Elizabeth Olsen Reveals how does it feel when someone criticizes marvel

Elizabeth Olsen admits she only gets "a little furious" when people criticise Marvel movies.

Elizabeth Olsen admits she only gets "a little furious" when people criticise Marvel movies.


While no one should feel sorry for a studio that is raking in billions in box office receipts, the Marvel Cinematic Universe has recently attracted a slew of high-profile critics, including directors Martin Scorsese, Denis Villeneuve, and Jane Campion, who have all essentially laid the death of cinema at its feet.Olsen, who has starred in a slew of Marvel films since 2015, including the current "Doctor Strange" sequel, understands the criticism, but she's also pushing back against people who make superhero movies "look like a lower form of art."

"I'm not suggesting we're doing indie art films," she stated in a new interview with The Independent, "but I simply believe it takes away from our staff, which irritates me." "These are some of the most incredible set designers, costume designers, and camera operators, and I feel like criticising them in this way devalues all of the individuals who work on award-winning films and on these projects."

"From an actor's perspective, whatever," she continued, "I get it; I completely understand that there's a different kind of performance going on." "However, I believe that putting Marvel under the bus detracts from the hundreds of highly skilled team members. That's when I start to get a little irritated."

Before moving on to big-budget, special-effects-heavy material, Olsen earned her start in a succession of critically lauded indie films, including her big-screen debut in the 2011 thriller "Martha Marcy May Marlene."

"Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness," her latest Marvel movie, opened to an estimated $185 million in ticket sales this weekend, making it the highest opening weekend of any film in 2022.


Olsen has learnt to keep her choices open and the naysayers out of her mind when it comes to returning to her roots, saying she's eager to participate in the Marvel sandbox again as long as "there's a decent idea linked to it."

"It continues to be a surprise when they want to use me for new projects," Olsen stated, noting that she was initially only committed to perform in two movies and a cameo.

However, the actor's next project will be in a completely different genre."Love and Death," a forthcoming HBO Max limited series from writer and executive producer David E. Kelley about Texas housewife Candy Montgomery, who famously killed her closest friend from church with an axe, is planned to feature Olsen.

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