of course this is subjectivelly but generally speaking The Dark Knight is still looked at as one of the greatest superhero movies more so then any MCU film, The Winter Soldier etc.., because it didn't have that sort of branding on top of it, that it didn't have to confine itself with in an artificial canon,

was it just a freak accident?
 

btrboyev

Member
I don't consider the Nolan batman movies to be batman movies at all, I think at least Whedon got it right and he obviously understands the characters.

Nolans trilogy was tainted by Rises. Absolutely trash movie on every level.
 

massoluk

Banned
Whedon said with absolute seriousness, “Nothing has ever made me angrier than the Gwen Stacy slept with Norman Osborn and had genetically enhanced twins [storyline]. Gwen Stacy is the bedrock of the Marvel universe. And that to me is unforgivable.”

My man.
 

Cheebo

Banned
Marvel movies will be producer controlled movies, not director controlled ones. That is just how it is. similar to James Bond
 

ruxtpin

Banned
I enjoy the Marvel cinematic universe more than Nolans Batman movies. Both Avengers and GotG especially. Maybe I'm in a minority, but I feel like the Marvel movies embrace their comic book origins a bit more. Or at least for me they feel more fun, and I find that entertaining.
 

OldRoutes

Member
It still turned big and dumb at the end, the same way Iron Man 3 changed from a PG-13 Shane Black superhero movie into a big dumb Marvel movie at the end, the same way Guardians of The Galaxy changed from a PG-13 James Gunn movie into a big dumb Marvel movie at the end.

That's kinda what these movies do. They start trying to do something, and partway through you can almost literally see the suits injecting that patented Marvel® Branding™ into the movie.

I think you're just mistaking "big finale" with 'Marvel Branding' or whatever you want to call it.

At the end of the day, a movie is a movie. I don't think anyone goes into a blockbuster movie in May expecting a movie breaking new grounds in story telling techniques. To argue about that being wrong is something ; to blame it as a big dumb Marvel movie is dumb.

Many movies finish with a big bang, and they're expensive and bit repetitive... but people want that. I want that in some of my movies.

Marvel has shown great restrain on TV and Netflix so far in term of scopes, because the medium allows it. They've already explored many genre throughout the super hero genre (Spy thriller in TWS, buddy comedy in IM3, Fantasy Epic in Thor 1, Space Opera with GotG, War movie with Captain America), which is something that hadn't been done or really explored before.

Whether you want it or not, it works and most movies are different.
 
If anyone could have stood up to Disney/Marvel, you'd have thought it'd be Whedon, so it's kind of concerning to see his vision was partially destroyed given that younger directors with no experience with marvel are probably fairing far worse.
 
Maybe Whedon can get to work on a sequel for this now?

Serenity_One_Sheet.jpg


let me dream ;_;
 

Violet_0

Banned
I'm just exited to see what Whedon's next project will be in the near future. Personally I'm hoping for something involving space ships and possibly cowboys
 

Salsa

Member
Marvel movies will be producer controlled movies, not director controlled ones. That is just how it is. similar to James Bond

what?

what does this even.. mean?

all movies are producer controlled movies.

do you think that means directors bring nothing to the table?

you think Kevin Feige like.. comes up with plot points? or shots and framing?

only thing the dude did is listen to what people actually wanted and find the right people for the right jobs, then swim in money
 
I think you're just mistaking "big finale" with 'Marvel Branding' or whatever you want to call it.

At the end of the day, a movie is a movie. I don't think anyone goes into a blockbuster movie in May expecting a movie breaking new grounds in story telling techniques. To argue about that being wrong is something ; to blame it as a big dumb Marvel movie is dumb.

Many movies finish with a big bang, and they're expensive and bit repetitive... but people want that. I want that in some of my movies.

Marvel has shown great restrain on TV and Netflix so far in term of scopes, because the medium allows it. They've already explored many genre throughout the super hero genre (Spy thriller in TWS, buddy comedy in IM3, Fantasy Epic in Thor 1, Space Opera with GotG, War movie with Captain America), which is something that hadn't been done or really explored before.

Whether you want it or not, it works and most movies are different.
yes but none of those movies really challenged viewers like The Dark Knight did...TDK still was true to the origins of Batman but also was able to stress it's muscles and do something different then what is generally seen in comic book movies...
 

