• @MimicJarM
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    82 months ago

    But who is the “everyone” that hated it? Where are they? By what metric?

    Let’s discuss it for a moment,

    I would say Thor was an OK film, definitely a lower point in the MCU (at the time). I would say Thor 2 was about the same, maybe a bit worse since it continued the boring trend of Thor. Thor 3 was a breath of fresh air, making me actually care about the character. Thor 4 was definitely a step down. It had fun moments, but wasted opportunity.

    Now let’s look at critic v audience for all Thor films,

    • Thor - 77% v 76%
    • Thor: The Dark World - 67% v 75%
    • Thor: Ragnarok - 93% v 87%
    • Thor: Love and Thunder - 63% v 76%

    That all roughly tracks with what I said. Maybe the audience was too lenient. Maybe the critics were too harsh. Rotten Tomatoes is just one source, we can look at more, but I think they’re roughly correct.

    Also, just for calibration sake, let’s look at Secret Invasion - 52% v 44%.

    • Omega
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      42 months ago

      Part of my point was that Thor 4 was successful by the metrics. But in reality it was hated, to the point where I think it damaged both Taika Waititi’s reputation and the Thor brand.

      However, you can look at the box office for some more insight. Because while it did well because of the hype, it’s success was short lived.

      Domestic box office total Thor 1-4; DS2

      $181M $206M $315M $343M $411M

      2nd Weekend Drop Thor 1-4; DS2

      47.2% 57.3% 53.5% 67.7% 67.0%

      I added Doctor Strange 2 as well for reference. I think Thor 4 mostly benefited from Thor 3’s success in the same way Thor 2 benefited from Loki in the Avengers. And both fell off faster after the initial weekend than their predecessors because word of mouth sucked.

      Thor 5 would not do as well, and could quite possibly bomb.

      • @[email protected]
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        fedilink
        42 months ago

        in reality

        Reality is subjective. Lots of people will watch a movie and simply not engage in a public discourse about it.

      • @MimicJarM
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        32 months ago

        I mean Avengers: Endgame also had a 58.7% drop off on the second weekend, that makes it look similar to Thor 2.

        I don’t disagree that there are multiple ways to measure this. This is basically the jobs of multiple people in the film industry.

        And of course we’re just talking Domestic, what if a film is more successful internationally? What if it bombs internationally, but is amazing domestically?

        Also DS2 and Thor 4 both came out after Endgame, is superhero fatigue real, how do we measure it. Also after the peak of COVID, some reports say theaters still aren’t back to pre-pandemic attendance.

        I don’t say all this to discourage discussion. I just think that we (and anyone) can probably use numbers to prove anything.

        I definitely agree that as a viewer, Thor 4 was a step down. But I don’t think it turned me off of a Thor 5. In fact after Thor 1 & 2 I had low expectations for 3, I would have said cancel/scrap it and give me something else, but it turned out to be the best one.

        I have my criticisms of DS2, but I’m excited for DS3.

      • @Squizzy
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        32 months ago

        Definitely sick of Taika’s shtick these days. Jojo rabbit was good but Thor was aggressively shit and the fact he offered Natalie Portman a role in his star wars movie not realising she was already in a trilogy was a cherry on top for him not really focusing on what he is doing and just importing his same comedy into everything.