Rumor Wonders of Life getting an attraction soon?

aladdin2007

Well-Known Member
Sounds like things are continuing to get interesting. I hope its all panning out in a good way and not so much hemming and hawing so to speak like months back. At least there are people within who realize its time to stop wasting such a large pavilion/location. But all of this keeps putting Imagination on the back burner it seems, sigh, but I guess give and take a bit.
 

capsshield

Active Member
at are the strongest Marvel IP’s available? And I mean from the 7,000 you mentioned?
Marvel has tiers like "E" ticket - "A" ticket, when it comes to characters. Most "E" ticket characters can be traced to the 60's silver age due to Marvels limited distribution at the time. That longevity and marketing behind the characters plus their many stories built the line up.
E ticket are:
Spider-Man
Fantastic Four - Thing, Torch
Avengers - Iron Man, Thor, Hulk, Cap. America
X-Men - Wolverine, Cyclops, Storm

D ticket are:
Dr. Strange
Shield
Daredevil
Namor
Avengers: Ant man, Wasp, Hawkeye, Scarlet Witch, Quicksilver
X-Men: Iceman, Beast, Angel, Marvel Girl, Nightcrawler, Colosus
Silver Surfer

"C" ticket are:
Black Panther
Kazar
Cloak and Dagger
Luke Cage
Iron Fist
Inhumans

Now that some of the "C" and "D" ticket characters have been used in television and the movies their value is rising.
Even a failed show like ABC's Inhumans increases the value of these IP's

Figment was given a comic book or two and his value rose. It's a syncronicity wheel Disney drives fueled by IP's.

With all this Marvel hyperventilating that assumes Disney will not wear out the franchise as is apparently happening with Star Wars where merch sales have dropped like a rock this year. So in 10 years will anyone care about Marvel

Yes they will. Marvels wealth of diversity and stories is too deep to measure, and they are in the business of creating stories and IP's fast.

Marvel Comics has war, western, romance, science fiction, and many other libraries to dip into.
When the deal with Fox is done they will be able to reboot the X-Men and Fantastic Four and add them into the mix.
I foresee a movie line up of 5-6 Marvel movies a year for the next 10-20 years.
The biggest problem Disney faces involves stealing money from itself as all of their IP's begin to compete against each other for space in the parks, or on a tv or movie schedule
 

HauntedMansionFLA

Well-Known Member
Marvel has tiers like "E" ticket - "A" ticket, when it comes to characters. Most "E" ticket characters can be traced to the 60's silver age due to Marvels limited distribution at the time. That longevity and marketing behind the characters plus their many stories built the line up.
E ticket are:
Spider-Man
Fantastic Four - Thing, Torch
Avengers - Iron Man, Thor, Hulk, Cap. America
X-Men - Wolverine, Cyclops, Storm

D ticket are:
Dr. Strange
Shield
Daredevil
Namor
Avengers: Ant man, Wasp, Hawkeye, Scarlet Witch, Quicksilver
X-Men: Iceman, Beast, Angel, Marvel Girl, Nightcrawler, Colosus
Silver Surfer

"C" ticket are:
Black Panther
Kazar
Cloak and Dagger
Luke Cage
Iron Fist
Inhumans

Now that some of the "C" and "D" ticket characters have been used in television and the movies their value is rising.
Even a failed show like ABC's Inhumans increases the value of these IP's

Figment was given a comic book or two and his value rose. It's a syncronicity wheel Disney drives fueled by IP's.



Yes they will. Marvels wealth of diversity and stories is too deep to measure, and they are in the business of creating stories and IP's fast.

Marvel Comics has war, western, romance, science fiction, and many other libraries to dip into.
When the deal with Fox is done they will be able to reboot the X-Men and Fantastic Four and add them into the mix.
I foresee a movie line up of 5-6 Marvel movies a year for the next 10-20 years.
The biggest problem Disney faces involves stealing money from itself as all of their IP's begin to compete against each other for space in the parks, or on a tv or movie schedule
Awesome list! Now if they did agents if shield, would they go with the white, unshaven guy or the movie version of Sam Jackson. Thanks again for the list :)
 
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mikejs78

Well-Known Member
Merch sales dropped because the movie wasn’t good. Good movie good merch sales.
I don't think the movie had much to do with the merch decline (I loved it and so did many others, but let's not rehash that debate) it's that the merch was pretty poor this year. My 7 year old is an avid collector of star wars toys and a huge fan - loved the movie. However this is the first Christmas in memory he didn't want any star wars toys (with the exception of a lego Millennium Falcon that he's wanted for a while), because he thought that there "weren't any good toys this year". He's hoping that there will be better stuff for Solo and Ep IX.

My point being, (and its not to rehash the movie debate, as reasonable star wars fans seem to disagree on this one) the quality of merch matters, and this year it was just bad product. I think that has a lot more to do with the poor merch sales than whether or not Last Jedi was good or not, and whether or not the market is saturated. If avid fans like my son don't want any of the toys, there's a problem with the toys.
 
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larryz

I'm Just A Tourist!
Premium Member
I blame Obama or Russian hacking. Take your pick.;)
political.jpg
 

Yellow Strap

Well-Known Member
With all this Marvel hyperventilating that assumes Disney will not wear out the franchise as is apparently happening with Star Wars where merch sales have dropped like a rock this year. So in 10 years will anyone care about Marvel

Considering Marvel began in 1961, weathered bankruptcy and is now the most successful Superhero Film Franchise critically and commercially....
Yes...I'll bet you in 10 years people will care.
 

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