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Captain America: The Winter Soldier Discussion

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NewsMike Cecchini4/5/2014 at 10:11AM

Captain America 2 is in theaters now. Have you seen it? Need a place to chat about it? Join us!

Well, Captain America: The Winter Soldier is the talk of the Den of Geek office, and has been for several weeks. It's too bad that nobody else out there seems to have gone to see it and...wait...what? It did over $10 million in Thursday night screenings alone? Oh, never mind, then! It appears that EVERYBODY is going to see Captain America: The Winter Soldier, and quite a few of you have enjoyed it!

So, with that in mind, we'd like to invite you to share your thoughts about the film. For folks who haven't seen the film, we'd like to warn you that these comments may become fairly spoiler-heavy. For folks commenting, please try and be considerate and kick your more spoiler-y comments off with a visible spoiler warning of some kind. We do have a fairly spoiler-free review of the film, which you can read right here in case you're still deciding on whether or not to go see it.

Also, if you're looking for very specific explorations of some of the characters and situations on display in Captain America: The Winter Soldier, allow us to direct you to the following articles:

The Significance of The Captain America 2 Post-Credits Scenes: Not since Nick Fury first said the word "Avengers" in the first Iron Man film have post-credits scenes had this much importance to the future of the Marvel Universe!

The Lesser Known Villains of Captain America: The Winter Soldier- We take a look at the comic book roots of two of the movie's secondary bad guys.

Meet the Men Who Wrote The Winter Soldier: The writers of Captain America 2 gave us a great interview, and dropped a MAJOR hint about Captain America 3

We've got even more Captain America 2 coverage coming in the next few days, and we'll add those links, too! In the meantime, if anybody asks, "tell 'em they can find me right here."

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I couldn't decide on 5/5 or 10//10. Do I gave it 15 stars.

SPOILER TIME

The computer room was a pretty awesome way of bringing back an old character. Fury's car,
Man I thought trailers ruined that scene. Nope. It was amazing. Sitwell name dropping Stephen Strange, THAT was awesomazing. Truly, Marvel's best film. Gotg has it's work cut out for it.

Agreed, it absolutely lived up to the hype! Phase Two has been getting better with each movie so far. I'm sure GotG is going to be great but I don't know how it could possibly top Winter Soldier. This had so many ties to the existing films and I loved how they brought HYDRA back as a credible threat.
Also Nick Fury's tombstone was flippin awesome! I fully geeked out when I read the quote!

Mmmm hmm, this is a tasty burger! Nick Fury's car was awesome... But Coulson's can fly lol. But yes Hydra being back may eventually lead to Fear Itself. Meanwhile AIM and the 10 Rings seem to be kaput, though the latter was in All Hail The King, I think it's a throwaway. I can't wait to see what Easter eggs and mid and end credit scenes are in gotg. Forget Spider-Man and xmen (I kid, I will try to watch both) but Come on august!


Richard Donner says Goonies 2 is Happening

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NewsMike Cecchini4/5/2014 at 1:02PM
Den of Geek loves The Goonies.

Goonies never say die, and apparently, neither does Richard Donner, who revealed that a Goonies sequel is in the works.

The Goonies will return for a Goonies 2 after all. At least, that's what Richard Donner says. During an "interview"with TMZwhile signing autographs for fans, Donner revealed that he's involved in a Gooniessequel, and he'd like to bring back as much of the original cast as possible. 

In answer to whether or not he would ever do another comic book movie (Mr. Donner helmed the timeless Superman: The Movie) "If you call Gooniesa comic book. We're doing a sequel." On the question of whether the original cast might return, he responded "Hopefully, all of them."

There have been rumblings of a Goonies sequel roughly since the time the first film was released back in 1985, but a confident, definitive comment like this from Richard Donner should get fans thinking. Watch the video here:

Goonies 2joins the ranks of other long gestating sequels to classic genre movies, such as Ghostbusters 3and Beetlejuice 2. As charming as the original Gooniesfilm (and the earlier installments of those other franchises) remains, there's the question of whether it was ever really a sequel-ready film. Some films can just be right for a particular moment in time, and perhaps revisiting that same world three decades later might rub the magic off a little. Oh, who are we kidding? We'll see it...

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Watch an Extended Godzilla Preview Right Here

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TrailerMike Cecchini4/5/2014 at 4:32PM

The only thing better than a Godzilla trailer is a really long Godzilla trailer. Enjoy 2:30 of kaiju action...

When you spend all your time on the internet talking about movies, there's always a point where there's a danger of fatigue setting in. As movies, particularly event films, get closer to their release date, studios will throw daily content out there, just to make absolutely certain that they haven't been forgotten. It can be (occasionally) wearying.

Not so with the impending Godzillareboot. There's just the right blend of mystery and spectacle in Legendary's Godzillamarketing campaign, so, yes, we're quite happy to devote two and a half more minutes of our lives to even MORE new Godzillafootage. Behold!

That was fun, wasn't it? And while we don't want to get anyone's hopes up (especially when this might just be the result of an under-caffeinated writer blearily watching this trailer over and over again), it sure does look like there are other kaiju in this movie, doesn't it? We can post the suspicious screengrabs if you don't believe us...

Godzillais directed by Gareth Edwards and stars Bryan Cranston, Elizabeth Olsen, and Aaron Taylor-Johnson. He will destroy a theater near you on May 16th.

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Agents of SHIELD: New Clip from "Turn, Turn, Turn"

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TrailerMike Cecchini4/6/2014 at 11:55AM

Agents of SHIELD is about to converge with the events of Captain America: The Winter Soldier in show-altering fashion!

It was only a matter of time before Marvel's Agents of SHIELD would have no choice but to run right up against the events of a Marvel movie. While Phil Coulson and friends have dealt with the fallout from Thor: The Dark World in earlier episodes this season, these were side-missions at best. But considering some of the seismic changes that Captain America: The Winter Soldier has on the Marvel Cinematic Universe, there was absolutely no way for Agents of SHIELD to not have to deal with the consequences.

Which brings us to this clip from the newest Agents of SHIELD episode, "Turn, Turn, Turn." Warning...this may be considered a spoiler both for this episode AND Captain America:The Winter Soldier!

We'd love to discuss this further, but there's just too many potential spoilers, here. Let's talk about it Wednesday night! They do get serious cool points for Blue Oyster Cult's "Don't Fear the Reaper."

Thanks to USA Today for the clip. They've got some quotes from the cast and crew about the implications of all this cloak-and-dagger craziness over there, too!

Agents of SHIELD"Turn, Turn, Turn" airs on Tuesday, April 8th at 8 PM EST.

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Star Wars: Episode VII Filming Underway, Casting Nearly Done

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NewsMike Cecchini4/6/2014 at 6:23PM

Star Wars: Episode VII is already filming, with or without its full, primary cast.

Star Wars: Episode VII remains the cagiest of beasts. For a film that has been in aggressive pre-production since January, there has been almost no official news on it. There's a release date of December 18th, 2015, that we're still betting will be pushed to a more traditional May release date, and there has been confirmation that the film takes place 30 years after Return of the Jedi, and that filming begins in May. But what if filming is already underway?

