You will never witness this epic moment on the big screen.
Thank you, Scott Buck./s
IGN took down the review. Guess they broke embargo and they didn't give a fuck.
So is the whole replace mutants with Inhumansnow finally dead?
Any wider MCU references you might have picked up on, Cuburt?
In all fairness, Iron Fist was also overly fond of repeated, unnecessary flashbacks.
Ouch
Also what's up with those four people sitting as far left from the screen as possible when there's all those available seats?
Midnight showing are always for the real True Believers.There's a theater near me where every showing is basically completely open but then there is an 11:40PM showing that is sold out....that is weird.
Also what's up with those four people sitting as far left from the screen as possible when there's all those available seats?
We're also talking about Scott Buck. "Good" will never be apart of anything he's involved in.
"You fought an immense, immortal, magical dragon in the wilderness surrounding an eternal city shrouded by mystery, and filled with the monks who founded Kung Fu? And you punched it in the heart, giving you incalculable mystic powers for a mortal?"
"Yes."
Fast and cheap, baby!
"You fought an immense, immortal, magical dragon in the wilderness surrounding an eternal city shrouded by mystery, and filled with the monks who founded Kung Fu? And you punched it in the heart, giving you incalculable mystic powers for a mortal?"
"Yes."
Flawless.
"Seymour the city is shaking!"
"No Mother, it's just an immortal dragon!"
"You fought an immense, immortal, magical dragon in the wilderness surrounding an eternal city shrouded by mystery, and filled with the monks who founded Kung Fu? And you punched it in the heart, giving you incalculable mystic powers for a mortal?"
"Yes."
Flawless.
"Seymour the city is shaking!"
"No Mother, it's just an immortal dragon!"
So is the whole replace mutants with Inhumansnow finally dead?
Nope.So is the whole replace mutants with Inhumansnow finally dead?
To be fair though, even if the show was good we'd never see that. They seem really resistant to mixing the movie and TV characters, even when they do well.
Absolute zero. Inhumans on TV/movies is dead for at least a decade due to this pile of trash.
Ok so I asked my friend, who had seen this, what the dumbest moment of the pilot was and here it is:
Maximus taunts Black Bolt with the fact that BB had killed their parents and immediately after he says this, we get a flashback of young Black Bolt playing with some toys next to his parents. Completely unprovoked and out of nowhere, Black Bolt just screams,
"WHY?"
And his parents both blow up. No explanation given as to why this happens, why Black Bolt yelled it, or what he was thinking.
I was hyped to watch this when it was announced but I'm not really caring now.
You never know. Fantastic Four keeps coming back despite never having a decent movie and X-Men came back despite half the movies being hot garbage.
FF4 movies keep getting made because they have to. The IP has to be used every, I believe, 7 years or the rights revert back to Marvel.
The X-men movies make money, so that's really all that matters on that end.
As soon as I saw this shit I knew it was shit.
Black Bolt can knock Hulk on his ass with a punch. Hulk!!!!! And here he is whincing in pain from a baton.
The problem is trying to make the Inhumans the X-Men isn't true to the source material. These characters are not comparable to the X-Men at all.
I guess the thing with FF4, unlike X-men, is that every time they've tried to use it because the "have to" they LOSE money on it. X-men movies make bank, usually... FF4 hasn't been financially successful for them since 2005... and that just BARELY got a profit. The franchise has lost them far more money than it ever earned them, especially since they don't really get money off merchandising either (Marvel gets that, not Fox).
So when saddled with an IP that is NOT making them money, but they "need" to use it to keep making movies that aren't making them money, I'm not sure if it makes sense to hold on to it. It's costing them more than it's helping them.
What's the definition of insanity? Doing the same thing over and over again and expecting different results? At this point, they've poisoned the brand enough that they could actually make a good film... but who at this point will be lining up to see the next Fantastic Four film? Unlike Spider-man, there was never a "golden period" to return to, no fond memories of the comic brought to life, no nostalgic praise for paving the way for future films...
Fox holds onto it because they keep thinking they can get something... somewhere... somehow... good out of it, despite two decades of evidence proving they really can't. It's why, at this point, they're looking to make films based on the SIDE characters instead... Doom, the Richard kids, etc... because they can't do the main group justice.
And the Incredibles 2 is coming out soon anyway.
Not LITERALLY the X-Men, but something akin to them. Prior to the movie, they could've introduced the Inhuman royalty as a powerful group that aided during the Infinity War, then the movie could've focused on Terrigen Mist cloud turning people into new Inhumans and the royalty reaching out to them to help them understand their powers. Maybe introduce more "there are too many super powered beings wrecking everything" human governments that are banding together to round up the newly turned Inhumans, and have the Terrigen Mist being unleashed by Maximus to make Earth into an Inhuman world where he could rule as its Emperor. Basically have Black Bolt, Medusa, Crystal and co as "mentors", the newly turned Inhumans as the main characters (Kamala Khan HAS to be there) and them fighting against both those that don't understand them, and Maximus (and his Terrrigen Mist cloud).
Well Fox has a lose-lose situation. Either keep using the rights and lose money or lose the rights and potentially watch a studio make a hit out of it
OR... give Marvel a price and sell it back to them. It'd be the only money they'd see out of it in over a decade and half.
OR... give Marvel a price and sell it back to them. It'd be the only money they'd see out of it in over a decade and half.
I'm hoping that Fox and Marvel working together to make TV shows (Legion, The Gifted) is a sign that a deal to have the FF in the MCU is in the works, similar to Spider-Man.
Honestly even if Marvel gets FF back they probably wouldn't make a movie right away. There's a reason why Blade, Ghost Rider, Daredevil and Punisher haven't been seen in movies yet
For starters, the warning that Inhumans was incomplete would seem to apply mostly to the show's visual effects, which did indeed have some glitchy qualities to work out. That's common for TV shows with big special effects sequences, which are often tweaked and finessed up until the very last minute. And when you consider that Inhumans boasts the most significant computer-generated character in TV history (a teleporting giant bulldog named Lockjaw), it's easy to understand why it would remain a work in progress until the very last second.
But I can overlook incomplete effects. I've been doing it for years. (My first major assignment was reviewing Battlestar Galactica every week, and that show almost never had completed effects on its screeners.) The key factor in this equation is that the visual effects are one of the last things added to a series — they can't compensate for bad writing, incompetent direction, or listless performances.
And because this is not a time when I can publish an official review, I will say no more, except that I am highly, highly doubtful that completed effects will fix what's wrong with Inhumans. All the spiffy teleporting bulldogs in the world won't be able to overcome this series' issues.
So, look, I can't tell you not to spend $20-plus to see the show in IMAX before it officially premieres on ABC. It's your money, not mine. But one function that critics can serve is that of consumer service — advising you against spending money on something that might make you wish you had spent it on anything else.
You will never witness this epic moment on the big screen.
Thank you, Scott Buck./s