fuzzyfoot
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- Aug 5, 2014
- Messages
- 334
Beat me to it haha.
They still might. The Hulk page in there is a character history rather than a movie history, which implies the book will cover both concepts.I noticed they don't bring up the fact Coulson provided Fury with the Helicarrier (Agents of Shield season two finale) that he used in Age of Ultron.
Honestly be as through as they want, the years of progress that our timeline has gone through striving for absolute perfection can not be matched.I'll bet the research this collective group has done is far more thorough than the time put into this book. I hope I'm wrong though.
I agree. We've all been working on this for far longer than the people who put this book together.Honestly be as through as they want, the years of progress that our timeline has gone through striving for absolute perfection can not be matched.
I mean, they use words like 'early' and 'spring' for how narrowed in their timeline placements are, so we are already far more intricate and detailed then the book will ever be. I'm really looking forward to it to pin down some of the more vague entries post Endgame if I'm being honest. The one thing that they won't do though, is established reasons why something is here or there in a certain year. It'll just be the next film/show without any explanation.I'll bet the research this collective group has done is far more thorough than the time put into this book. I hope I'm wrong though.
Marvel Studios has shows now. I wouldn't get your hopes up with that comment.0:43 "out of the films, out of the tv shows"
2010 for Fury's Big Week... huhMore on the Amazon page for it.
View attachment 1227
It's probably meant to straddle the "6 months later" of Iron Man 2 and Fury's "last year" in the Avengers, while maintaining Vision's "in the eight years since..." in Civil War. I don't hate it2010 for Fury's Big Week... huh
Yeah personally I've always gone with 2011 but this does seem to be the best of all the little referencesIt's probably meant to straddle the "6 months later" of Iron Man 2 and Fury's "last year" in the Avengers, while maintaining Vision's "in the eight years since..." in Civil War. I don't hate it
It's probably because of the Stark Expo 2010 promos for Iron Man 2.2010 for Fury's Big Week... huh
Another page: Iron Man 1 (as expected) is 100% set in 2008.
View attachment 1226
2010 for Fury's Big Week... huh
It's probably because of the Stark Expo 2010 promos for Iron Man 2.
I mean, they kinda have to though, don't they? Unless "Fury's Big Week" is now "Fury's Big Couple o Years".I'll bet they don't do the Iron Man 2 time jump either.
Added more spoiler tags.Can we have a spoiler tag for each year in the main document? It'll really help with navigating to a specific year instead of having to scroll so much.
I think at this point it's best to see it as 2 options.I wonder how they actually end up connecting Iron Man 1 and 2? I know IM2 starts simultaneously with the ending of IM1, but the "6 Months Later" would only take us to 2009 at the very latest.
I think it's a good compromise with all the evidence. The main contradiction to this is Fury's "last year" comment when referring to the events of Thor. 2010 fits with Natasha's "over a year without an incident " line with Bruce, fits with the 2010 Stark Expo promo, fits with the Monaco Grand Prix falling in May 2010, brings Iron Man 2 around its release date, Thor around its filming date, and The Incredible Hulk closer to its release date, and it allows more time for Tony to turn the Metlife Building into Stark Tower.2010 for Fury's Big Week... huh