Marvel Studios pushes back Thor, Black Panther, and more to make room for Spider-Man

Iron Man 2 May Have A Huge Clue To The Marvel Cinematic Universe's Future http://www.cinemablend.com/new/Iron...e-Marvel-Cinematic-Universe-Future-70347.html
As fans prepare for the onslaught of awesomeness that will surely be unleashed in less than two months with Avengers: Age of Ultron, speculation about the direction of Marvel Studio’s Cinematic Universe continues at a steady pace. However, while everyone has been looking forward, it now seems as though a new theory has discovered a critical occurrence in the film that’s widely considered the black sheep of the MCU, Iron Man 2. If it proves true, then the movie may have given us witness to the birth of could become one of the critical weapons in the massive franchise in the near future.In a speculative piece by Movie Pilot, a theory is presented that Tony Stark’s investigation into his father’s research in 2010's Iron Man 2 may have a critical role to play in the future of the Marvel Cinematic Universe. While the details of the theory are heavily mired in fictional scientific forte, the idea is actually rather simple: Tony Stark used his father’s research to create an element that has the same magical cosmic quintessence that powers The Tesseract – which you will also remember is one of the Infinity Stones. (Take THAT, Steve Jobs! Right?)
 
6 Superheroes That Marvel Does Not Own The Rights To Anymore http://www.cheatsheet.com/entertain...y-other-studios.html/?a=viewall#ixzz3XURituMV
With all the superhero movies coming out nowadays, there’s a lot of money to be made. The Avengers alone made $1.5 billion worldwide according to IMDb, while franchises like Spider-Man have made a habit of breaking box office records. Way back before they were cash cows though, Marvel saw their various superheroes as commodities to be sold off to make a quick buck. Starting as early as 1985, franchises were offered up to studios like Sony, 20th Century Fox, and more, culminating in a whole mess of reasons now why Marvel can’t bring characters they themselves created into the cinematic fold.Each studio with a Marvel property keeps it jealously guarded, knowing full well the moneymaking potential each respective franchise represents. While it would make sense for the rights to return to their original creators, the current owners have kept an iron grip since they first acquired their various properties.
 
Leaked Sony Email Reveals Marvel's Distaste For Female Superhero Movies http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2015/...vies_n_7212386.html?ncid=txtlnkusaolp00000592
The latest "Saturday Night Live" parody of Marvel's take on female-fronted superhero movies may not be so off, based on recently surfaced leaked emails from the Sony hack. Wikileaks published more than 30,000 searchable documents from the hack a few weeks ago, and one of the emails reveals exactly why execs thought superhero movies about women were bad for business.The documents contain an email exchange between Marvel CEO Ike Perlmutter and Sony CEO Michael Lynton with the subject line, "Female Movies." Per Wikileaks, the email reads:
 

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