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Captain America Civil War was highly Disappointing

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It was an okay movie. Comparing it to ANYTHING DC has done regarding movies in the past 10 years helps you see that it could be MUCH worse.
 
Captain America's given up his mantle. I mean you can always argue that "We know there are more Avengers movies", but that actually means comparatively little.

I'm not saying Civil War doesn't have character arcs. I think Black Panther's was done very well for the amount of screen time it had, for example. I'm saying none of those arcs will have real consequences. There's a general feeling of "everything will be fine for everyone in the end." And that's totally fine and even appropriate for a popcorn superhero movie, which is why I framed my praise of the movie as I did.

Unless I'm not remembering correctly, I'm pretty sure Tony was trying to kill Bucky in that final face-off.
The airport fight was cap's team trying to bring down Tony's so they can get to the Quinn Jet and fly to the Russian base.
Tony's team was trying to arrest Cap, Bucky and Falcon, so things wouldn't be worse when the UN went after them.
Would have made zero sense for them to try to kill each other in that Situation.

Of course, because the movie sets up situations where they don't actually want to kill each other despite there being a meaningful, deep idealogical divide for which they easily could have created situations where the two sides were trying to kill each other, which is the point of a "no consequence" criticism. The final fight is more intense because Tony probably is trying to kill Bucky, but of course nothing comes of it. Steve, being the good guy he is, doesn't even resent Tony for it and offers an olive branch after.

Let me ask a question that I think will help clarify the criticism a lot of people have for the MCU: does anyone believe any of these guys would ever turn heel and start being a villain? It's a very specific hypothetical, I know, but there's other similar questions you could ask that would have the same effect.
 
I'm not saying Civil War doesn't have character arcs. I think Black Panther's was done very well for the amount of screen time it had, for example. I'm saying none of those arcs will have real consequences. There's a general feeling of "everything will be fine for everyone in the end." And that's totally fine and even appropriate for a popcorn superhero movie, which is why I framed my praise of the movie as I did.
Again... Captain America isnt Captain America anymore. That is a consequence. He's going to have to earn that shield back.
 
I loved Civil War, I have some issues with it, the biggest one being the lack of focus on the Accords, and when the focus was on the accord it was mostly on the scale of the collateral damage than the political issues it'd arise for a team of super heroes to continue stepping on foreign soil. Most of the issue also happens because of Bucky, although I guess that makes sense considering its a Captain America movie first and foremost.

Also I do agree Spider-Man was shoehorned as fuck, but I didn't care, he was great in the movie.

Edit: Also I finally saw BvS recently (Director's Cut) and anyone agreeing that the Martha line scene was better than Tony watching the video is crazy, the Martha scene is even more hilarious because Batman was ranting about both his and Superman's parents right before the scene happens.
 
I loved Civil War, I have some issues with it, the biggest one being the lack of focus on the Accords, and when the focus was on the accord it was mostly on the scale of the collateral damage than the political issues it'd arise for a team of super heroes to continue stepping on foreign soil. Most of the issue also happens because of Bucky, although I guess that makes sense considering its a Captain America movie first and foremost.

Also I do agree Spider-Man was shoehorned as fuck, but I didn't care, he was great in the movie.

I thought Ant Man was far worse. At least we have a scene with Stark visiting Peter, they just roll up in a van and here's Antman. I liked him in the movie but that was pretty damn lame.
 
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I thought Ant Man was far worse. At least we have a scene with Stark visiting Peter, they just roll up in a van and here's Antman. I liked him in the movie but that was pretty damn lame.

No they didn't. Falcon brings up bringing in Antman much earlier. Which is a continuation of a plot thread from the Antman film itself, which ends with the notion that Falcon is looking for Antman for something.
 
Yes, I remember plenty of it, and I will probably still remember it with a rewatch here or there.

