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“They put me in armor; they shoved a beard on me,” Hopkins said in a scathing new MCU piece in the New Yorker. “Sit on the throne, shout a bit. If you’re sitting in front of a green screen, it’s pointless acting it.”
Hopkins appeared as Odin in three movies, the aforementioned trio of films. Beyond that, however, Odin’s reach was felt in all corners of the Marvel Cinematic Universe as a integral part of its lore. Yet, thge comments from the Oscar-winning actor are far from the first that are critical of Marvel. Nearly four years ago, Martin Scorsese ruffled the feathers of many by saying he felt Marvel movies weren’t “cinema.”
“I don’t see them. I tried, you know? But that’s not cinema,” Scorsese toldย Empire Magazine at the time. “Honestly, the closest I can think of them, as well made as they are, with actors doing the best they can under the circumstances, is theme parks. It isn’t the cinema of human beings trying to convey emotional, psychological experiences to another human being.”
Shortly thereafter, Francis Ford Coppola echoed the sentiment.
“When Martin Scorsese says that the Marvel pictures are not cinema, he’s right because we expect to learn something from cinema, we expect to gain something, some enlightenment, some knowledge, some inspiration,” Coppola told journalists in Lyon, France after receiving the Prix Lumiere award (viaย Yahoo News). “I don’t know that anyone gets anything out of seeing the same movie over and over again. Martin was kind when he said it’s not cinema. He didn’t say it’s despicable, which I just say it is.”
Thor: Love and Thunderย is now available wherever movies are sold. It’s also streaming on Disney+.
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