It wasn't that it was all bad in FATWS for me, as there were some parts I actually really enjoyed from the series, namely the opening action sequence, the Isaiah Bradley stuff, and the John Walker storyline. Where it completely fell flat was the whole Carly/Flagsmasher storyline you mentioned (the main storyline), the slow bogued-down boat/bank scenes, and the ending preachy monologue that just kind of fell somewhat flat. As for the whole flagsmasher storyline, you can find youtube videos showing all the weird ADR (automated dialogue replacement) cuts they made throughout the movie where it is clear they pretty much COMPLETELY changed the whole storyline in post with edits and reshoots. If I remember right, rumor has it the whole storyline was completely different and centered around some type of vaccine I believe, but due to political climate at the time in America, they decided to overhaul everything last minute to stay out of that mess. Hard to tell how true that is or not, but I could totally tell throughout my watch that something weird was going on that was jarring and didn't make sense. So, in the end, I ended up feeling like the series had a poorly written script, but I don't know how much of that was due to poor writing and how much was due to the last minute storyline changes. My guesses it was somewhat both. Sorry for the long answer, but like I said, I was really excited for this series only for me to walk away somewhat disappointed. I also recognize I was somewhat set up for disappointment after how much I LOVED Wandavision, and then was totally jacked after that first action-packed FATWS episode, only for it to go downhill from there.
Thanks for the detailed response.
Very interesting on the ADR. My wife watched it originally and then did a full re-watch recently, and did not at all notice
any weird ADR issues. Nothing odd or weirdly stitched together, in our opinion. Of course most of the Marvel TV shows (at least initially) did struggle with the concept of "episode" viewing, often filming "movies" and cutting them up into TV series as for some reason they steered away from a standard showrunner driven model, which doesn't always work well. I follow 3 - 4 YouTube channels closely that do Marvel breakdown videos (several of which are not all that positive towards Marvel) and I do not recall any mention of extensive ADR use or re-shoots regarding FATWS. To be fair, all of these Marvel shows and movies (yes - even phases 1 - 4) have gone through re-writes and re-shoots, the absolute worst of which are examples like Secret Invasion and Madam Web (well, anything Sony is mostly just embarrassing and terrible).
There was just SO many positives from FATWS. One I keep going back to is Zemo - what a fun re-introduction and really hope they are setting him up for something down the road (holding out hope for example that he's got a place in the Thunderbolts* - particularly if they can get him interacting with Bucky again). Was the final speech a bit cheesy? Sure, but that's Sam's character. He's not a super solider, so he has to use words and persuasion. It's been in his character's DNA since he was introduced when they showed him as a counselor for vets.
And on that note, I felt that theme came through again (fairly well) in Captain America 4, which I saw last night. No doubt the fun-haters and critics will use it to continue to pile on Marvel. And yeah, we
know this movie went through extensive re-writes and re-shoots. But I still enjoyed it. Solid 6/7 out of 10 for me. And as a diehard fan, I find it completely acceptable for Marvel movies to be solid 6/7's. There were plenty of early Phase 1 - 3/4 movies that weren't even this good, but it wasn't as popular to sh*t on Marvel back then, so you didn't hear about it as much. And honestly, if Twitter wasn't constantly b*tching about Captain America 4 going through extensive re-writes and re-shoots, I likely wouldn't have been on hyper alert for it, and maybe would have enjoyed the movie a little more. Instead, I was constantly listening for each quote and cutaway for "post production changes". That's my own fault. But again, overall, another fun time at the movie and excited to watch it with my kids when its out on digital.
Last thing - I thought the CGI was fantastic. If anyone walks out of that movie b*thing about CGI or color grading or other dumb sh*t that people are just learning the words to and trying to act cool, I am convinced they won't find
any CGI acceptable going forward.