Total Members Voted: 14
Also, you're not taking into account the fact that not every superhero movie made in the past decade has been an MCU film.2014 had four between Winter Soldier, X-Men: DoFP, Amazing Spider-Man 2, and Guardians of the Galaxy.2015 had three between Avengers 2, Ant-Man, and Fantastic Flop.2016, on the other hand, is going to have SIX, between Civil War, BvS, Shitpool, X-Men, Suicide Squad, and Dr. Strange.That's pretty fucking crazy.
Quote from: Kirlia on June 04, 2016, 06:11:03 PMIf the market is saturated, how come the value of the films continues to rise?It's econ 101.The capital value goes down when the market becomes saturated.They're only just now beginning to tap into the value of this market, and people's tolerance for it.Because we're not speaking in obsolete economic terms. Whether something is saturated in a bullshit capitalist sense doesn't matter, because that's not a rational standard of judgment.The value of the films continues to rise because people feel obligated to see them all. It's not actual value.They just have a vice-grip on your balls.
If the market is saturated, how come the value of the films continues to rise?It's econ 101.The capital value goes down when the market becomes saturated.They're only just now beginning to tap into the value of this market, and people's tolerance for it.
Civil War (The best Marvel movie, and up there with TDK for best hero film in general)
Quote from: BaconShelf on June 04, 2016, 06:14:49 PMCivil War (The best Marvel movie, and up there with TDK for best hero film in general)That's a bold comparison. I still need to see it, but I haven't seen First Avenger or Winter Soldier yet either.but that's just because i dislike captain america on a conceptual level
Quote from: Prime Kruphix on June 04, 2016, 06:01:30 PMTreat them like comics. Follow the ones you like forget that the others exist. You might miss a few in jokes, but everything crucial to Avengers #61 will be told within the film.Yeah, that's what I do anyway. I'm just trying to illustrate how saturated the industry is becoming with them, and that Turkey's being just a little obtuse about it.
Treat them like comics. Follow the ones you like forget that the others exist. You might miss a few in jokes, but everything crucial to Avengers #61 will be told within the film.
Why has Disney been the ONLY one to catch onto this and ride with it? Honestly if more movies decided to expand their universe before the first Avengers we would see a lot less Superhero movies and more variety.
I can't compel you to believe something you don't, but the 'superhero fatigue/saturation' meme is hardly persuasive when there are the same complaints leveled against the young-adult/teen trope (Hunger Games, Divergent, Maze Runner) with much fewer and less frequent releases, while none aimed at examples such as spy thrillers, college comedies, gross-out comedies, etc. which are released much more frequently than Marvel or DC. Marvel (and DC to some extent) aren't even just releasing "superhero movies", they're releasing comic book-based movies with a wide range of tones, themes, settings, cast, and style. Captain America: Winter Soldier is more of a spy thriller than it is a typical superhero movie; Guardians of the Galaxy is more of a space opera; Ant Man is a heist movie with a gimmick; Deadpool is canonized satire parody. If they were releasing movies that felt and looked the same, like the Man of Steel series, there'd be a lot more cause for criticizing saturation of the industry with too little innovation, but that's just not something that can be said of Marvel.
Deadpool wreaked of Reddit-tier shit slop. Easily the worst blockbuster of the year.