Well, it is, according to Disney chairman, Alan Horn. “We’re actually shooting some of it now,” he told a crowd at the Loyola Marymount School of Film and Television. This would seem to jive with recent reports that filming would start as soon as May 14th, possibly in Morocco where the Tatooine sets still stand. But what about the big questions...like the cast?

“We have a lot of them, it’s not completely done yet,” said Horn. Right. So, whatever they're filming right now is probably not all that crucial. But, if "a lot" of the cast is already in place, it sounds like we'll get one, huge official announcement from Disney about the full Star Wars: Episode VII cast all at once, rather than a dribbling of casting announcements spread out over weeks or months. That, we assure you, will be a relief. At least for us.

Source:Variety

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The world is about to lose its shit.

Disney working on Wreck-It Ralph 2

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NewsSimon Brew4/7/2014 at 8:40AM

Wreck-It Ralph 2 is being developed at Disney, it's now been revealed...

Given that director Rich Moore and his team were very open to the idea of a Wreck-It Ralph sequel around the time of the film's original release, it's been pretty widely assumed that one's on the stove at Disney somewhere. After all, Wreck-It Ralph took nearly $500m worldwide at the cinema box office, and garnered generally very positive reviews.

Walt Disney Animation Studios, however, is hardly known for its sequels. You have to go back to The Rescuers Down Under for the only one on its official line of animated movies (trivia time: Mike Gabriel co-directed The Rescuers Down Under, and was art director on Wreck-It Ralph). However, rumours now persist that we're getting a Frozen 2 as well, so there may be changes afoot.

Right now thought, the first tangible sign that Wreck-It Ralph 2 is on the way has come from composer Henry Jackman. In an interview with him, Collider asked if he'd heard news of a Wreck-It Ralph 2. His answer? "I did, to be honest with you. I can’t tell you more, not because I’m being coy, but I believe that it is officially on the cards. I don’t know any more other than a story is indeed being written".

Well, that's more than we officially knew before. The interesting question is who's writing it? Jennifer Lee co-wrote the first, along with Phil Johnston. Lee then went on to pen and co-direct Frozen, and that's a rollercoaster she's only just beginning to step off. Is she back on Ralph duties? Time will tell. But it seems, one way or another, Wreck-It Ralph 2 is edging closer...

Collider.

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Mickey Rooney: 1920-2014

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NewsSimon Brew4/7/2014 at 8:43AM

Some sad news: the actor and entertainer Mickey Rooney has died, at the age of 93...

After an incredible career and an incredible life, Mickey Rooney has died at the age of 93.

Rooney, married eight times in his life and leaving nine children, first came to prominence as a child star. Yet he was still active up to a year or two back, with his last two roles being his cameo in 2011's The Muppets, and 2012's Last Will And Embezzlement.

It is reported that Rooney had been ill for a while. He leaves behind a body of work that's quite remarkable both for its depth and longevity. And our thoughts are very much with his friends and family at this time.

Rest in peace, sir.

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I am Mad, Mad, Mad Mad at the world today over this news.
RIP Mick!

Captain America: The Winter Soldier - The Comic Book Story That Couldn't Be Told

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FeatureMarc Buxton4/7/2014 at 8:57AM

When Ed Brubaker and Steve Epting introduced the Winter Soldier to comic readers, nobody thought the story would work.

This article contains spoilers for Captain America: The Winter Soldier.

It was the story that shouldn’t have worked. There were certain sacred cows in mainstream comics, certain stories a writer just didn’t undo. Uncle Ben couldn't be brought back to life in the pages of Amazing Spider-Man, there should be no danger of seeing the Thomas and Martha stroll through the doors of Wayne Manor in Batman...and Bucky Barnes, Captain America’s loyal sidekick, had to stay dead. Or so everyone thought. Everyone except writer Ed Brubaker, who dared to ask “Why?”

Ed Brubaker and Steve Epting's original "Winter Soldier" story in the pages of Captain America not only gave Marvel a critical and sales success, it also provided the House of Ideas with a new potential franchise character with the newly-revived Bucky/Winter Soldier. Now, many of those the story beats inform Captain America: The Winter Soldier at the movies. Not bad for a story that no one thought should ever be told.

When Captain America was first created in 1941 by Joe Simon and Jack Kirby, he was a Nazi-stomping exemplar of American pride and strength. Cap was defined by his conflict with the Axis Powers and little else. By his side was Bucky, a character created to provide a point of view character to young readers of the day, a younger brother figure to Cap who provided a degree of wish fulfillment for young boys reading Captain America Comics whose own older brothers and cousins were off fighting the war. What could be cooler to a young boy whose brother was fighting overseas than the idea of fighting side by side with an unstoppable engine of American pride? Bucky was emblematic of every kid in America who wanted to fight shoulder to shoulder with their absentee role models. In Cap’s earliest adventures, Bucky served a dual purpose. Firstly, he gave Cap someone to talk to and secondly, he provided young fans with a stand in, a cipher to imprint themselves on, through Bucky, the youth of America could sock a Nazi in the jaw.

When Stan Lee and Jack Kirby resurrected Captain America in 1964's Avengers#4, World War II was long over and the modern day heroes like Spider-Man, Hulk, the X-Men, and Iron Man all had layers of tragedy that serviced their origins and motivations. For the returning Captain America, the death of Bucky Barnes was that tragedy. Bucky became Cap’s Thomas and Martha Wayne, his Uncle Ben, the failure that haunted him and kept him fighting no matter what. In his 2012 Captain America exit interview with Comics Alliance, Brubaker discussed how Marvel crafted Steve Rogers in the Silver Age. “That’s just how I saw him, or that’s the early Stan Lee kind of Shakespearean take on him from when he and Kirby brought him back. Marvel heroes were always tragic in some ways, and Steve was a tragic guy… lost in time, haunted by his dead friend, weighed down by going from being soldier to superhero, not sure of his place in the modern world. And yet, always knowing what the right thing to do was.”

The death of Bucky was one event that fueled Cap’s character. In truth, it's likely that no one felt there was a place for Bucky in the Silver Age. Marvel’s newer, more sophisticated fans, could have viewed Bucky as a Robin rip off. Originally, Cap’s mission was inspired by, as the first film so succinctly put it, his hatred of tyranny and bullies, but the Cap of the Silver Age seemingly needed that dramatic spark, that one failure to make him more akin to his modern peers. Most people thought, that if Bucky were to come back, there would be the loss of the fundamental moment of tragedy that defined the revived Cap as a hero. Bucky was an anachronism, a one-note character who was way more interesting dead than alive. Until, of course, he wasn't.

