🐱 A year without Marvel movies left a void - Consuuuuume

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CatParty

In early April, I watched a clip of people crying, hollering, and clapping during a scene in Avengers: Endgame. It was the first time I remember missing physically sitting in a movie theater. I thought by May, when Black Widow was scheduled to be released, life would return to normal. I’d be back in a theater on Thursday night with friends, sitting among a packed room full of strangers chatting excitedly about the beginning of a new Marvel Cinematic Universe phase.


That never happened.

Instead, 2020 has become the first year since 2009 without a major addition to the Marvel Cinematic Universe. There’s no big introduction of a new superhero, no highly anticipated sequel — there’s not even an entry in Marvel Studios’ MCU TV universe. WandaVision, once slated to premiere this month, won’t hit until January 15th. The Falcon and the Winter Soldier was supposed to kick things off in August of this year, and now will now premiere in March 2021. There’s no big Marvel anything.


In a year where I feel more disconnected from people than ever, where I’m searching for community from the confines of a tiny studio apartment, not having that quintessential part of normalcy — sitting in a theater and watching the couple of Marvel movies that come out every year — feels enormous.

The absence of Marvel movies is the absence of a very specific kind of excitement. Living within the confines of our new normal for the last 10 months means trying to find little things to look forward to every week. A new show on a streaming service helps or a Zoom catch-up with family who can’t visit. But it doesn’t replace the physicality of community or the excitement of leaving home to experience something people may have been waiting on for several months. In 2020, a year filled with death and travesty at the worst of times and mindless boredom at the best of times, the absence of unbridled anticipation was tough to swallow.

Marvel’s disappearance didn’t just echo through subreddit forums and on stan Twitter. It severely impacted business for a number of companies in the entertainment industry. Disney went from having its strongest third quarter ever in 2019 with the release of Avengers: Endgame, which brought in more than $2.8 billion, to one of its worst without any notable releases. Since Disney acquired Marvel Entertainment in 2009, the IP has brought in nearly $30 billion. That doesn’t include merchandise.

There are also theaters. In a moment where Hollywood is struggling to get people to tear their eyes away from Netflix, TikTok, and Minecraft, theaters are reliant on major tentpole event movies — like a new entry in the Marvel Cinematic Universe — to bring people in. In 2008, Marvel Cinematic Universe movies made up about 6 percent of the US box office; by 2019, it was more than 15 percent, with Disney controlling close to 40 percent of the total US box office market share.

A new Marvel movie would come out, it would dominate pop culture discussion around the world for a few weeks or months — giving us a fresh round of memes and plenty of Twitter discourse — and then start up again by the time the next one rolled around. This happens with other movies, of course, but with Marvel, everything felt like it was on a grand scale. A subreddit deleting half of its members over the course of a couple of days all because of a joke in Infinity War was something we could participate in together, even if it was online. That moment was spurred by an event that millions of people experienced in movie theaters together.

The pandemic has become a lesson in adapting to a new normal. The beauty (or nightmare, depending on who you ask) of Marvel movies is that there’s always one or two just around the corner. That absence of excitement is beginning to fade; in part because The Mandalorian has helped to make the last few weeks fun again. I’m getting excited about WandaVision, which will premiere on Disney Plus in just over a month. I’m excited about having that week-to-week discussion and feeling of community online again when episodes drop. I’m excited for Black Widow, and hopeful that we may be at a place where we can pile into a movie theater and fall back into a world with a character that’s been on-screen since 2010.

A year without Marvel movies is significant to me, but Marvel can be replaced with any number of things. Concerts, basketball games, church outings, or nights at the local bar — it’s the quiet bonding that we experience that emphasizes our communities. It’s the feeling of intimacy inside a sea of strange faces. It’s that inexplicable sense of true unity in the face of this thing that we love so much. As much as I can’t wait for the next MCU release, I’m more excited to get that feeling back.
 
One thing that I find really disturbing about MCU is after Disney consolidated everything into a proper cinematic universe it became extremely sanitized and sex-free.

Instead of Ironman getting laid and playboy-ing it up like in the first Paramount produced film for example you now get full grown men in spandex mugging the camera like a teenage girl trying to make quirky quips and making soy faces.
It's one of the reasons I'm kinda-sorta happy that the old Punisher movie came out pre-Disney. Even if it's not as brutal and merciless as it should have been, it's still enjoyable.



In hindsight, the Harry Heck scene is actually the best out of the whole movie, considering it's a cannon-fodder character that only "lived" for about 2 pages.

 
A year without Marvel is like having Christmas last 365 days.

There is no excitement as the majority are done. The climax happened and I think people actually want good movies that aren't comic book related. No new characters will revive it. No existing characters will extend it. Wonder Women is going to bomb.

