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Despite Lead-in On Disney+, 'The Marvels' Bombs at Box Office (deadline.com) 245

Despite a six-episode Ms. Marvel miniseries on Disney+, audiences aren't turning out now to see the 16-year-old superhero's team-up with Captain Marvel on the big screen.

The Marvels earned $47 million in its opening weekend, reports Deadline, "the lowest ever for Disney's Marvel Cinematic Universe," and $110 million worldwide, "which is also a bottom rung for the MCU and below the $140M we were forecasting." In regards to U.S. admissions, The Marvels came in per EntTelligence at 3.3M compared to other superhero bombs, The Flash's 3.9M and Eternals' 5.5M. By all accounts and by all sources, it's a disastrous result for a $200 million Marvel Studios movie... Months ago, who would have thought that Universal/Blumhouse's Five Nights at Freddys two weeks ago in a day-and-date debut on Peacock would post a higher opening at the box office ($80M) than The Marvels...?

The Marvels meltdown isn't about superhero fatigue. It's about Disney's overexposure of the Marvel Cinematic Universe brand on Disney+, and those moth holes are beginning to show: Keep what's meant for the cinema in cinemas, and keep what's meant for in-homes in the home. Meaning, this whole crossover streaming-into-film master plan isn't working, nor is it really connected in a jaw-dropping way.. The Marvels — with its crossover streaming series blah-blah — looks like it was built to be seen in homes, not to get audiences off the couch.

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Despite Lead-in On Disney+, 'The Marvels' Bombs at Box Office

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  • by Anonymous Coward on Sunday November 12, 2023 @04:28PM (#64000539)

    Put a chick it in, and make her lame and gay!

    I wonder if Disney is self aware enough to see what they're doing to their properties, watch SP, and say, "maybe we should try actually writing decent scripts and characters"?

    • by rogoshen1 ( 2922505 ) on Sunday November 12, 2023 @04:35PM (#64000547)

      the pandering will continue until box office receipts improve.

    • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

      by Powercntrl ( 458442 )

      Put a chick it in, and make her lame and gay!

      I watched the Disney+ series and if they were trying to tick any of the LGBTQ+ checkboxes, I missed it. The star [wikipedia.org] is Pakistani though, so racial issues are something of a plot point.

      My partner's preteen nephew saw the movie yesterday and his opinion of the movie was just that it wasn't very good. I'd venture a guess that since his parents aren't racist or homophobic and kids tend not to overthink things as much as adults do, it was just not a well written movie. Disney has never been immune to releasing b

      • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

        I watched the Disney+ series and if they were trying to tick any of the LGBTQ+ checkboxes, I missed it.

        It's probably like we saw with Star Trek: Discovery - people who haven't actually watched the show are parroting bogus talking points they heard from someone else.

        In case people don't remember, there were multiple people here on Slashdot complaining about how Discovery featured a lesbian lead character and focused on lesbian plotlines - which, if you've watched more than two episodes from season one, you realize someone pulled straight out of their nether-regions.

        • by ArmoredDragon ( 3450605 ) on Sunday November 12, 2023 @06:33PM (#64000805)

          I watched Discovery though season 4 (I think? The way they break it up is confusing as hell) and while the woke shit was heavily pushed (I can't say I recall ever seeing a bathroom scene in Star Trek before they had a gay bathroom scene, which was very lame by the way and felt like it added nothing at all) the problem I had with the show was the way it was nearly impossible to follow the story line between seasons because the arch just kept changing so drastically.

          Also slashdot made a big deal about the nonbinary character in Discovery, and I swear that was the most lame character in the history of Star Trek. Even more lame than Kes. The human/trill they had for a few episodes was even more lame and the entire character arch for both was such a slow grueling bore fest that I lost interest.

          If they want to do LGBT stuff, that's fine but do it in a way that doesn't bore the fuck out of the audience, especially over multiple contiguous episodes (I can't say I recall that they've ever done that with ANY relationships, gay or otherwise, until discovery) particularly when the seasons are short to begin with. And do it in a way that adds meaning to the canon of the show. Like the Rejoined episode in DS9, THAT was done well and in a very Trekkie way.