When Brubaker and artist Steve Epting relaunched Captain America in 2005, the series was at a creative crossroads. Creative teams had come and gone in the previous few years, none able to leave an indelible mark on Cap. Sales, which never exactly set the charts on fire in the first place, ebbed. But when Brubaker and Epting arrived, they brought a new, very modern villain...Russian operative, the Winter Soldier. The Winter Soldier certainly looked like an older Bucky, with his domino mask and boyish good looks, but it couldn’t be, could it? Marvel had teased Bucky’s return in stories for decades, but it was just that...a tease. Rick Jones had taken up the mantle of Bucky briefly but that didn’t stick, as did Jack Monroe who eventually shed the Bucky identity to take up the mantle of Nomad. There even was a Bucky android for a time. The Winter Soldier struck an imposing and dramatic figure, with his mechanical arms and flowing hair, the character was tied into the Cold War and was inserted into Marvel history as a shadowy assassin for the Soviet Union. Like Steve, but in a more dramatic and bloody way, the Soldier was a man out of time trying to find his purpose in the modern world.

When it was revealed that the Winter Soldier was not an android, not a Skrull, but Bucky, fans did not storm the Marvel offices with pitchforks and torches. Most fans seemed to be in awe of Brubaker’s gall in not only telling the story that could never be told, but absolutely nailing it.  “It's the worst possible story idea, executed so brilliantly it doesn't matter that it's the worst possible story idea,” one commentor on the Comic Book Resources message boards said in reaction to the shocking return. That seemed to be the most common fan reaction, those that didn't bother to read the book cried gimmick and foul, but the actual readers were hooked.

In a way, the Winter Soldier's existence was a greater tragedy to Cap than Bucky’s death. At least in Cap’s memory, Bucky died a hero bringing down a Baron Zemo super weapon, now Cap had to face the fact that his prodigy, his de facto little brother, was chopped up by an antagonistic foreign government and turned into a weapon of mass destruction. It was bad enough for Cap that the Winter Soldier had none of Barnes’ memories, but Cap’s former sidekick had also been profaned by being turned into an unrepentant political killer. In the Winter Soldier, Cap saw a dark road he could have gone down if he was not frozen at the end of World War II. If Bucky was frozen, Rogers could have just as easily been turned into a Winter Soldier. Bucky was now the Super Soldier idea gone horribly wrong.

Despite the worries of fans, "The Winter Soldier" arc wasn't a gimmick, it was a thematic triumph, and moreover, it was one of the best Captain America stories ever told, combining aspects of the Golden Age, the Silver Age, and the lost Cold War era into one cohesive and surprisingly personal story. It could be argued that this is one of the finest sustained periods of creativity in the character's history. In a 2005 interview with Marvel, Ed Brubaker relates the initial reaction to the story. “Bucky seems to be the Little Engine That Could. Everyone who was completely resistant to the idea of Bucky coming back totally embraced him as a character after about a year. There's probably one or two that didn't, but most people were like, "Wow! They pulled it off. Unbelievable."

Not only was Bucky back, he was a major new part of the Marvel Universe. Now, Marvel could tell flashback tales of Bucky meeting such characters as Wolverine and Nick Fury. Through flashbacks was no longer the archaic kid sidekick, but a dangerous American soldier who didn’t flinch at spilling enemy blood. He was a trained killer that, through use of propaganda and news reels, the public saw as the smiling hellion presented in the Golden Age. Just when fans got used to the Winter Soldier in an adversarial role, they switched gears and turned Bucky back into the hero he once was. When fighting the Winter Soldier, Cap grabbed hold of the reality altering Cosmic Cube and wished Bucky would remember everything. All at once, the Winter Soldier’s past came flooding back, forcing Bucky to remember all the torture, the violation, and the torment he had gone through and caused as a puppet of his Russian masters.

In a 2007 interview with Comic Book Resources, Mr. Brubaker spoke about what made the resurrected Bucky such a compelling character for the modern era, “The Winter Soldier, he's this really tortured on edge character; a sort of modern twist on the classic Marvel character. That's why I think the Winter Soldier works as a way to bring Bucky back. If he was to team up with Cap and immediately go fight crime and got over everything I think it would be wrong. He's a conflicted, weird, modern Marvel character that fits right into the Marvel U." 

Ed Brubaker didn't do it alone, though. Steve Epting created the visual look for the Winter Soldier, Epting’s reimagined creation bursting with a coiled danger and the promise of mayhem. Watching Captain America: The Winter Soldier, one can see Epting’s drawings come to life. His flashback sequences captured the sense of the past, giving the Winter Soldier a connective tissue to the history of the Marvel Universe. Epting visually informed the character that would go on to inspire a new generation of Cap readers.

Still telling the impossible Captain America story, the team had Cap assassinated and replaced by...none other than Bucky Barnes. The former Winter Soldier barely had time to get his bearings before he replaced his mentor as Captain America. No one was ready for the fan love that poured forth after Bucky took up the mantle of Cap. Bucky was supposed to wield the shield for just a short period of time, but fan response forced Marvel to extend the story. Fortunately, the quality of Brubaker’s writing made this prolonged story seem organic and natural to the progression of the characters. In his exit interview with Comics Alliance Brubaker stated “It was partly a situation of the book being a huge success then, and Marvel saying, ‘hey, if you have more story here, play it out. Don’t rush bringing back Steve’ and partly that after the first few issues post-Cap Death, I realized how much fun writing the world without Cap would be. We don’t often spend enough time on ramifications in mainstream comics, so here was a place to build a whole storyline around them.”

And what a story it was. What started as a writer daring to question the fundamental rules of the Marvel Universe to a story that will inform a major film release, the saga of the Winter Soldier is a classic example of the rewards creators can reap if they dare defy convention. As The Winter Soldier becomes even more embedded into the cultural consciousness, it’s amazing to imagine that it was a character whose story was once impossible to tell.

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Captain America: The Winter Soldier Sets April Box-Office Record

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NewsMike Cecchini4/7/2014 at 10:31AM
Captain America The Winter Soldier Chris Evans Samuel L Jackson

Captain America: The Winter Soldier opens to record-breaking April numbers at the box-office.

Captain America: The Winter Soldier is a springtime box-office warrior. The latest Marvel movie opened to an unprecedented $96.2 million in its first weekend of domestic release, eclipsing the previous record for an April opening (2011's Fast Five) by $10 million. While Cap was certainly aided by the Avengersconnection, the early positive buzz on the film certainly didn't hurt, either.

And for folks wondering whether a character named "Captain America" will sell overseas, the flick has already taken in over $200 million in those other markets. So, whether or not Marvel does end up releasing Captain America 3 in direct competition with Warner Bros. untitled Batman vs. Superman movie in May of 2016 remains to be seen, but if these numbers are anything to go by, Cap might just be able to hold his own against a ticket selling juggernaut like the Dark Knight after all. 

And it sounds like Kevin Feige's plans to make Marvel movies through at least 2028 remains safe.

Source:Box Office Mojo

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Northgate Pictures Crucifies The Bunny in Easter Sunday Trailer

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TrailerTony Sokol4/7/2014 at 11:46AM

The Easter Bunny is Rabbit Stew in Northgate Pictures’ Easter Sunday

Almost 24 years ago, to the day, a man had a horrible Easter Sunday. So bad it infected his whole town, which can’t even celebrate the joys of the holiday anymore. Twenty-four years later one man with a plaster of Paris face and an automatic rifle are going to kill that fucking bunny.

