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Post by Vassaggo on Feb 1, 2019 17:18:05 GMT
If it could be done I wouldn't mind 1 season one offs that main integral characters could be missing for whole seasons and come back later. Not haphazardly but planned. So the shows aren't about specific characters. Not a Wolverine Show or a Gambit Show or Loki show. The show is the main star and the characters are what change. I just think that Netflix's business mistake was to put 5 very similar toned shows on back to back to back. Especially for binge watching it can be a grind for some consumers. The decision may not have been right for Netflix but, in the long run, I think it was good for Marvel. Marvel, as we all know, isn't regarded for its variety in tone across mediums. They are, by now, well regarded for creating a shared universe populated by many characters. Luke, Danny, Jessica, Frank, and Matt all contribute to that legend. I guess what I'm asking for is an anthology series which makes the Marvel Universe the central character and rotates the heroes, villains and locations per season. Heroes and villains can be revisited in future archs based on popular demand. Marvel's future as the dominant force in cinemas will come to an end - probably sooner than a lot of us want to believe possible. 2018 was a peak year for them; there is no place to go but down. They will produce one or more flops. It's inevitable. The future of Marvel live-action content is streaming. I just saw the Hobbs and Shaw trailer. The villain is a superhumanly-augmented Idris Elba. We are reaching a tipping point. And let's be clear about Netflix's business goals. They are chiefly concerned with subscribers. Ratings are things that you, myself and other third parties obsess over, the gold standard for a show on Netflix is can it attract new subscribers. Even if the Marvel shows maintained their "ratings," without contributing to adding new subscribers, they'd still be seen as a failure (or loss leader at best) in Netflix's worldview. Also I never understood the infinity growth model of business. Seems like a pyramid scheme. Especially when dealing with attracting more users or subscribers. There is a finite number of people on the planet and yes new customers are born everyday, but come on. There is an inevitable plateau that the growth model seems to vehemently deny.
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