Secondly, Disney only does female characters one way, villains even moreso.
Everything she ever did wrong was actually a man's fault. Everything else she did that seemed wrong, actually wasn't. Anything remaining about her is forgiven or ignored. See: all of them.
Lastly, by these same rumors, she's playing a gender-bent Silver Surfer. The decline continues, unabated. Even if she plays Frankie instead (a later herald of Galactus originally from Earth) Disney will confound the concepts on purpose to have their cake (representation!) and eat it too (it's totally Silver Surfer guyyyyss).
Normies are too braindead to know Galactus has any heralds other than the Silver Surfer, or even that Galactus has been a herald himself.
The fact that they might be going the same route as the X-Men films and simply doing the same stories yet again shows how bereft of ideas the company is, or how little they think an audience will understand. FF have a lot of villains in their rogue lineup even before bothering to touch planetary threats such as Galactus, the Negative Zone, or even Doom.
Alicia's father is a villain, and while relatively small time compared to others still more than a problem for the FF and others since he can not only puppet the FF roster but then send any number of other Marvel hero/villain after the FF, too. It would even serve to both include some kind of cameo and create the repetitive "the heroes fight each other" trope that most comics and other media end up using.
In fact, here's a basic outline that could be used for such a film.
The FF get their powers, it's always the same way so that's just going through the motions in the first act.
They learn to use them, throw in some "random" cameos from other MCU faces along the way, and in doing so discover a series of breakins at various locations all committed by completely unrelated and random individuals, [which will all be hwuite ofc š].
Reed tries to figure out the pattern between the randoms and the breakins, Ben meets Alicia and gets closed to her while also ending up getting in close proximity with Alicia's father, and Ben becomes the next puppet setting up internal team drama and fighting.
Reed figure's out Alicia is somehow connected to the pattern and goes alone/with the other FFs to find her and Ben.
Ben vs Reed and Sue and Johnny [who is now a black trans wheelchair bound hacktivist with a porn tache after the last film made him black, so the new one needs to go even tarder].
Alicia's father is revealed to be the one behind it all, his big plan is revealed, the FF confront him and those "random" MCU cameos end up being the final fight because Puppet Master is a wet tissue in a hurricane as far as resilience goes so would never actually work himself in a fight.
Ben fights the cameos and ofc says "It's clobberin' time!", Reed helps solve the problem at hand, Sue must ofc be the one who actually does it because "woman, RAH!", and Johnny berates Puppet Master for not using his puppet powers to kill "the Right people".
Film ends, cameo of Silver Derper because even when adding in a new villain normies still need something familiar enough for a Youtuber to make a 29 minute long video telling them why this person is special and why they need to clap when it happens.
Thanks. I stopped reading Silver Surfer back around 1970, when I was 9. I gave up straight comics for underground comix around 2 years later, then both genres went to shit, but some of the underground artists continued producing good work through the '80s.
Very good point. F4 have a lot to draw on but they seem to only care about all different all new crap. With Avengers for instance Iād love to see the Korvac Saga
I wondered - could AI go tarder? here is the result:
Hello, this is Copilot. I can try to flesh out the synopsis into a plot summary with actual Fantastic Four characters, based on the selected text from the web page. Here is my attempt:
Origin and Discovery: The Fantastic Four (Reed Richards, Sue Storm, Johnny Storm, and Ben Grimm) are a team of scientists and adventurers who gain superpowers after being exposed to cosmic rays during a space mission. They learn to use their abilities and become public heroes, attracting the attention of other Marvel characters such as Spider-Man, Black Panther, and Nick Fury.
Mystery and Suspense: The Fantastic Four also notice a series of strange break-ins at various locations, such as a military base, a museum, and a bank. The culprits are seemingly ordinary people with no connection to each other, but they all have a small clay figure in their possession. Reed deduces that someone is using mind control to manipulate them, and traces the source to a sculptor named Phillip Masters, who is the father of Alicia Masters, a blind artist and Ben's love interest.
Conflict and Betrayal: Reed confronts Phillip, who reveals himself to be the Puppet Master, a villain who can control anyone he makes a clay replica of. He has been using his power to steal valuable items and information, as well as to test the limits of the Fantastic Four. He also reveals that he has made puppets of the entire team, and activates them to turn them against each other. Ben, who has been spending time with Alicia, is the first to fall under his control, and attacks Reed, Sue, and Johnny at the Baxter Building, their headquarters.