          FWIW I thought the Janeway relationships in Voyager were boring as well, but they never dragged on forever and were at least directly connected to the main plot.

          • DS9 did an entire episode where Odo learns to be suave so he can woo Major Kira away from who he perceived to be her boyfriend at the time. There also were a few episodes revolving around the relationship between Commander Worf and Lieutenant Dax. So yeah, Trek certainly has its share of relationship drama episodes.

        • by Roger W Moore ( 538166 ) on Sunday November 12, 2023 @09:35PM (#64001199) Journal

          It's probably like we saw with Star Trek: Discovery - people who haven't actually watched the show are parroting bogus talking points they heard from someone else.

          Sorry but I did watch the first season of Discovery and it was a shit show from beginning to end: the lead character was a selfish arsehole who mutinied and got people killed, the warp drive was replaced by magic mushrooms, other characters were entirely 2 dimensional and often stupid and/or incompetent, the stories basically told you what you were supposed to think rather than try to make you think and the whole thing had such a dreary, negative view of humanity that it bore no resemblance to normal Star Trek at all. When the evil twin thing came towards the end of the season I thought that perhaps they might save it by making the lead character be the evil twin given her actions but no, they made the only vaguely competent and likable guy the evil twin. When the writing is so bad that you find yourself wanting the supposed villains to win then it's time to turn off.

      • by markdavis ( 642305 ) on Sunday November 12, 2023 @06:35PM (#64000809)

        >"I watched the Disney+ series and if they were trying to tick any of the LGBTQ+ checkboxes"

        Oh, they certainly are, with great regularity. Or with some other identity-politics.

        And it isn't just Disney+, most of the stuff on Netflix and Amazon Video are the same. It is painfully obvious when they do it, and annoying as well to a lot of people. I wish they put as much effort into the actual stories.

        >"I'd venture a guess that since his parents aren't racist or homophobic and kids tend not to overthink things as much as adults do, it was just not a well written movie."

        I know this might come as a surprise to many, but one doesn't have to be "-ic"/"-ist/" (categories of terms incredibly overused and usually inappropriate nowadays) to not like identity politics or the mindsets surrounding them.

        • Oh, they certainly are, with great regularity.

          I was referring specifically to LGBTQ+ pandering in the Ms. Marvel series, of which if there was any, I totally missed it.

          I know this might come as a surprise to many, but one doesn't have to be "-ic"/"-ist/" (categories of terms incredibly overused and usually inappropriate nowadays) to not like identity politics or the mindsets surrounding them.

          That may be the case, but I was talking about a child's opinion of the movie. A young kid is generally not going to hate a movie specifically because it has gay or brown characters unless their parents hammered it into them that they need to believe that there's something wrong with those kind of people.

          • >"I was referring specifically to LGBTQ+ pandering in the Ms. Marvel series, of which if there was any, I totally missed it."

            That might be. I was responding more generally and not specifically to that particular identity politic or show. Sorry.

            • by kenh ( 9056 )

              The only thing i saw in the movie was *maybe* a random couple in a the deep background where both partners are (apparently) the same sex, and in my opinion, that's fine - it just broadens the scope of characters in the background, it doesn't hijack the plot line narrative.

      • by argStyopa ( 232550 ) on Sunday November 12, 2023 @09:36PM (#64001207) Journal

        "not checking any of the LGBTQ+ checkboxes"

        How would you expect to notice, as you seem to be a member of their ecosystem (I liked the implication that the previous poster was racist and/or homophobic - I'm not sure which would be worse: if you did that deliberately, or if you didn't notice you did it)?

        Hint: There are many flavors of woke*, the alphabet-array isn't the only one. Brie Larson's acidic anti-male toxicism is one, the MCUs cheerful replacement of legions of canonically white characters with characters of color is another. How about making Capt America a nazi?
        *obligatory: "I bet you can't even define what you mean by woke, you alt-right Magaboy!" followed by a deeply Platonic argument over the nature of words because semantics is Left Playbook page 1. Or maybe page 2, after ad-hominem, which you also hit.

