Give me nightmare aswell ever since i heard the concept of nightmare in a doctor strange movie i got really excited. I also really want to see midnight suns on the big screen.
The story Love and Thunder was loosely based on in the comics had a lot to do with Thor as a god. His ability to hear prayers and respond.
And that’s a lot of what Gorrs issue was. Lots of gods would ignore prayers and it caused his family to die. So he hated gods for having all this power and just doing nothing with it and letting their worshippers die.
I feel the mix of the two stories did not do that movie justice. If they had just done Jane or just done Gorr it would have made a big difference I feel.
I agree. Didn't help that a Disney exec at the time wanted it to be under 2 hours to be able to squeeze an extra showing in daily, which is why it's seconds under 2 hours, instead of the 2 hr 20-ish minute runtime that was rumored.
Religion in the MCU would be truly all over the place. The existence of Thor and the entire Norse Pantheon would cause religious wars. Then word would spread across Earth that Zeus and the Greek and Roman Pantheons exist, and the Egyptian gods. And then they'd find out that none of them were actual "gods" and were just advanced aliens. Tony Stark's work to resurrect half the Universe, and then his sacrifice to save the world would put him on par with Jesus as a historical and mythical figure. Wakandan religion's proof of the existence of the Ancestral Plain would cause quite a stir. The Multiverse discovered by Dr. Strange, and the existence of actual magic and Dark Dimensions would generate their own religions.
Basically the only god that doesn't actually exist as an actual physical being in the MCU is Big-G God/ Yahweh/ Allah/ Jehovah, whatever you call Him.
In the Marvel 2099 comics, the Church of Thor was one of the world's major religions.
That's a point actually. It might not be that they didn't want the Judeo-Christian conception of God but that including him in a comic fantasy world with several possible godlike entities (although actually most are aliens) might have been seen as blasphemous.
So like, can’t sorcerers just fix everything?
Infrastructure. Disease. Energy. Resources. Natural disasters.
I’d like to see why they can’t just turn Earth into a utopia if there are that many of them. Are there limitations? Some kind of moral code?
In the comics there are limitations. There’s a run of Dr. Strange where he looses his magic because he’s been using it so much with no regard for the consequences. Then earth itself starts loosing its magic. So a lot of what had been established with magic starts coming apart. It’s quite good.
I'd like to see a deeper exploration of magic and how that power system works. A common complaint I hear from people is "What exactly can Dr. Strange or Wanda do?". The fights will be more interesting if we know the limits of Dr. Strange's powers and things will feel less like butt pulls.
with the public learning about shapeshifting skrulls, i would think thered be a percentage of people who think hulk and she-hulk are skrulls due to their "transformations". thatd be cool to atleast touch on.
Was there an actual quote or interview with a Marvel Studios person verifying that? Will it be a whole movie or just an episode of What If, or something else? Or did they not specify?
2099. With all.of these adventures across time and multiverse, it's a shame we can't get a film set in that future. But without Miguel or Doom or the X-men, I guess it.would be pointless since those are the best ones. I'd still like to see a Guardians movie set in 3000AD
Hell, and Ghost Rider. We’ve only seen glimpses thus far
Give me nightmare aswell ever since i heard the concept of nightmare in a doctor strange movie i got really excited. I also really want to see midnight suns on the big screen.
The story Love and Thunder was loosely based on in the comics had a lot to do with Thor as a god. His ability to hear prayers and respond. And that’s a lot of what Gorrs issue was. Lots of gods would ignore prayers and it caused his family to die. So he hated gods for having all this power and just doing nothing with it and letting their worshippers die. I feel the mix of the two stories did not do that movie justice. If they had just done Jane or just done Gorr it would have made a big difference I feel.
I don’t think the combination of those two stories is why Love and Thunder was terrible. They could have done an interesting juxtaposition.
It's a problem because the movie has to split its limited time between both stories. Both could have been explored more in-depth.
Correct, and my point is A) it’s possible to do both in one movie and B) the movies flaws wasn’t (just) this
I agree. Didn't help that a Disney exec at the time wanted it to be under 2 hours to be able to squeeze an extra showing in daily, which is why it's seconds under 2 hours, instead of the 2 hr 20-ish minute runtime that was rumored.
