Yeah, no kidding.
I think it's important to be able to suspend your sense of disbelief when it comes to movies, particularly and especially with comic book movies, but there's a difference between being able to do that and then feeling like you're having your intelligence as a viewer insulted. WW 1984 went way over that fine line. Did turning a jet plane (that they stole from the Smithsonian apparently in full working order) invisible also give it a couple of extra fuel tanks to get from DC all the way to Egypt and back? Just terrible, terrible writing.
My favorite term to use when describing movies is verisimilitude, which is defined as the appearance of being true, real or believable. Some movies have it, while others don't, and it is a fine line to walk. Some of the craziest movies can still have verisimilitude while some of the most grounded movies lose it. If Kevin Feige has been a master of anything, it has been toting and pushing that line so well to the point where he is suddenly able to move it. Then with every subsequent movie he makes, he is able to work with that new line.
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