Loxley

Member
I'm sure it helps that Nolan got to work on his own big pet projects in-between Bat films to clear his head up. At least on the surface, it appears WB gave him a blank check and complete creative autonomy on The Prestige, Inception, and Interstellar. I never got the impression that Whedon's relationship with Marvel and Disney was a mirror-image of Nolan and WB's. It's unfortunate that Whedon is coming out of this seemingly sour on the latter chunk of the experience, whereas I can't recall Nolan ever really complaining about WB dicking him around.

I'm curious just how much of this (if any) comes down to Disney's oversight of all-things related to the MCU.
 

Sephzilla

Member
yes but none of those movies really challenged viewers like The Dark Knight did...TDK still was true to the origins of Batman but also was able to stress it's muscles and do something different then what is generally seen in comic book movies...

How did Dark Knight ''challenge viewers''?
 

Salsa

Member
If anyone could have stood up to Disney/Marvel, you'd have thought it'd be Whedon, so it's kind of concerning to see his vision was partially destroyed given that younger directors with no experience with marvel are probably fairing far worse.

you think the first-time director who had 3 shows cancelled by a smaller studio is "the only one" who could have step up to fucking Disney?
 

OldRoutes

Member
If anyone could have stood up to Disney/Marvel, you'd have thought it'd be Whedon, so it's kind of concerning to see his vision was partially destroyed given that younger directors with no experience with marvel are probably fairing far worse.

He never said that. He never even implied it.

Whedon said:
In practically the same breath, Whedon added that the worst, he hoped, was behind him. “I’m now coming out the other side, realizing that once again, for all its many varied and soon to be heralded flaws, it’s my movie,” he said. “It’s the movie I set out to make. And I have the honor of saying, it’s fucking bonkers. So there’s that.”

Age of Ultron carried weight. It wasn't Marvel Studio's or Feige's ; it's a movie called The Avengers. And Whedon created it. He directed it. He wrote it.
 
Every single movie (aside from Iron Man 1) felt like a long advertisement for the next Marvel film. People are too interested in seeing how all these pieces fit together that they forget to judge the movie on its own qualities.

I wonder, when the MCU hype has died down, if people will look back at these films and say, "what's the big deal?" I think the novelty of seeing these characters on screen blinds many Marvel fans to the film's shortcomings and mediocrity.
 

Raptor

Member
the only good nolan bat was the first. joker bat was completely carried by health leger, two face wasn't even there or relevant, and batman was merely a plot prop.

the third wasn't even worth watching, and is not worth commenting about.

And here is we stop commenting about the OP and instead begin to talk shit about the movies this filmakers made.
 

mreddie

Member
I'm sure it helps that Nolan got to work on his own big pet projects in-between Bat films to clear his head up. At least on the surface, it appears WB gave him a blank check and complete creative autonomy on The Prestige, Inception, and Interstellar. I never got the impression that Whedon's relationship with Marvel and Disney was a mirror-image of Nolan and WB's. It's unfortunate that Whedon is coming out of this seemingly sour on the latter chunk of the experience, whereas I can't recall Nolan ever really complaining about WB dicking him around.

I'm curious just how much of this (if any) comes down to Disney's oversight of all-things related to the MCU.

Prestige was done by Disney actually.
 

Salsa

Member
I wonder, when the MCU hype has died down, if people will look back at these films and say, "what's the big deal?" I think the novelty of seeing these characters on screen blinds many Marvel fans to the film's shortcomings and mediocrity.

The "good" thing about the MCU is the same thing some people like to shout from rooftops as demise already

everyone was on board cause they actually "GOT IT!", they got fuckin Jon Favreau to do Iron Man! they do comic stories! they keep the costumes! they got JOSS WHEDON to helm the biggest movie ever! JAMES GUNN!?!??

but apparently now they don't "get it" enough even if they do Black Panther and Captain Marvel and put a horror guy to do Doctor Strange or whatever


they got arguably their best movie (winter soldier) out just last year. It's all a bunch of hyperbole. Superhero fatigue? you bet, but saying there's no creativity in these films or that they're some sort of mass produced husk of a film is just wrong
 

OldRoutes

Member
i should of used a better term, what i meant was it didn't follow a basic superhero formula that you often see in MCU films

Well... I think it did.

It ended up with a big finale when Batman invades a building where the Joker held up people hostages. It had explosions, tensions, a cool action sequence... It had high stakes.