Easter Sunday is coming and to celebrate Northgate Pictures put out the official teaser trailer for their upcoming slasher movie Easter Sunday. The movie is gross and gory, and I’m not just talking the blood, look at the way they make soup in that town and you may never eat out again. This indie love letter to the golden era of slasher movies was written and directed by Jeremy Todd Morehead and stars horror legends Robert Z’Dar from Maniac Cop and Ari Lehman the original Jason Voorhees in the original Friday the 13th

Easter Sunday also stars indie film veterans Edward X. Young from Mr. Hush and Shawn C. Phillips from Ghost Shark and features Paige Taylor, Christine Galbraith, William Bozarth, Jon McKoy and Travis Marion.

According to the official press release: Easter Sunday follows a group of teens who accidentally conjure the spirit of Douglas Fisher, a deranged, bunny mask-clad serial killer.

Producer Jason Delgado says "We are trying to bring forth a vision of '80s gore and real brutality on our limited budget. We want to bring people a film that will be fun, fast paced and filled with edge-of-your-seat tension. I'm humbled to be working with so many talented individuals."

 

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Marvel Confirms Captain America 3 Is Going Up Against Batman Vs. Superman In May 2016

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NewsDavid Crow4/7/2014 at 1:08PM
Captain America The Winter Soldier Chris Evans Samuel L Jackson

Marvel confirmed the rumor today that Captain America 3 is the film slated for May 6, 2016...the same day as Batman vs. Superman.

Confirming a rumor we first heard about last month, Marvel Studios and Disney have officially announced that the tentatively titled Captain America 3 is slated for a May 6, 2016 release date. And not-so-coincidentally, that is the same day as Warner Brothers’ hotly anticipated Batman vs. Superman team-up is due to hit theaters.

Disney made the official announcement in a press release Monday morning, following the impressive $96 million box office take for Captain America: The Winter Soldier over the weekend. The number marks the second Captain America movie as the most successful April release on record and is a 32 percent increase from Captain America: The First Avenger’s $65 million take in 2011.

A great achievement in every sense, Captain America: The Winter Soldier is the movie many fans have been waiting for (read our own review here) and is Marvel’s biggest opening to date that didn't feature Robert Downey Jr.’s Iron Man. With that said, we are still very curious about what this means for the cowl-to-cowl clash of the Captain and the Dark Knight (Superman too). Despite proving Captain America is now one of the most viable movie franchises out there, The Winter Soldier’s weekend bow does not quite measure up to Man of Steel’s $116 million debut in June 2013, and it surely is not in the same ballpark of the last two cinematic Batman adventures from Christopher Nolan’s The Dark Knight Trilogy, which both crossed well north of $150 million in their first three days (a first in 2008 when The Dark Knight did it).

Indeed, other than Iron Man, no superhero has yet to rise to those heights in a lone adventure. If push comes to shove, we wouldn’t be surprised if our previous predictions about this stand-off come to pass.

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Is Arnie Roth in the 3rd movie?

New The Quiet Ones Clip Summon Malevolent Spirits

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TrailerDavid Crow4/7/2014 at 2:33PM

Watch a new clip from Lionsgate and Hammer Studios' The Quiet Ones with Sam Claflin and Jarred Harris performing a creepy seance.

Some forces should simply not be summoned. They are beyond our control, they are beyond our understanding…they are The Quiet Ones. And in the new clip released by Lionsgate and Hammer Studios, “Burning,” trying to talk with them may as well be setting a match to gasoline.

Supposedly based on true events, this period piece horror looks equal parts Hellhouse and Exorcist in its grand setting of 1970s creepy-crawlies. The intentionally vintage look promises hopefully another grand freak show when university student (Sam Claflin of The Hunger Games: Catching Fire) and some classmates are recruited to carry out a private experiment by a peculiar scientist (Jared Harris of Mad Men and Sherlock Holmes: A Game of Shadows) -- to create a poltergeist. Their subject: an alluring, but dangerously disturbed young woman (Olivia Cooke of Bates Motel). Their quest: to explore the dark energy that her damaged psyche might manifest. As the experiment unravels along with their sanity, the rogue PHD students are soon confronted with a terrifying reality: they have triggered an unspeakable force with a power beyond all explanation. Inspired by true events, The Quiet Ones is directed by John Pogue from a screenplay by Craig Rosenberg and Oren Moverman and John Pogue, and based on a screenplay by Tom de Ville.

The Quiet Ones opens April 25, 2014.

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Breck Eisner Is Directing Karate Kid 2

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NewsDavid Crow4/7/2014 at 3:24PM
Karate Kid remake

Breck Eisner, director of 2010's The Crazies remake, has signed on to helm The Karate Kid 2, starring Jackie Chan and Jaden Smith.

Real movement on the second installment of the Karate Kid reboot franchise is beginning with Breck Eisner signing on to helm the Sony Pictures sequel.

As reported in Deadline, Eisner will be taking over directorial duties from Harald Zwart who directed the 2010 Karate Kid hit that grossed $56 million in its opening weekend alone. Eisner has some experience directing remakes and reboots as well, having most recently helmed the surprisingly strong The Crazies in 2010.

The Karate Kid 2 is expected to reunite Jaden Smith and Jackie Chan as the student and the master, respectively, in a world of highly competitive and highly dangerous childhood martial arts. As long as there are no CGI tigers chasing him around in a jungle, I think that we’re going to be good.

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Star Wars: Episode VII Marks The Return of the Wookiee

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NewsTony Sokol4/7/2014 at 5:40PM

Star Wars: Episode VII casts the original Chewbacca, Peter Mayhew

Chewbacca may be getting a little long in the tooth. The latest Star Wars: Episode VII casting news has it that Peter Mayhew, the actor, who played Chewbacca in the original Star Wars trilogy, will put the suit back on in the upcoming post-pre-sequel prequel for Disney and Lucasfilm.

The studio has been keeping a tight lid on the three new leads in Star Wars: Episode VII, but they’ve been teasing with smaller parts, but no less significant parts. Adam Driver is in talks to play the villain in Star Wars: Episode VII. Harrison Ford, Mark Hamill and Carrie Fisher are also rumored to be coming back.

Disney’s head mouse recently let it slip that Star Wars: VII casting is almost complete and that the movie is already being shot.

Rumors that Mayhew was going to play legendary Wookiee character who really drove Han Solo's ship in 1977’s Star Wars Episode IV - A New Hope started when he ducked out of an appearance at Texas convention Comicpalooza "due to filming." You don’t have to be Yoda to figure that out.

Star Wars: Episode VII will be directed by J.J. Abrams. It is scheduled to open Dec. 18, 2015.

Disney and Lucasfilm haven't said a word.

SOURCE: THR

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Agents of SHIELD: Turn, Turn, Turn trailer

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TrailerMike Cecchini4/7/2014 at 6:59PM

More footage and interviews from this week's "game changing" episode of Agents of SHIELD have arrived. Watch 'em here...