        My favorite: Marvel's sales are shitting, their customers are telling them why....and Marvel "isn't sure that's really the reason". LOL.
        https://ew.com/tv/2017/04/03/m... [ew.com]

        I'd agree with you that the writing is shit and the stories are dumb. My main gripe is that they seem to believe casting some non-white character is 'enough' to replace a lack of plot.
        It doesn't have to be this way; I'd point to The Expanse as a magnificent example of diverse casting that allows BOTH men and women, both white and nonwhite, to shine and excel and be interesting.

      • by kenh ( 9056 ) on Sunday November 12, 2023 @11:53PM (#64001389) Homepage Journal

        I saw the movie Saturday night, 8 PM screening, and there were about two dozen people in the theater.

        The movie just wasn't very good. There was a lot of Sci-Fi BS being hurled about with literally no explanation, and the casting of all women leads was fine, it didn't come across as trying to tick gender inclusion boxes.

        I walked out and had no idea what I had seen, I couldn't really describe the plot of the movie after watching it.

        Granted, I am not a comic book fan, I go to the superhero movies (DC, Marvel, whatever) just for the spectacle.

      • by registrations_suck ( 1075251 ) on Monday November 13, 2023 @12:37AM (#64001457)

        Pakistani is a nationality, not a race.

    • Its coming book super hero crap. Its all terrible and every one is sick of it. Its all bad.
    • by RazorSharp ( 1418697 ) on Sunday November 12, 2023 @05:16PM (#64000619)

      I wonder if Disney is self aware enough to see what they're doing to their properties, watch SP, and say, "maybe we should try actually writing decent scripts and characters"?

      They're trying to appeal to the super hero and Star Wars crowd. It's funny that you guys consistently blame poor writing when you've gobbled up garbage for decades. You're talking about an audience that thinks Iron Man is high art.

      The problem is simple economics. Most filmmakers would be elated if their film had an opening weekend of $100 million. They're spending a ridiculous amount to produce these films and then they make too many of them. They've saturated the market to the point where they no longer become "must see" events for a sufficient amount of their audience.

      What they're trying to recreate is the 50s/60s westerns. Audiences loved them and ate them up and it was easy to churn out formulaic scripts for them. But the key difference is that westerns could be made cheaply. There was plenty of suitable land nearby L.A., plenty of sets purpose-built for the genre, tons of available costumes, etc. This isn't about Disney screwing the pooch with the writing—the writing for this genre has always been bad and audiences tend to react negatively whenever it deviates from bad.

    • If you want to see decent scripts and characters, stop playing into bullshit narratives written by unemployed, racist psychos who masturbate to gun videos. Third-generation corporate executives don't know wtf you're talking about when you rant about political nonsense. It's just numbers to them.

      Stop rewarding them with attention and their games will fail, just as they have several times when there were creative resurgences.
    • by illogicalpremise ( 1720634 ) on Sunday November 12, 2023 @08:47PM (#64001097)

      Why can't people see how simple this issue really is? It's demographics.

      The market for superhero movies, science fiction and fantasy is still a majority male audience. It's always been that way, even if the ratio is narrower now. In the 80's it was probably 90% male - Now, maybe 70%. Visit any kind of sci-fi/comic convention if you want to verify it. Also they are majority white and hetrosexual.

      People like a protagonist they identify with so if you want a diverse protagonist you're unlikely to get high box office returns.

      Look at the evidence:
      Success (White male lead): Ironman, Superman, Batman, Dr Strange, The Hulk, Conan, Robocop, Die-hard, Back to the Future, Predator, Matrix, Rick and Morty, Bill and Ted, Ghostbusters (original), He-man (original), Terminator, Star Trek, Scooby-Doo, Lord of the Rings
      Fail (female/diverse lead): She-hulk, Black Adam, Ghostbusters (female), He-man (female), Velma

      Of course there have been exceptions like Captain Marvel, Black Panther, Black Widow, Spiderverse (Miles) and particularly Aliens and Barbarella (and mixed-leads with strong supporting women) but the overall trend is still obvious - especially if you argue some of these female leads still play to male sexual fantasies. Hard to say if they would have done so well if the leading woman was old or ugly or didn't undress.

