as was the case with “Moon Knight”), lest audiences find themselves having to do endless amounts of homework just to understand the plot. It also doesn’t help that the MCU has left several loose ends dangling for years, only to eventually tie them off in an underwhelming fashion (like what happened in “Captain America: Brave New World”).
But a franchise that requires viewers to watch dozens of movies just to understand a new one is not the same as a successful expanded universe. There are better ways to do interconnectivity. Take “Thunderbolts,*” a film that acts as the MCU’s answer to “DC’s Legends of Tomorrow” in that they both focus on superhero teams composed of characters who were introduced in other projects. As with that Arrowverse show, it’s useful but not wholly necessary to understand where the heroes in “Thunderbolts*” are coming from — because it’s not really their past that matters in the story at hand so much as who they are when they’re together.
Now, it appears Marvel has another ace up its sleeve (one that shows a better path to achieving interconnectivity) in the form of “Eyes of Wakanda,” an animated TV show that offers phenomenal world-building without requiring lots of homework. Those attending the Annecy International Animation Film Festival got a chance to watch the very first episode of the series, and it’s shaping up to be something pretty special … as well as, hopefully, a sign of things to come for the MCU.