House of R - ‘Daredevil’ and What We Want From Our Superheroes
Episode Date: March 20, 2025Jo has put together a team. A team of Chris Ryan, Van Lathan, and Sean Fennessey to discuss the status of ‘Daredevil: Born Again’ in the wake of its latest episode. Also, they chat about the statu...s of the superhero pop culture space at the present moment, as well as what they believe would be best for it going forward. Host: Joanna Robinson Guests: Van Lathan, Sean Fennessey, and Chris Ryan Senior Producer: Steve Ahlman Video Supervision: John Richter Social: Jomi Adeniran Addition Production Support: Arjuna Ramgopal Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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Hello, welcome back to House of R. I'm Joanna Robinson.
And joining me today is not Mallory Rubin, but three of my favorite dudes are here.
Wow.
Two and a half men.
It takes three of the ringer's finest to fill in for one Mallory Rubin.
It's Chris Ryan, Van Lathan, Sean Fantasy.
Thanks for being here.
Thanks for having us.
Welcome to House of R.
I never would have guessed that this would be what we were going to talk about.
When this group got together on House of R, I,
What would we talk about?
I don't know, but Daredevil Born Again is not the thing that I would have guessed if you would ask about three years ago.
I thought it was something weighty that needs the perspective of all of us like it's forming together.
Well, actually it is.
This is the Illuminati.
Are you implying that Daredevil Born Again is not a weighty and profoundly impactful pace of culture?
No, it's not.
But it's still a very important superhero story, even like what's behind the show.
That's true.
Why did you invite us here?
Thanks so much for us getting on.
So we're here ostensibly to talk about episode four of Daredewell Born Again,
but really as a test case for what's going on with superhero storytelling.
And also I thought in the next, oh, hour and a half or so,
we might look back at, oh, the last 25 years of superhero movies and television
and solve for what are we looking for from superhero storytelling.
Because coming off of Captain America, which was,
not what a lot of people wanted from that Captain America movie.
And Daredevil, which is landing medium positive, but not a banger.
I feel like we're in a real uncertain space.
There are some projects on the horizon, your Fantastic Fours, your Superman's.
But the question is sort of...
24 Thunderbolts is Sean is really looking forward to.
Absolutely. Very important.
I got a co-EP title on that now. I'm really excited.
From the post-editor of...
From the producer produced by Ari Astro.
from the podcaster who likes to talk about 824 movies.
It's Thunderbolts.
So all of that stuff is coming,
and I just kind of wanted to figure out
if we're,
what are we wanting from our superhero story telling right now?
And I think Daredevil is a really good sort of test case for that,
especially what you were talking about, Van, in terms of,
this is a show that was something.
And then Marvel looked at it and said,
oh, no, that's not what we want to do.
And then they made a bunch of changes to brought a new creative team.
And what we're left with is the vestigial remains of what they thought might work and something new.
And this episode in particular had it all.
Had it all.
But it has air dropped into the middle of it.
This Daredevil Punisher scene, which is something that they shot later and they just sort of dropped into this episode as like clearly thinking, hey, this is what people really want.
And I think given the reaction to the show, they were right that we're in a.
an era where it's like play the hits don't give us something weird and experimental and new.
Or you might disagree with me.
So, quick pour of my reminders before we get into all of that.
Let's hear it.
How far?
We're covering Yellow Jackets and Daredevil.
That's what we're doing.
Fantastic.
What's that, what season, is it season eight of Yellow Jackets?
What season are they on?
Season three, man.
Season three.
Yeah.
What's going on?
They released an incredible.
They released an incredible Survivor, Yellow Jackets crossover ad.
where Probst is like in with the Yellow Jackets girls.
Oh, because it's on Paramount Plus.
What is the old jackets about?
We don't have time.
Okay.
Girls in the woods lost, but then when they grow up,
they rethink about like what happened.
Yeah, very vancoded.
Oh, yeah, I was about to say.
I've seen that before.
Yeah.
The Midnight Boys are trying to step on the watch and prestige territory.
They're covering the Severance finale next week.
There's fans demanded it.
Who are these fans?
The fans, the Reddit fans, they want to hear the Midnight Boys talk about anything.
thing other than superheroes.
Can I ask you, did your vitamin pack just hit?
Because the way you said that,
the way you said that had a little bit of an edge.
We have a punisher on an animal pack today.
It's very exciting.
And then the spoiler alert for this episode is just sort of every
superhero thing ever that has ever existed.
You're grown-ups.
Everybody who comes to House of Art comes with a PhD in this stuff.
I don't think we have to, we don't have to walk them to water.
You're wrong, but, you know, we don't, we don't.
We did our best award them what's coming.
Episode 4 is Sixth Semper Sistama, written by David Feige and Jess Wicito.
Is that Kev's cousin?
No relation.
No relation.
You'd consider a name change there.
That's a little dicey.
Actually, it's pronounced fiege.
Yes, fiege.
Directed by Jeffrey Nachmanoff.
So I just want to start with the Daredevil as a character, because this is a character that
hit on the Netflix shows and Marvel's like,
We want some of that.
We want that Charlie Cox, Matt Murdox, Wilson Fisk.
We want all of it.
What is it about Daredevil that hits specifically?
What do we want from it specifically?
Sean Fantasy, knowing that he was coming on House of R, did some reading.
Yeah, I did a lot of preparation in part because I pre-recorded an episode of The Big Picture this week.
So I didn't have to record it this week.
I went back and reread the Frank Miller runs.
There were ultimately three runs, I think, but one really.
long run in the late 70s and early 80s.
I went back and looked at 45 minutes of the Ben Affleck movie.
I looked at a couple of episodes of the Netflix series.
And then I'm up to speed.
I'm up to date with the first four episodes of porn again.
I think I'm the only person on this panel that hasn't talked about this show at all.
I was very curious to know what you're thinking of so far.
I think it is not good at all.
Oh, okay.
And I know that I've been trying to make an effort to be more open-minded about this
storytelling this year.
Notariously. Yeah, yeah, yeah.
But I think that there was like a real miscalculation, which is that they're trying to make Dick Wolf's Daredevil.
And that makes no sense.
That has nothing to do with what makes this a compelling character.
And I can see that they've obviously, like, they realized the error of their ways, and they went back and they reshot things and they reframed it and they cut the season in half.
And I see all the moves that they made.
And some of that stuff is cool.
I got a kick seeing Frank Castle.
That was very exciting.
But Daredevil is like an incredibly emotionally sophisticated.
character, much more so than many of the
down the middle, Stan Lee, Marvel
classics. And that story
is a story about faith, disability,
parenthood,
like, it's really a weird
configuration and very
noir. Obligation, destiny. Yeah,
and it's very, it's super,
super, super grounded in a time when
most of these stories are not very grounded.
The series itself
is not, it's not
awful, like I don't want to overstate.
It's just like, it's very clunky to me.
the way it's been designed thus far.
And even though I like everybody involved,
and I had some fondness for the original Netflix version of this series,
what would I want from a Daredevil?
It's maybe a different conversation that we could all participate in.
But I was hoping that this would bring some of the pop appeal
that the best Marvel stuff has with that groundedness,
and it's kind of neither fish nor foul for me so far.
Van, where are you sitting with that?
The last episode was a slow realization that the show isn't really working.
On the Midnight Boys, I said, I like it.
I likened it to watching a Premier League match for me.
Yeah.
Which is what's happening on there is good and entertaining,
but I don't care about any of it because I don't know any of the players or the culture or anything.
Like I feel like I'm watching a perpetual away game.
It's like something that's like very foreign to me.
And that's kind of where the show is for me right now.
I have such a nostalgic tie to the old Netflix show and it was such an achievement.
and it really was an achievement.
It was one of the most faithful recreations
of comic book intensity
to the screen that's ever existed.
And they took so much time with it
and it was so human and so accessible.
All the attention was palpable
and all of the story beats were executed so well.
This is just spiritually not the same thing.
They're just doing stuff.
Yeah.
And the stuff that they're doing doesn't repel you in the way that some shows that we've watched have.
You know, you're not looking at it going, oh, my God, this is terrible.
I'm not into it.
But you are going, just like, why?
Like, what's happening?
How do I invest?
What's my end point?
And I'll go back to even the decision to kill Foggy.
They're assuming that we cared about that.
But when it happened, you kind of didn't care because we needed a refresher on this relationship.
And we needed a little bit more.
meat on the bone there.
So they're just assuming a lot of things
that none of it's really working there.
Like, it's weirdly
empty calories TV for a show
from before
that had no empty calories. The show was almost
too much protein. Right. And is it,
well, does it feel all the emptier because we know
how good it can be?
Look, this is how I feel about
superhero stuff in general.
Ready?
Yeah. You just cut me off.
You just drove, like, no, no, no.
No, no. Let's get to it.
Nobody needs to hear me talk about this show, yeah.
No, no, no, no.
So I don't think we ever throw away our toys.
There's always this point where you throw away your toys.
I don't think we ever throw away our toys.
We just get different toys, right?
You start off and you have a Batman figurine,
then you get a basketball or a baseball or whatever.
Like, you just get different toys.
Then you get an iPhone.
Then you get a car.
Your whole life is about figuring out how you love your toys.
Marvel does not know how to make different toys.
Like after you're done with the first toy that they give you,
you, the action figure that they give you, they have not figured out how to take that,
how to take my Castle Gracegold and turn it into a baseball bat or turn it into a basketball
or turning it into some of the other stuff that I fell in love with.
They can't mature this stuff.
They can't give us the next iteration of this stuff.
And the aimlessness of Daredevil Born Again right now just shows that.
Like they can't take this story.
They don't want to do the old thing, but they just can't do the new thing.
And at this point, I'm wondering if they will ever figure it out with any of these characters moving forward at all.
Yeah, I think that you're getting to something that I really wanted to talk to you guys about,
which was this idea of whether or not the television model is at all suitable for the kind of storytelling that the MCU specifically wants to do,
not necessarily Marvel Comics, because I do think television would actually be the perfect medium for a straight adaptation of Marvel comic book storylines if budget were never a concern.
and you could just build sentinels
and have Egyptian gods
coming out of pyramids and stuff like that.
But Daredevil is the best possible candidate
for that. Because I don't like the show
for the very reason Sean doesn't
which is I like Law and Order.
So I don't mind Matt Murdoch's case of the week
with some overstory
about like well Punisher and Fisk and everything else.
