Showing posts with label Iron Man. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Iron Man. Show all posts

Tuesday, September 12, 2017

The OMNB Roundtable: Down With the Sickness (of Marvel Franchise Fatigue)

Kyle:
Guys this one kind of hurts me, because I have been a voice crying out in the wilderness against the general rising tide of “ugh, I am soo sick of comic book movies” that has permeated reviews everywhere. A comic book is just a fucking medium to tell a story, that gets adapted into a different medium. No one ever says “uggghh I am so sick of movies based on books.” 

That said, I am worried that the very specific house style of Marvel Studios is starting to peak. I watched Guardians of the Galaxy 2 the other night and I had so looked forward to that movie, as the first is still one of my all-time favorites, and man was it just an overly forced rehash of the second, saved only slightly by a pretty decent climax and Kurt Russell.

The sad thing is I wouldn’t even say any Marvel movie I have ever watched is objectively bad (although I could be convinced that Age of Ultron sucked if I could remember any of it), but there comes a point when factory-produced B+ movies that never really take risks just become noise. Thoughts? 

Oh and maybe we should also touch on JJ Abrams getting Episode IX because I am very split on how I feel about this. 

Erik:
They've kinda backed themselves into the most comfortable corner possible. When you're pumping out 3-4 movies a year and they're all "good," that becomes your new baseline. All their movies are thoroughly acceptable, at the absolute worst, so unless something is the Winter Soldier it gets a resounding shrug from me. Great work, Marvel, you did what you've been doing every 3 months since I was in high school.

Kyle:
Oh I agree they’re still in a good spot. They’re going to make all of the money for the foreseeable future, and so it’s hard to ask what is ultimately a business to mix things up, but man am I hoping Infinity War takes some chances and shakes things up in a big way, even if, like, killing off Tony or Steve would really be because Downey and Evans are about done, and not because they actually want to take huge story risks. Guardians just kind of shook me as a guy who defended even Ant-Man and Dr. Strange for being more unique than people give them credit for. I did not expect to come out of a movie that had fucking Ego the Living Planet as the villain going “meh, that was nothing I haven’t really seen before.”

Travis:
I didn’t like Guardians 1, so hearing this means I’m not watching Guardians 2, but as to the larger issue of every other movie being a comic book movie, I’m not sure I care specifically? To elaborate, what I mean is that I don’t care about any superhero movie because I know I won’t have a shortage of them anytime soon. There are no stakes. This is also, humorously, an issue with American comics in general, though for a different reason. Back with X2 and Spider-Man 2 it really seemed like those movies could go away, so maybe this is the last adventure with these characters I’ll get to see. Now there’s just no way. Most likely DoFP was the last great one we’ll see, because it provided actual closure to a series of things we won’t get again (technically Logan is the end for those movies, but that movie… look, that’s another discussion entirely).

As far as Abrams is concerned, he was a good choice to do a shiny reboot that was competently made that set the table for all the future SW movies, but I don’t have any faith in him making a movie that exceeds his usual fare. He’s proven pretty comprehensively that his ceiling is a 3 star movie that you don’t hate but don’t ever need to see again.  
Kyle:
I just can never shake the memory of Star Trek Into Darkness. Star Trek 2009 was a fun movie full of likeable characters that had a tolerable level of plot contrivances, easter eggs, and fan service that you put up with knowing that the goal was to end the movie with a re-introduced crew blasting off for new adventures. Then the sequel did the exact thing the first movie did. It retroactively ruined its predecessor.  I have some fear that this is where IX will go, but I comfort myself with the knowledge that A) JJ is above all else a Star Wars fan, and he really cares about this story in a way he never cared about Trek and B) the Lucasfilm Story Group is undefeated so far in battling the worst impulses of directors and ensuring a good, continuous story throughout all forms of media, so they should hopefully keep JJ on track. The key here is if Rian Johnson turns The Last Jedi into something that takes us in a new enough direction that turning IX into a rehash of Return of the Jedi is not possible.

Also, Travis, to speak to your point about how “knowing the series can actually end” makes comic book movies better—this is weirdly enough why I am so happy that the DC Extended Universe appears to have failed and that after JL their plan is entirely self-contained movie franchises and even stand-alone, one-shot Elseworlds type stories. Gal Gadot’s Wonder Woman is no longer needed to service a larger franchise, so Patty Jenkins is as free to tell a self-contained story that might even end in the character’s death as Christopher Nolan was. Despite everything WB is doing seemingly being a massive clusterfuck, we’ve got the potential there for some good, independent films about DC characters. James Wan being handed a blank slate and a blank check for Aquaman definitely intrigues me more than an Infinity War movie that’s still just going to set up another decade of sequels.

Travis:
Right, at this point the Marvel movies are basically just the comics, and what has always frustrated me about American comics is how impermanent they are. Artists and authors change, stories change, old stories are either canon or not depending on… well, anything, really. You get 40 issues of one guy, then another guy steps up and everything is different. Dead people come back, new people die, they come back later. The universe is always threatened, but you know it won’t end with the universe going away (unless a brand new one is going to pop up next month). To Erik’s point, it’s the security Marvel feels right now that has removed the punch from their movies. Back when I was a kid this waa all I could have asked for, and now I’m getting my just desserts.

And yeah, there are very clear through-lines in all of JJ’s work. He makes the one movie, and it’s a horrible fit for a part 3 in a trilogy.