Avengers: Endgame
- BridgeConsoleMasher
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Re: Avengers: Endgame
I didn't get how the time travel was supposed to work. I mean I didn't get how it was supposed to be different from any of the other movies we've seen involving time travel as per their explanation, "the past you travel to is your future."
..What mirror universe?
- Madner Kami
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Re: Avengers: Endgame
Counter-point: Dredd.clearspira wrote: ↑Tue May 21, 2019 9:47 pmOn the other hand though, I can only rate four non-Marvel Marvel films as films that I think are great: X-Men 1, Logan, and the first two Maguire Spiderman films. The rest are meh to awful.
Also, both the Thomas Jane and the Ray Stevenson Punisher movies are really good and everything that isn't that good about these two, could have been fixed by a higher budget.
Also also: Sin City, 300 and Rise of an Empire. True comic book movies and they are glorious.
Last edited by Madner Kami on Sun Jun 23, 2019 1:21 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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- BridgeConsoleMasher
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Re: Avengers: Endgame
According to the screenwriters it was a time loop and didn't changed the timeline at all. So in away it's different from time travel stories like Back to the Future where one thing changed in the past can changed the present.BridgeConsoleMasher wrote: ↑Sun Jun 23, 2019 6:23 am I didn't get how the time travel was supposed to work. I mean I didn't get how it was supposed to be different from any of the other movies we've seen involving time travel as per their explanation, "the past you travel to is your future."
- BridgeConsoleMasher
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Re: Avengers: Endgame
Right. It seems like they went into a different continuity and just snatched the stones out of that, and of course brought them back.cilantro wrote: ↑Sun Jun 23, 2019 7:00 amAccording to the screenwriters it was a time loop and didn't changed the timeline at all. So in away it's different from time travel stories like Back to the Future where one thing changed in the past can changed the present.BridgeConsoleMasher wrote: ↑Sun Jun 23, 2019 6:23 am I didn't get how the time travel was supposed to work. I mean I didn't get how it was supposed to be different from any of the other movies we've seen involving time travel as per their explanation, "the past you travel to is your future."
If that's being the case, Loki's new show is going to be based on that separate continuity, I'm pretty sure that was confirmed by people involved in it or the movie. I mean I guess I just didn't get what they're saying that the past becomes the future. It's more like, "a separate doppelganger past now becomes your present (where one is when they time travel) and when you leave it then it stays where it was and you just come back to your own reality."
..What mirror universe?
- clearspira
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Re: Avengers: Endgame
Blade came out when vampires not zombies were the craze so that helped a lot. A think it comes down to whether you experienced it at the time or not, because now it comes off as being VERY late nineties. The black coat and sunglasses that was in so many films back then, the early CGI that no modern kid could love etc.
And I would imagine that Blade 3 has sullied it in the minds of many. And I say that because the Matrix sequels really harmed my appreciation of the first for the better part of a decade.
Re: Avengers: Endgame
Well that's one way to do it. Alternative time line or alternative universe if you will like comic books tend to do. Granted Marvel hasn't done it as much as DC has but they have done it as well.cilantro wrote: ↑Sun Jun 23, 2019 7:00 amAccording to the screenwriters it was a time loop and didn't changed the timeline at all. So in away it's different from time travel stories like Back to the Future where one thing changed in the past can changed the present.BridgeConsoleMasher wrote: ↑Sun Jun 23, 2019 6:23 am I didn't get how the time travel was supposed to work. I mean I didn't get how it was supposed to be different from any of the other movies we've seen involving time travel as per their explanation, "the past you travel to is your future."
"In the embrace of the great Nurgle, I am no longer afraid, for with His pestilential favour I have become that which I once most feared: Death.."