Like tonally, visually,
a lot of other things, it's a car crash.
But for some reason,
and a lot of car crashes,
I'm kind of like, wait,
did anybody get out of that thing?
There's parts of it where I'm like,
how is fiddle faddle
and probation arguments?
I can't believe you said fiddle fattel
when I just heard them say it 200.
I honestly had forgotten
and then I listened to Midnight boys
and I'm like,
should I get this tattooed on my neck?
Yeah, exactly.
How is the fiddle fattel stuff
happening in the same episode
as two men just screaming at each other
for five minutes?
Yeah.
Like in the Punisher, Matt Murdochonoff scene,
And then on top of that, like, the wire season two, like, let's redevelop the ports and make Hell's Kitchen Great Again stuff going on.
There's all these little bits.
I'm like, I like kind of like that.
Wait, this is stupid, but I can't look away.
Yeah.
When it comes together, you get to the end and you're like, what the fuck was that?
But then kind of like, I have dropped some of these series.
I'm just like, no, I'm out.
I know.
I'm kind of still, like, you're in.
Classed in enough to check it out.
That's so interesting.
I think something that I've been struggling with at least is that, you know, Mallory and I
rewatched all of the Netflix show and then we did an episode where we sort of identified
the best moments from those three seasons and in doing so did sort of a diagram anatomy
of what this storytelling, why this storytelling works for us.
And it has to do with the religious themes or the noir visuals or all these sorts of
things.
This is the soul of Daredevil.
And it's by design of the premise, intentionally missing from this series, because the whole point of where we're finding Matt Murdoch here is that he is trying not to be himself.
So he's trying to be foggy and work inside of a system.
And so by design, this show is like, we're going to take you out of Hell's Kitchen.
We're going to not show you the suit after the first CGI, terrible CGI fight scene.
We're going to do this, that, and the other thing.
and conceptually that's interesting,
but the execution is not nourishing me enough
to make me not long for all the things that worked before.
To strip away Karen and Foggy,
to strip away him going into a confessional,
to strip away all that stuff,
is in theory a good idea
and execution tough stuff for me, you know?
Even furthermore, they've taken,
he's not Daredevil in this series so far,
except for this one braver opening sequence of the show.
So we're not seeing him in the suit and he's not in action.
The genius of the first series was rather than go in a post-matrix filmmaking style,
which is what the Ben Affleck movie is, it's post-the-rate, right?
Like, that's the style of combat that you're seeing.
It's like a very Korean new wave in the style of filmmaking and in the fight action.
And not having any of that stuff, taking bullseye off the board completely,
making Fisk a reputable figure in the storyline, there's no juice.
There's just no juice.
Now, obviously, it's going to change.
He's going to come back.
We see Frank Castle
But to make you sit for five hours
Until making it a Jarediff
And I know
I have no patience for that
I really have no patience for that.
Can I say something about that?
When the Netflix series comes out
The awesome thing about the first season
Is that it is a season-long origin story
To where you only get him actually as Daredevil
In the last episode
You had all the episodes at once, didn't you?
Yeah, but that means something.
But what I'm saying is this, it still works perfectly because of the intrigue of the things happening in the other characters' lives.
That's not just that, but also even when he's in the sort of like black ninja get-up, that's still daredevil enough to be daredevil, you know?
It is for everyone else, but not for me, right?
Because, so, because remember I'm watching, it is for everyone else that watch the show.
But for me, I'm watching the show going,
because, like, Kaleika's watching the show
and she doesn't know that that's not Daredevil.
I'm like, that's not how he looks.
Relax.
But, like, what I'm saying is,
the show itself, Hell's Kitchen was a character
that meant so much to that Matt's trauma
is a character.
Stick comes into the show.
There's so much daredevilness going on
that by the time you see him in the suit,
you don't feel like that you've missed them in the suit.
you feel triumphant that he's gotten to the end of that journey.
You don't even miss Daredevil in a suit in this show to me
because it's not even the same show.
I don't even know what he would be doing.
I don't know who he would be fighting.
I don't know what would be going on.
There's no sense of intensity to the show whatsoever.
By the way, I'm like you.
I'm enjoying it, but I'm watching it just because it's Daredevil.
I would say there's no intensity except for this Frank Castle scene,
which is airdropped out of nowhere,
basically poured it over from another,
TV show entirely into this.
It's like basically pulled out
of Daredevil Season 2 and dropped
into Daredevil Born Again.
And, Sierra, I mean, I want to hear
what you want to say about
what Van just said, but I also want, of course,
your John Burnfield thoughts.
It's very
incongruent
with the rest of the episode where we're talking about
like the Latvian Heritage Day
celebration and union
busting and Red Hook.
Is this really the show?
That's really the decision they made to make the show.
So here's the problem, right?
This like warmed over David Chase.
I think this is where there were like three or four different versions of this show made.
I think somebody pitched, uh, let's make the wire, but with Daredevil at the center of it as a defense attorney.
Someone was like, no, we have to go back to the original recipe of brooding guys screaming in each other and just beating the shit out of bad guys.
That's another version of it.
And then there is a kind of like, they've talked about this or there's been.
in rumors about like there's like six episodes of it kind of being like she Hulk where it's like
a comic banter with the prosecutor like I was looking for like who played the prosecutor and I don't
think she's going to show up again or something because I couldn't find her on IMDB it was like
Stephanie or whoever's the I'm like oh that's his love interest right like this is popping
and it was like no she's not in the show she was just in one scene or or whatever but yeah I think
that that's it's indicative of there is not a single author of and wait listen to you
you guys talk about Daredevil, it's clear that probably what these projects need is a,
you know what, we're going to go down with the ship, but this is the guardian of what this character
means. This person is the Dave Faloni of Daredevil, the Dave Faloni of Captain America,
whatever. And he might not be for everybody. They might not love, not everybody might not be,
like, that's not as good as Andor. But he is going to respect certain core values because you talk
about like Marvel can't iterate on these toys. It doesn't sound like you really want them to
because you're talking about a conception of a character from the 1970s or 1980s. Like do you really
want, maybe you just want it to be like the originalist version of it. It just needs it's Christopher
Nolan. I mean, the closest analog to Batman in the Marvel character story is Daredevil.
It's a, it's a street level story with a person who has powers, but they're not like
lasers flying out of his eyes. And Frank Miller is the person who,
He didn't fully conceive Daredevil, but he evolved that character the same way he evolved Batman,
which is what Nolan took inspiration from.
So I think you're right that it needs somebody who loves this part of the character,
loves this kind of like duty versus faith.
You named a film director, not a TV showrunner.
On the one hand, yes, but on the other hand, the original Netflix series had three different show,
a different showrunner every single season.
And even the first season had like kind of two, like a changing the guard.
So I think that's not the only thing that could fix it, but it's certainly what, you know,
you're basically saying we need a Tony Gilbril.
Roy for this.
You just need somebody who's like,
obviously they had so many different showrunners
involved in this.
I think the actors had a lot of power
because they had the leverage of like,
we are now as big as these characters
and people want to see Charlie Cox.
Berthall walked away
because he's like, I don't like what you're doing.
When he comes on the screen,
he almost breaks the wheel
because he's like, now it's a different show.
Right.
You know, and now I'm granted,
that may have supposed to happen in episode six
and they were like, we cannot hold Bernthal
for six weeks or something.
But when he comes on, you're kind of like, the rest of the show does not matter.
So I'll say something else about if we go back and look at the Netflix era.
It wasn't just Daredevil that worked.
Luke Cage worked, Jessica Jones worked.
So there was an approach to these characters.
Not you, Iron Fist?
No, not you, Iron Fist, right?
I never watched The Defenders.
How did that turn out?
Please don't.
It was okay.
No.
It really was okay.
Please don't.
I was going back in there.
I haven't seen everything with Daredevil in it because I haven't seen that.
The only thing that held the defenders back, in my opinion,
was just the fact that Iron Fiss is just like unwatchable
in the way that they're just weird decisions that they decided.
Just like a vulnerable, like misuse of Sigourney Weaver.
Bizarre.
But those shows like not just Daredevil,
the whole Netflix MCU experiment was working.
Like Purple Man in the first season of Jessica Jones
was just an intense,
sinister, terrifying villain.
Everything that they were doing on Luke Cage with Mahershal Ali,
all of this stuff was working because there was a clear vision of the New York,
of the type of characterization and the arts and everything that they were trying to do.
MCU television just don't have that.
They do not have that.
They don't give you the version of the character that you know.
They don't give you a version of the character that you can connect with.
they just mutate the character
and then vomit it
onto you. Like, moon night
and all of this different stuff that
this is really not at all
like what you have in mind
when you sign up for these shows.
And to me, once again,
with Daredevil Born Again, you could
come back and just do Daredevil versus
Punisher. Just do it.
Just do a whole thing. I mean, I think
the reason that that is
both appealing to people and this scene
works so well and all of that is that they brought
in the Punisher showrunner to take over in this new Daredevil revamp.
Right. Is that Dario Scarpa? So like he he's like, of course it's going to start working when
Punisher comes on the scene because he's the Punisher guy. And so I think that like I agree with you
entirely. And I think what's interesting listening to the director of this episode talk about it,
it was originally supposed to be a day in the life for both Matt and Fisk. The reason we're on
fiddle fattel beat and all the rest and the minutia of, you know,
bargaining about the probation sentence and the minutia of the red tape and the,
we built this city moments,
so like that,
is to show sort of like the mundanity,
I guess,
that sounds like electric television,
of what it's like to try to operate inside of the system.
But like it was going,
it was intended to be,
and there's still sort of like some remaining moments of it,
a show where the camera just continuously follows characters from morning to night.
We start with like everyone coming out of the club at the break of dawn
and we go directly through a cab across the street to fiddle faddle.
And then we go from there.
And the camera was supposed to like never stop going.
So it was this like kind of high concept idea for an episode.
And they were just sort of like, nope.
We're going to chop it all up and drop Frank Castle in there in a way that makes no sense, you know?
The wire would do stuff like that to where they would just get you caught up on things that you didn't know that you cared about.
They get you caught up on who.
was going to do paperwork or small little things.
So why I could focus on one little thing,
but they would orient a human experience around that.
So you would be like, oh, my God,
this little morality play can be like oriented around one stupid
or one place or the ring or whatever.
Like they would do that.
But you have to have clarity of story there.
