Up up and away: Justice League and Marvel heroes soar to streaming platforms as digital demand grows
With North American box office down 80 per cent, superheroes are right at home on the small screen
One of my favourite movie theatre moments happened during a screening of 2017's Spider-Man: Homecoming. There we were, crammed in the Scotiabank Theatre in Toronto.
In a moment of perfect plotting, the worlds of Spider-Man, the superhero, and Peter Parker, the high schooler, smashed together when Tom Holland opened the door to pick up his prom date only to realize her father was the villainous Vulture, played by Michael Keaton.
There was a gasp. You could almost hear it as it travelled from the front row to the back, followed by a secondary ripple, an audible mixture of shock and giddiness the audience processed the surprise.
The modern version of the superhero movie was made for the big screen. With Lex Luthor-worthy budgets, a cavalcade of computer effects and A-list movie stars, the theatrical experience was the only way the business of making comic-book blockbusters made sense.
But now with theatres trapped in a pandemic phantom zone, the superheroes have shifted to the small screen, from Marvel's Wandavision to Zack Snyder's Justice League. The shared experience is missing, but something else is gained: a more expansive playground for character development — and a pause button.
Superheroes come home
After the bang-pow box office of The Dark Knight in 2008, every studio dreamed of billion-dollar revenues, built on movie theatres crammed by fans eager to witness the latest big-screen version of their heroes. Those crowd reaction moments have become such a staple of superhero cinema there's even a whole TikTok trend dedicated to it.
Before he became Marvel's first Asian onscreen superhero, Simu Liu was right there in the theatre with the rest of the fans for Avengers: Endgame in 2019.
"Those moments when that entire audience was going through that experience with me on a 90-ft. screen, to me nothing replaces that," he said.
In the non-COVID timeline of 2021, we would have already watched Black Widow last May, Chloe Zhao's The Eternals in November, followed by Liu in Shang-Chi and the Legend of the Ten Rings in February 2021.
Instead, it was Wandavision that led the way as a nine-part television series on Disney+. While the show was never intended to kick off Phase 4 of the Marvel Universe, the drama that spoofed various sitcoms turned out to be uniquely suited to welcoming these heroes into our homes.
Fans didn't get the build-up to the big screen extravaganza, but adjusted to the weekly rhythms of anticipating next Friday's instalment. Part of what made Wandavision work so well is how the show embraced the episodic nature, complete with surprising guest stars and cliffhanger endings.
Get comfortable with your pause button
Streaming has also allowed fan favourite Zack Snyder to return to the DC Comics universe, sharing the ultimate director's cut, Zack Snyder's Justice League — an epic four-hour-long extravaganza super-sized with $70 million in addition visual effects and reshoots.
Snyder wasn't able to finish the original 2017 version due to a family tragedy; instead, Joss Whedon replaced him and reshot and rewrote much of Snyder's movie.
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