Morbius plunged the SSU( Sony’s Spider-Man Universe) into even more deep despair after having a critic’s score of 17% on Rotten Tomatoes and 5.1/10 on IMDb, becoming one of the worst-rated Marvel Movies of all time. Not only was it bad according to critics, but its audience score was the 2nd-worst for any Marvel Movie of all time.
Today, Director Daniel Espinosa talks about the post-credits scenes of this movie, and the future of Morbius.
On The Raimi Spider-Man Poster In The Trailer
I make the movie and then some people make the trailer. When I make the movie, everything that I include in the movie, it’s included. If it’s not in the movie, it’s because I don’t think it should be included. So no, that’s not in the movie.
daniel espinosa, via variety
Deleted Vulture Scenes
Many of those Vulture scenes were shot from the beginning. What had to be changed was the physiology of how to move between worlds. The idea of moving between worlds was invented by Sony, not by the MCU. They did it and then I had to adjust. That’s the thing with the Marvel universe, in the comic books it’s always expanding. There are rules you’re slowly setting up together, but the creators are different. The whole idea of the Marvel universe is you have to create the collaboration so they function together. If you have Chris Claremont who’s working on X-Men and he spoke to Steve Ditko, there are clearly different perspectives, and if J. Michael Straczynski gets involved, they have to collaborate to make those rules.
daniel espinosa, via variety
Who Morbius And Vulture Should Team Up In The Future
I think Norman Osborn would be very interesting. That’s a whole different idea, that’s like if you go away from the idea of Sinister Six and you’re going into something different. There are other possibilities, because it’s been made for so many years. For me, what Kevin Feige made so brilliant was the way they took many of the mythologies and chose different parts of them and the realization that it doesn’t have to start just like the comics started. You don’t have to go from the ’60s and the ’70s and then to the ’80s and ’90s. You can take from the 2000s, which was like Civil War, and mix them with other concepts of characters that are from earlier parts of the comic book universe.
daniel espinosa, via variety