The look on Wanda's face right after the explosion.
Vision's entrance.
The shot of Rhodey and Sam arguing with one another over Cap's shoulders as he sits in the foreground reading the accords.
Vision's monologue about the inherent danger their existence invites.
Widow at Sharon's funeral, updating Steve with the team's decision as he mulls over his own frustrations, but then stating that she's there simply to make sure Steve was okay.

I could keep going if you'd like...
none of this is comparable to Heath Ledger's performance lol
 
I thought Ant Man was far worse. At least we have a scene with Stark visiting Peter, they just roll up in a van and here's Antman. I liked him in the movie but that was pretty damn lame.

The issue with Scott being there is, while Spider-Man was shoehorned, the movie at least explains why he'd be on Tony's side.

Despite Ant-Man being in is because of a direct consequence of him infiltrating the Avenger's HQ, due to the resolution of the movie it makes NO SENSE for Scott to risk becoming a criminal again despite how much he sympathizes with Cap.
 
No they didn't. Falcon brings up bringing in Antman much earlier. Which is a continuation of a plot thread from the Antman film itself, which ends with the notion that Falcon is looking for Antman for something.

Oh sorry, they gave him a line! Its still a fucking lame shoe horned in entry. I would have much preferred he actually had a part to play in the movie despite growing huge and punching stuff. Its sloppy lazy writing.
 
Everytime someone complains about stakes, death is the only thing they bring up.
That's the only way some of you seem to think a story can have stakes, main characters dying.

Death is the ultimate price, but there are also personal and public stakes. Personal stakes are more than just what a hero wants to do. They illustrate why: why this goal and that action, and how it must be performed in a profound and personal sense.

Civil War didn't have any of that. Was there any indication that any of them would lose their reputation? Or powers? Was there any dramatic irony? Hypocrisy? Was there even a big mystery? I don't think the film asked a big question at the beginning of their story.... it just kept rolling and rolling. Then we reach the meat and bones: breaking a friendship -- but when the entire franchise is about leading to unity -- it feels mundane. The third party, aka the villain, was just not an overwhelming force. Think of ET, the stakes were implied and if our bud ET gets taken by the Men in Black we just know it's gonna bad and our protagonist will have to live forever with that nightmare of an idea.

Cop dramas have higher stakes than what's presented in Civil War.

Tony friggin Stark was set up beautifully at the beginning of the movie. He starts to feel guilty by all the hero stuff. Yet he recruits a kid. Then he continues to blow shit up at the airport. He remains cool and collected like he's always been. He's literally half the movie but he's just playing tag with Captain America.

Bring me Doctor Strange and Black Panther, but enough with these movies trying to follow a dozen heroes. It just ruins the screenplay. Jinkies.
 
I have to agree.

I watched the leaked airport scene like 6 times before the movie came out, so I was dissapointed to have seen all the best parts.
 
I am curious are you not counting Dredd as a comic book movie ?

Because it's just so much better made than any other comic book movie. ;)

I feel like it's just above that status, really. It is one, yes, but for me (IMO) it deserves to be mentioned in the same conversation as the films I've listed and not in the same conversation as forgettable Toys R Us stuff like the MCU.
 
Except not really and not really if we're being real here. It's a fake division that'll end immediately once the next conflict comes to unite them (the end of the movie even confirms this with Steve giving Tony the cell phone) and nobody seriously believes any of the "fugitives" will be imprisoned (they didn't even last the movie imprisoned) or gunned down in a meaningful fight. The point of idealogical conflict is that it's supposed to raise the drama to a level where the two sides are trying to kill each other. Never feels like that in Civil War.

Hell, the only consequence from the airport fight is an accident by Vision because we couldn't have any superheroes permanently hurting another superhero on purpose, because that would traumatize the kids and possibly make one of them unlikable, which the MCU doesn't allow. Even the final conflict follows these guidelines.

That isn't to say I disliked Civil War; I actually loved it. But it's a perfection of popcorn superhero movies and nothing more, which is to say it doesn't reach the same realm of cinema as Nolan's Batman movies.

