How would you guys envision Superhero movies of the late 2000s and 2010s would be seen twenty to fifty years from now.
Will they be considered classic films or a cringy period in filmmaking? Or would they simply be forgotten?
Frankly I think they would be forgotten because right now I'm trying to recall iconic scenes or lines and I couldn't. All it has are short lived memes.
>existence of Thor and Odin is confirmed in marvel films so why didn't anyone realise norse mythology was the correct path and begin to worship them again?
Nathaniel Morris
People realized they were just Ayys.
Isaiah Gutierrez
people will probably be nostalgic in 20 years, but by 50 no one will care about them
James Young
2000s ones will but current ones are too CGI heavy and this ages badly.
Luis Scott
They'll be considered classics because they reflect our current zeitgeist.
Dark Knight has aged like wine Marvel will age like milk. People who didn’t grow up with it won’t understand, but I think Infinity War will be the only one that is remembered
Matthew Lee
Avengers movies will be considered classic of popcorn movies, just like Star Wars, IndIana Jones etc. The rest will be remembered only by hardcore fans.
Christian Mitchell
I think some people will look on them with nostalgia, same way Millennials do with Harry Potter.
Ian Harris
Only The Dark Knight, Iron Man, The Avengers, Guardians of the Galaxy, Infinity War, Endgame will be seen as classics.
Nicholas Evans
i can imagine kids watching a marathon of the entire mcu and crying about "being born in the wrong generation"
Cooper Carter
They will be remembered the same way the Lethal Weapon and Transformers franchises are remembered.
McDonald's of cinema.
Parker Campbell
Why does Hemsworth look so different in the first Thor?
Aaron Miller
baby fat (he was 28) and bloating from possible natty bulk in first film as he got older maybe he leaned out or he got put on PEDs/testerone which does the same thing and defines his facial features even more. look at connor murphy on cycle vs off
Juan Smith
Capeshit is just modern equivalent of 80s slasher flicks. But with big budget and some A-list actors.
Justin Butler
They made his eyebrows blonde as hell and he had a shitty wig. He only had convincing blond locks by Dark World, his shittiest film ironically enough.
Ryan Thomas
...which implies they're bigger than 80's slashers ever were if they rake in big bucks that justify these huge budgets and either attract A-listers or transform unknowns into A-listers.
Eli Phillips
Unless you had the time to stretch them out artificially like we had with releases over the years, I really think it's impossible to make yourself sit down for 25 movies.
At best there'll be a few fathers goading their kids into watching them but I really think people will disregard them. It's like the Harry Potter movies, they're not that great of movies and we're even worse a huge drain on your time so nobody but Tumblr marathons it anymore. I think people might cast a more resplendent light on the Avengers movies since they're how you get through the MCU in bite sizes but that's it really.
Anthony Sullivan
MCU will be remembered, because what other series of movies have reached over 20, all in the same continuity, without a reboot or major recasting?
Carson Fisher
they did, in Captain America the First Avenger the first scene is like a norse mythology temple or something
Chase Morales
they will go down as "classics" in the same vain as starwars. new generations will grow up with them as parents turn them on for their kids in whatever streaming service monopolizes the future. but this all hinges on the unlikely scenario that they ever stop making them. these characters are 70 to 100 years old by now. hollywood is still remaking black & white classics, how many mummy reboots have we had so far? superheroes are the perfect fit for them since they have been around so long they are staples of pop culture and are thus instantly recognizable.
William Reyes
I'd be shocked if people actually remembered the superhero movies of the 2010s. 2000s is a different matter, The Dark Knight was on a completely different level and 11 years later its still remembered fondly as a great superhero movie and I don't see that changing in another 10 years. Maybe the early MCU stuff like Iron Man will remain as popular introductions to the character whose merch you see everywhere, but for the rest of the 32534 movies, it's hard to say. It'll certainly have a fanbase, but it's too early to say what the overall cultural impact or impression it will leave. Considering I don't see many pop-culture references to the MCU aside from Thanos (a villain) and maybe Loki, it's up in the air.
Samuel Thompson
>in a one off scene in a period decades before Thor visits Earth yeah no. retard
Lincoln Mitchell
What do you propose exactly? In the next Avengers movie there is a church subplot where a priest is having an existential crisis completely unrelated to the rest of the film? Ultimately all you would get to establish something like that is a one off scene, retard.
Jaxon Bell
its called world building. not surprised a retard such as yourself cannot understand that