      I'm not saying it's fair but you really have to be blind or hopelessly optimistic to expect this to change in our lifetimes. There's definitely a good argument for making male-dominated genres more inclusive but you just shouldn't expect blockbuster profits. Acting surprised every time a female-lead sci-fi bombs shows people don't understand the issue.

      • by Telephone Sanitizer ( 989116 ) on Sunday November 12, 2023 @09:25PM (#64001185)

        No.

        I'm a cis-gendered male and I had my butt in a movie-seat watching this one on opening day. I have no problem with the idea of a female buddy/superhero-movie. I was excited by the promos and early reviews promising that they made it colorful and fun.

        It had colors. They didn't make it fun.

        The problems with this movie have nothing to do with demographics.

        It was simply written and directed poorly. It was a mess of plot holes and tropes thrown together without any sense of meaning and no catharsis. There were a few good ideas stuck in here and there, but never as more than a throwaway plot-device.

        They did the characters and the actors AND the fans a terrible injustice. I walked out feeling very sorry for Iman Vellani having this as her breakout movie role. She leant a great deal of life to each of her scenes, but that simply was not enough. No actor could have rescued this train wreck. It needed a complete re-write. ...I'd say it needed a better director, but my understanding is that Disney screwed up so badly that the credited director actually left for other projects well before the movie was completed. So we'll never know whether Nia DaCosta was up to the task.

        • Yeah but we're talking about a movie that just released and the opening weekend box office. It's too early for whether the movie is actually good to really matter.

          For the opening weekend people will choose to go based on whether they think they will like it - and that has more to do with lead actors, setting/theme, previews and hype. If enough people are thinking they won't enjoy a superhero movie with a female lead then they're just not going unless they hear it's actually really good. It doesn't help that

      • Protagonist OR antagonist. Frankly, a really well written antagonist is far more engaging than any hero could ever be.

        Oh, he wants to save the world! Shocking! Yet a good villain has you even questioning whether he was the villain by the end of the movie, has you questioning who was right and who was wrong.

        The closest they ever came to that was Killmonger, and of course they killed him off.

        You want a great example of the hero/villain dichotomy that I'm talking about, go watch Farscape. Crichton and Scorp

  • Never heard of it... Loki is good show though make more like that.
    • Never heard of it... Loki is good show though make more like that.

      I wasn't thrilled with the writing in the season finale.

      spoiler alert

      We find out that the temporal loom is actually a failsafe which automatically prunes all alternate timelines once it goes into meltdown. If that's the case, why have a TVA at all? Then, when Loki explains to Kang that he's going to destroy the loom, Kang again warns that this will result in a multi-versal war. Loki destroys the loom anyway, and inexplicably the timelines begin dying. Loki then uses magic to restore the timelines and dr

      • I wasn't thrilled with the writing in the season finale.

        (more spoilers)

        I don't think I understood a single thing about the plot of Season Two. Even when I *did* understand the plot, it didn't matter, because the plot revolved around complex rules of made-up multiversal physics, and there was no way to predict that "Aha, if A happens, then that means B is going to happen". B might happen, but it was equally likely that C, D or (fill in the blank) could happen. And at the end... Loki can heal the multiverse by floating around in space and using green glowy magi

  • I would have thought that based on the trailer and advertisements and the general lack of appreciation for Brie Larsen's character in the previous movies it appearing to be by all accounts a horrible movie would be the reason for it to bomb at the box office.

    I've seen every Marvel movie so far. I may save this one though for when I'm either really really bored or really really drunk.

    • It's bad. From the super-annoying and can't-act teenage miss marvel, to the super my and can't act Brie Larson, to the musical number to the bad plot to the lame villain, this movie sucked to to bottom. Spider man has been the only thing worth watching in marvel since end game.
      • by Pieroxy ( 222434 )

        It's bad.

        It has cute kittens in it though.

        That said, I agree, the Spider Verse productions are the best these last few years.

  • by hebertrich ( 472331 ) on Sunday November 12, 2023 @04:49PM (#64000571)

    They milked that cow dry so much it's giving powdeted milk now.
    time to put that one on ice for a few years/decades.