You have to know what you.
I don't give a fuck about the fiddle fat,
I'm motherfucking.
To me,
throw me in the bing
like you stole five boxes of fiddle fattle
after you've been arrested 11 times
like what am I supposed to get from that?
I can't believe I gave you another platform
to get your conservative anti-fiddle fiddled takes out.
It's not conservative.
This is respectability politics if I've ever heard of it.
How do you feel about this show being ACAB?
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If you know how the lineage of the white tiger goes,
who got fucked over in this show, right?
We know that, like, there's a new white tiger
that's kind of introduced in this episode.
Yes.
The lady.
Yeah.
The niece.
Yeah.
Meaningless.
Okay.
Like, it doesn't mean.
Well, it's just, like, waving to the audience that knows,
like, here's something you might get, but probably won't.
And to me, that's, like, a big problem with this entire season.
This entire season is just, like, leaning you towards where we're going.
and maybe we will get there in season two,
but it's my problem with all television, as you guys know,
but particularly comic book storytelling on television,
which is it's only interested in set up
and it's not interested in payoff.
And the best TV is great at payoff.
And so I don't really understand
what's appealing about what you were describing
that sort of like day in the life
of a New York City politician
as told by not expert human-like storytellers.
Like no one goes to Daredevil.
Like if you open a guy.
comic book, a Daredevil comic book.
By the eighth or 12th panel,
he's like doing a flip and punching a guy in the face.
That's what Daredevil is.
It is like a meditation on, you know, on faith.
There's some story runs that concentrate a little bit more on the body.
But it's a very physical book.
Like everything, it's very much oriented around his ability to fight.
And so to remove that entirely just feels like completely misunderstanding why we're here.
Well, I think it feeds into Marvel's longstanding idea of what if we took genres we liked
but they're superhero.
We're going to talk about Winter Soldier
as always in a little bit.
That's the example we always use.
What if we use 70s paranoia thriller,
but it's, you know, Steve Rogers.
And so...
Were they citing the wire
and shows like that
as the inspiration?
I'm serious.
Like, did they note that
in this season or the show?
Yeah, they talked about this
as a legal procedural
is sort of something that they want to do.
We have so many of those.
Why do we need that?
You know, they give a She-Hulk
and they're like,
what if Ali McBeal, but it's She-Hulk?
You know what I mean?
And yeah, what if a lot of a little?
illegal procedural, but it's Matt Murdoch. We've got a lawyer, superhero. Why don't we do
a legal procedural? Maybe that's something we'll do. And, you know, similarly, like,
Loki is what if Doctor Who, but Loki, you know what I mean? That's what they've been doing.
It doesn't always work, and it's not working here, especially, I think, because they did not
recast the character and we have this other model to hold it up to, you know? Don't you guys think
it can work to apply that thinking if you just give us both?
Because the whole idea of Daredevil is he's a lawyer who's obsessed with the rule of law, who is also a vigilante who breaks the law.
Like that is the entire conceit of the character.
The fact that he can't see, but he sees better than anyone.
Sure.
The contradiction of the character is the whole intent.
But to only give us one side of that on a TV show.
Would you have cared?
Would you have watched, I guess?
But some of this is packaging.
So would you have cared if it was called Matt Murdoch attorney at law?
And it was about like daredevil trying to like...
Interesting question.
Trying to like shake off the vigilante side of his...
Better call Matt.
I think if it was written by someone who's incredible at that, yeah.
But if it was Vince Jordan, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
But if it was just like, Marvel Studios, you know?
The only thing that I would ask is like, I would ask, why are you doing that?
Yeah.
You know, I would be interested in it.
Like, I, you know, listen to a four-hour lore video on Yoda last night.
But, like, but...
At one X or did you speed it up?
Nah, baby.
You just want one X?
No.
It's just I'm going to get one X.
I'm sitting down.
At a certain point, the TV's going, no sound.
Why did you ask a question?
The Yon video is going?
And then I turned the TV off.
I commit to the Yoda video.
You were two screening it though for a while.
For a while, I was just watching.
But then they caught you.
And then I just like, nah, man,
they start talking about Yon and Palpatine.
A four hour of Yoda video.
And then in another hours of the force and like whatever.
You're very special.
Sean's like, I watch four whole hours of television for you.
And in advance like that's a one of whatever.
Yeah, exactly.
But no, so I probably would have tried it out.
But the thing is, like, if you're going to reinvent the will, the will has to turn.
It has to be functional.
It has to be the same thing.
Like, the problem with the show and the problem with a lot of this stuff is that's cool.
Like, She Hulk, Allie McBill is fine.
Like, Ali McBill is not like why we go to Shehulk, though.
It's like these, the procedural aspect of Daredevil is not why we approach him.
So you essentially have to make your, you're making your, you're lowering your margin for error.
It has to be perfect now.
We also might be feeling the long-term ripple effects of the change in policy that's
happened over the course of the Daredevil Television experiment.
So multiple times they have tried to turn the boat where at one point it was like,
TV is TV, people who can watch these TV shows, they're not going to impact the movies.
Right.
And then it gave that the TV shows a sort of.
like Junior Varsity Field because it was like, I doesn't really
need to watch Agents of Shield. This is not going to affect the
Avengers. Not only that, but it was like almost counter-programming.
Right. Right. Then, with Disney
Plus, they were like, oh, you have to watch
because you never know when
somebody in the fifth episode might jump out
and be like, scrolls.
Let's see.
And, and
But even in that, you have to do that.
Guys, all of this is worth it for me to
watch Chris go scrolls.
Through multiple seasons
of this shit and we were like,
wait a second, this doesn't matter at all.
Like, it doesn't matter.
Like, it doesn't matter at all.
And now the problem is that they've kind of tried to be like,
no, actually, you don't need to know anything about anything.
Right.
You can just watch this like you watch Law and Order.
But it would help be helpful if you knew who Punisher was.
Like, let me ask you guys a question since you've watched all of these shows.
I feel like it might be a tonnage issue for me.
Oh, yeah.
Like, I watched the first two episodes of Adolescence last night.
I haven't finished it.
Please don't spoil it.
But I had a sense of sad.
You guysel Punisher shows up in that.
It's sad.
Yeah, that would be exciting.
But I had a sense of satisfaction.
and this feeling of momentum watching that show
because I knew it would be over soon.
Yes.
And with Daredevil,
I think this idea that they're pursuing,
which will make whatever I've said so far
in this conversation,
moot when he puts the suit back on
in one more episode or two more episodes,
if they had just compressed that
and made this a four or five episode thing,
wouldn't that have made more sense?
If they just applied like the Sherlock methodology
of movie C to these characters
and they were like,
we're going to make three 90-minute episodes
and then we'll come back nine months later
and do another two or something.
But like there is the only reason why this is two nine episode seasons
that are going to be really pretty close to one another
is because it helps their quarters.
It helps us like whatever.
Like that's all corporate.
They had an idea and the idea blew up.
But I'll say something else is that they've done that.
They've given you the six hour, the eight hour experience.
And then those fucking suck, right?
They've attempted it.
Like what?
What's the good?
Secret invasion?
Secret invasion.
That's what they do all the time.
All the time they give you six episodes.
They give you eight episodes.
They've done that, right?
They've, what they don't have...
Again, I'm shooting for like four hours.
Yeah, I get it.
What they don't have, what they don't have with the original Netflix show had...
One yoga lore video.
Like, what they don't have with the original show had was a sense of purpose in character and tone.
Like, that show.
was saying, hey, I'm going to drop you into this place with all of these competing motivations.
We talk about the arc of Daredevil, the arc of Fisk, like learning about Fisk.
By the end of that show, you are so intimately acquainted with the character of Wilson Fisk that you're not sure it's not his show.
So they...
And you're saying...
And you're saying Mr. and Mrs. Smith-esque marriage counseling scenes is not doing the same
work for you? It's just not the same thing. What the fuck is that stuff? Why? Is that seriously
important to this story? I skip. You skip. I skip that. You skip that. You skip.
CR. Coming out antith therapy. Okay.
Wow. Just to give me an animal pack of vitamins. Can I just say one thing about Fisk?
Just one by two points. One, shout to Michael Gandalfini. He's actually a really fun actor.
He's good. And his character is one of the reasons why I'm watching this show because I'm like,
What's up with this guy?
This is like little Steve Bannon of Staten Island.
But he has a real arc.
He has a real important scene.
He's also like a little bit good and a little bit better.
He's also not acting like he's in like a Ken Loach movie or something.
Like he's having fun,
which is part of the problem with the show,
is that it's not that much fun to watch these people be very upset with their lives for four hours.
I think that Sean might like a three to four episode short season like in and out.
Van would probably take a 22 episode.
episode season if he thought like it was good.
What we're probably all going to
arrive at when we start and
we can start or it's your show.
I just want a one special presentation
Whirlpool by night. That's what I will.
That's the thing.
That was super cool.
Did you guys? Did you guys? That was awesome.
Yes. But what has been the thing
across all of our pods for
the movies, for the shows, for
what are we like kind of like
agitating about right now? It's been
this crisis of competence.
It's just been this like,
well, you know, the scripts weren't done
and we decided midway through we were going to make a completely different show
but obviously Bernthal scheduled and permit for certain things
or he didn't want to do it so like now we're doing something else
and you know what, we're going to put it up.
And then they want like that's why we are where we are.
There's too many missing pieces at the bottom of the Jenga tower now
and they can't afford to stop pulling pieces.
And it's just, well, it's just content churn.
And that is when I feel like, excuse me, I mean,
but that is when I feel like they're holding me hostage with my childhood.
Yes.
Because I'll come back.
I'm serious.
Because I'll come back and I'll come back.
Yeah.
Like you bring up Nolan.
Nolan looked at Batman and Nolan went, okay, well, Schumacher fucked Batman by making
Batman a living comic book.
It doesn't really work that way, right?
Well, let me strip Batman down, bringing the best actors I can and tell a slow burning
story of a man trying to save his city and then also access who his father was.
Let me do that over and over and over again.
and he'll get more broken.
Did Batman have a thing with his dad?
He has a whole thing?
So he does that entire thing, and it works,
but that's like, that's a new toy.
That's like a different, that's a different thing.
That's a different way.
And to me,
it doesn't seem like Marvel has any interest
in making that type of stuff
with filmmakers can take their own takes on these characters.