Have you found yourself somewhat unsatisified with Marvel's Agents of SHIELD? Have the adventures felt a little lightweight? Perhaps the constantly stated connections to the larger Marvel Universe haven't done the trick? Talk, after all, is cheap. But this week's Agents of SHIELD episode, "Turn, Turn, Turn" ties directly into the events of Captain America: The Winter Soldier. Events that will absolutely alter the landscape for this show and the films. There's a quick trailer for you to watch right here...

It's a start. It almost feels like last week's "End of the Beginning" and this week's "Turn, Turn, Turn" bookend Captain America: The Winter Soldier's SHIELD plot. At least, that's what we hope is happening. Marve have also released a video of the cast promising that things will most definitely never be the same after this week's episode.

Well, whether it was all planned or not, it does seem like Agents of SHIELD is going to finish as a very different show. "Turn, Turn, Turn" which is part of Agents of SHIELD"Uprising" will air on Tuesday, April 8th at 8 PM est.

Read all our Agents of SHIELDcoverage here.

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Samuel L. Jackson to Appear on Agents of SHIELD Season Finale

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NewsMike Cecchini4/7/2014 at 7:34PM

Nick Fury will reunite with his Agents of SHIELD in the season finale of the show.

Marvel is certainly making a full court press with these final episodes of Agents of SHIELD season one. Between the introduction of Deathlok, a series of action-packed episodes, and heavy ties to Captain America: The Winter Soldier for this most recent set of episodes, one gets the impression that they want to drive the point home that this show is, in fact, quite important to the ongoing plans of the Marvel Cinematic Universe. One way to do that is to bring in the guy who helped make the whole concept a reality: Nick Fury, specifically as portrayed by Samuel L. Jackson.

And that's exactly what they're gonna do. "I just shot the end-of-the-season show,"Jackson told Vulture. He wouldn't reveal any more details, though. ""You're trying to get me fired and killed! I don't talk about Marvel's business. None of us do."

Here's hoping that they just hand Mr. Jackson a blank check to come back as a series regular if Agents of SHIELD gets a second season.

Read all our Agents of SHIELD coverage here.

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Guardians of the Galaxy: First Clip Released

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TrailerMike Cecchini4/7/2014 at 11:48PM

This new clip from Marvel's Guardians of the Galaxy gives us a little more time with Chris Pratt as Star-Lord.

At this point, it's easy to imagine Kevin Feige doing his best Scrooge McDuck and swimming through the lucre generated by this weekend's historic Captain America: The Winter Soldier box-office performance. And on the heels of a victory like that, what better time could there be to remind fans that there is still another Marvel movie coming in a few short months. Hence, the first proper clip from Marvel's Guardians of the Galaxy. On first glance, it's plenty familiar to those of us who watched that first trailer about 30 times, but here, we get a better picture of how Chris Pratt operates as Star-Lord. And a better look at that mask!

Watch it here.

So, like we said, it isn't much. But it's something to help get you through until August.

Guardians of the Galaxy is directed by James Gunn. It stars Chris Pratt, Zoe Saldana, Dave Bautista, Vin Diesel, Glenn Close, and a plenty of others. It opens on August 1st.

via ComicBook.Com

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New Battlestar Galactica Movie Will Reboot the Franchise

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NewsMike Cecchini4/8/2014 at 12:05AM
Battlestar Galactica

Might the latest Battlestar Galactica reboot actually happen? Universal seem to think so...

Battlestar Galacticamay return to the screen after all, this time as a film. Varietyis reporting that Jack Paglen, who wrote Transcendence, and who is also on board for the Prometheussequel is writing the new Battlestar Galactica movie. Glen Larson, who famously created the original Battlestar GalacticaTV series will produce. That's about as far as things seem to have gotten. 

While we don't doubt the veracity of these reports, there has been so talk of a Battlestar Galacticamovie for quite some time. Let's not forget that Bryan Singer was threatening to reboot Battlestar Galactica (along with Logan's Run) before the recent TV series had even hit re-runs. And then there's the fact that the 2004-2009 TV series is going to cast a VERY long shadow, so we have to file this reboot under, "wake us when it happens." Any version of the Battlestar Galactica saga has always seemed to lend itself more to episodic storytelling than anything that could be contained in a single film. It's not impossible, though...it might just be a little too soon to get too excited about this one.

We could, however, just use this as an excuse to re-watch the series...

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Karen Gillan Talks Horror, Doctor Who, Guardians of the Galaxy, and More

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InterviewDon Kaye4/8/2014 at 9:11AM
Karen Gillan Oculus

We chat with the beloved Doctor Who star Karen Gillan about her new horror film Oculus, Guardians of the Galaxy and more.

In the frightening new horror movie Oculus, Scottish actress Karen Gillan plays Kaylie, who reunites with her brother Tim (Brenton Thwaites) 10 years after their parents died violently. Kaylie is convinced that the tragedy was caused by the Lasser Glass, an enigmatic antique mirror that came into the family’s possession after decades of leaving a trail of death and madness in its wake. But is the mirror truly home to some sort of supernatural evil or is Kaylie losing her mind?

Director/co-writer Mike Flanagan has created a genuinely unsettling experience, with the film alternating between the past and present in disorienting fashion and Gillan doing great work as the obsessed and calculating Kaylie. Gillan, coming off her breakthrough four-year run as Amy Pond on Doctor Who, will also be seen this August in the next Marvel epic, Guardians of the Galaxy, for which she shaved her head to play the villainous Nebula and revealed her bald scalp in a memorable moment at last year’s Comic-Con.

The infectiously cheery and friendly Pond sat down with Den Of Geek in Los Angeles to talk Oculus, Guardians and coming back for one last scene on Doctor Who.

Den Of Geek: What drew you to play this character, especially because she definitely walks a fine line between being sympathetic and not so sympathetic?

Karen Gillan: I think that's what I kind of loved about the character. That's what was appealing to me. I think she's really interesting and compelling and so damaged. I mean, God, just so damaged and her way of dealing with it is obsessing over this mirror. And also she's dancing on the line of sanity and insanity. I mean for me, as an actress that's so interesting to play.

A lot of American actors have trouble with British and Scottish and U.K. accents. Do you have any trouble doing an American accent?

I feel like it's different going to American because we're saturated with American TV and film in the U.K. I mean I would even play with Barbies in an American accent from like when I was tiny. So I just feel like we're so exposed to it all the time that it's not totally foreign, whereas here you're not saturated with British accents all the time. It's actually probably quite a novelty to hear one in a TV show or something. So I think it's not as huge a leap as it is the other way around.

What where some of the more challenging aspects of the production in terms of the physical and mental aspects of it?

Physical was actually pretty easy. I wasn't doing any stunts or anything like that so it was more cerebral actually, like that's where the challenges really lay. And it was just about accessing those really, really dark emotions really and trying to relate to them and connect with her in some way so that I could make it true to myself because I feel like that would show in the performance.


