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As I vented on Twitter, I think there’s an element of sneering canonicism in Scorsese’s statement: Marvel Films aren’t “cinema,” they aren’t “Art,” they aren’t canon-worthy.

Which of course prompts the usual questions: who decides what’s in and not in a canon of cinema? What standards do they use? Who profits from canon-construction, and who loses out?

All questions that Scorsese is not intellectually prepared to tackle.

(I like your post better than my tweets, naturally)

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William Kendall said on October 9th, 2019 at 10:40 am

You make a pretty good argument about it. This is actually the first I’ve heard of this dust up. Probably because I’m not on Twitter anymore.

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Matthew Vossler said on October 9th, 2019 at 11:53 am

Nice to have you posting again. You always have something thought-provoking to say.

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mygif

I think when Scorsese says they are not cinema, he means they aren’t trying to do the kinds of things he’s trying to do when he makes movies.

Which is a fair claim for him to make, and might even be right. I’m not sure he makes the case very well, but I don’t think he’s required to sit through 10 Marvel movies and take notes in order to have a gut reaction that “This doesn’t look like it’s interested in the things that I think make film interesting.”

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Halloween Jack said on October 11th, 2019 at 2:58 pm

I’m glad that you mentioned Ebert, because he’s someone whose opinion I respected, even though I disagreed with it more than a few times. I’ve had friends who were serious comics readers who didn’t like Watchmen, which still baffles me.

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Placeholder said on November 1st, 2019 at 12:24 pm

“Scorsese’s subjective opinion is wrong that the things are bad, but my subjective opinion is right that they’re good!”

I was gone for months. Came back and found this. Think I’ll try again in 2021.

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mygif

It’s always disappointing when you reach a point in life when you’re still growing and changing, but the people you admired when you were younger clearly haven’t. Like, for example, when you see a guy you remember as having interesting things to say feel the need to log on for the first time in a year to defend a series of toy commercials made by the biggest entertainment company in the world from Mean ol’ Marty

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Sean Martin said on November 28th, 2019 at 5:23 pm

@Rolf, I, too, enjoyed the postings MGK has made here and have looked forward to the day he’d post more. Some postings were not as much as others, sure. But nothing is 100% enjoyable or thought provoking all the time.

It strikes me as odd that you’d hang around for a year waiting to see if he posts anything more, just to then insult him for it.

I have no interest in the prior post. WWE holds no appeal at all. But I enjoyed enough of his previous work that I’ll keep checking back in hopes more posts I do enjoy are coming. That he gets back in to posting here regularly. (Assuming posts like yours don’t discourage him.)

(And if future posts include a few more “If I wrote Dr Strange…”, the wait will be worth it. The Legion got 50. Hopefully Doc will, too.)

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@Rolf

I have good news on both the “growing and changing” front and the “not logging in” front, most of MGK’s content is found elsewhere now, in a very different format than the blog!

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Sean Martin said on December 8th, 2019 at 4:54 am

@Marble: And just where is that?

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