Vigilant Walrus
Member
You can't hate on Inception though. I gets really close to Paprika. It's a good movie.
Hope somebody at WB/DC gives him a project. DC films could use a little Whedon touch.
He did a better job on A2 than Nolan did on TDKR, so I guess there's that.
They tried with Wonder Woman about a decade back. Creative Differences reared their ugly heads.
Buffy is a great television showDamn Marvel for tying Whedon's artistic, savant-like hands. If it weren't for them we could have gotten a film as well-written and directed as that one Whedon film/script that everybody remembers.
Dude made a modern-day Shakespeare indie in black and white. Obviously the sky is the artistic limit when Marvel isn't involved.
This makes me very very curious as to how that would have worked out. Even a bit moreso than had Darren Aronofsky stuck to Wolverine.They should have let Nicolas Wending Refn do Wonder Woman since he wanted it.
Wasn't there an element of the execs getting jittery at a female-led action film, too? Attitudes are a lot different these days, but that was a very real problem back then.
Damn Marvel for tying Whedon's artistic, savant-like hands. If it weren't for them we could have gotten a film as well-written and directed as that one Whedon film/script that everybody remembers.
Dude made a modern-day Shakespeare indie in black and white. Obviously the sky is the artistic limit when Marvel isn't involved.
just by examining the products, there is nothing in the Mission Impossible series or Nolan Batman trilogy that makes me think "this seems out of place" or something being there for the sake of setting up another movie.
look all of Iron Man 2 or some of Guardians. too much time spent on setting on future installments which lessened the films as a whole. just by watching the movies you can tell. and of course the whole act 3 shootbang thing.
Whedon chuckled bitterly. Somebody said, Well, that was a great setup for the next thing! in one of the test screenings, and I died inside. [Marvel executives] were like, No! They say that all the time, its fine. I was like, No, thats the worst thing I could have heard. I want people to come out feeling done.
Yeah forreal I fucking loved captain america 2 until the ending battle which you could literally replace with the gotg finale and nobody would prolly bat an eye.
Marvel loves their everything but the kitchen sink final battles even tho they all just look kinda stale after james Cameron kind of put his claim on the Aerial/Land cgi action-fest
As problematic as nolan movies can be (and his flaws can sometimes be apparent in the TDK trilogy too, certainly in the last one) they are so much better made and exciting than what marvel's given us post-iron man 1. They've gone with a sort of cartoon vibe with their universe, has a villain ever been genuinely terrifying or threatening among these movies? It works though to get the majority of the audience, and also the fans of the books like seeing infinity gems and stuff
Given how utterly unambitious and generic everything in A2 was it is not a big achievement. I rather failures like TDKR then generic attempts like A2.
I wonder if cynics are already taking bets Yellowjacket will be forgotten going by impressions from the recent Ant-Man trailer.As a big Marvel fan in general and enjoy most of their cinematic universe I must say this is the one thing I'm disappointed in regarding their universe. Loki and Winter Solider (in some regards) (honorable mentions to pierce & abomination) are only decent villains with Kingpin being the only great one among their universe it's a major problem. Ultron had momentsbut they never went all the way there and instead play up how humorous he could be. Marvel has some of the best villains in comics and so far they've wasted Red Skull, Mandarin, Ronan, Malekith and others they need to make sure their villains are as memorable as the heroes headlining this movies in order to continue to improve.including his introduction and when he cut off Klaws arm that was great moment to show how dangerous and angry he could be
Whedon's biggest failure is his inability to take responsibility for his failures.
Seriously, I'm fucking baffled by this thread and I love Whedon.
People are really just gonna run with a black and white narrative of Marvel being the bad guys here?
Good stuff.
I like to think that Ike Perlmutter just gets all these grandiose plans from Feige, then cuts them all down to the ones that are the cheapest
No. These blockbusters are driving him mad. He can't hack it anymore. Plus he's not very good at this, and he couldn't make it any clearer that he knows it. For admitting so, I give him credit.Hope somebody at WB/DC gives him a project. DC films could use a little Whedon touch.