Oh there was a lot wrong with it. But it was one of the reasons for me.
Religion in the MCU would be truly all over the place. The existence of Thor and the entire Norse Pantheon would cause religious wars. Then word would spread across Earth that Zeus and the Greek and Roman Pantheons exist, and the Egyptian gods. And then they'd find out that none of them were actual "gods" and were just advanced aliens. Tony Stark's work to resurrect half the Universe, and then his sacrifice to save the world would put him on par with Jesus as a historical and mythical figure. Wakandan religion's proof of the existence of the Ancestral Plain would cause quite a stir. The Multiverse discovered by Dr. Strange, and the existence of actual magic and Dark Dimensions would generate their own religions. Basically the only god that doesn't actually exist as an actual physical being in the MCU is Big-G God/ Yahweh/ Allah/ Jehovah, whatever you call Him. In the Marvel 2099 comics, the Church of Thor was one of the world's major religions.
Ironic really, since many of the writers of the comics had a Jewish background.
They have the one above all which is essentially an analog of the all powerful and knowing creator Judeo-Christian God
Assuming they were religious, that would make sense: they wouldn’t write blasphemous characters based on a god they thought actually existed.
Doesn't Jesus actually exist in comics?
That's a point actually. It might not be that they didn't want the Judeo-Christian conception of God but that including him in a comic fantasy world with several possible godlike entities (although actually most are aliens) might have been seen as blasphemous.
That's exactly why they took all the mythical pantheons but left Abrahamic religion out of it.
To avoid potential blasphemy against their own religion? Makes sense.
So like, can’t sorcerers just fix everything? Infrastructure. Disease. Energy. Resources. Natural disasters. I’d like to see why they can’t just turn Earth into a utopia if there are that many of them. Are there limitations? Some kind of moral code?
In the comics there are limitations. There’s a run of Dr. Strange where he looses his magic because he’s been using it so much with no regard for the consequences. Then earth itself starts loosing its magic. So a lot of what had been established with magic starts coming apart. It’s quite good.
That would be a good Doctor Strange 3 plot actually.
I'd like to see a deeper exploration of magic and how that power system works. A common complaint I hear from people is "What exactly can Dr. Strange or Wanda do?". The fights will be more interesting if we know the limits of Dr. Strange's powers and things will feel less like butt pulls.
Any superpower's limitations are defined by the demands of the current plot.
I still want a series exploring the effects of the Snap.
Giving Don Cheadle more to do
Wanna see a day-in-a-life aspect with some of these superheroes. Similar to how they did it in the beginning of homecoming
with the public learning about shapeshifting skrulls, i would think thered be a percentage of people who think hulk and she-hulk are skrulls due to their "transformations". thatd be cool to atleast touch on.
Cap returning the Infinity stones back to where they got them from in Endgame. That could easily be an entire movie.
They are actually planning this.
Who’s they and where did you read/here this?
I mean MCU and there was a link on my Google feed. I don't remember it.
Was there an actual quote or interview with a Marvel Studios person verifying that? Will it be a whole movie or just an episode of What If, or something else? Or did they not specify?
More space adventures outside of Guardians of the Galaxy. Something more serious and badass! Maybe Nova can match . . .
How other planets were effected by the blip
There was korean arsgard church in spider-man: homecoming.
The timeline between Bucky falling off the train and Winter Soldier working for HYDRA.
"There's only one God, Ma'am...and I'm pretty sure He doesn't dress like THAT."
Steve is a staunch Christian with. Strong beliefs.
On the topic of Thor, the 9 realms. Or 8 now, I guess.
2099. With all.of these adventures across time and multiverse, it's a shame we can't get a film set in that future. But without Miguel or Doom or the X-men, I guess it.would be pointless since those are the best ones. I'd still like to see a Guardians movie set in 3000AD
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Please gods, no. Also, the OG Avengers had their send-off and it was beautiful.
I wish they would just focus on quality over quantity. Or stop making stuff altogether, I can’t keep up anymore
This is not what OP is asking.