‘Captain America: Brave New World' Has the Worst MCU Post-Credits Scene Ever
Now, Marvel has made its worst MCU post-credits scene ever with the tag for 'Captain America: Brave New World.'
Marvel didn't invent the post-credits scene — so-called because they drop after the closing credits (sometimes spiked with a mid-credits scene as well or instead) — nor did they make the first good one. The first, according to most historians, came at the end of the 1966 spy comedy 'The Silencers,' starring Rat Pack crooner Dean Martin as Matt Helm. The scene depicted Helm on a bed, either pre-or-post-orgy, with a cadre of scantily clad, beautiful women, and a title card teasing his next adventure, 'Murderer's Row.' Martin, atypically stressed out by his own virility, simply put his head in his hands and cried, 'Oh my God.'
For decades post-credits scenes were rare, and usually empty promises. Matt Helm delivered on his follow-up film but when Skeletor emerged from a liquidy grave at the end of 1987's 'Masters of the Universe' and screamed 'I'll be back!', he was lying. Barry Levinson's excellent prequel 'Young Sherlock Holmes' concluded with the film's villain revealing he was actually Holmes' future arch-nemesis Moriarty the whole time, which also went nowhere. And of course there were lots of comedy codas, like Animal telling the audience to go home at the end of 'The Muppet Movie' and Ferris doing likewise at the end of 'Ferris Bueller's Day Off.'
The difference with Marvel Studios was that when Nick Fury invited Tony Stark to join the Avengers Initiative at the end of 'Iron Man,' it didn't just tease a sequel. It teased an interconnected franchise. Audiences were told that Iron Man would be back, which we already assumed he would if his movie made money, but also that he'd bring the rest of the Avengers with him, in a crossover unlike anything the world had seen since the 1968 kaiju team-up 'Destroy All Monsters,' or the late-era Universal Monster movies 'House of Dracula,' 'House of Frankenstein' and 'Abbott and Costello Meet [insert monster here].'
When Tony Stark showed up in a post-credits scene for 'Incredible Hulk,' just one month later, Marvel's promises became tangible. These were not just empty teases, they were — even though a lot could have gone wrong in those days — at least the start of a plan. So audiences quickly learned not to rush to the bathroom as soon as the credits rolled in a Marvel movie. You'd probably miss a sneak peak of a brand new superhero, or a brand new villain, or at least a hilarious scene where the exhausted Avengers eat shawarma.
The genius of the Marvel post-credits scene wasn't that all of them were great, it's that all of them had value. Either they were an exciting preview or, in larks like Captain America's PSA about patience and disappointment at the end of 'Spider-Man: Homecoming,' at least a gag worth sticking around for. These teases had massive value to Marvel Studios as well, since they left customers buzzing about the next movie as well as — and often, sadly, instead of — discussing the film they just saw. The Marvel post-credits scene quickly became a fine-tuned engine of anticipation.
Like all engines, the Marvel post-credits scene developed some wear-and-tear. There are now multiple teasers that have, to date, gone absolutely nowhere, breaking the promise Marvel once made with its audience that they always follow through. Baron Mordo started stealing magic at the end of 2006's 'Doctor Strange' and nine years later literally nothing has come of it. 'Ant-Man and the Wasp: Quantumania' promised more of Kang the Conqueror and let's just say that's not happening any time soon, or ever.
And then of course there's 'Eternals,' which teased the introduction of the vampire hunter Blade (which still hasn't happened), the British superhero Black Knight (nothing yet either), and also introduced as Harry Styles as Eros, a superhero whose powers include brainwashing people into a state of attraction and arousal, which eventually put him on trial in the comics for sexual assault. It's hard to get worked up about that guy never coming back again.
It's been argued, rather successfully, that Marvel Studios fell into a creative rut after 'Avengers: Endgame,' a once-in-a-lifetime cinematic event that successfully and satisfyingly ended the story of the Marvel Cinematic Universe as we knew it. The problem was that after years of planning, Marvel didn't have a clear vision of what came afterwards, or at least it failed to convey that vision to the audience. The sense of momentum leading up to the Infinity Saga had understandably dissipated and now there was nothing to replace it except… the multiverse.
