MCU: The Reign of Marvel Studios

MCU: The Reign of Marvel Studios

Unabridged — 16 hours, 40 minutes

MCU: The Reign of Marvel Studios

MCU: The Reign of Marvel Studios

Unabridged — 16 hours, 40 minutes

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Overview

Marvel Studios is the dominant player in Hollywood and global pop culture, having generated almost $30 billion in revenue and remade the entire business of movies and mass entertainment. Yet its origin story is as unlikely as that of any of its beloved superheroes. How did Marvel conquer the world? And will it be able to survive its own outrageous success?
In MCU, culture writers Joanna Robinson, Dave Gonzales, and Gavin Edwards draw on more than a hundred original interviews-with everyone from studio head Kevin Feige to producers, directors, movie stars, writers, and even Doctor Strange's Cloak of Levitation-to present the definitive chronicle of Marvel Studios and its sole, ongoing production, the Marvel Cinematic Universe. They demonstrate that, from the first Iron Man, which released in 2008, the genius of Marvel was its resurrection and modification of Hollywood's old studio system: it signed up actors for long-term contracts, cultivated trusted staff writers, and brought on a small army of visual artists who sometimes determined the look of a movie before a director was even hired. The result was a string of hits without parallel in the annals of moviemaking. Each film had its own tone and tenor-Marvel played with genre, from the space opera Guardians of the Galaxy to the political thriller Captain America: The Winter Soldier-but each was also part of a larger narrative mosaic. Bought by Disney in 2009, Marvel Studios expanded into TV with the creation of the streaming service Disney Plus-its ambitions onlygrowing.
Spanning the early 1990s to the present, MCU relates many never-before-told stories, including the high-stakes Mar-a-Lago lunch where the idea of Marvel Studios was first pitched. It reveals that, for all its outward success, the studio was forged by near-constant conflict, from the contentious hiring of Robert Downey Jr. to the bitter, internecine battles with the so-called Creative Committee in New York City to the disappointment of Ant-Man and the Wasp: Quantumania and shocking departures of multiple Marvel executives in 2023. Dishy and authoritative, MCU is the first book to tell the Marvel Studios story in full-and an essential, effervescent account of American mass culture.

Editorial Reviews

Publishers Weekly

★ 08/28/2023

Trial By Content podcasters Robinson and Gonzales team up with journalist Edwards (The Tao of Bill Murray) to deliver a superb chronicle of how Marvel Studios conquered Hollywood. Drawing on interviews with more than 100 Marvel personnel, from studio president Kevin Feige and star Chris Hemsworth to hairstylists and set designers, the authors flesh out the oft-told story of the Marvel Cinematic Universe’s humble beginnings with lesser-known anecdotes, noting, for example, that the studio chose Iron Man to head its inaugural outing based on a focus group’s findings that the superhero was the character children “would most want to play with as a toy.” The authors excel at illuminating the behind-the-scenes drama that shaped the MCU, most notably Feige’s uphill battle to introduce a diverse cast of superheroes against the wishes of parent company Marvel Entertainment, “who preferred for Marvel’s heroes to be played by young white men named Chris” because they believed such actors would sell the most toys. There’s fascinating trivia on every page (for instance, Daniel Craig was a front-runner for the part of Thor), and the authors maintain an evenhanded perspective, celebrating the studio’s successes while calling out its missteps, namely the MCU’s lack of direction after 2019’s Avengers: Endgame. This definitive account of the Hollywood juggernaut thrills. (Oct.)

Cosmic Circus

"MCU reveals the real saga behind the Marvel Cinematic Universe.... A fresh backstage perspective into the successes, failures, and twists that have spanned Marvel’s long production history. I thought I knew everything there was to know about the MCU, but the book is filled with revelations I never imagined... [MCU] is not only enlightening, but enthralling."

Marc Bernardin

"I thought I was an authority on the Marvel Cinematic Universe, but I was wrong. This impeccably researched and reported tome is both a propulsive page turner and a real peek behind the curtain into how you build a cultural phenomenon, brick by obsessive brick."

Vulture - Josef Adalian

"Over the course of more than 500 pages and hundreds of interviews, the authors explore how an iconic 20th-century comic-book brand pretty much willed itself into becoming this century’s most potent box-office force. The focus is not on a critical dissection of the individual movies; instead, the book concerns itself with the people and decisions that have shaped Marvel Studios from before Iron Man through today. With The Marvels’ box-office performance (or lack thereof) prompting a wave of stories about the studio at a crossroads, this feels like a potential epitaph for the company’s first epoch."

PopMatters - Michael Curley

"A highly entertaining, well-researched, wide-ranging, detailed, and objective examination of one of the greatest Hollywood success stories. Documenting this specific story illuminates the universal story of big-budget studio filmmaking in the 21st century. There will never be another story like the Marvel Studios story, and maybe there shouldn’t be. But those who want to understand this phenomenal story can do no better than read MCU: The Reign of Marvel Studios."

