I mean, Marvel's cinematic attempts may feel somewhat tonally consistent, but they suffer heavily from a lack of cohesion. If Marvel had been planning Agents of Shield and the Netflix series from the start, it would feel more unified. But Daredevil wasn't owned by them at the inception of the MCU, and who would have guessed that you could actually make a decent superhero TV show at that time? Now that Marvel has had successful attempts, they might know what sort of united direction they can take. However, they don't seem to be able to perceive their failures, because hey, as long as it makes money, who cares about the consistency?
I think we're going to see a lot more excuses for a lack of cohesion than an actual attempt at it. Hell, the Avengers got like, two lines of recognition in Daredevil season 1, and his actions have had barely any effect on things outside of the "Netflix Universe". This, coupled with the fact that they might not even use the Netflix actors as representatives of the MCU in Infinity War, shows that Marvel is more interested in separate, isolated plotlines and representations of their characters. Say what you will, but I've only seen character growth from MCU headliners within their franchise installments- never in a team-up film- and sometimes, it's barely even that.