Marvel had been promising a big multiverse story ever since the first season of 'Loki,' when the so-called 'sacred timeline' was shattered, ushering in a plethora of alternate realities, many of which the audience had seen before in separate or pre-existing superhero franchises. The tease of a massive multiverse crossover was promising, and could have been milked for a few years, just as Marvel had built up the Infinity Stones, gradually bringing the storyline together over the course of many films.
The problem with Marvel's multiverse is that the promise of a giant superhero multiverse crossover was already old hat by the time Marvel got to it. 'Loki' introduced the concept to the MCU three years after a giant superhero multiverse crossover called 'Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse' had already won the Academy Award for Best Animated Feature. Just a few months after the first season finale of 'Loki,' Marvel and Sony released 'Spider-Man: No Way Home,' a live-action multiverse crossover that made a billion dollars. Less than a year later, Doctor Strange traveled through a 'Multiverse of Madness,' and by the beginning of 2022 the genre-defying 'Everything Everywhere All at Once' won an Oscar for Best Picture. 'Deadpool and Wolverine' made over $1 billion last year. Even DC had already gotten in on the action, with an extremely ambitious TV crossover based on the classic comic 'Crisis on Infinite Earths,' and a failed attempt to soft reboot the DC Extended Universe with the notorious 2023 flop, 'The Flash.'
The concept of a multiverse has long since been introduced to audiences, successfully, in and out of the Marvel Cinematic Universe. The cat is simply out of the bag, and yet here we are, in 2025, and Marvel has just released 'Captain America: Brave New World' which [spoiler alert] ends with a post-credits scene that teases — brace for it — the concept of a multiverse.
Hashtag facepalm.
It is hard to fathom just how redundant and pointless the 'Brave New World' post-credits scene actually is. It consists of two shots, with Anthony Mackie's Captain America staring into the camera and the film's villain staring into the camera, suggesting that the actors weren't even in the same room and this whole teaser was a half-hearted afterthought. The villain vaguely claims something is coming, and that the thing is the multiverse. He even claims he knows this because he's seen all the variables, but who needs variables? The multiverse is already an accepted fact in the MCU, and definitely to the audience. Nobody is impressed that this guy knows what's coming. We've all known what's coming for almost half a decade.
To quote Monty Python: 'Get on with it!'
Marvel went from making promises and delivering within the year to making promises it never followed up on, to making promises it's already followed up on, and multiple times. There's literally a three-season Marvel TV series called 'What If' that just bounces around the multiverse every episode. We understand that dropping Kang as the new 'big bad' robbed the MCU of some forward momentum, but the multiverse has had zero momentum for four years because Marvel keeps pretending it's on the horizon and not right here, right now. We've had it for years and it's already getting boring. Even Deadpool, who spent most of 'Deadpool and Wolverine' shamelessly praising Marvel Studios, admitted 'It's just been miss after miss after miss,' and suggested 'just take the L and move on.'
I hate to say this but Deadpool is right. 'Captain America: Brave New World' has problems, and a lot of them, but this post-credits scene and its failure to acknowledge reality, singular or multiple, isn't just a problem for the new film. It's a problem for Marvel in general. There is no discernible promise for this franchise's future, even with big announcements like 'Doomsday' already on the books. We no longer leave the theaters talking about how exciting the future is, and since most of the recent Marvel movies have been underwhelming on their own, we don't want to talk about the movie we just saw either.
After years of getting it right, Marvel Studios made us stop talking about their films. At least not the way we used to. We no longer live in an era of perpetual anticipation — which the late, great film critic James Rocchi wisely pointed out had serious problems to begin with — because audiences no longer have any faith in or patience for Marvel's vague, years-too-late crossover plan. We have nothing to look forward to right now except the movies immediately ahead of us, and since the once-reliable standard of Marvel Studios quality has turned inconsistent at best, it's hard to look forward to those much either.
We have, for now, run out of reasons to marvel.