Resolution and Showdown: The other three manage to escape and track down Ben and Alicia, who are held captive by Phillip at his workshop. They free Ben from his influence and confront Phillip, who unleashes his army of puppets, including some of the Marvel cameos from earlier. A chaotic battle ensues, with the Fantastic Four fighting their friends and foes alike. Reed manages to reach Phillip and destroy his puppet-making device, breaking his control over everyone. Phillip is arrested and taken away by S.H.I.E.L.D., while the Fantastic Four and their allies celebrate their victory. The movie ends with a hint of a bigger threat looming in the horizon, as a silver figure flies across the sky.
Firstly, sheeeeeesh.
Secondly, Disney only does female characters one way, villains even moreso. Everything she ever did wrong was actually a man's fault. Everything else she did that seemed wrong, actually wasn't. Anything remaining about her is forgiven or ignored. See: all of them.
Lastly, by these same rumors, she's playing a gender-bent Silver Surfer. The decline continues, unabated. Even if she plays Frankie instead (a later herald of Galactus originally from Earth) Disney will confound the concepts on purpose to have their cake (representation!) and eat it too (it's totally Silver Surfer guyyyyss).
Normies are too braindead to know Galactus has any heralds other than the Silver Surfer, or even that Galactus has been a herald himself.
The fact that they might be going the same route as the X-Men films and simply doing the same stories yet again shows how bereft of ideas the company is, or how little they think an audience will understand. FF have a lot of villains in their rogue lineup even before bothering to touch planetary threats such as Galactus, the Negative Zone, or even Doom.
Alicia's father is a villain, and while relatively small time compared to others still more than a problem for the FF and others since he can not only puppet the FF roster but then send any number of other Marvel hero/villain after the FF, too. It would even serve to both include some kind of cameo and create the repetitive "the heroes fight each other" trope that most comics and other media end up using.
In fact, here's a basic outline that could be used for such a film.
The FF get their powers, it's always the same way so that's just going through the motions in the first act.
They learn to use them, throw in some "random" cameos from other MCU faces along the way, and in doing so discover a series of breakins at various locations all committed by completely unrelated and random individuals, [which will all be hwuite ofc š].
Reed tries to figure out the pattern between the randoms and the breakins, Ben meets Alicia and gets closed to her while also ending up getting in close proximity with Alicia's father, and Ben becomes the next puppet setting up internal team drama and fighting.
Reed figure's out Alicia is somehow connected to the pattern and goes alone/with the other FFs to find her and Ben.
Ben vs Reed and Sue and Johnny [who is now a black trans wheelchair bound hacktivist with a porn tache after the last film made him black, so the new one needs to go even tarder].
Alicia's father is revealed to be the one behind it all, his big plan is revealed, the FF confront him and those "random" MCU cameos end up being the final fight because Puppet Master is a wet tissue in a hurricane as far as resilience goes so would never actually work himself in a fight.
Ben fights the cameos and ofc says "It's clobberin' time!", Reed helps solve the problem at hand, Sue must ofc be the one who actually does it because "woman, RAH!", and Johnny berates Puppet Master for not using his puppet powers to kill "the Right people".
Film ends, cameo of Silver Derper because even when adding in a new villain normies still need something familiar enough for a Youtuber to make a 29 minute long video telling them why this person is special and why they need to clap when it happens.
END OF FUCKING FILM
That's dumb. Why would you expect outsiders to know or care about some esoteric piece of comic book trivia?
Thanks. I stopped reading Silver Surfer back around 1970, when I was 9. I gave up straight comics for underground comix around 2 years later, then both genres went to shit, but some of the underground artists continued producing good work through the '80s.
Comic books are for losers and adult men that read them should likely jump off a high object
Very good point. F4 have a lot to draw on but they seem to only care about all different all new crap. With Avengers for instance Iād love to see the Korvac Saga
I wondered - could AI go tarder? here is the result:
Hello, this is Copilot. I can try to flesh out the synopsis into a plot summary with actual Fantastic Four characters, based on the selected text from the web page. Here is my attempt:
Basically, although there will of course be blatant mentions of Ben being Jewish.