Writer and
producer Simon Kinberg, fresh off of his work writing X-Men: Days of Future Past and
the reboot of The
Fantastic Four, has just made it official with Fox, signing a deal to continue working with the studio and, he hopes, finally provide a competition to Marvel's Avengersseries. Kinberg's bona fides have involved a few Fox projects, including X-Men: The Last Stand and X-Men: First Class. Now, Kinberg will be building Fox's superhero slate for at least the next three years.
Fantastic Four, has just made it official with Fox, signing a deal to continue working with the studio and, he hopes, finally provide a competition to Marvel's Avengersseries. Kinberg's bona fides have involved a few Fox projects, including X-Men: The Last Stand and X-Men: First Class. Now, Kinberg will be building Fox's superhero slate for at least the next three years.
But
while Kinberg is a smart investment for Fox, it still seems unlikely that they
will be able to build an interlocking, serialized franchise when each X-Men
film feels the need to reboot either Xavier/Magneto's relationship or unleash
some fresh torment on Wolverine. Hopefully that's what he means by more
continuity. The Days of Future Past comics series is an ambitious undertaking,
and hopefully will finally move beyond those same three characters (though the
trailer seemed to suggest that once again it will be a Magneto/Professor
X/Wolverine three hander, making Kinberg's promise already sound a little
hollow).
But
can Fox ever really hope to compete with Marvel's superhero canon? After all,
Marvel's Avengers franchise
really only began to take form when they were purchased by Disney, since they
now can afford to plan their "phases" years in advance and only have to worry about adapting their
comic series, which gives them over 50 years of material. But Fox is a large
movie studio, and they have other properties to take care of -- ones that don't
involve complication due to rights and character ownership that make them
obligated to make more films every few years. That, more than anything,
is what limits Fox's superhero possibilities. Kinberg or no Kinberg, their lack
of flexibility means they can never have, say, Captain America make an
appearance or mention a Skrull/human war. Granted, if the X-Men or Fantastic
Four films are telling good enough stories, they won't need to make use of the large Marvel canon,
but Kinberg clearly has his work cut out for him.
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