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Christ, it's like I am playing cards with my brothers kids or something
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Christ, it's like I am playing cards with my brothers kids or something
not to mention that he's the OP of the damn threadMBAR said:
TCTTS you came into a thread filled with superfans, told them that you didn't care enough about the movies to follow a central plot of one, then are finding it hard to understand why people are thinking thats odd?
Dude, com'on.
TCTTS said:Quote:
Wait, where did Loki get the "mind stone"? There were two stones in the first Avengers movie?
- Tesseract (main mcguffin) and The scepter (secondary mucguffin)
- Scepter was used to control hawkeye. you don't find out that it contained the mind stone until Ultron.
As for the Eye of Agamotto / The Time Stone, I obviously remember its powers, but I couldn't remember if it was an actual stone or if that was just a power that Doctor Strange unlocked.
So, as of now...
- THE TESSERACT (introduced in The Avengers) is currently with Loki aboard the Asguardian ship.That controlled Hawkeye's mind, right? But it's not the mind stone?It's the "space stone"? What's its primary power?
- Traveling through space
- THE MIND STONE (introduced in The Avengers as well?) is currently... where? In Vision's forehead? I do now remember that happening in Age of Ultron.
- Yes, It was in loki's scepter
- THE ORB (introduced in Guardians of the Galaxy) is currently with the Nova Corps. This brought back Quill from the brink of death? Is that its power?
- THE AETHER (introduced in Thor: The Dark World) is currently... no idea. For the life of me, I can't remember what it looked like or what it even did.
- Red flowing liquid. malekith wanted it. it bonded with natalie portman. Lady Sif took it to the collector at the end of The Dark World.
- THE TIME STONE (introduced in Doctor Strange) is currently... where? In New York at Doctor Strange's house?
- Yes
But then there's also apparently a SOUL STONE that we've never seen? Wouldn't that make for six stones total? I thought there were only five?
- One for each finger and one on the top of the hand below the knuckles
Also, what was the thing Red Skull was after in Captain America: The First Avenger? Was that a stone or no?
- Youseriousclark.gif? It was the tesseract. Red Skull was teleported away in the final battle when he touched it bare handed.
Regardless, CLEARLY this hasn't been "spelled out" for me, either in this thread or in the movies themselves, for someone who only casually keeps track of this stuff. I'm actively trying to understand / remember and it's still pretty damn confusing.
MBAR said:
TCTTS you came into a thread filled with superfans, told them that you didn't care enough about the movies to follow a central plot of one, then are finding it hard to understand why people are thinking thats odd?
Dude, com'on.
Yes, because it played such a key part. It was, IIRC, the reason Cap crashed his plane, so it wouldn't be taken by more bad guys.TCTTS said:
I think I've got a handle on it now. This was a big help.
As for the Tesseract being in the first Captain America, it's been seven years since I've seen that movie and I haven't read a word of analysis / recap since. Is it really that hard to believe that someone can't remember what the McGuffin in that movie looked like or did?
tbh, with all the movies and the fact that there aren't infinity stones in all of them, it's easy for them to get lost in the shuffle. It's probably going to be the biggest issue with reviewers is to REALLY understand and enjoy the movie, you pretty much have to have seen all the others.TCTTS said:
Of course I remember the plot revolving around it / Cap crashing his plane so it wouldn't be taken. But there are SO MANY McGuffin's in these movies that it's hard sometimes to remember that THAT was the Tesseract.
Living Legend said:I somewhat disagree with this idea. I don't think reviewers need to know the location of the infinity stones going into the movie, as long as they show Thanos getting the stones in the movie.AgMarauder04 said:tbh, with all the movies and the fact that there aren't infinity stones in all of them, it's easy for them to get lost in the shuffle. It's probably going to be the biggest issue with reviewers is to REALLY understand and enjoy the movie, you pretty much have to have seen all the others.TCTTS said:
Of course I remember the plot revolving around it / Cap crashing his plane so it wouldn't be taken. But there are SO MANY McGuffin's in these movies that it's hard sometimes to remember that THAT was the Tesseract.
MooreTrucker said:Yes, because it played such a key part. It was, IIRC, the reason Cap crashed his plane, so it wouldn't be taken by more bad guys.TCTTS said:
I think I've got a handle on it now. This was a big help.
As for the Tesseract being in the first Captain America, it's been seven years since I've seen that movie and I haven't read a word of analysis / recap since. Is it really that hard to believe that someone can't remember what the McGuffin in that movie looked like or did?
Admittedly, I'm a little fuzzy on some details too, but it really was a big part of that movie.