The post 'Captain America: Brave New World' Has the Worst MCU Post-Credits Scene Ever appeared first on TheWrap.
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The Favourite is an extremely dark absurdist comedy about Queen Anne and her twisted relations with her staff. While the film does have some historical backing, much of the film is speculative or slightly ahistorical. Directed by Yorgos Lanthimos, the film stars Olivia Colman, Emma Stone and Rachel Weisz. It is a strange, lesbian, period piece that has no business working as well as it does. Lanthimos directed a couple of great films in the 2010s (The Lobster is especially worth seeking out); however, The Favourite is by far his most accessible. It was quickly added to multiple 'Best Movies of the 21st Century' lists and was nominated for nine Oscars. Here's where you can find The Favourite. Paddington 2 is the rare sequel that is better than the original. A direct sequel to 2014's Paddington, Paddington 2 follows the titular bear after he is framed for stealing a mysterious and intricate pop-up book. The film stars Ben Whishaw, Hugh Bonneville, Sally Hawkins, Brendan Gleeson, Julie Walters, Peter Capaldi and Hugh Grant. Paddington 2 enjoyed a 100% rating on Rotten Tomatoes, making it one of the highest-rated films on the site before a single negative review in 2021 took it down to 99%. The film has become somewhat of a meme, with many saying it is better than films like Citizen Kane and The Godfather. While this phenomenon is a bit of a joke, the film is extremely sweet, heartfelt and has important anticareral themes that feel rare for a kids' movie. It is shockingly good for a sequel about a talking bear. Here's where you can find Paddington 2. Shoplifters is a wonderful crime drama about a family forced to shoplift due to poverty in modern-day Tokyo. The film is seemingly inspired by Japan's real-life elder crime and shoplifting wave. Directed by Hirokazu Kore-eda, the film stars Lily Franky, Sakura Ando, Mayu Matsuoka, Kairi Jō, Miyu Sasaki and Kirin Kiki. The film is subtle and complex, but it packs a great twist that makes the film almost feel like a thriller. Shoplifters premiered at the Cannes Film Festival, where it won the Palme d'Or. It went on to be nominated for Best Foreign Language Film at the Oscars and Golden Globes. The film also won eight Japan Academy Prizes. Here's where you can find Shoplifters. Uncle Boonmee Who Can Recall His Past Lives is a bit of a hidden gem. It is a Thai fantasy film that follows a man who, in the final days before dying of kidney disease, is visited by the ghost of his wife and his estranged son, who has taken on a non-human form. If it sounds a little odd, it is, but it is a beautiful and experimental film about death, rebirth and spirituality. Written and directed by Apichatpong Weerasethakul, the film is part of his larger 'Primitive' project. The multi-platform art project focuses on the Isan region of northeast Thailand. Uncle Boonmee Who Can Recall His Past Lives premiered at the Cannes Film Festival and was the first Thai film to win the Palme d'Or. Here's where you can find Uncle Boonmee Who Can Recall His Past Lives. There were a couple of great stop-motion animated films from the 2010s, with films like My Life as a Courgette, Wolf House and Missing Link. Anomalisa isn't the most conventional stop-motion animated film, but it is an excellent addition to this list. Written and co-directed by Charlie Kaufman, Anomalisa is a psychological dramedy that is very much not for kids. Based on Kaufman's audioplay of the same name, the film follows a motivational speaker/customer service expert whose life changes after he meets a woman. The film stars David Thewlis, Jennifer Jason Leigh and Tom Noonan. It was nominated for a Best Animated Feature Film Oscar and was a critical darling. However, it left audiences divided and only made $8 million at the box office. Here's where you can find Anomalisa. The Love Witch feels like a hidden gem. While it was met with almost universal acclaim after it premiered at the International Film Festival Rotterdam, it was theatrically released in fewer than 25 theaters in the U.S., leading many not to see it. The film follows a California-based witch who uses magic to make men fall in love with her to disastrous ends. It stars Samantha Robinson and was written, directed and edited by Anna Biller. The Love Witch is really a tribute to 1960s horror films. It is a beautifully made and unique film. It was shot on 35mm film and printed from an