Marvel Movies Are in the Same Spot They Were in the 2000s – And That’s a Problem

The Marvel Cinematic Universe has been an unstoppable empire of superhero movies, constantly succeeding where others many times failed. Unfortunately, it seems that said empire might be crumbling, with the reception for recent movies being noticeably less flattering than previous productions. It also appears that Marvel movies and TV shows have come full circle to the early 2000s and in the worst kind of way.Spider-Man and the X-Men are the two properties that fans and audiences seem to really care about in the MCU going forward, with other franchises simply lacking the hype. That mirrors not only the Marvel comic books in the 1990s but also pre-MCU Marvel superhero movies in the 2000s. While it could lead to a renaissance for Peter Parker and the merry mutants, the result may also be a total collapse in interest in Marvel’s other properties on the big screen.Spider-Man has been Marvel’s premiere character ever since he first showed up in the Silver Age, and that’s definitely the case in films, as well. Long before the MCU, audiences were wowed by a cinematic Wall-Crawler through the Sam Raimi Spider-Man movie trilogy. Even without an entire universe of other heroes to bounce off of, audiences and fans alike were heavily invested in Spidey’s world, a sentiment that continues to this day. Spider-Man: No Way Home was the only mega-hit of the MCU’s Phase Four, getting both huge critical and financial success. This movie had not one but three Spider-Men, uniting three generations of movies in a film that arguably rivaled even Avengers: Endgame. To be fair, Black Panther: Wakanda Forever was critically well-received and made over $800 million at the box office, but even this was a steep drop from the first movie.

The Marvel Cinematic Universe has been an unstoppable empire of superhero movies, constantly succeeding where others many times failed. Unfortunately, it seems that said empire might be crumbling, with the reception for recent movies being noticeably less flattering than previous productions. It also appears that Marvel movies and TV shows have come full circle to the early 2000s and in the worst kind of way.

Spider-Man and the X-Men are the two properties that fans and audiences seem to really care about in the MCU going forward, with other franchises simply lacking the hype. That mirrors not only the Marvel comic books in the 1990s but also pre-MCU Marvel superhero movies in the 2000s. While it could lead to a renaissance for Peter Parker and the merry mutants, the result may also be a total collapse in interest in Marvel’s other properties on the big screen.

Spider-Man has been Marvel’s premiere character ever since he first showed up in the Silver Age, and that’s definitely the case in films, as well. Long before the MCU, audiences were wowed by a cinematic Wall-Crawler through the Sam Raimi Spider-Man movie trilogy. Even without an entire universe of other heroes to bounce off of, audiences and fans alike were heavily invested in Spidey’s world, a sentiment that continues to this day. Spider-Man: No Way Home was the only mega-hit of the MCU’s Phase Four, getting both huge critical and financial success. This movie had not one but three Spider-Men, uniting three generations of movies in a film that arguably rivaled even Avengers: Endgame. To be fair, Black Panther: Wakanda Forever was critically well-received and made over $800 million at the box office, but even this was a steep drop from the first movie.

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