Business World

Avengers: Endgame moved up in crowded year for superheroe­s

-

WALT DISNEY CO. offered the first peek at Avengers: Endgame and moved up its release date, navigating a crowded year for superhero movies that may serve as the ultimate test of Marvel’s appeal.

The Endgame film, the fourth cinematic chapter in the tale of the universe-saving team of superheroe­s, is now set to debut on April 26. (It had been slated for May 3.) Another of Disney’s Marvel movies, Captain Marvel, is coming out in March, so there’s likely to be significan­t overlap in theaters.

Disney, its pending merger partner 21st Century Fox Inc. and Sony Corp. all have rights to various Marvel characters, and that’s added up to a flood of movies in the coming months. Sony will release Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse this month. Fox has two X-Men films coming in 2019. And Spider-Man: Far From Home, a collaborat­ion between Disney and Sony, is slated for July.

That means a major new Marvel film debuts approximat­ely every 40 days for the next eight months.

Disney’s Marvel Studios released a trailer on Friday for Endgame, which had been untitled until now. When we last left Iron Man, Captain America and the gang, they were reeling in defeat at the hands of Thanos, a supervilla­in who had eliminated half the population of the universe with a snap of his fingers. The how and why is complicate­d.

But what’s important is that the series is a big moneymaker for Disney. The three Avengers movies so far have grossed at least $5 billion worldwide since 2012.

And the story lines for individual Avengers are extended in the trailer. Ant-Man, for instance, reappears. (His last movie ended with him stuck in the Quantum Realm after being shrunk to microscopi­c size. Again, it’s complicate­d.)

Why is that important? Because Marvel’s non-Avenger films, and there are a lot of them, have grossed about another $12 billion. Endgame will help tie them all together.

Still, the ultimate threat for Disney’s Marvel universe may not be Thanos, but an oversatura­ted market. — Bloomberg

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines