Fun fact, my step father worked in the shipping/receiving of Disneyland when this movie came out. Because of the fragile nature of the model they made for the movie, they had to figure a way to transport it from Anaheim to the Burbank studio. It was my step dad who thought of a strap configuration to keep it from breaking the spires on the model. His configuration enabled the model to "float' inside the trailer that was used to move it.
@@jamesnoble8205 :Only the models of the Palomino exist. I saw the hero larger model in person hanging from the ceiling in a pavilion at Disney studios in Florida in 1996 where a lot of models and props were on display. I think it's been moved from there since but I don't know where. A smaller model has been seen at auction some time ago but I forget where. The two 12 foot models of the Cygnus were destroyed. One during filming of the breakup of the ship and the second one was destroyed by accident in a crate when apparently a forklift truck smashed into it (or something to that effect) after it was on display at the New York museum of Natural History.
@@jimsmalleimb7709 ... I used to be into plastic scale model building & I hate when models that are complex & took time to design & complete are smashed into bits by accident. I can understand models that were built to get smashed but not those smashed inadvertently. I still have most of the models I built, which are mainly some sci-fi ships & also real ships such as jet fighters. That Palomino, the size version as big as a person, would have been cool to suspend on the ceiling. I saw the movie back in the day & I had no problems with it (I also still have the novel).
One of my all-time favourite movies. It's properly dark in places, and it's probably the first Disney movie I've seen, where parents hustled their crying children out of the cinema. When Durant unmasks the humanoid, and we're treated to a closeup of what is basically a dead man, there was an audible gasp from genuinely shocked people in the cinema - someone actually screamed a bit later when Reinhardt's terrified face appears behind Maximillian's faceplate. I saw 'The Black Hole' five or six times on release, and every time, it blew me away. Like the later, and also wonderful 'Event Horizon', it can be seen as a haunted house in space movie - the empty crew quarters on the USS Cygnus, with all the missing crews' clothes and belongings in situ, is still skin crawlingly creepy: you know something really terrible has happened to them, in the last 20 years. I still watch it on DVD. I was pleased to find that my seven year old nephew watched it, with his mum and dad, and was utterly fascinated by it. A good friend of mine gave me a beautiful 3D printed 'Palomino' spacecraft as a Christmas gift this year - he knows how much I love this movie.
Oh yeah. I dragged my pops to the theater for this and I think he liked the dark aspect of the movie. I never for one moment considered it a Disney film when I saw it. I had all of the action figures with Maximilian being my favorite. Like Tron, it's still a fun flick to this day.
I know what you mean mate, people like us are tragic, nobody gets us, they don’t understand. Another good one is the time machine, the original movie from 1960 with Rod Taylor in it. If you haven’t seen it you better
I’ve loved The Black Hole since I saw it in 1979 and always considered it underrated. Star Wars, is space opera. The Black Hole is existential science fiction. Thanks for the review Minty!
Thank you for giving a new generation some incentive to catch this wonderful movie that remains one of my favorite sci-fi flicks to this day. Some of the most gorgeous and sophisticated visuals ever, and especially for it's time. I remember GASPING when the lights of the ship came on. And the music. I wore out that LP. I love it. I didn't know all that stuff about the production and what a rocky road it had to getting made. Many thanks to everyone who believed in the concept enough to push it to the next phase of production. It's truly a gem a movie that shouldn't be forgotten.
The big ship was a masterpiece of model making. True Story: I used the box my Death Star came in to make a cheap copy of that ship to play with when my friends came over.
The sudden lighting up of the USS Cygnus is actually a pretty nice jump scare, like the bus brakes in 'Cat People'. I jumped, and you could hear other peoples' reaction in the cinema. The robots aren't actually cute, either - V.I.N.CENT is dry, sarcastic and rather arch, and Old B.O.B. is bitter, world weary and fed up of being bullied by Maximillian. His death is as sad as any human character, and the voice work by the great Slim Pickens, is wonderful.
It.deserves a remake or even a new series: "Beyond the Black Hole" where either the Cygnus was rescued and Dr. McCray found a way to free the zombies and robots Reinhardt created and explore while trying to elude Dr. Reinhardt and Maximilian together and with new found allies who hunt the Cygnus down.