Did you work at all with Annalise (Basso, who plays Kaylie at a young age) in terms of like playing off each other or showing each other anything?

I just kind of watched her actually and just observed her. I wanted to check if there were any specific little tics or something I should probably take into the character. And also it was just written well enough and also years have passed between the character portrayals anyway. It was an extension of what she started, my character.

I found it interesting you watched her first. Because for some reason I would think that the kids would maybe watch the adults.

I think the director suggested it because maybe it's a little bit easier for adults to emulate things then kids to think about those things. I mean maybe it's not true; I'm sure she would've been amazing, but also they shot their stuff first. So we were kind of in Alabama waiting to do ours but they were already shooting so it made sense to do it like that.

Where were you shooting in Alabama?

In Mobile.

Did you like your time there?

I loved it so much. That was my first experience of America, like an extended period of time. And I loved it. I went to the Bass Pro Shop all the time and ate all the cornbread. It was great. We were in the middle of nowhere. There were no sidewalks. It was crazy.

Even though you know how it's done and you're obviously seeing how they've rigged the things with the special effects, did you still cringe when you see yourself munching a light bulb onscreen?

No. It takes it out of it for me. I just know what was happening that day and I know it definitely wasn't a light bulb so it kind of kills it for me. I mean I can appreciate if something turns out well and it looks realistic, but I won't get that squeamish thing. I get it from other people doing things but not myself.


Did any of the film, not necessarily involving you, get to you?

Absolutely. Yeah. I actually like felt nauseous afterwards. Like as if I had been on a roller coaster or something. I realized that my stomach had been really tense for ages. And I was just like that was like a ride or something. To see it all just come together and come to this crazy climax I was like that's insane.

You mentioned in the press conference you're a big horror fan. So if I asked you to name say five of your favorite horror films could you do it off the top of your head?

Yeah. Number one, The Ring. Number two, Scream. Number three, The Exorcist. Number four, The Shining. Number five, Scream II.

You knew 'em right off the bat.

That's hilarious. I really like those films.

So the hair is growing back.

It's coming back in slowly but surely, looking more like a human.

That Comic Con moment when you took off the wig is going to be one of those moments that people talk about at that show for years.

That's so funny. It was just such a spur of the moment thing as well. And I've been talking about it every since the interview. It's so funny.

Was it liberating to go all the way and shave your head in terms of finding that character?

It did half the work for me. It basically put me in the character. It was amazing. I would highly recommend that if you want to play a character that's at least like intimidating or something like that. And yeah, it made me feel scary for the first time in my life. Like I felt like people were intimidated by me in real life because I was bald in the supermarket and stuff.

How did you feel when you saw yourself like the first time in the mirror bald?

I was fine when they first did it and then I went to sleep that night and woke up in the morning and I was like “Oh my God, what happened?”


After many years of facing all those creatures on Doctor Who, has playing an alien adversary been a nice, different experience for you?

Totally 'cause it's like being on the other side of things now. I was always the human in the Doctor Who situation and all these people would come in in prosthetics and I was like, “Oh God, you have to come in so early.” And then I was like, “Oh no, it's my turn now.” It's amazing 'cause it just helps you transform into a different person and that's really what we're all trying to do.

How long did it take to get into that costume?

Five hours.

Was it uncomfortable?

I mean, it wasn't like the best way to spend five hours  when there's like glue on your face. But by the same token I was just like, this is so worth it because we saw the finished article and we were like, this is just so cool.

What was your overall experience like on Guardians of the Galaxy? How do you think it's going to turn out based on what you saw and did?

From the beginning I've always believed that this is going to turn out really well and is going to be really original, because it's just a new direction and tone for Marvel. It's like James Gunn is putting his voice onto a Marvel film and is taking it in a whole new direction. It's just so humorous and the music's amazing and it's not taking itself too seriously. I remember the moment at Comic-Con when they showed…the Guardians one and people audibly gasped because they were just like they weren't expecting that tone and then I was like, “Oh, we're onto something here.”

Who did you do most of your scenes with?

Zoe Saldana (Gamora) and Lee Pace (Ronan the Accuser).

Are you signed for more?

There are options but there's absolutely no guarantee that they would take me up on them.

How do you feel about Peter Capaldi taking over as the Doctor?

Amazing. Amazing choice. That was a no-brainer. And also he's the biggest Doctor Who fan in the world so for him to take on that role it just feels right. It's like justice.

There's some fan chatter online, I think a lot of people were used to seeing Matt Smith or David Tennant and there's this older gentleman now playing the role and I think some of the younger fans were like, who's this old guy.

When anything that people love takes a new direction people question it and they're scared because naturally a human doesn't like change, it's just like an in-built thing. But get in two episodes and they'll be in love with him. And also it's just cool because like Jenna (Coleman) is so young that those two bouncing off each other I think will be really cool.

Have you watched the show since you left?

I've watched some of it but not all of it. I need to catch up because I want to keep going with it.

It's very nice that you came back for Matt's last scene. Was that planned way in advance or was it something very late in the game?

No, that came late in the day. (Steven Moffat) wrote me into the scene, I think, primarily so I was there for Matt on the day that he was finishing for emotional support. And he wrote me into the scene and I had said previously, “Absolutely no more cameos,” and then of course I was like, “Absolutely I'll come back.” It was a no-brainer. And I went back and it was actually one of the most surreal days of my life because I was on somebody else's TARDIS now and it was different and they were in the roles and I was just like watching from the outside.

I bet there weren't a lot of dry eyes in the house that day.

Everyone was crying. Jenna was crying, I was crying. So sad.

So Oculus is out now, what are you doing next?

I literally finished, just the other day, a pilot for ABC and Warner Brothers called Selfie. It's about a social media-obsessed narcissistic girl who tries to better herself as a person or make herself more likable in real life.

Oculus is out in theaters this Friday, April 11.

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Captain America: The Winter Soldier: Can Superhero Movies Get Smaller?

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FeatureMike Cecchini4/8/2014 at 9:12AM
Chris Evans The Winter Soldier

Captain America: The Winter Soldier does its best work when it keeps things relatively simple. Do superhero movies need to get smaller?

This article contains spoilers for Captain America: The Winter Soldier.

Captain America: The Winter Soldier is currently the subject of considerable praise and unprecedented April box office success. With visuals ripped directly out of the pages of specific Marvel comics, Captain America: The Winter Soldierseems designed to cement Marvel’s reputation as the studio that actually listens to the fans and honors its source material. But historically, devotion to comic book visuals does not a fine film make, and the truly remarkable moments of Captain America 2 come in its more grounded moments, even those that are action-heavy, rather than its more traditional superhero movie climax.

Having already realized the impossible dream with The Avengers, Marvel’s unofficial gameplan for Phase Two has been to not make superhero movies so much as appropriate genre films with superheroes in them. In that regard, they have achieved somewhat mixed results. While Iron Man 3 is every bit as much a Shane Black action piece as it is an Iron Man movie, Thor: The Dark World, despite the presence of Game of Thrones veteran Alan Taylor at the helm, only occasionally felt like the authentic sword-and-sorcery flick that it should have been. The upcoming Guardians of the Galaxy movie looks like many things, but a superhero film isn’t one of them. Captain America: The Winter Soldier, however, has been touted by Marvel Studios head Kevin Feige as a “70s political thriller masquerading as a superhero movie.” Whether it actually is or not is another story (at best, it may be the other way around), but it’s clear that, as far as superhero movies go, this one mostly has its feet planted on the ground.