Wait ten years and try again fresh. But I am sick of comic movies. It was a trend and now we need a new one.

When Wonder Woman goes under it will be a deluge of "muh misogyny" just like with wahmmyn Ghostbusters. No legit criticism will be tolerated because Wonder Woman has a vagina and that's the only reason you don't want her to be a hero. It makes your penis feel threatened.

Also, Gal Gadot's tits aren't big enough and Linda Carter was prettier.

PS I have a non-troon vagina.

*edit: Thank you for the puzzle piece. I deserved it. Went overboard. :lol:
 
Does anyone else miss the weird violent one off superhero movies of the early mid 2000's like Super, Defendor, Kick Ass, Revanant, Hobo with a shotgun ect?

The MCU killed all that shit.
 
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A new Marvel movie would come out, it would dominate pop culture discussion around the world for a few weeks or months — giving us a fresh round of memes and plenty of Twitter discourse — and then start up again by the time the next one rolled around. This happens with other movies, of course, but with Marvel, everything felt like it was on a grand scale.
It's a perfect explanation of how vacuous modern consoomer culture is. The point of movies is not to experience new things, it's to mindlessly drone about them for a set amount of time and then continue to the next turd.
 
It's not a big deal.

It really isn’t a big deal. I don’t mind super hero movies and I’ve passively collected comic books since the 90s, but it’s something to kill time, when I have free time. I also just like collecting books in general. It kinda bugs me how people will make their identity around their interest.

Oh yes, because a lack of multi-million dollar popcorn flicks due to COVID is what left a void. Never mind:
  • All the businesses that had to permanently shutter due to lockdown restrictions.

  • All the families grieving the loss of their relatives who died due to COVID or COVID-related comorbidities.

  • The lasting damage this pandemic will leave in the economy for years and possibly decades to come.

  • The ambivalent state of everyone's future due to politics on municipal, state, federal, and global levels being an absolute shitshow.
The same people who bitch about not having their capeshit fix are the same retards who think Ellen DeGeneres did nothing wrong.

I’m more sad about the local businesses going down than I am about the MCU. I’ve also known some people who’ve died due to covid complications. The worst was an older individual who survived covid but after losing their sense of taste refused to eat and slowly starved to death... :/

The MCU is a lot lower on sane people’s list of priorities. What drives me nuts is a lot of the people who whine about how there are no more MCU films frequently overlap with the ‘capitalism is evil, we want communism now!’ crowd.

I miss the sort of nerds who have an autistically niche interest in something like trains or building models of landmarks out of matchsticks in their shed. They at least develop a skill, knowledge or a hobby around it, there's some personal development through their obsession. These nerds just sit there and consume bland media and that's it.

Oh, they still exist but they don’t get as much attention as the consumeee nerds. If I had to break down nerds into categories I’d do so this way: Nerds who have a hobby and “nerds” whose hobby is being a nerd. Basically, one is interested in a given subject, fandom, or interest, and the other wants to be perceived as being interested in a given subject, fandom, or interest. The latter likes to have things to talk about to make themselves look nerdy. Also they’re interested in the next new thing. If they wanted to get more Marvel there are literally decades worth of comic books in circulation, online, or even on torrent sites. They don’t want anything old they want something shiny and new to consume then toss away.
 
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Black Widow tho :(

Endgame does not hold up at all. Its definitely overrated shit. Especially compared to Infinity War.
Also it seems Hawkeye was supposed to die in the original script but for some godforsaken reason the female crew members asked that they change it to Natasha instead.
 
ok, then why dont you go see any dc movies? ww1984 is suppose to be in theaters this christmas, you could go see that.
 
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A year without Marvel is like having Christmas last 365 days.



Wait ten years and try again fresh. But I am sick of comic movies. It was a trend and now we need a new one.

At this point, there won't be theatres in 10 years, so what's the point of the capeshit blockbuster?

Endgame was a nice wrap-up, the serious contenders for superhero movies have all been made, enthusiasm is dropping, and the ones they're proposing now are woke capeshit with "diverse" takes on everything.

The Super Movie ended while it was on top, attempts by Disney and the others to keep it going by making ever-more woke sequels is going to fail, sooner than later due to the corona crunch, watch for a lot of quiet cancellations of these M-She-U movies, blaming it on the coof instead of the real reason: people have had enough of the Cape movie, there's nothing more to prove, and can't be whtie-guilted back into theatres, assuming they'll even exist at the end of next year.

Here comes the push for subsidizing the movie industry!

I fully expect Hollywood to ask for, and get, a trillion-dollar bailout package in the next few years, unable to draw a connection between their excesses and tone deafness driving away their audience while forcing them, essentially at gunpoint, to continue to consume through the backdoor via their taxes to save their fake worlds of detached vanity.
 
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