This movie is one of the more prized dvds in my collection. I remember seeing this when it was first released in the theaters, and loving it. My work table still has the VINCent figure I got when I was a kid. It proudly sits next to my BSG dagget figure and Buck Rogers Twiki figure. Cherished relics of my childhood.
I had a Black Hole punch out book. You could build cardboard spaceships and locations. I also had a Star Trek the Motion Picture happy meal box and the Mighty Man and Monster Maker Kit
Thanks for this Minty! This Movie was a totally original concept and there hasn't been anything like it since. The fx were great, The Signus design was very believable and it had that element of Zombie horror with the idea of Reinhardt using the crew to serve his crazy ends. We never, ever see this film shown on terrestrial TV anymore. Being a Disney production, it is probably the only horror they ever made.. Great Film.
I saw this film theatrically when I was a kid. I still consider the score to be haunting. Maximillian is still scarier in some respects than Darth Vader. What he did to Anthony Perkins is still nightmare inducing. V.I.N.C.E.N.T and B.O.B are my favorites, and B.O.B's death is still sad. Then how Maximillian and Reinhardt merging into a satanic figure is a perfect metaphor for megalomania.
I just watched it again this weekend. I thought it was interesting how Reinhardt asked Kate to "Save me from Maximillian". I suppose it was just a trick, but it seemed out of character for him, and I wondered if he actually was scared of the robot, who seemed to disobey him pretty regularly.
Satanic figure? More like Reinhardt's punishment in accordance with his sins. He was trapped inside the body of a murderous robot he created, unable to move, and to eternally look down upon representations of what he had done to the crew. This was his personal hell, his damnation. Very Dante's Inferno.
@@TheCastellan , I agree that Max has developed a will of his own. I think the line was actually ad lib from Maximillian Schell if I remember correctly. I think it adds an interesting aspect to the story. Later, we see Maximilian obviously ignore Reinhardt's plea for help. He turns back and looks at him, so it is clear he heard him. I think Reinhardt had recognized that he most likely didn't run the ship anymore, but that currently there was a status quo where it wasn't really necessary for anything to change. Reinhardt knew, deep down, that Max could have him sent to the hospital and there would be nothing he could do about it. I mean, was there REALLY any reason for Max to kill Durant other than jealousy?
I saw The Black Hole in ‘79 and as a 9-year old kid I loved it. I loved the action and the disaster part. It was different in terms of a space odyssey from everything else at that time. Now at 50, I still love the movie, and can appreciate the psychological aspect.
@@brandonpage7087 eBay There's a small collectors ring around the UK. As a child I was given the projector from HMS Bristol when the royal navy changed from 16mm to dvd. It came with 3 short reels of classic cartoons, so it's a treasured childhood toy. After getting it recapped andHaving all the perished belts replaced by one of the last living repairman I started collecting. Currently my library is: 1) The Black Hole 2) The Elephant Man 3) Those cartoons. When we move into our new house will be setting up a _reel_ home cinema. Ones that I missed, way out of my budget, was an anamorphic print of Aliens. That went for a £1000.
What?! ok. I'm calm now. That is an amazing thing to read. Maybe we could be fans and pull together to gather funds to see it played 16mm way. like a club, ya know? make friends in away, yeah?
Under rated classic, always loved the soundtrack and Roddy Mcdowalls wonderfully dry witted Vincent, not to mention the terrifying Maximillian and genuinely sad loss of the battered Texan Bob.
My parents took me to see this as a child. When a key character dies towards the very end of the film I started crying, and not quietly crying, but full on screaming sobbing. The people in the theatre were very concerned about this inconsolable little boy. To this day I can’t watch that scene without tears in my eyes. “We’re the best” just kills me.
My Dad brought me to see this at the theatre when I was a little kid. Didn’t understand ALL that was going on but, the flying robots caught my attention.
The part where the Cygnus is dark and they are flying under and around it- is one of the best cinematic scenes I’ve ever seen ! And the hand painted mats for space were beautiful!
I saw this as a child on release. A really dark movie from Disney that was aimed at kids. The bit where Maximillian comes at the camera with a spinning blade weapon was pretty scary as I recall but the really freaky bit was when he merges with his creator at the end and you see the trapped eyes of the human looking out of him whilst standing on an asteroid. That ending gave me nightmares.
8:01 It was the late seventies, at this stage it was all about going into out of space ............ and disco. :D That made me smile, well done Minty, well done.