It's not essential, but it is important, I think, because they will tie together all the movies and the dozens of characters.Living Legend said:I somewhat disagree with this idea. I don't think its important to know where the Infinity Stores are before the movie, as long as they show Thanos getting the stones in the movie.AgMarauder04 said:tbh, with all the movies and the fact that there aren't infinity stones in all of them, it's easy for them to get lost in the shuffle. It's probably going to be the biggest issue with reviewers is to REALLY understand and enjoy the movie, you pretty much have to have seen all the others.TCTTS said:
Of course I remember the plot revolving around it / Cap crashing his plane so it wouldn't be taken. But there are SO MANY McGuffin's in these movies that it's hard sometimes to remember that THAT was the Tesseract.
MooreTrucker said:It's not essential, but it is important, I think, because they will tie together all the movies and the dozens of characters.Living Legend said:I somewhat disagree with this idea. I don't think its important to know where the Infinity Stores are before the movie, as long as they show Thanos getting the stones in the movie.AgMarauder04 said:tbh, with all the movies and the fact that there aren't infinity stones in all of them, it's easy for them to get lost in the shuffle. It's probably going to be the biggest issue with reviewers is to REALLY understand and enjoy the movie, you pretty much have to have seen all the others.TCTTS said:
Of course I remember the plot revolving around it / Cap crashing his plane so it wouldn't be taken. But there are SO MANY McGuffin's in these movies that it's hard sometimes to remember that THAT was the Tesseract.
BTW, what's a McGuffin? I always thought that meant a device used to move the story along that really didn't have any other purpose than to move the story along. I don't think the Infinity Stones would be considered in that light since they are the main focus of IW.
TCTTS said:
....
So, as of now...
- THE TESSERACT (introduced in The Avengers) is currently with Loki aboard the Asguardian ship. That controlled Hawkeye's mind, right? But it's not the mind stone? It's the "space stone"? What's its primary power?
- THE MIND STONE (introduced in The Avengers as well?) is currently... where? In Vision's forehead? I do now remember that happening in Age of Ultron.
- THE ORB (introduced in Guardians of the Galaxy) is currently with the Nova Corps. This brought back Quill from the brink of death? Is that its power?
- THE AETHER (introduced in Thor: The Dark World) is currently... no idea. For the life of me, I can't remember what it looked like or what it even did.
- THE TIME STONE (introduced in Doctor Strange) is currently... where? In New York at Doctor Strange's house?
But then there's also apparently a SOUL STONE that we've never seen? Wouldn't that make for six stones total? I thought there were only five? Also, what was the thing Red Skull was after in Captain America: The First Avenger? Was that a stone or no?
Regardless, CLEARLY this hasn't been "spelled out" for me, either in this thread or in the movies themselves, for someone who only casually keeps track of this stuff. I'm actively trying to understand / remember and it's still pretty damn confusing.
Oh and the Eye of Agamotto (Time Stone) - yes that is still in Dr Strange's possession in his Sanctum Sanctorum in NYC.TCTTS said:
Nice. Makes total sense. Thanks!
AgMarauder04 said:
tbh, with all the movies and the fact that there aren't infinity stones in all of them, it's easy for them to get lost in the shuffle. It's probably going to be the biggest issue with reviewers is to REALLY understand and enjoy the movie, you pretty much have to have seen all the others.
I would certainly agree with that list. Would add the first GotG. Thor 1/2 and Iron Man 2/3 certainly not required viewing. Ant-Man and Age of Ultron aren't either.TCTTS said:
I'm thinking about rewatching a handful of MCU movies over the next couple of months in the lead up to Infinity War. I feel like I have a grasp on the stones now, but as far as the overall story goes, if you guys had to pick, say, five movies to rewatch as a recap/marathon of sorts, what would they be? And it doesn't necessarily even have to be for story, specifically, but perhaps rather just to fully soak in more of a this-is-how-far-we've-come kind of vibe, but in doing so, hitting as many significant signposts as possible along the way.
So I'm thinking about something along these lines, in this order...
- Captain America: The First Avenger
- Iron Man
- The Avengers
- Captain America: The Winter Soldier
- Captain America: Civil War
All the 2017 movies are super fresh in my mind, but it's been a few years since I've seen any of the others. Should I trade any out? Add another couple? With relatively limited time, and not knocking out all 18 movies, what would be your strategy?
While I think most probably don't or won't like it, I do want to watch it again as I think it deserves a re-watch.Sex Panther said:
I mean, you probably should watch Thor: The Dark World
I've seen it a few times and I think it gets a bad rap. It's definitely not the best but it's not horrible. It's just one of the MCU's weakest. All of Loki and Thor's interactions are great and the whole last fight with world hopping is cool. Also, Thor asking how to get to Greenwich and riding the subway is hilarious.