Obligatory disclaimer: real life sucks, and I apologize for my tardiness. Now let us talk about the GotG, Vol 3. What is it?
A really great film, to put it down concisely.
Without getting into details too much, let us point out as to what is absent from GotG Vol 3 – multiverse and
Kangs.
No, seriously, let us try again. Throughout the GotG
series, aside from the Christmas special that titular characters went from
challenge to challenge, growing and developing as a team/family from film to
film, including the ‘Infinity War’ and ‘Endgame’ movies – only not, as some of
them were dusted by Thanos… and Gamora died in a non-reversible way – and got
replaced by an earlier copy of herself, who acted quite differently from the
previous incarnations. So what?
Therefore, compared to the previous Marvel film,
‘Quantumania’, GotG Vol 3 is more toned down out of the two, it is more
restrained, and the stakes for the cast
and crew – not the characters –
are higher. Put otherwise, the former put a better performance than their
counterparts in ‘Quantumania’ did. What next?
Next, the movie is more restrained, by Disney/MCU
standards. ‘Quantumania’ is supposed to be a leap into the multiverse. Sadly,
Disney/MCU hasn’t gotten the hang of the multiverse so far; the best take on it
is ‘Loki’, and so far the info about its’ upcoming second season is kept close
to the chest: apparently, Disney/MCU is
aware that they haven’t figured out as to how to play the multiverse card
correctly, and ‘Quantumania’ was supposed to be a test run. Like a test run
into something new, it was not a smashing success, even if Elon Musk’s went
worse, but that is real life for you – it sucks.
Back to Disney/MCU the fact that the titular
characters disband at the end of the film, marking something of an end for the
group. This is important, for everything has to end, for otherwise it risks
overstaying its’ welcome. Now, this is something that has been harped about in
regards to Disney/MCU for a while now, so some elaboration is in order. Let us
begin.
Firstly, nothing is set in stone, and as long as MCU
continues to make money for Disney, it will continue to run. However, the
overall reputation of Disney/MCU will continue to suffer and what will come out
of that is another question. Of course, this means that the voices of
Disney/MCU’s critics will continue to sound, but by themselves, they are
nowhere near enough to end the MCU, for they matter less than they like to. In
the elections of 2016, the American mass media did its’ best to ensure that
Hillary Clinton would win – and she did not. Since then, the American mass
media wasn’t the same, and neither is the rest of the American society – but
the Donald is still neither arrested nor affected overmuch; he may’ve lost the
election-2020, but he’s still kicking, and the Democrats are trying to stop him
from running for the election of 2024, and are mismanaging that strategy…badly,
but that is another story.
Back to GotG Vol 3, they have actually ended and
kudos to them for this. Disney tends to make its’ series a trilogy, and GotG
confirms to this… unlike the Ant-Man franchise, whose third film,
‘Quantumania’, feels more like a beginning instead – but it also leaves the
ant-family high and dry. That is a cheap shot, it is, and even Disney (and MCU)
admit it… somewhat.
Ah yes, the villain issue of Disney/MCU. Until
‘Quantumania’, the villains of this franchise came and went in a range of a
single film – normally. There were exceptions. Thanos was one, obviously. The
characters in AoS were another, but AoS itself is buried deeper by Disney/MCU
than Thanos is, but where it does leave Kang?
Pretty much in the same place as the rest of the
villains, save that now there is a multiverse – as in a nearly limitless supply
of Kangs. Now when one Kang dies, another can replace him with little effort,
and that is it. It is the same old story, just cheapened even more, since death
of any Kang will be almost meaningless on one hand, and on the other, the rest
of the villains are now redundant as there’s probably always a Kang who can do
their job just as well.
To expand – ‘Quantumania’ differs from Vol 3 is that
it has a hero, who was left high and dry, as with ‘Quantumania’ over, there’s
no indication as to where the Ant-Man and the rest of his family will go, (i.e.
they are all left hanging), and on the other hand, it has a villain that had no
meaning in the greater structure of Disney/MCU, no matter how much the latter
tried to up-play the multiverse. Sad, but GotG Vol 3 did not have these issues,
which is why people like it much better than they had ‘Quantumania’, and that
is that.
This is also the end for now. See you all soon!
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