I seen the movie in the theater as a kid. The Maximillion hell scene scared the sh!t out of me. I wish I still had my Maximillion model. It was about 10 inches tall, and the arms rotated and articulated. As soon as I got Disney+, it was one of the first movies I watched.
They recently released a Maximillian action figure in 2019, you can probably still find it if you really want to own him again. Made by Diamond Select toys. Also, the two floating droids were made as well. B.o.b. and the other one. I bought all 3!
Cool! I still have the Max model and Vincent with all his extended arms and leg balls. The stands still work but Maxamilions wire don't stay in his back well. As a kid I even rigged red light for his eye. I never heard anyone mention the models before. I can't remember who made them?... AMT? Monogram? MPC Mabey?
I saw this for the first time a few years ago, fortunately in a theater, and was blown away. Partially because I wasn't expecting that intense overture, but I'm a practical effects nerd and just all the detail in this movie is amazing. It feels like a cross between 20,000 Leagues and Alien more than Star Wars though. I hope you'll do a list about "Watcher in the Woods" sometime.
French actress Yvette Mimieux was previously known for playing Weena in the classic film _The Time Machine._ Also, for those too young, an overture was where a mix of the film's musical themes were played at the very beginning of the movie, before the first credits even rolled. This was not an optional feature controlled by the theater owners, this was the actual start of the first film reel. They were a leftover from the old time classic theater days where people would hang out in the lobby before a film started. The lobby lights would flash to let everyone know the film was about to start. The overture served as a buffer to allow everyone time to enter the theater and find their seats without really missing anything. I think it was a holdover from live theater, where it served the same purpose..
I've always liked the intro to this movie The green grid pattern and the musical score. And of course also like the line Vincent's my name sharp shootings my game.
I had the big Max robot action figure as a kid and I used it to fight my Luke Skywalker action figure. The Black hole and the Poseidon Adventure have both Ernest Borgnine and Roddy McDowell in them!
FINALY!!! The Black Hole. As a young boy i watched that movie many many times. I even had a cassette tape from this movie. Maan that theme Music was epic. Great movie. Brings back memories 😌.
It gets a bad rap, but I have always enjoyed the Black Hole. It was Disney being brave and a gothic horror in space loooonng before Event Horizon. Tonally it's all over the place but it's still a fun watch.
No, it gets the rap it deserves. This was not a good movie even from a 1970s perspective. It was helmed by people stuck in the 1960s and did not have any of the blood Lucas and his generation brought on board. It was outdated way before it hit the screen and Star Wars just accelerated that feeling. Disney had a lot of problems then and even 20,000 Leagues Under the Sea made this movie look dated.
It took me awhile to actually watch this movie beyond the first 15 mins. I was not into Disney producing live action movies. I only watched their cartoons. However, there was a TV station that would broadcast this movie every year. I would just happen to stumble upon it. I would just watch it until the Palomino docked with the Signus. I lost interest in the story at that point. One day I decided to watch it because there was nothing else on. There were times when I lost interest and flipped the channel only to come back to watch it. The movie grew on me and I ended up buying it on DVD.
@@Laceykat66 Stop with the sour grapes just because someone likes a movie you didn't. It's not as if this film exists in direct opposition to something you love. The Black Hole gets better with age and as superior as Star Wars was, it was the beginning of a shark jump that gave us all the trash we have today.
@@paulw6057 Sour Grapes? You keep using that phrase. I do not think it means what you think it means. Adam made an evaluation I did not agree with and I gave him specific points as to why I disagree. In the olden days this was called a discussion. Black Hole does NOT get "better." The story still drags, the effects were more primitive than 20,000 Leagues Under the Sea, and the ending was a poor attempt that did not succeed. It was made at a time when Disney was between great periods. When it was a shell of its former self living on the residuals of re-releases.
I LOVED this movie when it came out. I was a little too young to fully follow the story, but lived VinCENT, BOB, and the Palomino. (Maximillian gave me nightmares.) However, I had the comic book adaptation which I read several times and was finally able to wrap my head around the entire story. I just realized it's available on Disney Plus. Going to go rewatch it now.
thats the craziest thing ive read on youtube this month (There is a lot going on right now!) BUT!!! More than likely true!! Yeah, theres some sweet irony in a horror film (and a really good one) based on a Disney flick.