  • There are those who know exactly what the problem is and then there are those that go nah couldn't be that... it must be over saturation. Wandavision, Falcon, Loki, What If?, Hawkeye and Moon Knight were all great. The problems started when wokeism was inserted into their movies and stories. They really need to learn how to develop great characters who just happen to be whatever the victim of the day is and focus on their greatness. People don't like being slapped in the face with it and have other choi
    • by thegarbz ( 1787294 ) on Sunday November 12, 2023 @05:35PM (#64000653)

      The problems started when wokeism was inserted into their movies and stories.

      No. People who complain about wokeism simply default to it because they don't understand what does and doesn't make a good movie. There's lot of excellent "woke" movies out there. Hollywood has a long history of being "woke" and there are plenty of "woke" Oscar winners out there too.

      The issue is bad horrible writing. Nothing more. You can insert woke agendas as much as you want, as long as they are competently written you can turn them into a decent movie. The issue comes when you either a) don't have the movie written for them (i.e. just substitute the male role for a female role in an action film), or simply have crap writers who do not understand what to do with a female / LGBTQ+ / any other role and come across as cringeworthy as a father in a 90s movie about the cyberspace.

      You did however touch on a part of the problem, it's a shame you focused on wokeism because you said:

      They really need to learn how to develop great characters

      The real key was this here. You can make your movie as woke as you want. Providing your character is well developed, relatable, and above all actually develops further during the story line you won't even notice it was "woke".

      • by memory_register ( 6248354 ) on Sunday November 12, 2023 @05:41PM (#64000671)

        People who complain about wokeism simply default to it because they don't understand what does and doesn't make a good movie.

        When people say woke, most often they mean, "In an effort to cram down a political agenda, the characters, setting, and plot have been compromised and the quality is significantly lowered."

        Don't label those who disagree with you rubes or ignoramuses just because they have a point.

        • "In an effort to cram down a political agenda, the characters, setting, and plot have been compromised and the quality is significantly lowered."

          Ever see that scene in that one Transformers movie where one of the robots is swinging a pair of gigantic metal robo-balls between his robo-legs? If they're not pandering to one group, they're pandering to heterosexual teenage boys who think dick and fart jokes are the pinnacle of comedy.

          The problem is that you're expecting high art from low-brow popcorn flicks.

        • by taustin ( 171655 )

          Work isn't when the political agenda is more important than the story. It's when the political agenda is instead of the story. The political agenda is all there is It is, literally, propaganda.

          And it's become far, far too common in movies and television.

        • Besides cutting regulation and taxes. If you're seeing something you object to in a movie because it seems like there's a wee bit too much diversity it's because they're trying to appeal to the broadest marketing demographic possible. In this case Captain marvel like Rei from Star wars is basically a Disney princess. The reason you're feeling like you're not being catered to here is because you're not.. but at the same time they don't want to leave your money on the table so they throw in just enough that y
          • And finally CGI means that they're often writing a movie around the CGI.

            Also, the novelty of CGI has worn off. Take the original Jurassic Park for example. If you released something like that today it would probably be a box office bomb too. It's basically the plot of Westworld but with Dinosaurs.

            Also Titanic. An hour and a half of a girl cheating on her emotionally abusive sugar daddy, and then another hour and a half of the boat sinking.

        • People who complain about wokeism simply default to it because they don't understand what does and doesn't make a good movie.

          When people say woke, most often they mean, "In an effort to cram down a political agenda, the characters, setting, and plot have been compromised and the quality is significantly lowered."

          Don't label those who disagree with you rubes or ignoramuses just because they have a point.

          You SAY that, like that's what you want woke to mean, but the person crying "woke" will then proceed to complain about the cast.
          Not character development, the setting, plot points or quality.

          100% of the time. Kinda like it's not really about the thing you say it is, but that sounds better than the real thing.

      • by chrpai ( 806494 )
        I mentioned a bunch of great characters and even acknowledged that I wouldn't mind under represented characters if it was done well. But they don't do this... they seem to think a fish slap to the face is the best way to get their agenda across. Defending this by saying I don't know what makes a great movie and that I'm just all focused on wokeism is just blaming the consumer instead of the producer. Be subtle, we'll get the message. Be bold and we'll tune out.
    • by Powercntrl ( 458442 ) on Sunday November 12, 2023 @05:36PM (#64000661) Homepage

      The problems started when wokeism was inserted into their movies and stories.