Well, that and being extremely profits motivated, even more so then other studios. Marvel under Perlmutter literally means there's a chance Whedon had to pay for his own coffee.
I wonder if cynics are already taking bets Yellowjacket will be forgotten going by impressions from the recent Ant-Man trailer.
For example I'm not convinced that hiring the Russo brothers was a stroke of brilliance or anything. Marvel probably thought 'these guys are working on a niche TV sitcom, we can get em for dirt cheap and they'll obey us since this is their big break. And if they fuck up, who cares? It's Captain America, has a built-in audience that will see it regardless!' Winter Soldier turning out great was more of a happy accident.
I read up about him today; miracle the dude hasn't made everything fall apart yet.I would say its not even in question. Perlmutter wouldn't even foot the bill for complimentary crisps at the Iron Man 1 premiere.
Damn Marvel for tying Whedon's artistic, savant-like hands. If it weren't for them we could have gotten a film as well-written and directed as that one Whedon film/script that everybody remembers.
Dude made a modern-day Shakespeare indie in black and white. Obviously the sky is the artistic limit when Marvel isn't involved.
The criticism of Black Widow in Avengers is really fucking unfortunate. What is on the page is largely what matters, but when criticizing someone personally you move into the territory where you should probably do at least a little research. if you had you would find out that Scarlett was pregnant and they had to rework the film. A billion dollar film he had to get done on a deadline.
I read up about him today; miracle the dude hasn't made everything fall apart yet.
Also I think Nolan might be the most blessed director in Hollywood in general right now.
He gets massive budgets to make his films that he always wanted to make about dream thieves and space sci fi epics, stuff you wouldn't normally expect to be huge money earners, but then they do earn massive money so he can keep making more and more.
That is true.
He was being sarcastic.
I won't quote the whole thing, but that was a very good post. Thank you for that.
Preach. Well, kinda, I liked A2 because there was a semblance of soul once in a while, Hawkguy saved the movie.I rather failures like TDKR then generic attempts like A2.
Given how utterly unambitious and generic everything in A2 was it is not a big achievement. I rather failures like TDKR then generic attempts like A2.
You keep making these kinds of snarky comments like they're universally accepted when they're not. Repeating your opinion over and over again doesn't somehow make it widely accepted fact.
this thread more than most should allow for subjective opinions tho, no matter how repeated they are
I view the MCU project as a collaborative effort. Obviously Joss isn't going to get his say in how the movie turns out. None of the Directors will have their final say, but I still see it as a unique and interesting idea.
But to date he's had to do the 1 for 1 trade with the studio every time he's wanted to make a film for himself. Prestige so long as he returned for TDK. Inception so long as he returned for TDKR.Also I think Nolan might be the most blessed director in Hollywood in general right now.
He gets massive budgets to make his films that he always wanted to make about dream thieves and space sci fi epics, stuff you wouldn't normally expect to be huge money earners, but then they do earn massive money so he can keep making more and more.
Good interview by the way.I'm a card-carrying Nolan fanboy. His Batman trilogy clicks on all levels - gravitas, blockbuster action, character drama, cultural/social/political relevance, etc.
I respect the hell out of Whedon as well. Haven't seen AoU yet, but what Whedon did for the MCU cannot be understated.
Ultimately the distinction between each filmmaker's end result seems to come down to the big picture. Nolan more or less had creative control over his films and was able to create a standalone trilogy. Whedon was working in a larger sandbox and Marvel's demands for their bigger picture, so in some ways his films might not be able to stand out as much in the overall MCU timeline/universe.
People probably get tired of me posting this in related threads, but I just love Spielberg's comments on Nolan's Batman films (go to 4:30).
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=r69N56plrDE
Also I think Nolan might be the most blessed director in Hollywood in general right now.
He gets massive budgets to make his films that he always wanted to make about dream thieves and space sci fi epics, stuff you wouldn't normally expect to be huge money earners, but then they do earn massive money so he can keep making more and more.