Superman

The "comic book movie” as a genre didn't exist in 1978 when Richard Donner’s Superman: The Movie was released to a $300 million (in 1978 bucks!) worldwide box-office take. Superman: The Movie was simply another high-profile science fiction film released in the wake of Star Wars...albeit one with a caped protagonist and a secret identity. Superman: The Movie shifts gears from stately, serious science fiction (a Krypton realized by Star Wars’ production designer John Barry) to Norman Rockwell-esque nostalgia (a beautifully photographed Smallville), to a Metropolis that is quite recognizable as late ‘70s Manhattan, bustling with sharp, witty dialogue and comedic timing.

Richard Donner famously had the word “verisimilitude” hung on the wall of his Superman production office, indicating his desire to ground this most fantastic of characters in as “real” an environment as possible. It worked. While Superman: The Movieremains the godfather of all modern superhero films, somehow, perhaps because of the diminishing returns of future installments of that franchise, it failed to ignite a successful superhero movie craze. Instead, it feels more at home in that parade of the post-Star Wars science fiction and fantasy film boom that includes somewhat less distinguished company like Krulland The Last Starfighter (both fine, fun films, but not exactly timeless classics).

Contrast Donner’s (and Marvel’s) hybrid genre approach with the last great superhero movie boom, which began with Tim Burton’s Batmanin 1989. Batmanwas as much a big-budget realization of Burton’s expressionist sensibilities as it was a comic book adaptation. While the intention of Batman was to create a new vision of the character in the popular consciousness, one as far away from Adam West as possible, and more in line with the borderline personality popularized by Frank Miller, it was still every bit as stylized (and removed from reality) as the 1966 BatmanTV series. 

Batmanwas quickly followed by 1990’s Dick Tracy. While the Dick Tracy of the newspaper strips was a hard-nosed crime-solver with a cadre of hideous bad guys that would make Batman wince, the film was a mostly bloodless, almost surreal affair, boasting a remarkable (almost literal) four-color production design and deliberately artificial sets, costumes, and matte paintings. The nameless city created by Richard Sylbert for Dick Tracy is the brightly colored counterpart to Batmanproduction designer Anton Furst’s sprawling, nightmarish Gotham. But while Batman’s production design recalled Fritz Lang and even hints of H.R. Giger, Dick Tracy’s was no less elaborate, but considerably less detailed, specifically tailored to create the illusion of an actual comic strip come to life.

Dick Tracy

Somehow, within those two films and their subsequent box-office success, the idea of the “comic book movie” as a genre unto itself took hold. This newly-minted genre, whose hallmarks were summer release dates, all-star casts, insanely large merchandising campaigns, and hyper-stylized visuals, became the norm for any project with comic book origins, whether they were appropriate or not. For a decade or more, it seemed that it was a requirement for every superhero adaptation to have an enormous backlot city with oil-slicked streets, deadly serious heroes, over-the-top villains, and a Danny Elfman score. The FlashTV series, for example, which aired on CBS in 1990-91, featured a character who didn’t necessarily lend himself to such operatic conceits, yet found himself operating in a garish, Gotham-esque city...with a rather cumbersome rubber suit for a guy who gets around by running. There were very few exceptions, notably Joe Johnston's woefully underappreciated The Rocketeer, but for the most part, this was what we were given.

The shift back towards the more naturalistic approach of Superman: The Movie arguably began with Bryan Singer’s first two X-Men films (perhaps not coincidentally produced by Lauren Shuler-Donner) and, to a lesser extent, Sam Raimi’s Spider-Man movies. For one thing, these franchises allowed their characters to function in actual daylight for a change. Singer in particular tried to ground the X-Men’s traditional themes of discrimination and persecution in a real world setting, with historical roots and political implications. Raimi’s Spider-Man films, on the other hand tended to split the difference between recognizable Manhattan locations and hyper-stylized set-pieces in the climax. What both did admirably, though, was balance the necessities of blockbuster storytelling with a reverence for the spirit (if not always the letter) of the genre’s visual appeal.

It was Christopher Nolan’s Batman Begins, the reinvention of the Batman franchise that had collapsed under the weight of its final two films' excesses (they took the conventions of the “comic book movie” genre that the franchise invented to its impossible conclusion) that signaled a renewed desire to tell stories WITH superheroes, rather than simply stories ABOUT them. By the time its sequel, The Dark Knight hit screens (the same year as Iron Man), Batman’s world owed as much to Michael Mann’s Heatas it did to Jerry Robinson and Bill Finger’s early Joker stories from the Batman comics, while Heath Ledger eschewed the scenery chewing that had been a trademark of most “comic book movie” villains (Ian McKellen’s Magneto and Alfred Molina’s Doctor Octopus were two other merciful exceptions) in favor of a performance that drew on everything from Andrew Robinson’s Scorpio in the original Dirty Harry to Tom Waits’ stage banter.

The Joker Heath Ledger

You could arguably take Batman and the Joker out of costume entirely in The Dark Knightand still end up with a compelling thriller. Still, even this, while a cut above the rest, to be sure, wasn’t free of certain generic conventions. Batman is forced to make the “impossible choice,” a plot device so well-worn that it should be retired forever from superhero films. At least here, things don’t work out the way they usually do, and choices do have consequences. Hints of The Dark Knight's genre-first (but not necessarily superhero first) approach can also be seen in 2013's Man of Steel, which did its very best to present Superman, particularly his Kryptonian roots, in as pure a science fiction environment as possible.   

Marvel Studios, from the first Iron Manfilm onward, have shown little interest in the idea of the comic book movie as a genre unto itself. While most of the Marvel Phase One films were necessarily beholden to certain conventions of superhero movie storytelling, mostly a function of the necessity of telling origin stories, they have rarely made attempts to portray the “real world” that their heroes inhabit as anything but that (fantastic realms like Asgard and the 1940s Saturday matinee sci-fi of Captain America: The First Avenger are understandable exceptions). There may be more and more heroes and villains, but the world, even the fantastical elements of it, all maintain a certain internal logic and visual consistency.

But somewhere between the death of the "comic book movie" as a genre driven by overstylized visuals and attempts to replicate comic book storytelling techniques on the screen (notably in Ang Lee's Hulkand Zack Snyder's Watchmen), the "comic book movie" has found itself trapped in a new cycle, one that isn't solved by simply grounding the characters in more realistic worlds. The presence of a superhero now seems to mean that each film has the desire top the last one, usually in the form of an ever larger CGI brouhaha, each resulting in more collateral damage than the last. The stakes have become entirely too high, even in superhero movies which, by nature, feature larger than life characters.