The point of the ideological conflict in Civil War was to further complicate and intensify the personal conflict between Tony and Steve. A conflict that is effective and tragic because it nearly pushed both to killing each other. The rest of your argument boils down to "But there are going to be sequels", which really isn't a criticism of the film at all.
 
Compared to Winter Soldier yes.

Compared to the rest of the movie season it was a breath of Fresh Air after a rather lackluster summer.
 
Completely disagree with pretty much everything you stated op, sorry. Civil War is the second best Cap film, and one of the best MCU films out there. It is not perfect, but it was a damn fun ride and I'm eagerly anticipating the Blu-Ray release.
 
Because it's just so much better made than any other comic book movie. ;)

I feel like it's just above that status, really. It is one, yes, but for me (IMO) it deserves to be mentioned in the same conversation as the films I've listed and not in the same conversation as forgettable Toys R Us stuff like the MCU.
MCU deserves to be in the conversation as Nolan's Batmans are.

When Nolan can put 3 movies with 1 being great, 1 being good and 1 being terrible than I think it absolutely is in the conversation.
 
I am not talking about acting here . The Whole plan of Zemo relied on luck that after seeing a video of his parents' murder which was captured by a video camera in the middle of nowhere how will tony react. What would have happened if there was no video or Cap had already told him about his parent's death.

Why are you basing Zemo's actions on luck?

Cap didn't know about the video either. The camera in the middle of knowhere is the only bad thing about the whole plot point but you can make something up that makes sense if you want, like it being a secret SHIELD road that has security cameras in place?

Also, cap holding the helicopter and going from overarm to underarm is boner inducing.
 
Loved it personally, my favourite superhero movie by a long way, all the action scenes were amazing and the story was half decent too.
 
Again... Captain America isnt Captain America anymore. That is a consequence.

Eh, not really. He's still going to function in the same capacity. He'll have his shield back next movie by some hijinks or another. It won't be anything like Batman at the beginning of the Dark Knight Rises, which would be a comparable situation in which someone sacrificed their reputation and name to do the right thing.

With that being said I don't want to undersell what the movies have done with Steve. They've done a good job illustrating his disallusion with nationalism and the erosion of his soldier-following-orders mentality. His actions in Civil War wouldn't have made sense otherwise.

Like I said, I loved Civil War. But I don't really believe there's a counter to the "playfighting" criticism. I suppose the counter would be that it's asking the MCU to be something it's not.
 
The airport scene is right up there with the shield crap from IM2. 25 minutes of fan service stuffed in the middle of a Captain America movie. Awful.
 
I think the movie could've gone farther with Scarlet Witch's collateral damage to better justify the Accords.
This is my main problem as an illogical Accords couldve been thematically appropriate if Cap had challenged it more. Scarlet Witch, who joined a global terror group for revenge(besides the avengers), is in mental anguish over that tiny incident, took me right out of the movie.
 
MCU deserves to be in the conversation as Nolan's Batmans are.

When Nolan can put 3 movies with 1 being great, 1 being good and 1 being terrible than I think it absolutely is in the conversation.

All three of Nolan's films, despite varying levels of quality, are way more distinct in their elements and far more memorable to me than anything in the MCU. TDKR, while inconsistent in its quality, gave us Bane. I remember him. I remember key scenes with him, his presence, his dialogue. I can't say the same for any villain in the MCU. Doubly true for Ledger's Joker.

Batman Begins has more believable dramatic beats that I can invest in and more characterization going on in its first hour than any of the origin MCU films combined. It has more subtext, more emotion behind it, and is executed with far better direction and cinematography (action scenes notwithstanding).

I honestly can't see the MCU films being talked about in the same conversation as Nolan's films, because he was given an auteur's creative license over those movies...that doesn't happen with the MCU films. Nolan's films took risks in their staging, direction, screenplays, and performances. The MCU plays it safe. You can always count on a fun 2 hours with your popcorn...and literally nothing more.

