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Its official huh. Ragnarok bout to do damage
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I suggested them throwing Hulk into Ragnarok and blending the stories
Just acknowledging the fact that a PH film doesn't sound like the smartest move on paper.. GOTG didn't either and it turned out to be great but that doesn't automatically sign me up for the rest of Marvel's future flicks.
Biggest question i have about it is how does it advance their overall story. Seems like they're entering a point where every standalone has major significance in expanding the overarching plot and i personally don't know how Planet Hulk will do that.
I imagine a situation where he's sent off somewhere and they use this as a way to crossover some of the cosmic stuff with what's going on here. Could be something with the inhumans, or he crosses path with the Guardians... hell i could even see something where he's sent to Asgard and they make a Hulk/Thor buddy film
Don't have the slightest idea but i'm interested in seeing where they take this.
I suggested them throwing Hulk into Ragnarok and blending the stories laugh.gif
Marvel been listening
had no idea she was in that movieFor my next #MarvelBomb
Brie Larson for Captain Marvel
Marvel should justbup a billi for Doom, Kang, and the Silver Surfer alone. I wanna ****** see Kang
The show just sucks. It's not about expectations either. Nobody was clamoring for a live action Batman tv show. No Bat fan wants to see that inevitable trainwreck.yall wilding, yall knew wwhat the story was going to be about from jump... you want the kid to put on the suit now???
I dont understand what yall expected??
it's going the way we anticipated.
Call me crazy or a conspiracy theorist but I think they both agreed to lie.damn that news got me back in the thread and now i read in here its not true... sucks
Denied by Fox. For all we know, they could be lying.It's also denied by Marvel.Since our original story about the possibility of Marvel having re-acquired the rights to Fantastic Four, we've been contacted by 20th Century Fox. It states that our source's suggestion that Fox had reached some kind of deal with Marvel is "completely untrue."
A denial has also come from Marvel.
Read more: http://www.denofgeek.com/movies/fan...x-denies-fantastic-four-rumours#ixzz3ogaOqOnJ
Stop flip flopping. You went from accepting Gunn won't use Nova to now believing he will and he's just not announcing it....and we just gonna act like Gunn's wack *** didn't confirm new characters for Guardians.
Nova's coming. But knowing Gunn he'll put his own corny interpretation of him
Basicallyaka no one was watching thor
I say that strictly off there'd be nothing to gain from Marvel to make a deal to let FOX do X-Men tv shows.Call me crazy or a conspiracy theorist but I think they both agreed to lie.
If this alleged "deal" is that masterful then props to both companies I guess...
lame's claims that anniversary posters and video games supported his theory still remain unproven.y'all doubted lamekilla too... look where that got you
Fox isn't planning to give it back to Marvel, though. Whether anyone wants to believe it at this point or not, they still have plans for the property. What form those plans will take is still under discussion, but they haven't just given up and thrown in the towel on it. They took a critical beating on the film, they had big problems with the press and with their director, and it's been a financial disappointment, to say the least. Even so, they managed to squeeze about $165 million out of the movie when you factor in the worldwide box-office.
That's not the point, though. There is a rumor that has gone crazy today that Fox has traded Marvel Studios the rights to "Fantastic Four" so that Fox can produce several different "X-Men" based television shows.
The "X-Men" TV shows are true. The thing is, they've been negotiating them for months, and to be clear, Marvel didn't give anything up. They negotiated a deal to co-produce the series, something that's become very lucrative for them. They've got "Agents of SHIELD" and "Agent Carter" on ABC, and they've got the Netflix deal in place for several different series.
One of those, I'd point out, is "Daredevil," a property that was owned for a time by Fox, who produced one film and an "Elektra" spin-off, and they came very close to making another movie as well. They balked at the last moment, though, and lost the rights to the character, also losing the rights to the Kingpin in the process. The Netflix "Daredevil" has become very well regarded among fans of the character, and the second season is going to fold another character that has had a rocky big-screen career, The Punisher, into the series.
Let me ask you this: if you're 20th Century Fox and you traded away "Daredevil" only to watch Marvel knock it out of the park, both creatively and in terms of fan reaction, how eager do you think you're going to be to also hand over "Fantastic Four," which you've fumbled creatively twice now? Do you think Fox is a rush to get shown up again? Or do you think it's more likely they've got something to prove now? Do you think they're going to hand over a potential franchise that exists as a rights package with a number of other characters and ideas bundled into it, or do you think they're going to keep trying to figure it out because they know how much money they've made off of the "X-Men" film series so far?
To be clear, I did my homework today. If Fox did trade away "Fantastic Four," which they did not, they did it without telling anyone involved with the property at all. Because that's the way things work. They wouldn't tell any of the involved parties, and they especially wouldn't tell Constantin Film, the actual rights holder on the property. Oh, wait, what? You mean Fox doesn't own "Fantastic Four" outright? You mean even if they wanted to, they couldn't trade the property for something else? Really? That seems surprising, unless you've paid any attention to the development history of "Fantastic Four" at all.
Like I said… I understand why rumors spread. People want to believe them. But I don't understand how people who write about films for a living routinely will print things that don't even pass a fundamental sniff test because they don't know anything about the way things actually work. More and more these days, so-called "fan press" seems to believe that actual expertise is something that doesn't matter, and so we see entire days or weeks of outright fabrication or faulty games of connect-the-dots, and we watch fandom whip itself into a frenzy over nothing.
Logic and a working knowledge of the business side of our industry… are those things too much too ask?
On days like today, it feels like the answer to that is "yes."
Read more at http://www.hitfix.com/motion-captur...umor-is-complete-nonsense#MEDgPuMigIB2SFjb.99
Let me ask you this: if you're 20th Century Fox and you traded away "Daredevil" only to watch Marvel knock it out of the park, both creatively and in terms of fan reaction, how eager do you think you're going to be to also hand over "Fantastic Four," which you've fumbled creatively twice now? Do you think Fox is a rush to get shown up again? Or do you think it's more likely they've got something to prove now? Do you think they're going to hand over a potential franchise that exists as a rights package with a number of other characters and ideas bundled into it, or do you think they're going to keep trying to figure it out because they know how much money they've made off of the "X-Men" film series so far?