Which brings us back to Captain America: The Winter Soldier, which relies even less on elaborate sets and stylized direction than the already restrained Marvel films are known for. The film instead opts for Washington DC landmarks and other outdoor locations (after decades of claustrophobic and nocturnal Batman movies, it’s such a relief to see superheroes routinely operating in daylight) and easygoing performances. So while this one has almost nothing in common visually with the comic book movies of the last big boom, it still ends up raising the stakes higher than the relatively introspective story requires.

Chris Evans The Winter Soldier

For the vast majority of the film, Captain America isn’t even in costume, relying instead on Chris Evans’ honest, charming, and direct performance, which owes as much to Christopher Reeve’s iconic Superman as it does to any comic book interpretation of the character. Were a viewer to wander in on a screening of Captain America: The Winter Soldierany time after it’s first fifteen or twenty minutes and before that final half-hour, there is a chance, however slight, that for at least a little while, they might not realize they were watching an explicit adaptation of a comic book superhero story. While it never quite reaches the “political thriller” levels that Marvel was aiming for, its down-to-earth aesthetic and naturalistic performances make the superhero movies of a decade ago feel hopelessly old-fashioned by comparison.

In fact, little about the film feels like a traditional superhero movie until the climax, which is an unfortunately predictable affair, involving a seemingly arbitrary countdown, 20 million innocent lives at stake, and a video game like quest to insert one thing into another thing in order to prevent bad things from happening. It is, quite probably, the movie’s only major misstep, and feels out of place after a subdued (by superhero movie standards) first two hours. Without this, Captain America: The Winter Soldier would feel like a very different, and certainly no less exciting, movie. 

Crashing helicarriers into fictional buildings may seem like necessities for any film with a superhero in it, but...are they? After the wholesale destruction of several blocks of midtown Manhattan on display in The Avengers and the even more gleeful carnage wrought on Metropolis in Man of Steel, well...there’s only so many buildings you can knock down. At this point, the only real surprises would be if cities aren’t destroyed in the course of these superhero slugfests. And this may be the final hurdle for superhero movies to clear in their quest for the legitimacy that is (occasionally) afforded other genre flicks: they shouldn’t be afraid to keep the narrative small when it’s appropriate.

Harrier Crash

Captain America: The Winter Soldier does its best to hint at the dangers of the unchecked surveillance state, drone warfare, and the not-so-subtle hints that we have nobody to blame but ourselves. Robert Redford’s Alexander Pierce offhandedly refers to the events of The Avengersas “after New York…” but he may as well have been referring to the World Trade Center attacks...but all of this is promptly obscured in another consequence free orgy of property damage. I’m not saying that it’s Marvel’s job to tell heavy-handed moral parables ripped from the headlines, but aside from lessening the impact of a superhero movie that might, for once, actually have something to say (rather than something fun to show us...which is just fine, mind you) it also distracts from what is otherwise a significant development in the Marvel film universe, one that not only casts previous events in a new light, but will have major consequences for future films and TV shows: the dissolution of SHIELD.

How much of Captain America 2’s $170 million budget went into that final thirty minutes? That money could have been better spent shoring up a few other less-impressive CGI sequences earlier in the film. The time could have been better spent establishing the depth that HYDRA has infiltrated SHIELD and the scope of the real threat that an organization like that headed up by an individual like Alexander Pierce would be. It could have freed up space to use flashbacks (rather than expository dialogue) to detail more of the Winter Soldier’s career, and perhaps develop more parallels between the PTSD that men like Sam Wilson, Steve Rogers, and Bucky Barnes all deal with, something that was also touched on in Iron Man 3. Among the other achievements of the Marvel Cinematic Universe is the ability to create relationships and character beats that stretch across franchises, and with success after success under their belt, they've earned the right to take chances.

It’s not like there’s any shortage of action in the first place. The opening mission, involving Captain America and Black Widow tearing through a shipload of hapless terrorists, feels not only authentic, but helps to remind audiences of what happens when enhanced and highly trained humans go up against regular jerks. For movie fans, this sequence, as well as Cap’s Bond/Bourne like pursuit of the Winter Soldier that takes him over desks, across ledges, and through walls, are as well executed and exciting as any action movie connoisseur could hope for.

Captain Ameria Batroc Georges St-Pierre

For comic book fans, Cap’s fight with Batroc ranks as one of (if not the) finest pure superhero/supervillain slugfests ever put on screen, as does his later bout of hand-to-hand combat with the Winter Soldier on the streets of Washington DC. One moment in particular, involving an uncostumed Steve Rogers charging machine gun fire with nothing but his shield to protect him is so evocative of the character’s comic book roots that nothing, no amount of slow motion, speed-ramping, or “comic book” mood lighting and set design could have possibly enhanced it. It takes up all of three seconds of screen time, and for Captain America purists, it’s unforgettable. All feel more special than any of the CGI spectacle of that last act.

The Spider-Man films continue to face this problem, as well. Historically, Spider-Man has endured as a character because of the reader/viewer’s personal connection with Peter Parker, and their investment in Parker’s daily relationships. Spidey’s greatest foes are almost exclusively creepy older men, many with animal or elemental science powers...and there’s always that lingering danger that Spidey is only one bad decision or missed subway connection away from growing up to be Adrian Toomes or Norman Osborn. These are the relationships and conflicts that drive Spider-Man’s world, and the anonymous body counts racked up by collapsing buildings are nothing compared to the very real danger that Peter’s friends and loved ones find themselves in every time he puts that suit on.

Yet somehow, the Spider-Man franchise continues to try and top itself with each new installment. Was there a single Amazing Spider-Man ticket buyer worried that the population of Manhattan would find themselves turned into lizards...or was their actual concern for the fate of Denis Leary’s charismatic George Stacy? Would the film have grossed less than its $750 million worldwide take if the fate of all Manhattan wasn’t at stake? Probably not.

In recent years, filmmakers have finally stepped away from hyper-stylized sets and wardrobes and the apparent need to light every frame like the panel of a comic book, in favor of an understanding with the audience that these larger-than-life characters work best when operating in a world a little more recognizable as our own. Now may be the right time to break their addiction to the idea that every one of these films must also place millions of lives in peril and require international aid to deal with the consequences and cleanup. By allowing characters like Batman, Spider-Man, and Captain America to tell smaller stories, they will not only prevent the audience fatigue and backlash, but they’ll allow the larger stories necessary for characters like Superman, Avengers, Guardians of the Galaxy, or (assuming we ever get there) Justice League to shine.

In any event, superhero movies, particularly those like Captain America: The Winter Soldier that aspire to tackle weightier subjects, need to take one last step away from the current conventions of the genre. With Marvel planning on releasing films through (at least!) 2028, not to mention their growing broadcast and streaming television ambitions, at some point their current blockbuster approach will have to evolve. It may be best to do it before this formula fails them. They staked their claim with Iron Man in 2008, lapped their competition (“on your left”) with The Avengers in 2012, and they will have to do it again before they’re done. And their competition, whether it's at Fox, Sony, or Warner Bros. would do well to take note.

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