original cut negative, giving it an almost Technicolor look. This film will seem strange to some. The acting in the film is presentational, which isn't typical for film (and is somewhat rare even in modern theater). However, The New Yorker called Robinson's work on the film 'one of the best performances of the century so far.' Here's where you can find The Love Witch. I Lost My Body is a disturbing yet hauntingly beautiful animated film. The French horror-drama follows a severed hand as it searches for its body through the streets of Paris and the Moroccan delivery boy who lost it in a carpentry accident. The film is often visceral and off-putting (especially the scenes focusing on the disembodied hand), but it has a beautiful message about community, place and belonging. The film premiered at the 2019 Cannes Film Festival Critics' Week. During the festival, it became the first animated film to win the Nespresso Grand Prize. I Lost My Body went on to win two César Awards and be nominated for an Oscar for Best Animated Feature. Here's where you can find I Lost My Body. A Fantastic Woman is a beautiful Chilean film about an aspiring transgender opera singer/waitress after the death of her boyfriend. The film affected real-world change in Chile. The film won an Academy Award for Best Foreign Language Film, and star Daniela Vega became the first transgender person to be a presenter at the Oscars. Chilean lawmakers used the film's Oscar win to push for a pro-trans bill in the Chilean Senate. Outside of its influence, the film is a sensitive look at loss, passion and identity. Directed by Sebastián Lelio, the film stars Vega and Francisco Reyes. Here's where you can find A Fantastic Woman. Out of the 11 films Pixar made in the 2010s, only four were not sequels (and two of those original films weren't very well received). While some of the sequels were very good, the overall output of the studio didn't feel as exciting as in the previous decades. However, one of their films from the decade is arguably one of the best films Pixar has ever produced, 2017's Coco. The film follows a young musician who is trapped in the land of the dead during Día de Muertos. Coco is a beautiful exploration of generational trauma, the power of music and the bonds of family. The film features an all-Latino principal cast, including Anthony Gonzalez, Gael García Bernal, Benjamin Bratt and Edward James Olmos, and many of the actors returned for the Spanish language dub. The film won two Oscars for Best Animated Feature and Best Original Song. It was also named Best Animated Film of 2017 by the National Board of Review. Here's where you can find Coco. A Girl Walks Home Alone At Night is a new kind of vampire film. The Persian Western film follows a young vampire who preys on men who disrespect women. Directed by Ana Lily Amirpour, the film feels a bit like a Spaghetti Western meets a German Expressionist horror film in a feminist way. There is a lot to the film, but it comes together wonderfully. The film stars Sheila Vand, Arash Marandi, Mozhan Marnò, Dominic Rains and Marshall Manesh. It was selected to screen at the 2014 Sundance Film Festival's Next Program and has since become somewhat of a cult classic, especially among horror fans. Here's where you can find A Girl Walks Home Alone At Night. There are so many great LGBTQ+ movies from the 2010s that it can be hard to count. From Pariah to Can You Ever Forgive Me?, lesbian films flourished in the 2010s. Carol is a 2010s lesbian favorite. It is a moving romance film about a love affair between a wealthy married mother and a young photographer. Set in the 1950s, the film explores love, motherhood, homophobia, and the repression of the '50s. Directed by Todd Haynes, Carol stars Cate Blanchett and Rooney Mara. Writer Phyllis Nagy started writing the project in 1997 based on the 1952 romance novel The Price of Salt by Patricia Highsmith. The film, however, was delayed, largely due to studios not believing that audiences would come to see a movie helmed by two women. However, Carol earned six Academy Award nominations and nine BAFTA Award nominations and even grossed over $42 million on an $11 million budget. Here's where you can find Carol. The Artist is one of only a couple of modern silent films. The French film is a love letter to classic Hollywood. It follows the familiar premise of a veteran actor falling for an ingénue as one of their stars fades while the other's rises. Directed by Michel Hazanavicius, The Artist stars Jean Dujardin and Bérénice Bejo. It was