      Like in the the 1994 Lion King movie, where an anthropomorphic animated meerkat voiced by an openly gay man, puts on drag and dances the hula?

      Man, I bet that movie must've done terrible? /s

      • I mean, except for the part where the vast majority of us probably didn't have a clue and you can get away with a lot more silliness in animations versus traditional film. Plus that character was a tiny part of the movie.

        It's really not about characters being gay but rather they try to make that to be a big deal. If your character has real depth and is interesting and just so happens to be gay, no big deal. When your character is boring and underdeveloped and being gay is the best thing they had going for t

      • You'd have a point if he puts on drag throughout the entire movie and was moved into a role more resembling that of a main character. Then people would probably hate it for the same reason that JarJar ruined star wars episode 1 for a lot of star wars fans. Otherwise it's not much different from when the genie in Aladdin does similar things -- just typical Disney shit. Like randomly breaking into a song for example.

      • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

        by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

        The antagonist in The Little Mermaid was famously based on a drag queen too.

        Most of those Disney movies are pretty messed up when you think about it. In Ariel she is 16, falls in love with a much older guy, literally the first man she has ever met who wasn't her dad. And then they murder her aunt.

        In Aladdin, a teenage girl meets an adult man who starts their relationship by lying to her about who he is, and eventually they murder her uncle.

        I could go on. The basic plot to most animated Disney movies before

    • There are those who know exactly what the problem is and then there are those that go nah couldn't be that... it must be over saturation.

      Wandavision, Falcon, Loki, What If?, Hawkeye and Moon Knight were all great. The problems started when wokeism was inserted into their movies and stories. They really need to learn how to develop great characters who just happen to be whatever the victim of the day is and focus on their greatness. People don't like being slapped in the face with it and have other choices on what to watch.

      To be honest, the Eternals was one of their best movies in a while. So I think there's an anti-woke crowd avoiding decent content out of spite. And in this case the story is the terrible opening, which is 10% quality of the film and 90% the marketing campaign (which I honestly didn't even notice).

      And the problem isn't wokeism, it more awkwardness when dealing with women and minorities. Like in Miss Marvel where Bruno is a white kid in high school who seemingly lives on his own and his highly integrated into

      • I think theres more to it than just anti-woke-ness going on.

        Im very "woke", but pretty much anything after End Game hasnt interested me - I had my conclusion, Im not really interested in a continuing universe of expanding storylines. I think the only film I have watched of the latest phase has been Guardians of the Galaxy Vol III, and that was for Rockets back story.

        I'm done, I don't want more of the same universe, I was invested in those characters and now they are either gone or changed beyond their prim

        • I think theres more to it than just anti-woke-ness going on.

          Im very "woke", but pretty much anything after End Game hasnt interested me - I had my conclusion, Im not really interested in a continuing universe of expanding storylines. I think the only film I have watched of the latest phase has been Guardians of the Galaxy Vol III, and that was for Rockets back story.

          I'm done, I don't want more of the same universe, I was invested in those characters and now they are either gone or changed beyond their prime.

          Honestly, I thought End Game kinda sucked. After the huge buildup of Infinity War they followed it up with a clip show.

          I think the format still has potential, I mean comics have been around for decades, but trying to force another all encompassing storyline was a mistake. How they should have handled the Disney+ mini-series was as a testing ground. Find new characters that work and build around those. Instead they planned 'The Marvels' before they showed the first episode of Miss Marvel, so when her series

    • Can you define woke for me? Everyone has their own personal definition.

    • These are comic books character, some of them for decades, with the race gender and ethnicity remained intact. In a lot of ways the movies had town down the political messages a lot. The real issue isn't about being woke, but the fact they made female characters that we don't want to masterbate to.
      I think the real problem with the Marvel Universe is it has been diverging from our reality for a while now. Iron Man seemed out of current events, Avengers then created a post NYC attack split from our history

    • So you think the only shitty writing in these super hero movies is their lame pandering to various demographics? All these Marvel movies suck. They have always sucked. Every single one of them. It's odd you can only see the suckage when it panders to a demographic you don't like.