I'm not asking for people to lose their jobs.
I'm legitimately curious.
how we were getting to the place, though, where they're like, yeah, we've delayed Brave New World for quite some time.
And now the version that we want to put out is the version where we staple John Carla Esposito into it, but pull him out two-thirds of the way through the movie.
And I think we're like, why is that arrived at like, this is a pretty normal thing to have happen.
We're in a triage era of Marvel where they just sort of like overreach, massively overreached.
massively overreach
due to corporate mandate.
We've talked about this
over and over again
on all of our pods, right?
That due to the streaming wars
and due to the fact
that people aren't going to the cinema
anymore and due to COVID
and due to all these other things,
they have to make all of these shows
and it has just stretched them
way too thin
and now they're making less stuff.
And this is
maybe Wonder Man.
We'll see what happens with Wonder Man,
but this is sort of, to my view,
the last project
that's of the triage.
era. We're just deep in the pit doing the best we can with like what what exists. And then we're
headed into Thunderbolts and Fantastic Four, which are allegedly from a more assured we're focusing
on fewer things era. We haven't heard stories of like massive reshoots or troubles on set and
stuff like that around Thunderbolts and Fantastic Four. So I'm not promising that those things are
going to be perfect unless you have and you want to say. No, I mean, I think that there's been several
writers on those. I mean, like these are big projects.
Armageddon had 17 writers.
I'm not saying, like, I'm not naive about that.
But it looked like a Michael Bay movie the entire time.
You know, like, and so I think part of the issue here for me is, like, whether we're
talking about the electric state or we're talking about Daredevil or we're talking about
Captain America, Brave New World, or like anything where you're just like, what happened here?
Yeah.
Why did, like, you guys are like Hollywood and.
You have so much money, so much.
This is supposed to be the best.
So many resources.
You're supposed to be, like, at the end of the day, you're supposed to, if it, if you're spending
this much money on it, would.
You want to make the best possible thing.
And I think with Marvel especially, and then I want to roll on to another segment,
but I think with Marvel especially, because they were so good at it for so long.
And not that many people in the sort of like creative lineup at the core of it have changed.
They've had a few people leave, but not, you know, like majority is still there.
So why are they making this shoddy stuff when they made such good monoculture,
grip on you even if you don't like a fucking superhero,
you have to know what's going on in the MCU storytelling.
And that's sort of what I wanted to get at the heart of here in this podcast today.
I think that you're right.
You guys have probably recorded hundreds more hours about this than I have in my life.
But I think the sort of like miracle that you chronicled in your book of the First Avengers movie set them up for like an eight-year window where we all were just magically insorcelled by the finality of that story.
And ever since that moment, when they closed that story in a way that I thought was wonderful,
they have just not been able to get us interested in what is the overarching theme.
There have been a variety of reasons for that.
Issues with actors, issues with story, certain movies failing that they didn't think we're going to fail,
et cetera, et cetera.
But there's not any forward momentum in one direction around it.
And so now every project that comes up is more susceptible to the hole poking that it was very easy to do
when Thor the Dark World came out.
No shots to Mallory.
But like, that's a deeply flawed, messy movie that you could do the same thing for that we just did for Daredevil Born again or that we could do when Thunderbolts comes out.
And it's like pretty good, but maybe not as good as we hoped.
And you can see some of the seams.
It's just that there was this overarching feeling like we're going somewhere.
Maybe even somewhere we've never been before as fans of this stuff.
No one feels that way anymore.
Now everyone is like, I need to go back to how I felt in 2019.
That's why we're bringing back Robert Downey Jr.
That's why everyone thinks Chris Evans is coming back.
even if he says he is not, because it's not about what's in the future.
It's about what we used to feel like and how can we try to get to that place again.
What can we reclaim? Yeah.
So the reason I've assembled this panel, not just because I adore you guys, and it's so nice to see all of you.
But also, like, CR is our TV expert, Sean Fennessee, our film expert, fan Lathen, our nerd expert.
And I think together there is this sort of like, how can we diagram what has worked in superhero storytelling?
together as some kind of gauntlet maybe.
You know what's so funny?
Were the stones and the gauntlet?
I was like going to make a corny Avengers Ascendant.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
Which stone are you?
He's the TV stone, man.
The funny thing about the way that you just set the three of us up is that you
are actually all three of those things all in one person.
But like on a more shallow level that I think all of you guys are.
No one knows that.
No one listening is like, yeah, she is more shallow.
The Watch Big Picture Boys.
Joyne-Rompson.
But I think.
that, like, what I wanted to, you know, we just sort of talked about what's not working for us in Daredevil.
I wanted us to talk about superhero storytelling that we've loved and maybe try to consider
what has worked. And I just arbitrarily picked the last 25 years, perhaps inspired by the Big Pick's
current project of rolling through the best films the last 25 years that you and Amanda are doing.
Yeah, it's going to be actually 24 consecutive superhero movies, which I'm really excited about
to countdown.
Can't wait for the Matt of Web episode. So let's start with TV.
Sure.
Chris Ryan, what is the best superhero television show the last 25 years?
It's The Watchman.
I think it's personally don't think it's super close.
But I'm judging that as a piece of television and not a piece of superhero
puck culture, right?
So that's obviously based on one of the most critically acclaimed and beloved pieces of comic
book writing ever with The Watchman.
But what Lindelhoff did with that and the way he cast it and the way he made it feel
applicable to contemporary times.
And I think maybe
he would have wanted to do more,
but it felt like a very complete statement
to Sean's point about
feeling like it's not like constantly
just being like, hey, and in this, there's a
stinger, so stick around because who knows
where Dr. Manhattan goes next.
It felt very complete and very moving.
And also, I know we're going to talk
a little bit about the idea of superheroes
losing their grip on the monoculture, but
within the bubble of like
my friends and I, like it felt like
a really important two months in TV
where we're just like every Monday
we're just talking about this so glowingly
talking about the ideas
and it transcended off the page
into the real world in a way that I thought
was pretty unique and wonderful.
There were people who
hadn't heard,
and this is a statement on so many different things,
that hadn't heard of the Tulsa race massacre
until that show came out.
Yeah.
Yeah. And, you know, if you talk to,
obviously we all have different people,
But, you know, I remember I made Tommy.
That's how I met court.
Like, I was like, Tommy, I want to meet the guy who wrote that one episode.
He does not talk about anything that has to do with superheroes
when he's talking about how he came up with that and how he wrote to me
the single best episode of superhero television that I've ever seen.
It's talking about anything about it.
He talks about the themes and the story and then how he could weave them
and use those characters to tell it.
And, I mean, that's what that show was.
That show was examining so many different things through the lens.
For us, Watchman fans, the fucking shit didn't even make sense of us.
Like, I was...
The Jeremy Iron stuff, you're like, what the fuck is happening?
Like, where's Vite?
Like, what's going on?
And I'm sitting there, like, and I'm watching it with Kalika, and she's like, what's going on?
I'm like, I'm having trouble, like, connecting to this because I've read and reread and reread this over and re-read this over and over and over again.
and watch cartoons on it
and watch
Zach's overhated movie on it
and they're not...
Appropriately hated movie on it.
That's a good movie.
And they're not giving me the candy.
And she's like, why don't you just let go?
Just watch this.
And like, once you got into it,
it made the same points as the original
almost in a lot better
and more contemporary way.
I agree.
Sean Fantasy.
Oh, no, no, no. Van Leehan, what's the best superhero TV show the last 25 years?
TV show?
Yeah.
So, if I'm on a TV show, I'm going to go to the original Daredevil Netflix show.
To me, it was that established to me.
And Netflix was in its weird prestige era.
Like, here we're coming.
Like, House of Cards is right back here.
Like, we're starting to dominate.
And it was such a cultural moment to take that type of.
character and really get into the guts and the weeds of it.
The brutality in terms of what the characters are being asked to do.
The action of the show, the weight and feel of the force of it.
It just, it was appointment television.
You could not take your eyes away.
Like a brand new star.
Obviously, you had been in what Boroughamire or something like that.
Yeah.
But like a brand new star.
Like to me, just.
It was perfectly executed.
And it was very meaningful.
Like, it was, we're going to take Daredevil seriously.
And it was a reinvention of Daredevil because the Ben Affleck Daredevil was like so
cartoony a little bit.
So I thought it was an outstanding achievement.
And it bore fruit.
Punisher.
Jessica Jones, all of these shows, it bore fruit.
So I thought that was not just the best, but the most important show.
Sean Fantasy.
It's kind of a cheat.
I mean, I still think that the first.
four episodes of Wanda Vision
is the most interesting thing
that they've ever tried to do on television
and was like a,
seemed like a real vision
and not white vision,
Chris's favorite character.
And formerly compelling
an attempt to kind of like
make us a little uncomfortable
with what is actually going on
inside the heads of some of these characters,
which is something that I find the movies
really struggle to do.
It was beautiful at times.
I thought it really a lot.
lost the plot when it was like, don't forget, we're in a Marvel property and there needs to be a battle.
They have to fight above tower.
Yeah.
I was like, this is way so far afield from what was cool about this.
But the other thing I'll say is just for the sake of television in terms of like what a good TV show can accomplish, I think Smallville is like maybe a little underappreciated in this way.
Because TV in that like 22 episode format that like I'm with my friends and it makes me feel at home.
I grew up watching Lewis and Clark.
which I really, really liked.
And was an interesting version, I think, of what Daredevil Born Again would like to be.
It's a newspaper show.
Yes.
Yeah.
Which has a little bit of Superman in it.
Yeah.
And Smallville was more of a Superman show than that.
But it was like smaller stakes.
I didn't watch every episode of Smallville or anything.
But when I would watch it, I would be like, this is Dawson's Creek for Superman.
You couldn't watch episode of Smallville.
Yeah, there was like $9.4.
Yeah.
But when it first came, it was something very novel about it when it first came around.
Yeah.
To me though that just kind of speaks to my relative disinterest in TV.
Sure.
That I can't really...
Even like, Loki was very, very acclaimed and loved, especially in certain corners of the ringer.
And I liked it just fine.
But I never felt that feeling of like, I got to find out what happens on Loki next.
You know, I just, I couldn't get interested in the storytelling the same way as I could
the way I could reese through a comic book in 19 minutes or I could finish a movie in two hours and nine minutes.
So it's just not the perfect suitcase.
for all my stuff.
Yeah.