nominated for 10 César Awards and 10 Oscars, winning four. At the Academy Awards, it was the first French film to win Best Picture (and notably not Best International Feature Film). It was only the second mostly silent movie to win in the category (the only other was 1927's Wings, which won at the first Oscars). Dujardin also won for Best Actor, making him the first French actor to do so. It was also a surprise box office hit, grossing $133.4 million against a $15 million budget. It is a joyous and exciting film that doesn't need dialogue to draw the viewer in. Here's where you can find The Artist. Knives Out is an inventive film that feels like a surprising love letter to the mystery genre. Written and directed by Rian Johnson, Knives Out follows the detective Benoit Blanc as he investigates a dysfunctional family after the apparent suicide of an acclaimed mystery novelist. The film is full of mini-twists and turns, which will keep the watcher reassessing their feelings about the characters and who is in control of the narrative in a really satisfying way. Knives Out stars Daniel Craig, Chris Evans, Ana de Armas, Jamie Lee Curtis, Michael Shannon, Don Johnson, Toni Collette, LaKeith Stanfield and Christopher Plummer. It was nominated for the Oscar for Best Original Screenplay and spawned two sequels: 2022's Glass Onion and the upcoming Wake Up Dead Man: A Knives Out Mystery. Here's where you can find Knives Out. The 2010s were a fantastic decade for Korean film, and while The Handmaiden is one of two Korean films that appear on this list, films like Train to Busan or Burning could have easily made this list (and maybe arguably should have). Directed by Park Chan-wook, The Handmaiden is loosely based on the Sarah Waters novel Fingersmith; however, the setting is changed from Victorian Britain to Japanese colonial rule in Korea in the early 1900s. The film follows a con man and a pickpocket who conspire to seduce a wealthy Japanese woman out of her inheritance. It is an entertaining queer thriller that all just really works. Emily St. James wrote in a review for Vox, 'The Handmaiden is a nearly flawless movie. Every frame, every movement of the camera, every performance feels perfectly calibrated for maximum effect.' The film stars Kim Min-hee, Kim Tae-ri, Ha Jung-woo and Cho Jin-woong. Here's where you can find The Handmaiden. Mad Max: Fury Road is a part sequel, part reboot to the Mad Max series. Director George Miller had the idea for the film since the late 1980s; however, the film wasn't made until decades after the original trilogy. The film stars Tom Hardy, Charlize Theron, Nicholas Hoult and Hugh Keays-Byrne. Mad Max: Fury Road follows the titular Max as he helps Imperator Furiosa smuggle women away from the warlord Immortan Joe. In many ways, the film boils down to a driving movie where the heroes simply drive away, are followed and go back, but it becomes far more interesting through its world-building, post-apocalyptic setting, feminist themes and impressive practical effects. It was nominated for ten Oscars, winning six. Here's where you can find Mad Max: Fury Road. The Grand Budapest Hotel is an embedded narrative about a 1930s luxury European ski resort and a concierge who is falsely accused of murder after inheriting a priceless painting. The film is a fun yet still heartbreaking film that explores fascism, elegance and society. Directed by Wes Anderson, the film features a star-studded ensemble cast with Ralph Fiennes, Adrien Brody, Willem Dafoe, Jeff Goldblum, Harvey Keitel, Jude Law, Bill Murray, Edward Norton, Saoirse Ronan, Jason Schwartzman, Tilda Swinton, Owen Wilson and Tony Revolori. While it was released in March (outside of the usual awards season release timeline), it was nominated for nine Oscars, winning four. Here's where you can find The Grand Budapest Hotel. The 2010s ushered in an era of prestige queer dramas, both internationally and in the U.S. There are many great LGBTQ+ international films that are well worth watching, including France's BPM, the UK's Gods Own Country and Weekend and Brazil's The Way He Looks. However, Portrait of a Lady on Fire is one of the most beautiful on that list. The film is an 18th-century romance between a female portrait painter and an unhappy bride on a small French Island. It is a modern lesbian classic that is heartbreakingly beautiful. Directed by Céline Sciamma, the film explores art, the female gaze and the lives of women. Sciamma is a bit of a powerhouse when it comes to modern queer films. She has directed