Tuesday, May 12, 2015

Avengers: Age of Too Much of a Good Thing

It's rather counterproductive at this point to post a pure review of Avengers: Age of Ultron. You've either seen it once, twice or more. Or you will see it, armed with a certain set of expectations based upon (hopefully spoiler-free) thoughts from others who have seen the flick.

I'll spare you the details and spoiler exploration. Avengers: AoU is a great movie but definitely not an improvement upon the original. We're not in Empire Strikes Back or Godfather II territory here. Indeed, Avengers: AoU is more of a setup for the other Marvel cinematic universe films to come, leading up to Avengers: Infinity War.

No doubt, Avengers: AoU goes full throttle from the start and the action sequences, particularly - as expected the confrontation between Hulk and Tony Stark/Iron Man in Hulkbuster armor - are stupendous. Does some of the CGI of the action, when the crap really hits the fan, look more like a video game or a comic book? Yes.

Parts of the storyline (if you will) delve into darker questions and angles concerning the Avengers, who are really a fragile bunch to an extent. When they're fighting together, they're clicking on all cylinders. At the other times, their vulnerabilities can be so exposed to a dangerous degree.

Even if the movie Ultron doesn't seem as cold, calculating as some of the comic book Ultrons, James Spader's voice and mannerisms set a great, creepily fun tone to the proceedings. The introduction of The Vision, for as short a time he's on screen, is glorious. The introduction, also, of the Maximoff twins -- Avengers Quicksilver (as opposed to X-Men Quicksilver) and Scarlet Witch was fun and appropriate. Yes, I do have a thing for Elizabeth Olsen (aka the “good” Olsen sister).

There are the nice touches that reflect the state of the Avengers team members, how one believes his ingenuity and resources can bring about a global "peace in our time" when it really brings Earth to the brink of destruction; how two other people are drawn to each other when they know they can never truly be together; how a fourth desires simply to be back with his young growing family in their tiny peaceful corner of the world. Then there's the ever-present question about artificial intelligence, its potential for good or for bad.

It does feel overstuffed at times with so many characters appearing, crossing paths with each other often, but thanks to Joss Whedon's guidance and comedic timing, Avengers: AoU still entertains. He'll be missed in the director's seat from here on out. Indeed, the pace at which Marvel Studios are churning out films is amazing, perhaps hard to keep pace. By all appearances, the cast size and scope of Captain America: Civil War is approaching It's a Mad Mad Mad Mad World/Ten Commandments level. And only Avengers: Infinity War, split into two parts, could only be bigger than that.

So many more movies to come between now and then. It all seems still like a dream, these Marvel properties coming to life before our eyes, in our lifetime. Even outside of Avengers: AoU, there's enough to talk about away from the storyline, namely Marvel, ahem, "forcing" Whedon to insert and maintain questionable scenes, such as Thor's dreamscape, for the sake of satisfying the meddling, naive suits back at the studio.

Then there's backlash that MAY HAVE compelled Whedon to abandon Twitter. The suggestion is that Whedon betrayed the feminist ideals and strong female characters he's instilled in practically all of his TV shows and movies by having Natasha Romanov/Black Widow reveal, in a moment of openness and understanding with Bruce Banner/Hulk, a man she "adores," that she was made sterile at a young age while undergoing training as an assassin.

Natasha is saddened by something that took place against her long ago, yet as she goes to work, romance and never being able to conceive a child are rare thoughts in her mind. She does have a tender, extended family side -- again, one of the fairer flourishes of Avengers: AoU.

It's a notion worsened as Jeremy Renner "jokes" (as he notes in the press) that Black Widow/ Natasha is a slut for perhaps having slept with several of her colleagues. Meanwhile, other critics call out Marvel for a seeming inability (or lack of desire) to make a standalone movie with Black Widow or other heroine in the Marvel universe. 

If that's not bad enough, Avengers: AoU toys somehow leave Black Widow out of her own key scenes. How does that happen? (Not that DC and Warner Bros. have been rushing over the years to give contemporary audiences a fitting on-screen interpretation of the likes of Wonder Woman or Supergirl, but that's another story.)


Anyways, so much has Marvel Comics and Marvel Studios given us, especially in the last 15 years or so, the comics and now TV shows and films are more than special effects-driven blockbusters. We help to create cultural icons that help to give us address, if not totally adequately, complex issues of the day. It's indeed a golden era we're living in.

Meanwhile...DC...I hope for the best when more of your properties hit the big screen. I also fear for the worst.