It’s no secret that the Marvel Cinematic Universe is arguably the most successful film franchise running today.
Now on a three-films-a-year schedule, each new Marvel movie is greeted with anticipation by fans, by and large receives a favorable critical response, and scores huge at the box office.
But when The Avengers first grouped these disparate superheroes together in 2012, this was a somewhat novel idea (though admittedly not to comics fans who’d been reading crossover events for decades).
This cinematic universe was something of a risky gamble, as general audiences were instead used to either …
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