eXo
Devil's Advocate
- Joined
- Sep 19, 2014
- Messages
- 592
I have to say, I like to have the Marvel characters walking around the Universal Parks, WDW never allows unhandled character interactions.
That's definitely a good point.
When visiting Universal last fall I popped into one of the gift shops (the generic Universal one at the Port of Entry in IOA), and after getting past the 2 tons of potter scarves and the such I came around the corner and found myself face to face with Spider-man. He was hanging out by himself by the Spider-man shirts and as soon as he saw me he jumped into conversation. The guy really impressed me. He had a great voice for the character, he was sharp, he didn't feel rehearsed, and overall it turned the experience of walking into a gift shop into something as memorable as the attractions.
I stumbled across Green Goblin and Dr. Doom later on that day and they were both funny as hell too. If there is one thing they totally get right at Marvel Island, its the characters.
My personal thought is that I am glad the contract favors Universal in this case. I think the allure to most folks of Disney suddenly having Marvel is what they might do with it. But there is absolutely no way we would get anything as "thrilling" as what currently exists or what could potentially exist at IOA.
If a Marvel ride/land ever opened at Disney I think we could expect a fairly impressive queue that tells an in depth back story that leads up to a ride that we all feel like we've been on before. That sounds a bit more negative than I'd like it to, but even rides like Tower of Terror (which are notable for their story and theming) ultimately boils down to a simple drop ride at the end (no matter how 'random' it might be). I often get the impression that the imagineers spend a lot more time thinking about the story and presentation of a ride over the ride itself. Is that something the general public would honestly want for Marvel?
To the point of Disney being happy to sit back and collect a paycheck on licensing, I think it is important to note that Disney is a multi-faceted company, and what one part of the company is happy to do... another may not. I say this because there has been activity within Marvel to devalue comics/characters that they don't own the movie rights too. Wolverine has been killed. Marvel is not allowed to create any new "mutant" characters (as Fox auto gets rights to them). They put the Fantastic Four on hiatus. Some argue this does nothing to devalue the properties and others argue it doesn't matter because anyone can come back from the dead or get a rebooted comic anyways. But those arguments don't change the fact that they have chosen to make these moves in the first place. I think the ban on creating new mutant characters stands as the chief policy that shows Disney/Marvel is, at the least, not interested in creating any value for Fox.
And there are heavy rumors that marvel may be heading towards one of those giant universe splits that they do so often. Where the go back and change the complete foundation of characters within the universe. In this case, the rumor is in this split mutants never existed. Instead, a somewhat obscure band of super powered folks known as The Inhumans rise to take their place. If they do indeed follow through with this, then essentially Fox has to come up with their own way to market these characters as they won't be getting any help in the way of new characters, new storylines, merchandise, or anything else related to mutants.
Disney may be happy to sit back and collect a check for character rights on the theme park side, but they appear to be actively sabotaging value on the movie side (which happens to have quite a bit of overlap with characters in use at Universal). At one point I had found an article where a guy at Marvel confirmed he had been asked to devalue Fox owned characters. I apologize however, I can't find it now.