      Do I think Disney pandering to certain demographics is sloppy garbage? Absolutely. But the super hero genre is just sloppy pandering to dumb Manichean nerds. The problem they've encountered with this super hero stuff going so mains

    • by amosh ( 109566 )

      LOL. Falcon was the wokest Marvel show that ever woked. This can't have anything to do with your particular prejudices, could it? Nah. Must be "wokeism."

  • by NZheretic ( 23872 ) on Sunday November 12, 2023 @04:54PM (#64000579) Homepage Journal
    I'm sorry but every fiction franchise that has been gobbled by the Disney corporation has become so utterly repeatedly overdone to the point of just becoming boring to endure.
    I haven't seen a Marvel/DC/Star Wars movie in a cinema for over seven years & have utterly regretted the utter waste of time watching the few I have seen on streaming services.
    Give us newly authored fiction & characters, not rehashed tropes from decades ago.
    • "...not rehashed tropes from decades ago."

      Or centuries ago.

    • It's not even necessarily franchise fatigue, it's character fatigue. Same old characters being pulled around the block on the nose ring again and again, at some point you just don't give a toss about them anymore.

      We had the same with Batman recently. Batman was the darling of the masses for a long time. Half a dozen movies within a decade and all of them hits, so that cow needed more milking. But at some point, there simply wasn't really any interesting story left to be told. We've seen all the interesting

  • As a MCU fan... (Score:5, Insightful)

    by crow ( 16139 ) on Sunday November 12, 2023 @04:54PM (#64000583) Homepage Journal

    I've seen every movie and Disney+ series. The trailers make me more excited about this movie than probably any since Spider-Man 3. But I'm not seeing it in the theater. Since I'm subscribed to Disney+, I can wait a few months and see it for free.

    Admittedly, I'm not really excited about theaters in general, but also with so much MCU content these days, it's not like I've been anticipating this for years. Well, actually maybe a year, but my MCU fix has been distracted with all the other stuff coming out. That makes it much easier to wait for streaming.

    Disney has a real problem here. They need the MCU content to drive Disney+ subscriptions. At the same time, too much new MCU content is detracting from the theatrical releases. I don't know how they can make it work right for them. Maybe slow down the streaming releases to six months? More likely they'll just put out less MCU content.

    On the Star Wars side, they're not doing movies right now, so there's no conflict.

    • Admittedly, I'm not really excited about theaters in general

      The idea of actually having to go somewhere to watch a movie seems so damn archaic and wasteful, so that's also why I didn't see it. Seems like a decent enough dumb popcorn flick, but I'm fine waiting for it to hit Disney+.

    • I'm an MCU fan. I enjoyed the full series, it's really remarkable to take a film-based storyline over a ten year arc. And I really liked the ending, I thought it brought the whole thing to a surprisingly satisfying conclusion.

      And then it kept going. And now they're acting surprised that I don't want to watch their epilogue epilogue epilogue.
      • Iron Man was awesome, fresh, etc. Despite the typical 'vs Nega' boss battle at the end, it was a good movie. While the MCU has had quite a few good movies since, they've been continually tightening up the productions to match 'the formula'. The fight scenes bore me, there's no tension. They escalate everything to the point of ridiculousness and even 'the multiverse' can't stop the lack of respect for continuity ruining things.

        Then there's the 'woke' stuff - and c'mon, Captain Marvel, Black Panther, &

        • On the other hand, there's been decades of racism, misogyny, and homophobia in the movies I've watched over my lifetime, and I don't know how people took that for so long.

          Not only that, but the people who were writing and acting in Hollywood productions had to hide who they were, too. DS9 even had an episode about this. [fandom.com] We're getting a lot of stories today where creative types want to see a reflection of themselves in their work because for the longest time, they couldn't do that.

