The Avengers post-credit scene ended the movie on a laugh. |
These days, however, audiences for superhero movies have come to expect some sort of Easter egg scene tacked on to the very end of the film, long after the last production company logo unspools. (In industry lingo, they're called "stingers." They predate the superhero movies by quite a margin.) They usually come in two flavors: a light-hearted, jokey moment, or a tease for the next movie. Are they necessary? No; they're usually a little something extra for the fans, a way of saying "thanks for watching." Could it be, though, that they're drawing more attention than necessary?
Josh Brolin's uber-baddie Thanos has been teased after the Avengers movies for awhile. |
When Marvel Studios did it with the first wave of Avengers movies, they bonded the films and built up anticipation for the Avengers movie, when we'd finally see all these characters together in one film. Could they have been integrated into the bodies of their respective films? Probably. Would they have generated the same amount of attention? Debatable.
That's what these scenes are about, at the heart of it all: buzz; generating hype for what's to come - because we know there will be more shared-universe superhero movies, from Marvel and WB (parent company of DC Comics), at any rate. It's like they're the US and the Soviet Union, engaged in an ever-escalating nuclear arms race, only the end result here is more like Mutually Assured Box Office.
Some scenes, like the one after X-Men: Apocalypse, can leave non-TruFans® baffled with their vagueness. |
Getting back to the post-credit scenes. I hear you complaining: "If you don't like them, don't watch them!" What can I say? If I lived without the Internet, maybe I would. If it were possible to avoid any and all discussion of them, on- and off-line, from now until the end of time, I might do that. The fanboy mentality, however, has infected moviegoers, and like zombies looking for some brains to munch on, we notice and discuss the minutiae of genre movies, especially things like post-credit scenes. I think the jury's still out deciding whether or not this is a good thing.
The Movieworld staffer saw me and said there was no such scene after Wonder Woman. I thanked him and left. Its absence didn't bother me. Who knows? Maybe it's the sign of a counter-trend.
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Related:
Are opening credits becoming uncool?
The main title work of Saul Bass
I waited through the credits with the expectation of something. I think I was slightly disappointed. It was like they didn't finish off the sentence with a suitable flourish. A trip to the doughnut shop in the next block cheered me considerably.
ReplyDelete"Mutually Assured Box Office" - ha!
I thought you'd like that one.
ReplyDeleteThe WB/DC movies look like they're deliberately bucking the trend. I suppose they don't wanna look like they're copying Marvel. I can understand that.
A good doughnut can solve just about any problem.