You know?
You guys have all picked my top three choices.
I'm serious.
Like Wanda Vision, Daredevil and Watchmen.
I think it's Watchmen for me,
but Daredevil season one especially.
And when Mal and I were talking about
the rewatch that we did,
and I told her, and she was like quite surprised,
but I told her that the hallway fight,
the beginning of Daredevil season one,
is like a top superhero ever moment for me.
Just a guy battling his way down
a hallway. And there's something visually iconic about it and emotionally iconic about it, the way it connects
to the rest of that episode, which is a flashback to his dad, Batlin Jack, like all that sort of stuff.
I think about it all the time. Watchman as a whole, I think about all the time. That's like,
and the way that it's the perfect example, I love that Van was talking earlier about the idea of your toys.
David Lindeloff as like a watchman fanboy
and then did that interesting thing with it
rather than try to recreate it faithfully
or
or go in another direction just to prove that he could.
He wound up sort of weaving something new
into the old in a way that is just really
responsible fanboying, you know what I mean?
In a way that a lot of people, I would say,
playing with the Star Wars toys these days
are incapable of doing.
And then Wanda Vision, the way that Wanda Vision was like,
not only I thought a great television series that I think about all the time,
but like a love letter to television,
an incredible calling card from Marvel into the Disney Plus era
that did not wind up panning out.
But like the way that both Watchmen and all three of those shows
broke out from the core superhero Stan audience into the large,
you know, like getting Emmy nominations, Emmy wins.
You know, people were like, what is this Daredevil thing on Netflix?
It really
They were ambassadors
for this kind of storytelling
in the best possible way
and I think it's what
we should always be striving for.
Yeah, absolutely.
Do you think that
do you think with your concerns
because I'm trying to like kind of kind of
connect the two things that you two were saying
but do you think that
part of it would be
a statement of intent in the beginning of a series of television?
Like if Loki was just Doctor Who
And it was like on for 20 weeks of the year.
And it was just they were flying around the TVA and visiting rent fares and stuff like that.
That that would be, you probably, would you say like, I don't want to watch this anyway?
It would be easy for me to ignore.
I mean, I think they've created a lot of things that you shouldn't, you can ignore if you want to be up to speed with the movie universe,
which they have clearly indicated to us is more important than the TV shows.
So, but if they were just like this is a separate, it's like the what if show.
which I think is cool.
I'm glad it exists.
I've watched a bunch of episodes of it,
but I never watch it thinking,
like, well, this is really going to explain something
that's coming in the future.
I can enjoy it on its own terms.
And so it could be 22 episodes.
It could be five episodes.
But if it was something that was disconnected entirely,
and part of what was compelling about Wanda Vision
was like, this doesn't really even feel super synced up.
It's happening inside of somebody's head.
I mean, the thing about Wanda Vision,
and they haven't,
the MCU hasn't gotten close to what they were.
able to do right in Wanda Vision.
Correct.
They haven't even gotten in the same ballpark of it.
Wanda, you already knew.
You already knew Wanda.
You already knew Vision.
What you didn't know was what was happening to them.
And why?
No fucking clue.
Like, this major huge event had just happened, which was endgame.
But you don't know where they are.
You don't know what's happening to them.
You're paying attention to every aspect of the show.
You're pouring over it.
What does this commercial mean?
What's what's happening to her?
Who's doing this to her?
Like, what's the deal?
They made you care about her.
Her brother died.
And that was a distant memory in terms of what was happening to her inside of that place.
And they have not really been able to do that.
Save Loki.
Loki was kind of the same thing.
Loki is a very close second for me.
And I know Miles Mayfrey, but I really liked Agatha Long.
I enjoyed it too, but she's just not a character that anybody gets to fuck about.
But I enjoyed it.
I did.
The thing I will say about...
Because she's a woman.
Is that what you're saying?
Get out of here.
The thing I will say about Wanda Vision
is that it was Jack Schaefer
who went on to do Agatha Aal Along
and Matt Shackman,
who had directed a million episodes
of It's Always Sunny
as well as Game of Thrones, etc.
These were people who know
how to do television.
And they were clearly doing television.
And Marvel, that was the rarest case
of head writer and head writer
and head director working together
in that weird Marvel Disney Plus era
where they were like,
we don't believe in TV showrunners.
They have allegedly moved away from that.
But, you know, that's part of why
there is this, I love, I love them,
but there's this like, there was this arrogance
of we know what we're doing better
than the people who've been making TV for so long
and we can disrupt that model
and do it the Marvel way.
And they simply couldn't, you know?
And so I think in terms of what you guys were asking for
before, which is like a clear creative
vision. That's what a fucking
show with clear creative visions a lot,
but I think that they fall victim
to like, it would be really great as to get
the next, the next
tiger in here. You know what I mean? Just to give
like a little bit of a tiger. You know what I mean?
And the same thing would happen, I think,
towards the
towards the end of Wanda vision.
It was just like, it got subsumed by like, is that
who's the doctor waiting around the corner and
who's like, is Mephisto here? And I think
I was partially responsible for that.
But there was a lot of like signaling and a lot of like, okay, so like now what's really, why is I really watching this?
Maybe we're getting to the idea that like these are two fundamentally different experiences.
They have been for most of the history of popular culture and they can't be treated the same necessarily.
Let me ask you a question.
If Wanda Vision had ended in a slightly different kind of way, in the way that the way it was sort of setting us up for, which was in a more twilight zone fashion.
Yeah.
With like a kind of cleverness, but then also a closed loop.
where it was not about pushing us forward
into the storytelling,
but it was more just like...
Into multiverse of madness
and everything that followed, yeah.
If it was just,
this happened inside of Wanda's mind
and they found a clever way to close that,
would the show have been more acclaimed
or less acclaimed?
Would it have been a better...
I think it would have been more acclaimed
it might have been more rejected on a family.
I think that's what...
Yeah, that's the tradeoff.
And so they were afraid of that.
Well, you...
I mean, they're not afraid of it.
You can't do it.
The thing has to lead into the next thing.
They know that because if it does...
Because 13-year-olds are actually not watching this stuff.
They're actually checking out,
like spoilers and being like, oh,
does this person show up? But who's responsible for that?
Kevin, but if the thing doesn't lead to the next thing,
especially the way that we're going right now,
one of the biggest complaints from the fans right now
is that this thing doesn't have any place
in the overall MCU story.
And that's my preference for, like I said,
an Agatha All Along or A Werewolf by Night,
where it's just sort of like, here's this story that we're telling.
Agatha Allong is.
launching a young Avenger character, but like,
not really, you know.
This is the deal.
This is a deal.
And this is part of this stuff.
And I'm about to blame the one group of people that never wants to be blamed for anything.
The fans, the Eternals come out.
And it's like, okay, the Eternals, I know these characters.
And then the fans go, well, fuck.
Where were the Eternals at when Thanos was attacking the whole earth?
Where did they are?
And then Marvel goes, okay, we have to come up with why the Eternals didn't fucking help out with Thanos.
And the fans, okay, so the Aero's, okay, so the Aero's,
Space Engineers, not Rerich's. Okay, where's Reitich's? Okay.
Those characters from Werewolf by Night, people are going to be like, where are they at?
Where are the monsters? Why aren't people getting abducted and all of that? The fans pour over this
stuff and raise the expectations and raise the threshold for this stuff so high that no one can
We're going to be able to alien in our core audience. I'm just being for me. This is the definition of an NMP for me. Like, this is not my
problem. Like I, I, and part of the reason why I have kind of, you know, cut bait on a lot of
this is because that became the prevailing sentiment. But it wasn't only that always. It's
because the height of success looked like that. Like the height of the interconnected. Yes.
Yeah. But it's like heroin, honestly. Yes. They got addicted to it. They got addicted to it.
It was this thing that they did to innovate superhero storytelling is they're like, all of our
movies are connected. And we're like, what? And then every movie becomes a must see movie. And you've got to see
it because we're all building up to end.
game of a film that I agree is like a massive success, obviously, by every metric.
And then they're like, okay, we're going to keep going.
But it becomes too burdensome, especially when you add the TV component, to account for
the whereabouts of every single person all the time inside of this universe, which is partially
why the multiverse is here.
I'm right now to wipe and reset.
Yeah.
Going to see Brave New World with Sean and Amanda.
And at points, it was so boring that Amanda was actually just looking at me, not to
get my attention or to make me feel uncomfortable, but she was like, your.
more interesting than what's like this
the eighth minute of this fight.
And I was like, this is actually, she's right.
Like I thought it would be weird if we were looking at each other.
But like I was like, this is a pretty strange.
This is a pretty boring film.
And yet still, he and I were like, stay in your seat.
We have to wait.
We have to wait for the post-credit sequence,
which was the epitome of like,
why don't you punch me in the dick?
That post-credit sequence where he was like,
what does he say?
The multiverse.
or something. And I was just like, you got to be.
No, he's like, the others are coming, right? Isn't that what he says?
Yeah.
What? God bless Tim Blake Nelson.
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The fans are used to
end the comic book structure
That even the end of Batman Begins
Ends with what
There's this guy that's been making trouble
Blah blah blah blah blah
Here's his calling card
And it's like oh my God
I want to show up to the next movie
Because the Joker
I didn't care
The Batman Begins ruled
I would have
It just that's the thing
If the movie's good enough, if the show is good enough, you don't need the stinger.
I understand that.
But what I'm saying is there are very few comic book stories that don't lead to another comic book story.
It's very true.
And Marvel was able to perfect that, which is why the MCU worked so well.
When it did.
The one differentiation, which I'm sure has been picked over, but having just read a bunch of comic books in the last two days,
is that comic books are leading to the next issue featuring the same characters.
They're not leading you unless you are at one of these, you know, culminating events,
which happens, you know, I guess more frequently now.
But when I was a kid, once every three to five years, maybe, when a Secret Wars would come along.
Well, it depends on the book.
Like, you would have the X-Men that would have their deal.
Yeah, yeah.
And then you'd have, and they would cross over it with the characters in their world.
But not common.
Not huge.
I mean, in the Daredevil run that I was reading, like, it's seven characters.
And then the occasional big bad who would show up who you'd be like, I'd never seen this person before or they're kind of reintroducing a voice.
Every once while they're being asterisk out at the bottom of the page is like go back to issue 402 find out why this guy's mad.
Yes.