other must-watch films like Girlhood and Tomboy. However, Portrait of a Lady on Fire is among her most impressive works. The film won the Queer Palm at the 2019 Cannes Film Festival. Here's where you can find Portrait of a Lady on Fire. Get Out was a welcome surprise in the horror/thriller genre. While Jordan Peele has more than made a name for himself in horror with films like Us and Nope, his first entry into the genre and directorial debut is still his most iconic film. The film follows a young black man who goes to his white girlfriend's parents' house for the first time, only to be met with a suspicious plot. Get Out is not only a great thriller but also a critique of White America and Neoliberal politics. The film was both a commercial and critical darling. It grossed $255 million worldwide against a $4.5 million budget (with a $124.3 million net profit). It was also nominated for four Academy Awards, winning for Best Original Screenplay. Get Out stars Daniel Kaluuya, Allison Williams, Lil Rel Howery, LaKeith Stanfield, Bradley Whitford, Caleb Landry Jones, Stephen Root, Catherine Keener and Betty Gabriel. Here's where you can find Get Out. Parasite is the rare comedy-thriller from director Bong Joon-Ho. The film follows a low-income family who con their way into working for a wealthy family in Seoul. The film takes inspiration from the iconic 1960s Korean film, The Housemaid. However, it still feels wholly original. It stars Song Kang-ho, Lee Sun-kyun, Cho Yeo-jeong, Choi Woo-shik, Park So-dam and Jang Hye-jin. Parasite is the first Korean film to win an Oscar. It won four Oscars, including Best International Feature Film and Best Feature Film (making it the first film to win both categories). It was also the first Korean film to win the Palme d'Or at the Cannes Film Festival. It is twisty, complex and a fabulous watch for fans of black comedy. Here's where you can find Parasite. Written and directed by Barry Jenkins, Moonlight is an essential LGBTQ+ film of the 2010s. The film follows a young man through childhood, adolescence and early adulthood. The coming-of-age drama examines sexuality, identity, manhood, parenthood and the Black experience beautifully. It is a quiet and impactful film with the right amount of heartbreak. The film was the first LGBTQ+ film to win an Academy Award for Best Picture, even if it was at the center of a mishap when it came to announcing the winner. It was also nominated for seven other Oscars. The film stars Trevante Rhodes, Mahershala Ali, Naomie Harris, Ashton Sanders, Jharrel Jerome, Janelle Monáe and André Holland. Here's where you can find Moonlight. While it has only been around five years since the end of the decade, the 2010s feel different than the 2020s. It is a decade that opened doors and still feels larger than life. Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs) What Are Great 2010s Horror Movies? The 2010s were a great decade for horror. While the highest-ranked horror film on this list was 2017's Get Out at No. 3, there are so many others that almost made the list. Not including The Babadook might be a bit of a snub. The Australian horror film is an outstanding example of psychological horror. The 2014 film follows a widowed mother and her young son who learn something is living in their basement. Directed by Jennifer Kent, the film stars Essie Davis and Noah Wiseman. It is a cult classic that is a beautiful example of 2010s horror. 2018's Mandy also fell just short of this list. Directed by Panos Cosmatos, the film is about a veteran who hopes to save his girlfriend from becoming a cult sacrifice. It is a strange and surreal film that will not be for everyone, but is wholly unique. The film stars Nicolas Cage, Andrea Riseborough and Linus Roache. What Are Great 2010s Disney Movies? Disney dominated the 2010s at the box office. Between Star Wars, Marvel, Pixar and their acquisition of 20th Century Fox in 2019, it was a huge decade for The Mouse. While their superhero films were the most successful, a film that deserves a rewatch is 2011's The Muppets. It was a wonderful return to one of Disney's most beloved franchises. Directed by James Bobin, the film follows two brothers as they hope to reunite the Muppets. The film stars Jason Segel (who also co-wrote the script), Amy Adams, Chris Cooper and Rashida Jones. It is a really joyous and lively film that is easily the best Muppets movie in years. Disney also released several iconic animated films in the decade, including Frozen, Tangled, Moana and Zootopia. However, one