Skip to content
Search AI Powered

Latest Stories

Elizabeth Olsen Opens Up About Why She Gets 'Feisty' When People 'Throw Marvel Under The Bus'

Elizabeth Olsen Opens Up About Why She Gets 'Feisty' When People 'Throw Marvel Under The Bus'
Noam Galai/Getty Images for Disney

There's no doubt that comic book and superhero films are here to stay. They are a billion-dollar business, after all, making them the entertainment industry's life blood by some metrics.

Nevertheless, many of the industry's heavyweights have derided the many Marvel franchises as lacking artistic merit—or even injurious to the film industry as a whole.


But Elizabeth Olsen—starring again as the Scarlet Witch in Marvel's newest film Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness—isn't having it.

In a new interview with The Independent, Olsen said she finds a lot of the criticism of Marvel's output unfair, and she gets "a little feisty about" the perception comic book and superhero movies are somehow a "lesser type of art."

A handful of iconic Hollywood directors have been outspokenly against films like Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness, especially because of the way they have changed the industry--smaller, auteur-led films are now harder than ever to get financed.

Martin Scorsese has derided them as "more like theme parks," and winner of this year's Best Director Oscar winner Jane Campion recently told Variety simply, "I hate them."

But perhaps nobody has been as direct as three-time Best Director nominee Ridley Scott, who has called the films "fu*king boring as sh*t."

Olsen, a Marvel mainstay who cut her teeth in small-budget, highbrow independent films, has had it with these criticisms--especially given how much work goes into them. She told The Independent.

"I’m not saying we’re making indie art films, but I just think it takes away from our crew, which bugs me."

She went on to point out that crews who work on Marvel movies are often the same artists and technicians who also work on Oscar-winning art films helmed by the auteurs who seem to hate them so much--and that irks her.

"I feel diminishing them with that kind of criticism takes away from all the people who do award-winning films, that also work on these projects..."
"I do think throwing Marvel under the bus takes away from the hundreds of very talented crew people. That’s where I get a little feisty about that."

On Twitter, many applauded Olsen for taking a hard stance toward what many feel is artistic snobbery in the industry.




But there was no shortage of those who agree with the likes of Scorsese and Campion.




Art or not, Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness had a $185 million opening weekend despite mixed reviews from both critics and fans, so these films are not likely to go anywhere any time soon.

More from Entertainment/tv-and-movies

Screenshots from Priscilla Houliston's TikTok video
@the1870studio/Tiktok

Woman Who Bought An Old Church For Under $40k To Live In Explains How She Did It

It's becoming increasingly difficult and expensive to find a home for those who do not already have one or who are in dire need of an upgrade.

TikToker Priscilla Houliston is here to teach us another way: seeking out old churches and other obscure properties that can be re-zoned as a residential home property.

Keep ReadingShow less
Pete Hegseth
Joe Raedle/Getty Images

Pentagon Just Banned Press Photographers Over 'Unflattering' Photos Of Pete Hegseth—And The Internet Got To Work

The internet reacted exactly as you might expect after the Pentagon announced it would ban some press photographers from briefings about the Iran war due to their "unflattering" photos of Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth.

Here's a silly one, just because.

Keep ReadingShow less
Screenshots from @italiangirl1130's TikTok video
@italiangirl1130/TikTok

Italian Exchange Student's Reaction To American Host Mom Taking Him To Olive Garden Is An Instant Classic

A joy that not nearly enough people get to have during high school is hosting an international student who comes to visit for either one semester or perhaps even an entire year to experience the world and the educational system from another country.

Tiktoker Rhonda, who goes by @italiangirl1130 on the platform, currently has the pleasure of hosting Alessandro, and her family has already filmed a variety of antics on the platform, trying to give the teen the best American experience they can.

Keep ReadingShow less
Screenshots from @ali.fragster, @pluto_theservicedog, and @thatflippingagent's TikTok videos
@ali.fragster/TikTok; @pluto_theservicedog/TikTok: @thatflippingagent/TikTok

Woman's Video Shooing Kid At Disneyland Away From Her Service Dog Sparks Heated Debate

A massive debate has taken over TikTok about who needs to be protected, children or service dogs or both, and it all started with a video taken at Disneyland.

TikToker @pluto_theservicedog frequently posts videos of her travels with her service dog, Pluto, and she also creates informative videos about how the general public should interact with service dogs.

Keep ReadingShow less
Hudson Williams (left) and François Arnaud (right)
Swan Gallet/WWD via Getty Images; Gary Gershoff/Getty Images

'Heated Rivalry' Stars Call Out The Show's Toxic Fans And Their 'Hateful Love' With Blunt Statement

Heated Rivalry stars Hudson Williams and François Arnaud took to social media to call out hateful comments from some of the show’s fans.

Both Williams, who plays Shane Hollander in the series, and Arnaud, who plays Scott Hunter, have recently been the targets of a wave of hostile online commentary. Their message addressed viewers who were trying to pit the actors and other cast members against one another.

Keep ReadingShow less