But like once Electra comes into that run, she's just a huge part of that run for a year.
And we're constantly like, what's up with Daredevil and Electra?
We're not like, hey, I wonder what I wonder what Thor is doing right now.
It's like, no, we're in Hell's Kitchen.
We're not thinking about Thor.
He's not a part of this story.
and he's maybe never going to be a part of this story.
And we were content with that.
So the fact that that is basically, like, not only is it over,
it's like not possible.
But you were so jazzed if Thor showed up in the book, though.
If Thor showed up out of nowhere, you were so fucking jazz.
A team up.
There was nothing better than a fucking team up.
Like, dude, you were so jazz if you were reading that book
and out of nowhere, Jack of Hearts is in that bitch.
It needed to make sense, though.
It needed to fit.
It needed to fit with the tone of the,
the book that you were reading.
But it also was just like a three-issues swing through.
You know what I mean?
Yeah.
I mean, that's the thing is that like the material that's within any given frame of a comic
book might cost $28 million to render on screen.
Yeah.
But you can be like, uh, and turn the page.
You know what I mean?
Comic book runs, like, even if I get like an anthology, like I was thinking about
some of the ones that I was reading in the early 2000s and like Age of Apocalypse was like
the one that I loved the most.
But like I would zone out for pages.
on end or like skip ahead
a little bit. You could have a much
more passive relationship with it,
whereas this is not only conditioned us
to be addicted to what's
the next leak, what's the next rumor, what's the next
spoiler, what's the next stinger, but it also
feels like you don't really
understand what's going on if you haven't
seen, like you wouldn't understand Brave
New World if you hadn't watched the Falcon show.
Right. You know, like there is like a kind of
almost a flaw
in the storytelling mechanism now.
Right. And it's the other
It's the other side of the thing that works so well from them
is now people feel alienated, like there's too much homework.
I remember my sister who, like, is not a huge comic book superhero person
but she loves Spider-Man, and she went to go see the first Tom Holland Spider-Man.
She's like, what the fuck?
I need to have seen another movie in order to understand this first Spider-Man movie with a new Spider-Man.
What's going on?
Let's talk about movies even more than we already have.
Chris Ryan, what's the best?
Well, to your point.
Yeah.
I think you can watch Logan, which is my favorite superhero movie.
Of the last 25 years.
Of the last 25 years.
Yeah.
I think Logan, for me, like, I think
Dark Night is, like, superior
cinematically or whatever,
and it's obviously stood the test of time,
but I think Logan is a perfect superhero movie.
I think it's the perfect performance of a character.
It's probably my favorite superhero character, Wolverine.
I think it's an incredible, like,
beginning, middle end story that was perfect
until Deadpool and Wolverine ruined it.
And then I just think totally had, like,
just enough, like,
there's a little bit of spaghetti western,
in this. There's a little bit of samurai movie in this.
Yeah. But it's
basically like a superhero movie
and I just thought
totally, totally nailed it. And I think
also in something like Logan, like
Charles Xavier
is there, like, you know, Patrick Stewart is there
but you don't need to even
have watched all of
the X-Men films in order
to feel that movie.
No. Absolutely.
It's Winter Soldier for me
and I'll tell you why. It's watching
Winter Soldier with someone who didn't know about the comics, right?
And I realized that we were watching the movie for two different reasons, right?
Like, Buck's thing comes off and it shows his face, and the person I'm with goes,
that's his friend.
Oh, my God.
And I'm like, yeah, it's the one.
Yeah, it's like, yeah.
And I'm like, oh, wait, you don't get, you don't know that.
Like, you didn't put that together.
Like, you're not initiated.
The story is.
working.
Like when that happens, you go, oh my God, that's his friend.
I'm like, yeah, this character's been around for years and years.
The story is working.
And when you look deeper into that, it is a completely different version of Steve Rogers
than you get in the first movie and they establish it right away.
Through story.
Dive into water.
Get out.
Fuck everyone up on boat.
Confident, clear in what he's supposed to do, has been through it.
now gets what being Captain America is. And he's thrust into the situation where he's forced
to question every single thing that the MCU has now made us believe. Like all of the stuff
that they've set up, now he has to like litigate in his mind whether or not this is the right
thing to do, which is the last thing that Captain America is supposed to, he always does
the right thing. Yeah. So putting him in a situation where he doesn't know what the right thing
to do is or who the right people, so we asked a question everything, was just unbelievably compelling.
And it took a character to be honest with you. People never gave a fuck about, really, and made
them into a legitimate movie icon. And so when I go back and think, what's the highest level of
superhero storytelling? Dark Night is better movie storytelling. Logan is definitely better movie
storytelling. But superhero storytelling is probably Winter Soldier for me.
Sean Fantasy
I mean I've watched the Dark Night more than any of these movies
For sure and the most
I always say the most I feel like all of us are like
Let's not pick the obvious one.
Yeah, but I do want to acknowledge that like the most like hair standing up
On my arm's feeling is watching the Dark Night
And a lot of it is oriented around Heath Ledger
But a lot of it is because of the great baggage we bring to the table with Joker
And watching him become a different kind of Joker that then becomes the idea
the idea of that character
in your head forever.
So I will say that
a movie that is similar to Logan
that is similar to Winter Soldier
that is similar to the Dark Night
that I think is probably the best at this
is Ray Lanark?
No, is Spider-Man 2.
Which is not an origin story.
You're close.
It's a sequel.
Like all of these other movies are sequels.
You bring with it
this understanding of where the character is.
It feels the most like reading a comic book
where you're reading a comic book and a new character is introduced, a new villain is introduced,
and you're like, oh, shit, everything is different now.
And the introduction of Doc O'Cock in that movie, the Alfred Molina performance, honestly, the way that
the action works in a movie that was made in 2002 is so far ahead of, you know, it is that like
Spielbergian, the mechanics of the filmmaking is incredible.
Toby McGuire is perfectly cast.
He's not just Peter learning how to put on the suit.
the same way Daredevil is wearing the black robes
and the first, you know, he is Spider-Man at that point.
Obviously, I'm a big Ramey nerd,
so that's part of what's influencing the decision.
But, like, that movie holds up
and still looks good and feels fun
and doesn't feel weighed down by everything
that we just spent 40 minutes complaining about.
Yeah.
You know, like, certainly Toby showed up
in future Spider-Man movies in the MCU,
but those movies kind of still stand on their own
without any regret about where they took the characters,
even though Spider-Man 3 kind of sucks, nevertheless.
I was about to say,
I can't believe we're defending Spider-N-3 on this podcast.
I'm not really.
Great picks.
I want to add it to the mix.
I will say Avengers Endgame, just as...
It's really Winter Soldier for me, and I might talk about Y for a second,
but like Avengers End Game as like an absolute singular accomplishment of years,
of filmmaking, of franchise building, of the way in which they got us to care about so many characters
and brought it all together,
and there's no way that should have worked.
There's no way that, you know, people, again,
people who aren't dialed all the way
into superhero storytelling
were invested in Avengers Endgame.
Everyone went to go see Avengers Endgame
because it was just the story of our time
for several years.
And I guess to wrap Winter Soldier,
the thing about Winter Soldier,
you mentioned that's his friend.
I've heard you tell a story before.
I love that story.
Like, the French,
the love between Steve and Bucky in that movie,
the character, emotion, forward thrust of the MCU at its best,
you know, the found family stuff,
all the stuff that Mal and I love to cry over.
Like, that was a priority for Marvel beyond even, like, spectacle
and all the other things that they had to get right.
They were trying to tell the story of Tony Stark,
a broken man, or, you know, Steve Rogers,
a guy just trying to do right in the world and help his friend.
And so that emotional buy-in that we got,
it wasn't just sort of like the shock and awe
of like this looks sick or whatever.
And Spider-Man too has it and Logan has it, right?
Logan, this like broken man at the end of his life,
that emotional investment we have in that.
Or Spider-Man too, I mean, we're about to, in a second,
very briefly run through like some timeline stuff.
But that sort of like everyone on the subway helps Spider-Man
in a post-9-11 New York is an iconic cinematic moment.
And so all of these things exist.
They're all different flavors, though.
They're all different flavors.
They hit at different times, all the movies that we picked.
And I guess my question is talking about all the things that we celebrate,
coming off of the back of, like, the biggest movie of this year so far is Captain America Brave New World.
By a wide margin.
That is the biggest box office success of the year.
Do you know what the number three highest grossing movie in America is this year?
What is it?
One of them days.
Wow.
That's a good movie.
It is a good movie, but that's interesting.
Yeah.
So the question is like, I guess the reason I want to sort of get to the bottom of what is good superhero storytelling or how do we fix it, is that maybe that like nostalgia thing that the MC was pulling on right now.
How do we get back to these?
Will we ever get back to?
To me.
These make comic movies great again?
Is that, is that, but like.
You said it not me.
No, no, no.
But like, what is the monoculture?
What are we looking for?
Is it Landman?
Is it Traders?
I don't even know, like, is it TikTok?
Like, is it severance?
Like, what is it?
I have a terrible answer, but I can't escape it is that politics is the monoculture now.
Okay.
And that that is the thing that, like, if you were going into a room and you were going to think of one topic that at least everyone would have an opinion on or have an experience with.
I think the opposite is true for many people right now.
Okay.
I think many people are working very hard to not get it.
I think it's maybe it has the biggest mind share of anything that exists in the world right now that you could get the most people.
to talk about it. Okay, let me rephrase it. No, I think you can rephrase it and, you know,
retreat from your take. But I think it's inescapably true. If you walk in anywhere right now,
like, I don't know that people don't want to talk about it, but you cannot escape discussing
it. You can't. You are in a way that like when, try to think of something else, like, okay,
the Kendrick Lamar Drake Battle. We got monoculturally on that. We got a little,
did. We got them on. It got
Super Bowl. That halftime show.
Bill potted about it. Yeah. That's
the bar right there. We got there on it. But like
every single
place that at least I go, and maybe
people know this, know who, hey, what do you think that
we talk about Trump? We talk about the
Democrats. We talk about Tesla. We talk about Elon Musk.
It's so fun. This is not my experience. And it's because I think
everything has folded into politics.
politics has captured Hollywood
politics is captured music
But you're on CNN talking about this
They know you and they know what your interests are
I wasn't trying to make a blanket
I know that you are like
I can't do the Department of Education
Every day
Not only can I not
I feel like the people who are at a similar station
In my life the parents I run into
dropping my kid off at school
They do not want to talk about that
If you bring that up
Well I genuinely think there's fear
That you might stumble into someone
Who disagrees with you
And find yourself
having a conversation.
