Paul MacLean wrote: ↑Sat May 17, 2025 1:53 pm
Any resemblance between these spinoffs and the
Star Wars of George Lucas, is merely cosmetic -- spaceships, props, sets, uniforms. Replace all those with original designs and the fan(boy) base would not exist.
This is always what I flash on when a good, original movie opens to crickets at the box office. Everyone always complains about there being too many sequels, prequels, remakes and reboots, and yet when something really good and truly original comes out, often times no one bothers to
go.

It's what's made the success of
Sinners such a breath of fresh air...yeah, it's not gonna make a billion dollars and kick off forty years' worth of sequels and spin-offs (at least, I hope not), but it's slowly and surely surpassed $300 million worldwide on a $90 mil budget and has had some of the smallest week-to-week drops of any movie in recent memory (it's still gonna take in $15 mil this weekend). And it's GOOD, too, the rare modern movie that people have been excitedly discussing and recommending to friends and family (my oldest niece and her husband took in in a few weeks ago, even though they're not big "horror people"). If Ryan Coogler were smart, he'd simply walk away from the third
Black Panther (why yoke himself to that rapidly sinking luxury liner?) and make another original. "From the director of Sinners" would be enough to guarantee an audience showing up by this point, they way Jordan Peele has made nothing but originals after the wild success of
Get Out, and Christopher Nolan used a trilogy of Batman movies to make nothing but originals for the last 13 years. Who would have ever figured that a talky, three-hour drama about the creation of the Atomic Bomb would have made almost five times more than
The Marvels, or
Snow White?
That's the model studios should be pursuing, giving talented, unique filmmakers the support they need to establish a fanbase who will show up for anything with their names on it, instead of blowing billions on trying to keep a foundering franchise like the MCU afloat for another decade instead of calling it a loss and moving onto something else.