SHE-HULK Star Mark Ruffalo Defends The Marvel Cinematic Universe...By Criticizing STAR WARS!

SHE-HULK Star Mark Ruffalo Defends The Marvel Cinematic Universe...By Criticizing STAR WARS!

We're guessing that Avengers: Endgame star Mark Ruffalo won't be heading into a Galaxy Far, Far Away anytime soon as he's defended the MCU while criticising the Star Wars franchise. Read on for details...

By JoshWilding - Aug 12, 2022 01:08 PM EST
Filed Under: Star Wars
Source: Metro

Mark Ruffalo joined the Marvel Cinematic Universe in 2012 when he starred in The Avengers as Bruce Banner, and he's been playing The Hulk ever since. Next up for the actor is Disney+'s She-Hulk: Attorney at Law, and it's fair to say he's now a Marvel Studios veteran.

It's no wonder then that he's quick to defend the MCU when it comes under fire, and the actor did exactly that during a recent interview with Metro.

However, he did so by (mildly, admittedly) criticising the Star Wars franchise!

"It’s not something I worry about," Ruffalo initially said when asked about the rapidly expanding MCU. "I understand that these things run their course and then something else comes along."

He'd go on to praise the studio for allowing filmmakers to put their spin on the comic books with "their own style [and] their likeness." To reinforce the point he was making, Ruffalo used Star Wars as an example of a franchise that doesn't necessarily change as much as the MCU (for example, Moon Knight, Thor: Love and Thunder, and Ms. Marvel are all worlds apart). 

"If you watch a Star Wars, you’re pretty much going to get the same version of Star Wars each time," Ruffalo said, making a valid observation. "It might have a little bit of humor. It might have a little bit of different animation. But you’re always, really, in that same kind of world. But with Marvel you can have a whole different feeling, even within the Marvel Universe."

Some Star Wars fans might not appreciate the actor's observations, but he's not wrong. There's a very specific approach that needs to be taken with that Galaxy Far, Far Away in order to maintain a certain feel to the franchise and, when someone veers from that, they get fired (look at Phil Lord and Chris Miller with Solo: A Star Wars Story). The MCU, however, is a little more varied.

What do you think about Ruffalo's take on Star Wars? Let us know down in the comments section. 

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DevilsDreams
DevilsDreams - 8/15/2022, 9:38 AM
Whether you like the MCU or not, you at least have to be appreciative of the level of interconnectedness and linking that it has managed to achieve, whilst still allowing individual directors agency to portray a story they want.

One of the problems that Star Wars seems to have faced is not having a longer term plan or goal, so when they gave a director agency it seems to have been without any real guidelines or thought towards a bigger picture.

Ruffalo isn't entirely wrong though, the star wars "aesthetic" is relatively clear across the franchise. I wonder in the past if that's because the leaders at Lucas film don't seem to understand their product in the same way that someone like Kevin Feige seems to understand the Marvel product.
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