Yeah.
Yeah, I think you don't,
I think people don't want that.
I think I wasn't going to retreat.
I was going to reshape it by saying
I think that's getting such a
disproportionate amount of coverage
and also, whether it's
your personal experience, my personal experience,
a lot of people are like,
I'm not,
I'm always
sub-tutaneously aware
of what is going on in that way,
that the idea of being like,
so what's up with Thanos?
Is he still out there?
Like, you know,
I don't think it's a one-to-one, but I do think that there was a moment where, like, we would do 10 pods a week about this.
And now, I don't know.
There's definitely been a sea change.
When I talk about miss, I don't know that politics is going to be my answer, though I think it's not a bad answer.
Though I've had the experience that Sean has had, people are just like, I can't talk about it right now.
Like, I'm still grieving.
I'll get to it eventually.
You know what I mean?
Sort of thing.
But, like, I think that what I miss about the monoculture, which is all but evaporated.
is like the ability to talk to people about Game of Thrones every week or whatever.
Like that common cause that we could find around silly things, but story matters to me.
Like all of that has washed away until we're just siloed into these two sides in this like ideological battle.
And so we don't have these other things that unite us as like, we all love, you know, whatever the biggest show on TV is right now.
That's not happening anymore.
and I think we're worse off for that.
Because even we talk about Yellowstone.
I would watch Yellowstone and I would get into Yellowstone, right?
There were people who didn't like Yellowstone for philosophical reasons
because of what they felt like Taylor Sharon and is trying to say to America.
We talked about this a little bit about Lioness and we laugh about it, right?
We laugh about some of the times that he injects his politics into the show a little bit.
But to me, it's about badass CIA chicks kicking ass.
And there's nothing political about it.
You know what I'm saying?
It's about it's about...
It's about...
It's about the shit that I like.
Which is...
Chicks doing coups.
You know what I'm saying?
And so to me, I don't feel like, yeah, you know,
I had to listen to a three-minute monologue on George W. Bush,
but it was worth it.
You know?
So I think...
A lot of this stuff is changing.
But in terms of the MCU, I will say this.
If anything has the opportunity to...
United Nations.
It's that.
And I'll tell you why is because we're going to get some version of our heroes for as long as we're here.
We're going to get some version.
These movies aren't about superheroes.
They're about human beings who are super.
And if you approach the storytelling from that standpoint, you will win.
If you approach this storytelling, God's first, people last, you will lose.
And Marvel, to me, got into a situation where they started doing that.
God's first.
When they started going, God's first.
Shouldn't never go on his face.
Like, to me, if you do it that way, that's when you lose the character.
What do you think it is?
Or do you have, like, a prescription for the monoculture thing?
I think both Taylor Swift and the NFL are significantly by orders of magnitude bigger than the MCU and politics.
I think there are.
I think there are other things in the culture that are bigger and more easily understood.
And I think also, even though I am as guilty of this as anybody alive, using the box office to kind of indicate what the monoculture could be.
I mean, we're talking, the box office represents like 8% of America now.
Like, it is such relative to 50 years ago.
Can I say one thing about Taylor Swift and NFL real quick, though?
I was in a room of people watching the Super Bowl, right?
And it was a room full of people who were Eagles fans.
No one loves the Eagles.
Do you know why they were rooting against the Eagles?
Because they hate Taylor Swift.
Because they think that the cheese were magnet.
Oh.
To me, they were cheering for the Eagles.
They were cheering for the Eagles.
They were cheering for the Eagles.
I think that's a little bit more complicated, though.
But what I'm telling you is, politics has heavily infected.
This is a different conversation.
Yeah, yeah.
Yeah, you're right.
And that's been true in the NFL for 10 years.
Yeah, right.
Given my lack of access.
to the core of the NFL, my apologies
to you and to Bill and the Ringer.
I will say that Taylor Swift as like
an example of
yeah, girlhood.
No, people going to the era's tour
and just like having, or Beyonce's tour
and just like having this like incredible time,
this bonding over friendship bracelets
and lyric knowing and singing together
and all that sort of stuff and not having a conversation
about, you know, do you like Trump or not?
Like there were.
That was Sean at the.
or a store
going around.
I did not attend.
I mean, obviously,
obviously Taylor's,
well,
you'll be at the next one,
right?
The next tour?
As a girl dad?
I might be.
I mean,
and that's sort of my point
is that that is also
very generationally powerful.
Right.
The way that some movies used to be,
now it's,
that's the sort of thing.
I use both examples for a reason,
though,
because they're kind of the polarity
of experience.
Right, right.
A very masculine thing
that has now drawn in a lot of women
and one a very historically
feminine thing
that has drawn in a lot of men.
Reductive.
Okay.
It is, but it's true.
It is, but it's true.
No, no, no, I agree.
I know because I look at consumption data on podcasts at this company.
Like, if you look at demographics, those things matter.
And so when you're thinking about what represents a mono, a single, there's very, there's pretty much nothing that appeals to all white, black, Asian, across the whole spectrum, plus men and women, plus ages up and down nine to 85.
There isn't anything, but the truth is, there never was.
There was never a thing that appealed to everybody.
We look back on Madonna and Prince and you two and Bruce Springsteen,
and we think, oh, yeah, music used to be one thing.
It never was.
You know what it feels like, though?
It feels like, every time we talk about this,
I talk about Terminator 2, Judgment Day.
Because it felt like that movie when it was coming out was all-encompassing.
You were watching on TV, you were passing a billboard,
and it was Arnold Schwarzenegger.
You were watching Arnold Schwarzenegger on the thing.
You were watching MTV, and it was, you will be mine.
And it was everywhere.
And you just got to a point to where you went, I have to see it.
I must see it because everyone is talking about the exact same movie.
Titanic.
And the movie is everywhere.
Titanic.
You go to McDonald's.
It's in the cup, and it's the whole deal.
And it seemed like everybody was talking about the same thing.
And I can't think of things that are like that anymore.
Now, in game was different.
because end
Endgame and Thrones
feels like the end of it
It's the same time
End game
and Game of Thrones
ending
that's it for the monoculture
that we used to know
of that way
Those had in common
were an incredibly
rabid
pre-existing fan base
Correct
build up over time
through the books
in the early seasons
of the show
or the early movies
of the MCU
that then
got like
it went through
and harvested
Normies
into Caring
and they're converted
them into hardcore fans or
had the like, it says
end game, so I'm sure something important's
going to happen in it, so I'm going to go.
And also both of those stories were
told over a 10 year period.
And we could all cling to that. A lot of what we're talking about
is durational. Yeah, but we're not building
anything. Biggest movie the year came out six weeks
ago or whatever. Feels like it didn't happen.
Exactly. I know. And I think
the one thing that I'll add
to politics to Taylor Swift's in the NFL
is of course like social media,
TikTok, reels, however you choose to consume it.
But I watched a reel of a TikTok or whatever this morning where kids were being asked to fill in the blanks of in the way that we used to do with movie quotes with like famous TikTok audio.
It was just like they would stop the TikTok audio in the middle and it's like, how does this end?
And they all knew all of it.
You know what I mean?
So that's a thing.
That's a great Uniter as well is the memeification.
We talk about this when we talk about White Lotus.
The way the White Lotus has weaponized not only the whodunit and the character studies, but also the memes.
and if you see something memed enough,
if something has like a fun dance,
you know, salt burn or whatever the case may be,
you got to understand the memes,
so you have to watch the thing.
To me, that's what monoculture really is.
It's really like cultural fomo.
Pure pressure.
Yeah, it's like you don't want to be left out.
I post the White Lotus just Sam's face on there,
and there are people in the comments that are going,
laugh, I can't believe this, I can't believe that.
And then there are other people that are going,
yo, what show is this?
Like, what are y'all talking about?
And then they start to freak out.
People did that with lioness with us, too.
That was me.
What is this, guys?
Can I watch it too?
Yeah, babe, kick an ass.
Okay, so let's wrap up and say there's the error that we're in right now of superhero storytelling is what I'm calling Trump 2.0.
Great stuff.
Here we go.
What are we looking for?
Are we looking for optimistic escape or grim, dark reality or some combination of the two?
So Captain America, Brave New World is a film that came out this year.
I don't know if you remember that.
James Gunn is taking on DC, right?
Downey's returning to the MCU.
New beginnings for Marvel with Fantastic Four and Thunderbolts.
On TV, we have The Penguin, which hit.
Ferrell's just scooping up awards for it, you know?
Hit outside of the core audience.
Agatha, Mixed, Daredevil, Mixed.
Upcoming, we've got the return of David Lindelof Lanterns is coming.
I'm paying attention to that.
Can't miss.
I will be so surprised.
I am monitoring that situation.
Very closely.
I've always liked Green Lantern.
I love the casting so far.
That's the rare comic book thing where I'm like,
I will devote all 10 hours that I need to to that show.
To your question of like,
we don't watch things that don't feed into the next thing.
I mean,
not to like constantly praise Dame Alindaloff,
but the way in which Watchman universally praise
and he's like, I'm not doing a season two.
And they just like, let it be.
And now they're coming back and doing his different thing,
different same same different but like it's great
there's a waller show booster gold show paradise loss
like this is what's on dc's mind marvel
they got to dump i lied there's one more triage
project and it's iron heart which has been on the shelf
for literally years that they have to dump on
hulu one weekend at some point
they don't dump that sister
they dumped echo yeah well
I'm talking about that they did dump echo
they forgot about echo
they dumped yeah they dumped echo
and uh wonder man's coming vision quest
and a Punisher special presentation.
Written by Burnthal, right?
Co-written at least?
Yeah, so like...
It's exciting.
It is exciting.
So, like, yeah, what are...
Of all these things, is it lanterns?
So, what are we most excited for that is upcoming?
Thunderbolts.
Thunderbolts, to me, first of all, a really interesting character in this entry.
Like, super interesting character.
And a more contemporary character, a character that probably has a little bit more
unformed real estate because people are going to be,
people are going to think that, you know,
they don't have any history with the century,
so they're going to think that he maybe was invented for the movie or whatever.
You know, their whole dichotomy between the century and his alter ego and all
that stuff, I think that's going to be really interesting.