- Kulvain Hestarius of the Death Guard
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Re: Avengers: Endgame
"Marvel hasn't done it as much"? Are you kidding me? Marvel has over a THOUSAND alternate timelines, with numbers and everything. Even the MCU itself is considered part of the wider Marvel multiverse. And alternate universes in Marvel are often created by time-travel shenanigans. The main Marvel verse is just universe 616.Mecha82 wrote: ↑Sun Jun 23, 2019 10:53 amWell that's one way to do it. Alternative time line or alternative universe if you will like comic books tend to do. Granted Marvel hasn't done it as much as DC has but they have done it as well.cilantro wrote: ↑Sun Jun 23, 2019 7:00 amAccording to the screenwriters it was a time loop and didn't changed the timeline at all. So in away it's different from time travel stories like Back to the Future where one thing changed in the past can changed the present.BridgeConsoleMasher wrote: ↑Sun Jun 23, 2019 6:23 am I didn't get how the time travel was supposed to work. I mean I didn't get how it was supposed to be different from any of the other movies we've seen involving time travel as per their explanation, "the past you travel to is your future."
If anything, kudos to them for being consistent with the comics.
Re: Avengers: Endgame
True. I was thinking on lines of pre-Crisis DC universe were there were pretty much almost unlimited number of alternative universes or when they had 52 alternative universes.Jonathan101 wrote: ↑Sun Jun 23, 2019 2:22 pm"Marvel hasn't done it as much"? Are you kidding me? Marvel has over a THOUSAND alternate timelines, with numbers and everything. Even the MCU itself is considered part of the wider Marvel multiverse. And alternate universes in Marvel are often created by time-travel shenanigans. The main Marvel verse is just universe 616.Mecha82 wrote: ↑Sun Jun 23, 2019 10:53 amWell that's one way to do it. Alternative time line or alternative universe if you will like comic books tend to do. Granted Marvel hasn't done it as much as DC has but they have done it as well.cilantro wrote: ↑Sun Jun 23, 2019 7:00 amAccording to the screenwriters it was a time loop and didn't changed the timeline at all. So in away it's different from time travel stories like Back to the Future where one thing changed in the past can changed the present.BridgeConsoleMasher wrote: ↑Sun Jun 23, 2019 6:23 am I didn't get how the time travel was supposed to work. I mean I didn't get how it was supposed to be different from any of the other movies we've seen involving time travel as per their explanation, "the past you travel to is your future."
If anything, kudos to them for being consistent with the comics.
"In the embrace of the great Nurgle, I am no longer afraid, for with His pestilential favour I have become that which I once most feared: Death.."
- Kulvain Hestarius of the Death Guard
- Kulvain Hestarius of the Death Guard
Re: Avengers: Endgame
I thought that they mentioned that it wasn't a new continuity but a time loop. Meaning that they stayed within the same universe (Earth-199999) throughout the film? Also, I would assume that the Loki show would be just Loki going on a time traviling experence, sort of like Dr. Who, and then at the end being captured by Thor (to fill fulled that ending scene of The Avengers)?BridgeConsoleMasher wrote: ↑Sun Jun 23, 2019 8:04 amcilantro wrote: ↑Sun Jun 23, 2019 7:00 amAccording to the screenwriters it was a time loop and didn't changed the timeline at all. So in away it's different from time travel stories like Back to the Future where one thing changed in the past can changed the present.BridgeConsoleMasher wrote: ↑Sun Jun 23, 2019 6:23 am I didn't get how the time travel was supposed to work. I mean I didn't get how it was supposed to be different from any of the other movies we've seen involving time travel as per their explanation, "the past you travel to is your future."
Right. It seems like they went into a different continuity and just snatched the stones out of that, and of course brought them back.
If that's being the case, Loki's new show is going to be based on that separate continuity, I'm pretty sure that was confirmed by people involved in it or the movie. I mean I guess I just didn't get what they're saying that the past becomes the future. It's more like, "a separate doppelganger past now becomes your present (where one is when they time travel) and when you leave it then it stays where it was and you just come back to your own reality."