despite being well cast, he is there as a prop to move to ostensible plot forward. A "fuddy duddy" for sure, but also 2/3
haven't seen Civil War yet, but @FilmCritHULK nails it; villains, ex. Eccleston's Malekith was perhaps one of the most useless 1/3
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puts the impetus on a plot that is otherwise paper thin to reveal a piece of the broader plot (Infinity stones) 3/3
#yawn
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when you create the movie entirely in post-filmmaking time, you effectively cut off any immediacy of purpose
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since Phase 2, and Age of Ultron as the prime example, the storytelling has been an afterthought for Marvel
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which points to the greatest issue: characterization exists only in the first movies - posted out by 2nd/3rd
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is it though? I haven't rewatched a single one save for GotG, and that was by accident.
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I like them all, but none of them scream "watch me again" because of their commoditization as pure marketing
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ultimately, there's more replay value in the toys that the movies aim to sell than the movies themselves.
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at least allows the user to be active, not passive to the machinations of the story universe. They control it.
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that being one of the main reasons you can easily mistake a Michael Bay Transformers film for Avengers.
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Can you though? Bay's got a distinct visual flair
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