Indeed, but after i watch the 'making of' of Event-H i think they got inspired more from pure horror movies. The ship for exemple, is a cathedral transformed into a spaceship. If you look at the ship, in some view, you can almost see stained Glass that are typical of them... That being said, The Black Hole is a great movie for his time, it just got overshadowed by Star Wars.
Absolutely. They're almost two takes on the same story, but with VERY different time and style. Watching them together as a double feature strangely makes both movies better.
When I was a kid there were few movies that lived up to my expectations like Empire Strikes Back, Flash Gordon and, yes, even The Black Hole! I saw The Black Hole several times in the theater and considered it a “classic” just like the Star Wars films. It would be several decades later that, to my surprise, it remains an oddity rather than a cool movie that it is.
Really surprised you've not mentioned anything about the John Barry score, which along with the score for Moonraker and Raise The Titanic is considered to have come from Barry's golden era of work... the main theme alone is just utterly jaw dropping.
Saw this in the theaters. Loved it, but I was 8 at the time. Watching in in 4k is stunning. And the USS Cygnus is one of the most visually pleasing ships in scifi. I can see the influence of designs from 2001 now that you mentioned who did the designs.
As someone who saw the movie in theaters at age 9, I have vivid memories. Maximillian was such a great villain. Genuinely scary! And than final scene.... music so haunting, the Dante's Inferno heaven and hell imagery. It just seemed so DEEP, and I was totally baffled. I've grown to really love this movie.
I loved The Black Hole when I saw it as a kid. I thought (and still do) that the villain robot "Maximillian" was one of the most impressive and scariest villains ever. I even remember having a "Black Hole" t-shirt and an old-skool metal lunch-box.
When this film was released I had the book they released with the film which included a vinyl record. "Help me Maximillian...Help Me!" This became my catchphrase for about a year after the film was released, complete with Schell's accent.
I've always loved this movie. The script could have been better but this movie has so much more to offer. It has an ominous feel to it from set design to musical score.
Correction: Jack Kirby did not draw the particular comics you showed. That was artist Dan Spiegle, who drew a number of Disney movie comic book adaptations and a great many other comic books for Good Key/ later Whitman comics. I know his style anywhere. What Jack Kirby drew was a separate comic strip adaptation that was completely separate from what you displayed examples of. *This* is what Jack Kirby drew (the entire comic strip series on RU-vid), while you can see the scenes from thre Whitman comic books is by a completely different artist and publisher: ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-gQVObZaFKfw.html
I saw it in the theaters as a kid and loved it so when the anniversary edition came out on disk I scored a copy without hesitation - it was just as good as I remembered it being. As for what to compare it to, I always kind of viewed it as 20,000 Leagues in space with a touch of Island of Dr Moro tossed in for flavor, thus making it more of a drama/thriller/gothic horror than action movie in my book.
I got to see this as a kid in theaters. I loved it! My four faves were Star Wars, Battlestar Galactica, Flash Gordon, and The Black Hole! I miss being a kid in the late 70’s...
I miss movies that got that sort of reaction from the audience. I recently experienced this recently in Godzilla 2014 when he kills the MUTO huge cheers and Rogue One but it was people yelling because they where upset at all th killing of heroes.
This movie was a huge hit among my circle of friends when I was in 1st grade. You were cool if you had the Bob and Vincent figures. I even had Black Hole pj's. 🤣
Thank you, Minty. This film was so beautiful and moody, and was an excellent entry into the Sci-Fi genre. Silly quirks aside, it’s a film that deserves its accolades. I dare say it influenced several movies in later years. And you just can’t beat that theme!!
This was the very first movie my parents let me see by myself in the theater. In the scene where the beaten and bloody face POPS up on the screen, my popcorn went 3 rows back. The group of girls it landed on were NOT impressed.
@@jamesnoble8205 At the very end when the evil characters body is seen floating through space. It's all of a sudden RIGHT THERE!!! In my defense, I was 12. lol
I remember seeing this when it was released and I loved it. I decided to revisit it about 5 years ago, expecting to have a good laugh but it has held up amazingly well. It stands on it's own even after all these years.
