Feige reveals Fantastic Four as MCU's first period film

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Kevin Feige, head of Marvel Studios, has revealed the most recent information regarding The Fantastic Four. In the movie, Ebon Moss-Bachrach plays Ben Grimm/The Thing, Vanessa Kirby plays Sue Storm/Invisible Woman, Joseph Quinn plays Johnny Storm/Human Torch, and Pedro Pascal plays Reed Richards/Mister Fantastic. Feige has disclosed that the movie is a historical drama with a 1960s setting. Feige stated, "It is a period film, and there was another piece of art we released with Johnny Storm flying in the air making a 4 symbol," on The Official Marvel Podcast. In that picture, a cityscape was seen. Many astute observers noted that the cityscape bore no resemblance to either the New York of the 1960s or the New York that we knew and loved. Those are astute insights. Feige also said that The Fantastic Four filming will start the Monday following Comic-Con, July 29. In addition, Paul Walter-Hauser, Ralph Ineson, John Malkovich, Julia Garner as Silver Surfer, and Natasha Lyonne sta...

Fan art ignites hope for a full Planet Hulk adaptation in the MCU

The MCU did not give fans the true darkness of the Green Goliath's most renowned epic, Planet Hulk; instead, incredible movie-quality fanart has replaced it.


There aren't many stories as famous as Planet Hulk from 2006, but MCU viewers were only treated to a severely edited version of the expedition. The spectacular visuals from the Green Goliath space epic are now being recreated by amazing fanart, illustrating what may have happened if Marvel had agreed to offer the Hulk a solo film.

The Hulk appears in space, encircled by a broken planet, in this incredible artwork that bosslogic posted to Instagram. The muted colors only highlight the blood on Hulk's hands, and the picture instantly makes one think of the epic Planet Hulk and the legendary name that follows Hulk around Sakaar on his adventures—that he will one day smash the world and become the Worldbreaker.


Note:- Mark Ruffalo, who plays Bruce Banner in the MCU, recently disclosed that Kevin Feige informed him early on that there will never be a solo Hulk movie. However, Feige did agree to explore a storyline in which Banner and the Hulk integrate their personalities by having Banner appear as a supporting character in other movies.


Thor: Ragnarok featured elements of Planet Hulk, but the movie only really showed Hulk as a gladiator. In contrast, the comic event shows Hulk assuming a new identity as the Green Scar, rising from the ranks of gladiators to become Sakaar's ruler, falling in love with Caiera Oldstrong, and forging a crucial alliance with the Warbound, who continue to be his allies to this day. From Incredible Hulk #92–105, Greg Pak, Carlo Pagulayan, and Aaron Lopresti created Planet Hulk.


Planet Hulk transformed the Hulk into the Worldbreaker.


The powerful heroes of Planet Hulk decide to imprison the superhuman to a desolate planet where he may live in peace after the Illuminati determines he is too dangerous to stay on Earth. Unfortunately, due to unforeseen circumstances, he crashes on Sakaar instead, a planet ruled by the Red King, who utilizes "Obedience Disks" to compel any possible threat to become an unwilling gladiator. Though the games make Hulk a folk hero, he amasses a group of fighters around him, including the stone-skinned warrior Hiroim, the former Thor foe Korg the Kronan, the former aristocrat Elloe Kaifi, an unnamed Brood predator, and Miek, an insectoid alien whose species has been driven extinct by the red king.


Note:In Thor: Ragnarok, Taika Waititi's character Korg the Kronan made his debut in the MCU as Thor's buddy and ally. But rather of playing Hulk's fellow imprisoned warrior and eventual rebel, his purpose in the films is far more comedic relief.


Following a string of significant conflicts, which included a gladiatorial match against the Silver Surfer, Hulk ascends to the throne of Sakaar and usurps a benign reign that even resolves a number of long-standing grievances on the planet. But the world becomes unstable when the spacecraft he landed on suddenly blows up, killing Caiera and many of Hulk's slaves. With a vengeance-obsessed Miek, who followed Hulk's wrathful example and blew up the ship rather than embrace a life of peace, the events of World War Hulk are eventually revealed.) Hulk, now more enraged than ever, returns to Earth. Throughout the narrative, Hulk finds himself torn between the legendary personas of the Green Scar, who will save Sakaar, and the Worldbreaker, who will shatter it. In the end, he fulfills both prophecies, rescuing the Earth from its internal disputes and injustices, only for the planet to be catastrophically damaged by the same technology that brought him to Sakaar. The artwork by Bosslogic depicting the Hulk with blood spurting from his hands and a devastated world in the background aptly conveys the conclusion of world Hulk, and it's simple to understand the anger that led to the intense reading of its World War Hulk sequel.


For Hulk, Planet Hulk was a major tale that helped establish his contemporary persona as a cosmic figurehead. It also served as a means of introducing his twin offspring, the valiant Skaar and the evil Hiro-Kala. Even though MCU fans were not given the opportunity to see the entire Planet Hulk, this incredible artwork depicts what could have been and will increase expectations that World War Hulk will be included in some capacity in future MCU productions.


Source: bosslogic

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