he spoke out in support of Martin Scorsese’s controversial comments regarding Marvel films, when he said those cinematic universe entries weren’t “real cinema.”
“Martin was being kind when he said it wasn’t cinema,” Coppola said during a press conference. “He didn’t say it was despicable, which is what I say.”
“There used to be studio films,” he added in a later interview with GQ. “Now there are Marvel pictures. And what is a Marvel picture? A Marvel picture is one prototype movie that is made over and over and over and over and over again to look different.”
But Coppola’s worry over the future of cinema seems to be quelled a bit by the success of July’s marquee pair.
Also on Instagram, a user asked Coppola where he sees the state of movies in 10 years. The director responded, “My hunch is that we’re on the verge of a golden age wonderfully illuminating cinema seen in large theaters.”
As he moves back into filmmaking himself, Coppola can only hope that movie theaters are good and ready to welcome his Adam Driver-led passion project “Megalopolis,” which is expected to debut next year.
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