    • by crow ( 16139 )

      A related and important point is that it's always difficult to remember that I am not the typical moviegoer, so my reasoning isn't nearly as useful as the reasoning of someone who went to see a movie in the theater this weekend, and chose something other than The Marvels despite having seen other MCU movies in the theater before. Or even just the opinion of people who have gone to the theater four or more times this year. Maybe their thoughts are different. Or maybe there's no such thing as the "typical

  • Embarrassing Spin (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Kunedog ( 1033226 ) on Sunday November 12, 2023 @04:55PM (#64000587)

    Despite a six-episode Ms. Marvel miniseries on Disney+, audiences aren't turning out now to see the 16-year-old superhero's team-up with Captain Marvel on the big screen.

    What do you mean "Despite"? Ms Marvel was over a year ago, and had the fewest viewers of any Marvel series (even lower than She Hulk). Nobody watched it and nobody liked the video game she was shoehorned into.

    Months ago, who would have thought that Universal/Blumhouse's Five Nights at Freddys two weeks ago in a day-and-date debut on Peacock would post a higher opening at the box office ($80M) than The Marvels...?

    Plenty people thought it would bomb years ago, as soon as they were exposed to the writing quality of Phase 4 and 5.

    The Marvels meltdown isn't about superhero fatigue. It's about Disney's overexposure of the Marvel Cinematic Universe brand on Disney+, and those moth holes are beginning to show: Keep what's meant for the cinema in cinemas, and keep what's meant for in-homes in the home.

    Or maybe don't hobble yourself with an ideology that forces you to replace every leading male MCU character with a female version, and then wonder why you lose hundreds of millions when there no popular characters left to lean on.

    A Black Widow movie could have been successful; why didn't you release one before she was dead?

    • by Junta ( 36770 )

      A Black Widow movie could have been successful; why didn't you release one before she was dead?

      Further, I think they should have done that one as a prequel. Doing it as "somewhere in the middle of the movies already seen' is rough enough, and to try to focus on a story without powers is kind of weird in the middle of a continuity chock full of friends with powers, making it really weird that none of her friends helped.

  • They will find a way to milk that cow in every conceivable market until theyve gotten their money.
    • by Anonymous Coward
      They'll keep milking it even if it's bull.
  • Give people what they want and they'll pay money to see it. Don't, and they won't.

    Taylor Swift's home movie [imdb.com] was the second-highest-grossing concert film before it even opened.

    ...laura

    • Taylor Swift's home movie [imdb.com] was the second-highest-grossing
      concert film before it even opened.

      Because if you're in a relationship with someone who is a Taylor Swift fan, you're going to go see it with them regardless of your own feelings towards dragging your butt out to the cinema. Probably worth mentioning that Taylor Swift absolutely loves her LGBTQ+ fanbase [cnn.com], so you really can't play the "but this non-woke thing is popular! card.

      • We know where Taytay stands on various subjects (e.g. Lavender Haze, You Need To Calm Down), but it's never intrusive. Her music comes first. Fans respect that.

        I saw her in Seattle back in July. A spectacular show, worth every penny.

        ...laura

  • Who thought the M-She-U was going to be a success? LOLz.
  • A bunch of fantasy characters I don't care about beating each other up for the 50th time is the most boring thing I can imagine.
  • Remember back in the 70's when you were a kid and it was Sunday at 8PM. Yep, "The Wonderful World of Disney". You always hoped it would be a cartoon special, but no matter what it was, it was good and worth watching. I can't imagine today's kids getting excited over anything Disney. No anticipation like back then, just churn, churn, churn out content no matter how bad it is, and it has been particularly bad lately.

  • So It's Disney cookie cutter. It's lost it screenplay edge. Ashoka is borderline watchable with every episode bringing "oh c'mon!" sights from my fam. Mandalorian had ups and downs (the first season was a-ok, second on the wrong side of 'watchable').

    Are the authors still on strike?

  • It's simple - Where would you rather watch something?
    At home where you can pause it for pee breaks and eat great food, on the streaming subscription you're already subscribted to?
    Or would you rather go out to a movie theater where you can't pause it, anything you eat will be more unhealthy and taste worst, you'll likely strain your neck to see things, have to deal with other people being rude and talking, risk covid/cold/flu and pay $$ for that experience.
    Simply, once they started having same-day releases f

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