Lewis Pullman season?
Yeah.
Okay.
Love him.
Reminds me of his dad.
Yeah.
That's when the NEPO stuff works.
I'm like, oh, look at Lone Star.
He has, like, very different energy, but similar features.
That's how I feel about Jack Quaid.
I was informed on a podcast that he's dating
Kai Gerber, which is certainly news.
She's a big reader.
Yeah.
Big reader?
Yeah.
She has a book club.
So.
This is Houselbar.
But because of that and because of the rag tag bunch of characters
and really the commitment to the movie,
they're committing to the tone of this movie.
Yeah.
I think if it works,
then that to me will prove that the MCU knows how to do
storytelling. And talking about, I mean, we were saying
and filmmaking. We were saying broadly
so little has worked post endgame.
Yelena Belova has worked. That's worked.
You know, and Buckey continues to work.
You know, and then we'll talk about.
He's really kind of, he's the
constant character right now
that's kind of holding down the MCU.
They want it to
be. It's so funny that that worked out. Yeah, it's so
funny that that worked out that way. Yeah.
I mean, you know.
In the complete opposite way. Yes. One guy said, I can't do
any more of this superhero. It's because I want to
Because of what Sean talked about with Sebastian Stan
is he's gone out and done such good work outside of it
that his, weirdly, his stock has risen within the MCU itself.
I'm probably, I've been hurt too many times.
So if I'm being honest, I want the big heartbreak
and I'm sticking around for X-Men.
And that's way down the line.
Sadie Sink didn't deny that she was Gene Gray.
You're right, you're right.
And so, like, I feel like they're starting to get going with that.
It's my favorite comic book by far.
It's my favorite characters by far.
It's the reason why I ever got into this stuff in the first place.
So I will be attending class until then.
Do you want to put that on?
Mallory will get mad at me that I didn't mention.
Trump 3.0?
There is a Spider-Man movie coming also, allegedly.
John Fetzy.
I think Spider, excuse me, I think Superman is the most important.
movie of the year, maybe the most important movie of the decade for the movie industry.
I think it is potentially the swing pivot moment for all comic book storytelling because it allows
it to be something that isn't Marvel going forward. If it does not work, the results are
like pretty catastrophic for a studio that is now clearly hinging its at least short-term future
on DC and James Gunn. And Dune. And Dune. Just kidding.
And Dune, but Dune in theory is probably, if not over, sort of over.
And one battle after another.
But that's the thing, you know?
Ask you a question.
Do you think that Marvel wants Superman to work?
At 100%.
I think so too.
100%.
Fadde has talked about this and I believe him.
I believe him.
Like when Wonder Woman hit and everyone's like, oh,
D.C. got a female-led superhero movie out before Marvel.
He's like, this is good for my business.
100%.
Yeah.
I think it really benefits them because it renews interest in that kind of storytelling.
And that kind of storytelling has never been at a lower flow than it is right now since whatever, probably since Captain America, the first Avenger.
So, you know, in addition to that, I just really like James Gunn and I like all of his movies and I want him to succeed, however complicated you feel about him and the way that he communicates online.
I think he's like tremendously creative and he comes from the kind of background and does the kind of thing that I was advocating for earlier.
He is a one-stop shop visionary person who has a very clear tone
Who really understands the characters and cares about them and also wants to be a little inventive
Want to give you something a little new every time he does something
So Fantastic Four might be great you know Thunderbolts might be great
If they're great that's great I'll be happy to you know sing their praises on pods
But if Superman bricks and everyone's like it's fucked yeah it's it's kind of dark
You know who's gonna save cinema?
Nick Holtz
I mean
You know
You're your cuck daddy
You know
Cuck daddy
Come to be
Trying to hurt my feelings
Oh my lord
For months now
By calling
Noseferatu
Oh
Oh no Svratu
Juror number two
Yeah that's right
What was his third
Cuck performance?
I mean obviously
Fury Road
One of the ultimate cucks
The menu
The menu
Cucked
Oh he cucked the fuck
The fuck out of that
I will say that
Oh shit
Warm bodies
Cuck
Stop
Stop
Stop
Stop
Stop
Stop
Bees is a fucking cock
Wait a minute
He's the premier cock
In American cinema
He's a war boy
Come on
He's a cop
He's from Oskins
The anti-cutt
Yeah seriously
I haven't seen that
Thank you to the expert
Chris Ryan
I was just going to say
That guns
Framing of the production of Superman
Which I know has had
Like some are we sure
It's going to be good
Kind of stuff going
his like whole
we need a script
I'm not shooting this until like
I know what it's going to be
that we've got that part dialed
is the thing that people need to worry more about
them making parallax view references
in and stuff like that
ex post facto like now that I've seen the movie that I made
it kind of reminds me a little bit of three days of the condor
like does it serve?
That's fine but like rather than say that in advance
and be like what it's it's kind of like you know
cheers meets you know like
it should be we actually
Cheers means what?
I want to hear the story.
What's your pitch?
Cheers.
Cheers means what?
Cheers meets fire walk with me.
Wait,
why is that actually happening?
You know what he?
It's perfect for that.
Rom Palmer is a bartender
forever.
What is I saying?
Write good scripts and
make sure they're finished
before you shoot.
Yeah, okay.
So make good shows,
make good films
and we'll watch them.
So in summation.
What's for you?
Wait,
what's for you?
What's for you?
Yeah.
What's weird to me is looking at this, I have been, I mean, the next, the Batman movie, obviously, is the Matt Ree's Batman movie.
Do you feel like that's a closed thing, though?
Yeah.
But, like, because if it doesn't work, if it is less good than the Batman, that's kind of okay, right?
Like, they can just move on.
But that's the thing you're most looking forward to.
What's interesting to me, in the Batman lanterns, Superman question mark, Thunderbol is definitely, it's more deep.
see stuff than it is Marvel stuff
for me right now and I've been like
in the Marvel like camp for so long.
DC has more wanted more untapped territory.
I just think that like I think
lanterns is hugely important
for comic book storytelling on TV
and I think to Sean's point
save cinema see Superman.
I'll say something about the Batman though.
Yeah. For as good as the Batman was
and I've come
to appreciate the movie. I know.
I love that you've turned around on it. I have.
We did a big pick about it. The three
of us. We loved it. That was a tough pot.
Sometimes it only takes me watching something 10 times before I can enjoy it.
I was like, how are you not all in on it? It was like when we went to go see no, but I was
like, what the fuck, dude? I need you on this.
Nah, man. Like it, the Batman to me just was a lot of brooding. I don't like brooding
motherfuckers. I don't like brooding. Okay? You're saving the city. Let's be happy about it.
Get your ass up. All right. Now look. So,
like, as if Matt Murdoch and Daredevil Netflix
doesn't brood the shit out of that.
You know what he does?
What?
He gets some bitches, though.
He flirts.
So he's getting pleasure in his life.
And he honestly respects Latvia and heritage.
Yeah, he's getting pleasure in his life.
Honey cakes.
Yeah, like, your Batman was all over the place.
But I'm saying, though, the movie for us...
Salina Kyle?
Yeah, she was hot.
The movie for as important as what it was, strangely insignificant.
You don't think so?
Because when we talk about films...
You mentioned the penguin?
Like, when we...
And I feel like the penguin
is as important.
Yes.
It's like super important to the Batman.
It's like they're equally weighted,
which is bizarre, but true.
But it's a Batman movie about probably...
Not the penguin inside the movie.
I think the Penguin TV show and the Batman film are like...
Right.
The Penguin actually made the Batman...
More important.
Yeah, more important.
But I'm saying like, that movie to me,
I'm still shocked.
I don't know if people know how to approach that version of Batman.
quite yet. Because I don't, I'm not sure if people are glombing on to it. They want the second movie. That movie is more akin to
Batman begins to where people were kind of like, because that Batman begins is not like a huge box office hit.
But people were still kind of like, hmm, new Batman, what are they doing? So I'm like, I'm wondering if they take too long to follow up with it if the movie can
maintain the interest from people. I see it the same way that Chris describes Superman, which is I think that, you know, Reeves is a perfectionist and, you
you know, very intent on control
and was not going to make the movie
until he felt like he was ready to make the movie.
And so I don't think you can wait too long
on things like Batman.
Yeah.
I think on Thunderbolts,
you could have waited too long.
If you were like, hey, you guys,
did you remember Taskmaster?
You know, your favorite character?
Yeah.
Like, we don't know who these people are,
but Batman's Batman.
Batman's always going to be Batman.
And it's Robert Pattinson.
So, yeah.
I think the only thing that I'm worried about
with the Batman is like Gunn's other Batman plans
mudding the waters in some way.
They should wait.
They really should.
They should wait.
Okay.
So I think we solved superhero storytelling in under two hours.
I have more Taylor Swift takes if you want to share.
Anytime.
Come back to Hasabar.
I like it.
For your Taylor Swift takes.
I like her.
I'm just saying.
I didn't used to, man.
But I like her, man.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I like her.
Were you suspicious for her because she was white?
Yeah, for sure.
That starts everything.
You guys have been able to bypass that throughout the years.
It's been years.
Oh, it took a while.
It's been years.
No.
It is.
It took, oh, not me and you.
Yeah.
I'm talking about these things.
Taylor?
Like, no.
So, you're a white privilege.
My white privilege.
We had to get over.
We've had to connect on different things.
Me and Joe connected.
Like the Central Intelligence Agency.
We connected on this.
And then me and Sean have connected on several different movie disagreements.
That's true.
I've been present for them.
It's always really pleasant.
We are a philosophical construct.
Thank you for coming to this episode of The Watch.
higher learning. You said you wanted a more freewheeling pod form.
And House of Ar.
I even over my laptop.
That's how free form this was.
But you did all the research and I'm so proud of you for that.
I really wanted you to be in the Rogan zone where you're like, Steve, put that up there.
What did the CIA, do they have female assassins?
Google that.
Yeah.
Joanna Rogan, the Venn diagram.
So thanks to Steve Allman, as mentioned.
Thanks to Roger to Rickapal.
Thanks to join me a dinner on social.
Thanks to John Richter.
Thanks to you.
Thanks to you.
Thanks to you.
Great job today.
Great job.
Thanks for coming.
Thank you for having us.
Thanks to Mallory Rubin and Absentia and we'll see you next week for Yellow Jackets and more Daredebel.
Bye.