The Black Hole is very macabre for a Disney film. It is so underrated...I think the makers of Event Horizon (which is also a fave movie of mine) took a lot of inspiration from the Black Hole. So dark with a number of avenues that were not fully explored...Such as why did Reinhardt say "Project me from Maximilian" Brilliant writing...I am surmising that the robot was created by Reinhardt (physically and mentally) , became far too powerful for him to control, by his lust for knowing what was on the other side of the black hole, and his hate for authority...who instructed him to abort and return, and Maximilian was a by product of Reinhardt's dark side, and hate for humanity...Very similar to the fundamental workings of the Forbidden Planet. It is a shame the end was so ambiguous....We obviously see Reinhardt mate and merge with his Frankenstein monster, and become maybe the movies depiction of the Devil....And the other survivors travelling through the glass corridor to Heaven, and hopefully out the other side.
I always thought Reinhardt said to Kate, "Protect me from Maximillian." I interpreted it as a way to try to pass his insanity as a fear of Maximillian.
@@SoremRasmussen It might well be the way you have mentioned...But it came across to me as though Reinhardt couldnt control his monster any longer. Look at how Maximilian kills Alex Durant...Totally against Reinhardt's wishes. I believe the robot was a manifestation of Reinhardt's darkness from within, and that he was struggling to control his hate. Well thats my take on it anyways. :)
@@jumblesaleboo That's not how reproduction works though. Fusing together on the other hand when the laws of physics break down after the singularity I can believe. In that sense I guess you can kinda interpret it anyway you want. Kinda a weird choice though to be honest, but who am I to judge... Pa.. paa... pervert! Oh my, excuse me! I think I'm coming down with a case of coronavirus. I'm just messing with you bro. Lol 😂
I was so excited to see that you featured "The Black Hole"!! I have always said this is an underrated and often overlooked movie. I was obsessed with this movie as a kid!
Do more of Disney live action movies, since Sean Connery's birthday was recently you could do Darby O'Gill and the little people or you could do Something wicked this way comes.
OMG, I love Darby O'Gill. Sean can sing so well! And, there's a lot of ' 'Disney style' special effects... They're cheesy now, but banshee & the death cab freaked us out when we were kids. And we loved King Brian in all his trickiness. Hehehe.
Yes, and thanks for reminding me of Escape to Witch Mountain. Tron was a big influence. I love all the corny live action FX like Sid & Marty Krofft and Godzilla. My 10 year old son and I laugh endlessly at Godzilla's stupid loveable son, Manilla.
An excellent video. The Black Hole has always been a favourite of mine. Something you may have missed is that Sigourney Weaver was considered for the role of Dr Kate McCrae. I also heard that Roddy McDowell and Slim Pickens were not credited because they were brought on after filming was completed for their voice acting so the original cast never heard their actual dialogue until (presumably) when the film was released. I cannot remember where I heard it, thought, so take that with a pinch of salt.
I had the storybook to this movie back in the day. It was part of a film adaptation series. They had a red, black, and blue logo on the upper right corner.
Wasn't there a 45rpm record version? I kinda remember something like that, but I can't be sure. I might just be confusing the story book version and a Star Wars record.
@@phillipmoxley2444 nice, and thanks for the info. That means there is a good chance I did have it amongst the dozen or so other 45rpm storybook records of the time.
Loved this movie when I was a kid, still do. I had the LP versions of this and Star Wars and played them over and over. It was the first movie I watched on Disney+.
I saw this when it first came out and loved it, I used to have the figures and bought it once it came out on DVD which had some cool bonus feature, including alternate ending.
As a kid in the late 70s, I had two posters hanging in my room. One was Spider-man and the other was V.I.N.C.E.N.T. I also loved Tron. If you look close in Tron Legacy, the scene where Flynn is talking to his kid in the bedroom and talks about "Cycles that raced on ribbons of light", there is a toy of B.O.B. in the background behind the two light cycles. Good episode Minty!
@1701gijoe I still wish Tron was moved to the Marvel universe. Imagine Marvel on the grid. Anyway, I wish your had been right. I think the Black Hole needs a reboot. Not a fan of reboots but I think it could be something pretty cool if done right.
I saw this 2000-2001 at my school! I have this in my DVD collection! This Film is also inspired the 1997 sci fi horror film EVENT HORIZON and the 2011 Sci-fi adventure interstellar.