That's all you need. The rest of the movie is only great because the Joker's performance is terrific, and there's also that beautiful cinematography.

But most of Nolan's touch get lost, as it did with The Dark Knight Rises.
 

Sephzilla

Member
i should of used a better term, what i meant was it didn't follow a basic superhero formula that you often see in MCU films

Eh, I dunno. At a basic level it shares some similarities with your typical superhero sequel. Granted Dark Knight did pioneer the "villain lets himself get captured" trope that every other movie copied for a few years.
 

inky

Member
The difference is that Whedon desperately wanted to present the characters that he loves. For him, it's "I desperately wanna see Tony make fun of Cap. I wanna see Vision talk to Ultron about humanity. I wanna see the roster change like it does in the comics. I wanna see Hulk and Thor duke it out on-screen."

Nolan seemed to have an image ahead of time for the tone of what kind of movie he wanted to make, and tried slotting in these pre-existing characters through a filter to make it work. "I want Gotham to look like Blade Runner in some areas. What if Batman was like Heat?"

Both had their successes and failures, but there really was no right way. Both came from very different places.

Yea, well said. Both approaches have their merit, and I really don't agree that much with the picture the op paints.

For one, I will be forever grateful to Joss for moving the heroes to the screen so vibrantly-- essentially bringing the comic book pages to life, even though he fell prey to bloat and his usual conventions (some of which I touched in the spoiler thread) and forever will hate Nolan for letting Bale do that stupid voice :p but applaud that his movies were pretty great crime dramas as well, even though he moved a bit from that Begins tone (which is more of a personal preference, TDK is masterful after all).
 

MMarston

Was getting caught part of your plan?
I enjoy the Marvel cinematic universe more than Nolans Batman movies. Both Avengers and GotG especially. Maybe I'm in a minority, but I feel like the Marvel movies embrace their comic book origins a bit more. Or at least for me they feel more fun, and I find that entertaining.

Indeed they do, but what I don't think people realize with the Nolan-Trilogy is that it didn't set out to give people the stuff already seen in the comics. The trilogy wasn't meant to cater to the comic-book fans, it was meant to be its own thing both as an artistic work and as a blockbuster film. Nolan points this out a couple of times in interviews. They were broad adaptations of its source material, not strictly. Sure, they still are comic-book films, but really, they are in the lightest sense possible.

This was pretty much the same mentality Abrams had with his Star Trek films, he set out to make it his own thing and simultaneously, it was also a vision that helped make something for everyone to enjoy rather than something exclusive to its fanbase.

Not to say I don't like the MCU, it has its own highs as much as its lows. Avengers and TWS still remains as one of my top 10 superhero flicks. It's just that comparing to the TDK trilogy always felt like comparing apples to oranges for me.
 

mreddie

Member
The "good" thing about the MCU is the same thing some people like to shout from rooftops as demise already

everyone was on board cause they actually "GOT IT!", they got fuckin Jon Favreau to do Iron Man! they do comic stories! they keep the costumes! they got JOSS WHEDON to helm the biggest movie ever! JAMES GUNN!?!??

but apparently now they don't "get it" enough even if they do Black Panther and Captain Marvel and put a horror guy to do Doctor Strange or whatever

Sums up the IWC, nothing is perfect and there's no upside.
 
It still turned big and dumb at the end, the same way Iron Man 3 changed from a PG-13 Shane Black superhero movie into a big dumb Marvel movie at the end, the same way Guardians of The Galaxy changed from a PG-13 James Gunn movie into a big dumb Marvel movie at the end.

That's kinda what these movies do. They start trying to do something, and partway through you can almost literally see the suits injecting that patented Marvel® Branding™ into them.

Yeah forreal I fucking loved captain america 2 until the ending battle which you could literally replace with the gotg finale and nobody would prolly bat an eye.

Marvel loves their everything but the kitchen sink final battles even tho they all just look kinda stale after james Cameron kind of put his claim on the Aerial/Land cgi action-fest

As problematic as nolan movies can be (and his flaws can sometimes be apparent in the TDK trilogy too, certainly in the last one) they are so much better made and exciting than what marvel's given us post-iron man 1. They've gone with a sort of cartoon vibe with their universe, has a villain ever been genuinely terrifying or threatening among these movies? It works though to get the majority of the audience, and also the fans of the books like seeing infinity gems and stuff
 

Kimosabae

Banned
The difference is merely that the vision for MCU isn't Whedon's - it's Marvel's. More specifically, Feige. You have to have a limited number of people at the top filtering decisions for something this ambitious or it's chaos. Ultimately, the MCU at large has to be an the vision of one man or an elite enclave. These aren't good films on their own imo, the connectedness is largely what makes them so compelling.