New York Times - Amy Nicholson

"Marvel’s inescapable obsolescence is the best argument for MCU; the genre should be studied with the same rigor as film noir. The book’s admiration for Marvel movies works in its favor, freeing the writers to skip straight to the gossip, like the relative who pulls you aside at Thanksgiving to whisper about your cousin’s divorce."

Empire Magazine - Helen O’Hara

"A deeply researched and engagingly written spin through Marvel history that gives credit where it’s due, without papering over cracks. Even the biggest fan will find new revelations and new perspectives in the often first-hand accounts of the studio’s climb to world dominance."

Agents of Fandom - Carlos Freytes

"Not to skip to the post-credits scene, but the book is necessary reading for anyone who fancies themselves an MCU fan... Honest and unmerciful... [MCU] delivers a wealth of new context... It’s a testament to the authors that the narrative thread remains easy to follow given the growing expanse of Marvel Studios’ reach.... There is no better document charting Marvel’s improbable rise and total disruption of the Hollywood paradigm.... Readers are sure to learn something new on every page, from which MCU stars first auditioned for roles years earlier to exactly what happened with Edgar Wright’s Ant-Man. A volume of trivia, drama, and humor, MCU: The Reign of Marvel Studios belongs on every Marvel fan’s bookshelf."

Nicholas Quah

"A gift. Comprehensive, accessible, and entertaining, MCU makes for a great primer on a modern pillar of Hollywood entertainment."

Alan Sepinwall

"The book every MCU fan needs to read."

Becca Rothfeld

"MCU is a thoroughly reported history of the world-conquering movie company and its products. Robinson, Gonzales and Edwards set out to write 'the most thorough, authoritative history of Marvel Studios to date,' and that is exactly what they have done. In the gap between power and its parody, between heroism and humiliation, glints something far more arresting than the most impressive special effects: humanity, with its airs and affectations and occasional flares of unexpected valor."

Douglas Wolk

"A riveting, deeply researched history of the collaborative wizardry and backstage showdowns behind Marvel Studios’ popcorn-movie empire."

Jeff Cannata

"Robinson, Gonzales, and Edwards deliver the definitive chronicle of the greatest cinematic achievement of all time. An absolute treasure trove of depth and detail that will delight both new Marvel fans and Marvel zombies from way back, like me."

Library Journal

★ 10/01/2023

In this compulsively readable book, culture writers Robinson (podcaster, The Ringer), Dave Gonzales (host of the podcast A Storm of Spoilers), and Gavin Edwards (The Tao of Bill Murray) explore the astounding ascent of Marvel from its 1996 bankruptcy to its current status as a box office juggernaut. With comprehensive research and no small amount of wit, the authors detail the corporate strategies that led to the expansion of Marvel Studios, a titanic gamble requiring a multimillion-dollar loan and the use of 10 characters—Captain America, Black Panther, and Doctor Strange among them—as collateral. The book features the insights of a number of Marvel VIPs in all aspects of film production, but it's the entity's current president, Kevin Feige, who commands the central spotlight as the driving force behind the interconnected Marvel Cinematic Universe. The authors do a superb job of exploring the internal conflicts between Feige's innovative filmmakers and hidebound corporate executives over such issues as Marvel's superhero lineup. VERDICT Marvel fans and film aficionados alike will appreciate this highly recommended, smashing insider look at one of entertainment's greatest success stories.—Sara Shreve

Kirkus Reviews

2023-05-27
How a stew of artistic conflicts, outsized egos, and commercial disputes somehow produced magic.

At some point, the movies based on the Avengers superhero group and its individual members ceased to be just comic-book entertainment; they became cultural touchstones. Robinson, Gonzales, and Edwards bring extensive knowledge to the task of determining how, and they obviously love the craft of cinema. Marvel Studios largely declined to cooperate, so this unauthorized story was pieced together from public sources and off-the-record interviews. The person tying the pieces into a cinematic whole was Kevin Feige, who started at Marvel in 2000 and acted as ringmaster to an ever growing circus of writers, directors, actors, and technical specialists. The first Iron Man movie saved the company from ruin and set the larger project in motion, although at the time it was an incredible risk. Feige was willing to take chances with casting, ranging from the mercurial Robert Downey Jr. to Chris Hemsworth, relatively unknown until Thor. The first Avengers movie was both a culmination and a crucial step forward. Feige was always determined that emotional development was the narrative key, an approach that was demonstrated as the multiple arcs came together in Infinity War and Endgame. The authors follow the pushing and shoving that occurred in the creative backrooms, and it is astonishing to see how everything came together, often at the last moment. Feige was able to effectively use CGI, but in less capable hands, the technology could have easily overwhelmed the story. It is unclear where Marvel Studios will go from here, and subsequent movies have lacked focus. One problem with this book is that it’s patchy and overlong, as the authors spend too many pages chronicling corporate shenanigans and side projects. A stronger editorial hand would have improved the text, but nevertheless, it’s a solid, fairly authoritative account. The book includes a timeline.

Something important took place when the Avengers assembled, and this book provides the background for the sprawling canvas.

Product Details

BN ID: 2940159367600
Publisher: Recorded Books, LLC
Publication date: 10/10/2023
Edition description: Unabridged
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