@@chadwarren9677 I can't remember where I read about the Director's cut but it's sadly not going to happen. Paul Anderson said that, in that time honoured tradition, the footage that didn't make the final cut was destroyed. Anderson did say he still had the footage but only on DigiBeta tapes of the rushes.
Still one of my favorites! Saw it when it came out. And I had models of V.I.N.C.E.N.T and Maximillian that I took great care in the assembly of. Wish I still had those models!
Still love this movie, even though it can be a little cheesy at points. Still watch it on DVD several times a year. I had most of the figures but gave them to my nephews as I got older.😣 Had the models of VINCENT, Max and the Cygnus, but when you play with models, they don't last. V.I.N.C.E.N.T. will always be one of my favorite characters of all time! His confidence/cockiness and his dialogue are fantastic. For you fans, go check out Walgreens. You might get lucky and find the new 2020 upgraded 6" scale remakes of V.I.N.C.E.N.T. and Maximillian if nobody noticed them! Thanks Minty. Another fun video! We'll forgive "Riving" at #8. Love Ya and Cheers Mate!
My mom used to take me and my sisters to a theater which showed Disney movies. Those were the good old days when the good old classics were re-released, time and again. We also saw some new (at the times) ones, such as, The Rescuers, Herbie Goes to Monte Carlo and The Cat from Outer Space. That theater stopped showing the Disney movies probably shortly after The Balck Hole was made. When I saw the trailer for it on TV, I wondered how family-friendly it would be considering it was a Disney movie rated PG. Sometime in 1980, we got our first VCR by RCA. Then we started renting movies on VHS, (About a year later, we rented a few on Betamax when my dad got a Sanyo [that's right, Sanyo, not Sony]). The first movies we've rented were The Jerk, Star Trek - The Motion Picture and The Black Hole. We had some experience watching movies without commercials and UNCUT! [Those who've seen The Jerk may recall the dog's name.] I kinda wished I had seen that Star Trek movie in the theater because of the scenes that would be awesome to see on the big screen. The Black Hole was not bad. I could see why critics find that movie dull and found it hard to believe that it was a Disney movie. There was a recent limited Blu-ray release of The Black Hole. It's now kinda costly to get it. Maybe soon there will be an UNlimited release? I wouldn't mind seeing it again.
The Black Hole has some serious flaws - mostly with clunky dialogue and underwhelming writing, but it still has some very cool things about it that make it worth checking out too. My favorite thing about it is the robot Maximilian - it's just such a cool design - one of my all time favorite robot designs along with Gort from The Day The Earth Stood Still (the original, not the completely awful remake). And I loved the fact that Maximilian didn't speak - that really lent to the menace and "otherness" of his character, which parallels the Reinhardt character. The film score of course is also awesome. A lot of people criticize the end of this movie, but I actually kind of dug it. If you pay attention to all the references to Dante's Inferno and also factor in various speculations about what black holes are, my opinion is that the end actually reflects some interesting artistic and philosophical choices and gives much food for thought. Anyway, if you haven't checked it out, I'm with Minty - give it a look.
It was also a Disney film, so its not like they could've had the remaining good guys & gal & robot pal all die via being reduced to their basic atoms in the hole. That would've been too dark and depressing an ending.
He didn't speak and it added to his mystery. Where did he come from, there are even hints (script wise) that he just appeared some day. Thus putting in more and more of a "He's a demonic figure due to their proximity to the black hole". It is like Event Horizon before event horizon in many ways lol.
The movie scared me to death as a kid, or more accurately, Maximillin did. That scene with the blender cutting through the books traumatized me. (As well as the crew story, no spoilers)That said, I LOVED Vincent and Bob
Agreed about the ending. It's a major story twist and divergence from what we were watching in the previous 80 minutes. It's like we went from a great space adventure following SOME real physics, to an M. Night Shyamalan twist filled fantasy land.
Angi Myers ...I still don't get the ending. The blackhole turned out to be a wormhole? To Heaven and Hell? Don't get me wrong, I'm all for a good Christian allegory. However when it just comes out of left field, you've lost me.
I love the special effects in the Black Hole, the robots are cool too especially Maximillian, V.I.N.CENT and B.O.B. It’s really a very inventive film, the intro is amazing, but the story isn’t really that polished. But I love these old Disney movies when they took chances and tried different things instead of cashing in and doing Marvel and Star Wars movies, which is ok if you like them.