Any director looking to get involved with the Marvel Universe should simply be looking to humble themselves and contribute to something greater than themselves. Otherwise, you're just being way self-centered and are completely ignoring the strengths of what the MCU is currently doing.

I think comparing this to Nolan is silly. Begins pretty much kickstarted a new era of Superhero films that no one wanted to even make, so of course he was given full reigns and it's a stand alone trilogy. Were he directing Avengers he'd be just as pinioned.
 

Cheebo

Banned
what?

what does this even.. mean?

all movies are producer controlled movies.

do you think that means directors bring nothing to the table?

you think Kevin Feige like.. comes up with plot points? or shots and framing?

only thing the dude did is listen to what people actually wanted and find the right people for the right jobs, then swim in money
No not all movies are producer controlled in terms of content on screen at all. Does a producer tell Scorsese what to do? Tarantino? Of course not.

The situation at marvel is much more studio and producer driven than say on a Tarantino, Scorsese, Nolan, Linklater, etc film.
 

Salsa

Member
No not all movies are producer controlled in terms of content on screen at all. Does a producer tell Scorsese what to do? Tarantino? Of course not.

I.. guess I get what you're overall trying to say but your perception of it is just kinda cartoonish dude

all movies are collaborations. all movies have lots of working people and moving parts. Whedon made Marvel a lot of money same way Tarantino made Weinsten a lot of money. Both parties ideally want to keep that going.

shit just aint that black and white

do producers have final say on the movie? you bet, guess what: that's the case in every non-independent movie ever.

again: I get what you're going for, but reducing what the director's artistic input on these movies is and being so firm about it based purely on watching them is not a strong argument
 
The difference is merely that the vision for MCU isn't Whedon's - it's Marvel's. More specifically, Feige. You have to have a limited number of people at the top filtering decisions for something this ambitious or it's chaos. These aren't good films on their own imo, the connectedness is largely what makes them so compelling.

Any director looking to get involved with the Marvel Universe should simply be looking to humble themselves and contribute to something greater than themselves. Otherwise, you're just being way self-centered and are completely ignoring the strengths of what the MCU is currently doing.

but that's boring.....i mean you don't see Kojima limiting himself when a new MGS game comes..in fact each MGS game seems to be distinctively different, the guy could care less about canon that much..although each game is technically connected

i don't buy the argument that directors and writers should abandon their vision be cause they are working within a universe/canon etc.
 
Christopher Nolan made Momento. Sit down on your toilet and contemplate on how insane backwards that movie is. Momento is like so insane, you literally will go insane if you try and deconstruct it. And believe me I have tried. Because I tried taking another film and doing the same thing and it doesn't work.


I don't understand how the pay off, could also be the revelation and at the same time being the kick off. It's like it takes everything I have ever learned about structure, 3 act, heroes journey and just throws it in a meat grinder. and..


It's not a entertaining film. It's not a fun film, but that film is one of the best I have ever seen and Nolan is a goddamn hero for making that.
This comment reads just like an actual review that gives the movie an 8.5.

But I can and can't agree on you with it being hard to decipher. Watch it twice and you can begin to cut and paste everything together.
 

Cheebo

Banned
I.. guess I get what you're overall trying to say but your perception of it is just kinda cartoonish dude

all movies are collaborations. all movies have lots of working people and moving parts. Whedon made Marvel a lot of money same way Tarantino made Weinsten a lot of money. Both parties ideally want to keep that going.
But Whedon can't go in and do stuff that would contradict story lines marvel was setting up for phase 3 and 4 on his own. Nolan had much more creative freedom on his Batman films for example.

Not saying Marvels way is bad. I love most of the MCU films. But it is clearly not a director as visionary franchise.
 

Slayven

Member
I enjoy the Marvel cinematic universe more than Nolans Batman movies. Both Avengers and GotG especially. Maybe I'm in a minority, but I feel like the Marvel movies embrace their comic book origins a bit more. Or at least for me they feel more fun, and I find that entertaining.

You are not, very few people will write 9k on something they enjoy.
 
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