of their most celebrated animated films of the decade came from Pixar, 2015's Inside Out. The film follows personified emotions inside a young girl's head. Directed by Pete Docter, it stars Amy Poehler, Phyllis Smith, Richard Kind, Bill Hader, Lewis Black, Mindy Kaling, Kaitlyn Dias, Diane Lane and Kyle MacLachlan. What Are Great 2010s Animated Movies? While the highest-ranked animated film on this list is Coco in the twelfth spot, many animated films from the 2010s could have found a place on this list. 2016's My Life as a Courgette arguably should have made this. The French-Swiss stop motion animation film follows a young boy's life in an orphanage. It is a whimsical and impactful film that was nominated for an Oscar for Best Animated Feature. 2017's Loving Vincent is another fascinating animated film. Directed by DK and Hugh Welchman, the film is about the death of Vincent Van Gogh. However, it may be more notable for being the 'world's first fully painted film.' It comprises 65,000 frames of oil painting on canvas and took 125 artists six years to complete. What Are Great 2010s Comedy Movies? The 2010s were not a great decade for comedy. While the overall box office did well in the decade, comedy totals sank. In 2009, comedies earned $2.5 billion; by 2018, the genre only earned $1 billion. This number definitely relates to the rise of streaming, but it also feels like the genre didn't flourish like it did in the 2000s. However, there were definitely some bright spots, including 2011's Crazy, Stupid, Love. The film follows a recently divorced man and a slick-talking ladies' man who form an unlikely friendship. It is an unbelievably sweet movie that also features a great twist. Directed by Glenn Ficarra and John Requa, the film stars Steve Carell, Ryan Gosling, Julianne Moore, Emma Stone, Marisa Tomei and Kevin Bacon. Another wonderful choice is 2017's The Big Sick. Based on the real-life romance between Kumail Nanjiani and Emily V. Gordon, the film follows their early relationship as Gordon battles adult-onset Still's Disease. Directed by Michael Showalter, it stars Nanjiani and Zoe Kazan. While the movie received good reviews, it also drew criticism for its depiction of Desi women (something that Nanjiani has since apologized for). For more curated film lists by genre, language and decade, visit our full movies hub.
Yahoo
4 hours ago
- Yahoo
Pedro Pascal says he's "being honest" when he denies that his Fantastic Four character Reed Richards will lead the Avengers in Doomsday: "I'm not even trying to avoid spoilers"
When you buy through links on our articles, Future and its syndication partners may earn a commission. Fantastic Four star Pedro Pascal has denied that Reed Richards will be leading the Avengers. Recently, director Matt Shakman commented of Reed: "He goes from being the nerdy scientist who's locked away in the lab, to the husband and the father who'd do anything to protect his family, to the guy who's leading the Avengers." But, according to Pascal, that's not quite the case. "It's big news to me, for one," he told the Associated Press. "I think Matt Shakman was doing an interview, and when he was speaking about Reed, there is something that happens within the comics, he's sort of... drawn in by the Avengers family and asked to be put in a leadership position. But it is something that happens in the comics, it isn't necessarily something that my character's future entails." He added: "I'm being honest in that. I'm not even trying to avoid spoilers. I'm just saying, it's a little bit of a... mislead." Shakman himself has also denied that Reed will be leading the Avengers. "I didn't actually say that. I saw the internet said I said that," he told Bustle (via Inverse). "What I said, and just to clarify, was that he's a really complex character in the comics. That he ranges from being this amazing scientist to being this leader who goes out and saves the day to being this family member, and I needed an actor who could encompass all three things. So unfortunately, a lot of that was taken out of context." The Fantastic Four: First Steps is in theaters now, while Avengers: Doomsday is arriving next year. One of the Fantastic Four: First Steps post-credits scenes directly sets up that movie, too, but we won't say anything else here. You can keep up to date with everything else the MCU has in store with our guide to all the upcoming Marvel movies and shows. Or, dive into our The Fantastic Four: First Steps ending explained for a spoiler breakdown. Solve the daily Crossword