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The two most important MCU movies are...

2,443 Views | 27 Replies | Last: 6 yr ago by Duncan Idaho
BTHOthatguy
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Iron Man and Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 1. The first established the genre the second fully established why we care. Fight me.

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TCTTS
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G Martin 87
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Agree. Without the success of Iron Man, the MCU never happens. Without the humor and fun of GOTG, the MCU doesn't hit the tipping point.
Max Power
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Iron Man definitely at 1, I might go The Winter Soldier at 2. That film brought in the Russo brothers, who also did Civil War, Infinity War, and Endgame. They redefined what the team-up movies could be. They are almost as important as Feige in the MCU.
Duncan Idaho
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The incredible hulk and Thor the dark world.
Bruce Almighty
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Iron Man is definitely number 1, but I think you can make an argument for The Avengers at #2.
Duncan Idaho
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The only real answers is black panther.
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rhutton125
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Some good points in this thread. I'd vote for...

  • Avengers. The first in-universe crossover event of its kind, and it's changed the industry. Everyone is still trying to do Avengers. DCEU, Dark Universe, Netflix's Defenders, Sony's Marvel universe - everyone still wants their own Avengers, 8 years later, but the MCU has been the only real success so far, both critically and financially.

  • Winter Soldier. I think this film was important for three big reasons.

1) It was the first solo film to not exist in its own isolated bubble. Sure, Iron Man 3 chronicled some repercussions from Avengers, but not really. IM3 and Thor 2 were more of the same. Winter Soldier, the world felt connected for the first time. It made sense that Black Widow, Nick Fury and Maria Hill would be around.

2) It was the first MCU genre film, essentially. This started a trend where each film had a pretty distinct style, which has probably prolonged the life expectancy of the genre. Filmmakers have expected superhero films to go the way of the western for years, but when one film is a spy thriller, and the next is a space western, and the next is a heist film, and the next is a coming-of-age high school film, they tend to stand on their own more.

3) This film deviated from the age-old formula of "do it again, but here's a new villain." Successful superhero films were quickly followed up by the announcement of a sequel, and with the tease of "this time he fights Doc Ock." "This time they'll fight Ultron." "This one will have the Joker." Usually the sense of normalcy is shattered by a new villain, usually acting alone, who arrives and stirs things up. And usually it's back to the status quo after. But in Winter Soldier, the villain was Shield - previously a force for good - which had become corrupt. And instead of killing the main antagonist (Bucky), Cap had to try and redeem him. It wasn't a fight that could be won by using superpowers.


I think Iron Man 1 set the tone for phase 1, but Winter Soldier set the tone for everything that came since, and Avengers has set the tone for a lot of the blockbuster film industry. But that's just my two cents!
Duncan Idaho
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I agree with you on winter soldier but not on avengers
Mathguy64
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IM1. If that flopped the whole thing never gets off the ground.

GOTG1. That opened the door for the wider universe character set and Thanos.
Max Power
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Avengers already had Thanos in the post-credits.
Mathguy64
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Yes but the character set opened with GOTG. It gave us the wider universe.
Aggie_Journalist
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1. Ironman 1: This movie still holds up great. If instead of Ironman we had just another ok movie (Like the forgettable Hulk movie that came out around this time), Marvel's growth might have never taken off.

2. Avengers 1: The first team up movie of its kind. I remember reading articles leading up to it and after it came out expressing aw at how effortlessly they balanced the large ensemble cast, introduced conflicts, played personalities against each other, and created a zippy fun movie that wasn't weighed down by the size of its cast.

3. Winter Soldier: Rhutton makes an excellent case for Winter Soldier being right behind the first two.
Thanks and gig'em
PneumAg
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Iron Man 1 and Winter Soldier.
Quad Dog
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Iron Man definitely is the most important, but based on its two sequels alone the character could have ended after 3. The Avengers is the other.
It revitalizes Iron Man for the rest of the movies. It's literally an achievement in movies never done before and that every one else is still playing catch up on. DC, WB, and others are all still trying to set up their shared cinematic universe.
It's crazy that Avengers used the villain from Thor, the McGuffin from Captain America, and the characters from many other previous movies. And nailed it out of the gate. An amazing achievement.


Good arguments were made for GOTG, Winter Soldier, and Civil Was too though.
Cinco Ranch Aggie
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The first Iron Man - if this flops, we never get another movie in the series.
Winter Soldier - I believe this one connected the Marvel universe and turned Shield on its head, and gave us the Russo brothers
Avengers - proved the team-up could be done and set the stage for Thanos
GOTG - introduced the wider galaxy and introduced a tone that would serve the series well
Infinity War + Endgame - the payoff of everything that came before, these were the movie equivalent of a grand slam homerun
An Ag in CO
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I would choose Iron Man and Civil War.

Iron Man really set the tone for how Feige and team would approach the MCU and it proved to be a great platform on which everything else could be built.

Civil War for adding some depth to the conflicts between the main characters that lasted all the way through Endgame. Would have been easy to just have everyone kiss and make up at the next opportunity, but they let the fallout from this one ripple through pretty much all the following movies.
jeffk
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I'm just saying... Iron Man 2 gave us Black Widow.
gggmann
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None of them are important. That being said, GOTG was the most enjoyable, IMO.
Brian Earl Spilner
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I'll take IM, GOTG, and WS for the top 3. Any order is fine.
Duncan Idaho
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gggmann said:

None of them are important. That being said, GOTG was the most enjoyable, IMO.


elfurioso92
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Agree 100%.

RDJ as Iron Man seemed odd to me at the time, but turned out to be a brilliant casting choice. GOTG took a group of characters no one outside of the most hardcore comic nerds knew anything about and made an absolutely fantastic movie with them.
Duncan Idaho
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The new Spiderman movie was pretty good. It was nice that they transitioned Spiderman to be a hetero-normative cis-gendered male
Ulrich
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Does the first Hugh Jackman X-Men movie count? Not quite sure if I'd nominate it anyway.
fig96
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Quote:

2) It was the first MCU genre film, essentially. This started a trend where each film had a pretty distinct style, which has probably prolonged the life expectancy of the genre. Filmmakers have expected superhero films to go the way of the western for years, but when one film is a spy thriller, and the next is a space western, and the next is a heist film, and the next is a coming-of-age high school film, they tend to stand on their own more.
Well stated and exactly the argument I was going to make. Winter Soldier started the trend of "a superhero film can be more than (and something different than) a superhero film".
Fat Bib Fortuna
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You have to throw out Iron Man from the equation because obviously if you don't have that one, you don't have any of them.

Winter Soldier set the table for the potential of stories that were more than good guy and bad guy punch each other. And it made it cool for the old guard of Hollywood to be in superhero movies with Robert Redford as the villain, following the lead of Tommy Lee Jones and Anthony Hopkins as hero allies in CA and Thor. After Redford you get Michael Douglas, Michelle Pfieffer, Kurt Russell, Cate Blanchett, and every black actor/actress over the age of 50 except James Earl Jones in one of the movies that came after.

I'd postulate that Black Panther is the other most important one because of what it did for Marvel's audience and the box office world as a whole. Who would have thought that all the millions of non-white males in this country might actually want to go see a movie about a non-white male like Wonder Woman ($412m domestic), Black Panther ($700m domestic), Captain Marvel ($426m domestic) or Aquaman ($335m domestic)?
Duncan Idaho
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Duncan Idaho said:

The incredible hulk and Thor the dark world.

So after posting this, I decided to watch dark world on disney+......the strange thing is I remember going to see this movie but I don't remember anything from the movie that hasn't been made into a meme.

That is pretty remarkable that the movie was that forgettable.
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