F Kevin Feige Opens Up About Edgar Wright | Galactic News One

Kevin Feige Opens Up About Edgar Wright


When news broke out that director Edgar Wright and Marvel split ways, the studio came under some criticism, and was portrait in some ways as the Man constraining, and ultimately dismissing the creative genius. Well during the Guardians of the Galaxy press event in London, Marvel Studios President, Kevin Feige confirmed that is was a combo of visions falling out of sync and personality issues.

Speaking to The Guardian, Feige said that it wasn't a case of the "big evil studio... too scared at the outside-the-box creative vision. We sat round a table and we realised it was not working. A part of me wishes we could have figured that out in the eight years we were working on it. But better for us and for Edgar that we figure it out then, and not move it through production. We said 'let's do this together and put out a statement.' What do we say? 'Creative differences'. I said: 'That's what they always say and no-one ever believes it.' Edgar said: 'But in this case it's true'"

"The Marvel movies are very collaborative, and I think they are more collaborative than what he had been used to. And I totally respect that. "[But] the notion that Marvel was scared, the vision was too good, too far out for Marvel is not true. And I don't want to talk too much about that because I think our movies speak to that. Go look at Iron Man 3; go look at The Winter Soldier; go see Guardians of the Galaxy later this month. It would have to be really out there to be too out there for us."

Feige then reassured MCU fans that Ant-Man is "in the best shape it's ever been" with Yes Man director Peyton Reed. "Peyton is going to do a tremendous job and the cast is tremendously dedicated and the script is getting into amazing shape," he said. "You wouldn't expect a producer to say anything different, but when that movie comes out it will be the absolute best version of Ant-Man that could have existed." He added, "The biggest disappointment for me is just the relationship, because I like Edgar very, very much and we were very close for many many years. But the perception that the big evil studio was too scared at the outside-the-box creative vision is just not the case."

Before you start saying this is BS, let's not forget that Marvel didn't had a cinematic universe when Wright came on board to write and direct Ant-Man, so there wasn't a "MCU mold" to follow, but now that there is one, the movies need (in my opinion) to have a certain tone, a certain feel, a certain continuity to them in order for it to work properly.


As for the "personality issues", let's face there are other things at play when you are doing a MCU movie. You have to connect your movie to those that came beforehand and those that will came after, so maybe for a director that prizes himself in being unique, which he is, that probably was never going to be a good fit.

Personally, and has much as I like Wright's work, I don't think the he could have fit the mold, I don't think his version of Ant-Man, regardless of how good it could have been, would fit, so in that perspective I think it's a good thing both parties went their separate ways.

Source - The Guardian

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