If there's a single memorable scene or quotable line of dialogue in the MCU that is delivered with weight, conviction, and a truly awesome performance behind it, I certainly haven't been able to remember it.
 
Oh sorry, they gave him a line! Its still a fucking lame shoe horned in entry. I would have much preferred he actually had a part to play in the movie despite growing huge and punching stuff. Its sloppy lazy writing.

It's a Captain America film, not an Avengers or Antman film. Not every character present needs to be a main character. Antman's inclusion is an important one, as his going giant and causing too much damage is the scale-tipping moment that both allows Captain America and Bucky to escape from the fight, it's also a great moment where Captain America begins to wonder if he's gone too far, and that shows that there might, in fact, need to be some kind of policies in place to control these people. Not to mention the fact that he gets a ton of great comedic moments there and it's a great set-piece on it's own.
 
All them stakes don't matter when the dirt floats offs the casket, right? lol..Pretty inconsistent stuff there, friends of Martha. As for the movie being forgettable, y'all might want to stop watching these movies under the influence.

I can list the few comic book movies that were so horrid, my brain dumped ALMOST everything about them..Fan4stic, Catwoman and Green Deadpool Lantern being the biggest culprits. That Arnold Batman is right there with them.

BvS was a 6 to me, until I saw the real version and upped it .5. Not gonna forget one thing about it. Suicide Squad? Think that one is going to fade from memory sooner than later..
 
The point of the ideological conflict in Civil War was to further complicate and intensify the personal conflict between Tony and Steve. A conflict that is effective and tragic because it nearly pushed both to killing each other. The rest of your argument boils down to "But there are going to be sequels", which really isn't a criticism of the film at all.

It is a criticism of the film, absolutely, because it limits what the film can do with its characters when there's a mandate to have sequels of these movies with the main characters as something kids want to cheer for. Your "but Steve might have killed Tony at the end of Civil War!" rings very, very hollow. There's never a situation where either of those characters would have killed the other. If the movie wanted to establish that this was a possibility, maybe it shouldn't have treated the airport fight with such levity, in which only one person got hurt...by accident.

If there's a single memorable scene or quotable line of dialogue in the MCU that is delivered with weight, conviction, and a truly awesome performance behind it, I certainly haven't been able to remember it.

While I agree Nolan's films are far more memorable, I think the climax of Civil War is great. I thought the reveal that the WS killed Tony's parents was fine and established a nice reason and mood for the last fight. I also thought Black Panther being the one to have the last scene with Zemo was a good bookend for both their characters in the movie.
 
Mad Max is the definitive answer to the obnoxious tropes (shaky-cam, hyperactive editing, poor choreography, etc.) and general mediocrity that have plagued action films for the last decade or so. It's a lean, expertly crafted action masterpiece. Not to mention a comprehensive education in effective filmmaking.

Best post in this thread! It's about time for a re-watch, thanks for the reminder.
 
Civil War was great for people invested in the MCU to begin with. It builds off of what came before it without needlessly retreading already established character arcs and motivations. It's really the first marvel movie that reward long time fans while punishing casual viewers. The Russos stated this bluntly in interviews, saying they feel they should no longer be afraid to chart new territory while keeping the considerations of newcomers to a minimum.

So yes, it kinda feels like a long episode in a cookbook soap opera but that's actually one of its greatest strengths. It's readily apparent browsing this thread who has been engaged enough to pay attention to the MCU while watching it over the years and who only watches it casually. If you're not the biggest fan of the MCU to begin with, Civil War will not change that because it never sets out to. It really doesn't care. The movie has faults, as does this serial format of storytelling in cinema, but for the fans of the MCU, Civil War payed dividends. Call it fan service of you want, it doesn't really matter. That doesn't make it any less superb for its fans.
 
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