RedWingFan wrote:verslibre wrote:How is that so bad compared to how they "introduced" Hawkeye in Thor? You see an unnamed guy move toward a rifle, but stops and chooses a bow. Geeks know who he is. The GA has no clue, until Entertainment and all the Avengers promos fill in the deets. Okay. Fine. And our first sighting of Black Widow involves Tony telling Pepper "I want one." They could have done better than that. IM2 was admittedly rushed.
Fury and Widow joined the MCU in a full-time capacity in Iron Man 2. Second movie in. Al three gather for an impromptu meeting in a donut shop. But that's awesome, right? LOL.
"It's so bad" because Fury, Widow and Hawkeye aren't major characters. Neither is Vision.
Says an uninformed guy who appears to be a casual fan of the movies only but wants to start calling the shots like he's a veteran reader-fan decades in the making.
Col. Nick Fury was Sgt. Nick Fury in his original non-SamJack-inspired comics reboot (which also led directly to casting said actor in the movies). Sgt. Nick Fury led the Howling Commandos in their own ongoing title starting Spring '63 to the summer of '70, after which Marvel continued to publish it, but reprints only, till the end of '81. (That's pretty solid for a WWII-themed comic, though it pales next to DC's Sgt. Rock, who is authentically WWII only, in that he didn't operate outside that venue, and his original stories as a soldier continued all the way to '88! Sgt. Rock & Easy Company did show up in some stories outside their comfort zone in the DCU, though.)
The reason for that is five years earlier in '65, Lee & Kirby created the first story that featured
Colonel Nick Fury. After three years of more original Col. Fury stories appearing in
Strange Tales, Jim Steranko, one of the genre's greatest luminaries, and who already taken over creative duties, started writing/drawing the new monthly
Nick Fury, Agent of S.H.I.E.L.D. While it only lasted 15 issues, the groundbreaking covers and Steranko's work on the character continue to merit discussion. Fury's continued to enjoy appearances in Avengers and other titles since then, and he's gotten his self-contained miniseries time and again, in and apart from S.H.I.E.L.D.
The last one,
Fury: My War Gone By, came out 5-6 years ago. It's really good (Garth Ennis wrote it, and the previous two Fury miniseries). It follows Fury in '70s Viet Nam, where he eventually teams up with a pre-Punisher Frank Castle. Then the narrative shifts to '84 Nicaragua.
The point is Fury is hardly a minor character. He's not superpowered but his presence looms over the Marvel Universe in no small way.
Is Hawkeye a major character? Not really. He's a Green Arrow ripoff in a goofy purple outfit (which is no longer, of course). But he got his own series again thanks to the movies.
Black Widow, OTOH, she's much more important in the context of things. Both Frank Miller and George Pérez have written/drawn her, and those are some fine stories.
Is Vision a major character? Not on the level of the original Avengers, maybe, but the Vision & Scarlet Witch tandem has had a lot of face time over the years.
RedWingFan wrote:Marvel laid the foundation and planted 4 solid pillars in Hulk, Iron Man, Thor, and Cap. Fury, Widow, Hawkeye, Vision, Winter Soldier fill in the gaps and provide plot points. While Marvel slams down even more pillars, Spidey, Black Panther, Ant-Man, Dr. Strange and Guardians.
^This is how I know you're just going by ticket sales, not actual content. Ant-Man's never enjoyed major popularity in the comics. I think he's going to operate at the level of Hawkeye, but he'll get a slight boost thanks to Wasp because female superheroes are set to be the rage now.
RedWingFan wrote:Now lets look at DC's grand architectural plan. MOS, hey let's throw Batman in there, no need to explain where he is at in this universe. Everybody knows Batman. Adam West, Keaton, Clooney, Bale or the other guy. Pick your favorite. This is that guy.
LOL, nobody remembers Clooney except as the punchline of the single worst Batman screen iteration out there. What, no love for the Kilmer?
"No need to explain"? Wait for the solo movie. That's what they did with Black Panther. Nobody seemed to mind that they had no clue what the source of his enhanced abilities were beyond those razor sharp claws.
Btw, Batman's backstory was meant to be concise in
BvS, and we got what we needed. His parents' death had been replaced by other sources of anguish, hence the brutality. Batman's enjoyed many arcs in the comics. Read some, and then maybe
BvS won't come off like the Lament Configuration.
RedWingFan wrote:You got 1 supposed pillar, superman from a widely panned movie. 1 pillar in a solid by comparison Wonder Woman movie, Batman we know from previous iterations.....and emails. Flash, aquaman, cyborg are supposed to be major characters and you're comparing their introductions to Marvel's minor supporting characters. That doesn't tell you something?
Like I explained, "minor supporting characters" is for the most part incorrect. You're only exposing your own ignorance by referring that way to characters not named Spider-Man, Captain America and Iron Man. And we already know Spidey, the X-Men, and the Fantastic Four are, or were, more famous than Iron Man, Thor, Ant-Man and even Strange. But Marvel couldn't use them, and that's why Civil War ended up being half-assed. It needed all the characters to tell the story. You got the reduced calories version and you think it rocks because 1) it has a lot of characters doing the two-step on the tarmac, and 2) you don't know better.
RedWingFan wrote:WB could probably learn something by reading "The 3 Little Pigs" on how to build something of significance.
You're just rambling and talking shit.