My Review: Avengers Assemble
Horse
horse at DARKSTAR.UK.NET
Tue May 1 18:26:57 EDT 2012
All-in-all, a bloody good movie and I'm gonna see it for the third time
(with my kids this time :) ) at the weekend.
I wonder how Marvel are doing with the Dr Strange movie - hope they've
still got plans to produce it in the near future.
Horse
On 01/05/2012 14:24, Mike Holmes wrote:
> I'll skip any spoilers that you couldn't get out of watching the
> trailers.
>
> I've been waiting for this movie since I was seven years old. So a
> little too close to five decades than I might have hoped back then.
> You'd imagine that'd make me generous, but the opposite is closer to
> the truth: I figured if there'd be one movie that Hollywood would find
> it easy to screw up, it was this one. They have form too: the X-men
> movies and the Fantastic Four films.
>
> Leaving aside Doctor Who, where so much of the movie was spent
> acquiring him a hat, a scarf, and an assistant to actually weave in a
> plot, solo superhero movies mostly managed to tell a good story.
> Spiderman 1 worked very well, though the sequels didn't live up to the
> promise. Daredevil, while incorporating some wooden acting, told a
> story too. X-Men Origins of Wolverine managed far better than the
> ensemble movies to tell a good tale.
>
> Ensemble movies on the other hand haven't had a good record. Fantastic
> Four spent too much time setting up the characters and X-men spent too
> much time setting up the better characters, Xavier and Magneto, who
> unfortunately didn't happen, strictly speaking, to be X-men.
>
> Marvel decided to get around this origins problem by taking the main
> four Avengers and getting their origin stories out in prequel movies.
> They decided that the first Hulk movie was too arty, and rebooted it
> with a different actor. Then the new actor had a spat with Hollywood
> and refused his part in Avengers Assemble - certainly making for a
> potential Strike One.
>
> Iron Man 1 & 2 were much more popular with audiences, probably because
> Robert Downey Junior very much made the part his own. Thor managed a
> partly-amusing fish-out-of-water tale of a demigod stranded on Earth
> and was used to introduce Avengers Bad Guy #1 Loki: Thor's "He's
> adopted" brother. Finally, in deciding to play Captain America as the
> straight-arrow loyal and patriotic soldier, Marvel set themselves up
> for Strike Two.
>
> Fortunately for Marvel the bats connected. Borrowing heavily from Sky
> Captain and the World of Tomorrow, Captain America was handled fairly
> well. Meanwhile Ruffalo has almost stolen the show in making The Hulk
> the best character in Avengers Assemble.
>
> Hiddleston's Loki brings the most malevolence to sibling rivalry since
> Cain and Abel. Mostly new character The Black Widow's entrance is made
> with much aplomb, and the tightest leather pants in any Avenger since
> Emma Peel - though it has to be admitted that Cobie Smulders' Maria
> Hill gives her competition even in those stakes.
>
> Sixth member Hawkeye's character explication is delayed for reasons of
> plot, and afterwards only a few hints are dropped as to his,
> thankfully non-romantic, history with Black Widow. It'll be
> interesting to see whether there's subsequent audience demand for a
> backstory movie incorporating those two, possibly with Jackson's Nick
> Fury.
>
> Not that the plot is held up any for introductions, which are very
> much done on the move. Loki has bad intentions, an all-powerful Cosmic
> Cube, and Nick Fury forms The Avengers to stop him.
>
> It goes without saying that, as with the comics, the sundry
> superheroes find it hard to get along. For anyone who wants to know
> what happens when superhero X fights superhero Y, we do discover that
> it's not very good for trees.
>
> Finally the guys assemble at SHIELD's secret base, which owes a tip of
> the hat to Captain Scarlet, and argue some more. If anyone wonders
> what the Buffy guy is doing directing here, then the dialogue shows
> that "Experience in writing witty banter amongst gods, humans, and
> other entities", must have in bold letters on his resume.
>
> Ultimately of course the team has to finally get together and fight
> the bad guys, So there's a little pathos, as they acquire something to
> avenge, and, shades of The Hellmouth opening, Loki fetches an army
> from outer space.
>
> It's at this point that I wanted there to have been a little more
> prior engagement with Loki's army. There hadn't been much time spent
> establishing what they were after on Earth, other than to kill humans,
> or why they stopped off at Transformers Planet on the way. So they
> just get mown down like comsic cannon-fodder in the final scene. But
> the final scene sets a new standard for movie spectacle. It is
> completely absorbing and the superheroes do manage to make all the
> mowing down seem like actual hard work, while the final showdown
> between one of them and Loki produced the loudest joint laugh I've
> ever heard from a movie audience. That is though in a good way that
> they're going to share with their friends, just as soon as their
> friends have seen the movie - or perhaps some are going to ruin what
> will become a much-replayed movie comedy moment.
>
> I wonder how many wives and girfriends have been subjected to revising
> the various prequels in the last couple of weeks. I headed out for a
> repeat IMAX showing last night as a pal's girlfriend (after Thor,
> Captain America and the two Iron Man movies) drew a line in the sand
> and refused to accompany him. I would say though that Whedon has
> managed to make a movie which will appeal far beyond the fanboys and
> the nostalgic, though it's set a new standard for them. It's headed to
> making the studios so much money that they'll be under pressure to get
> more out faster. If this kind of quality is what waiting produces
> though, I'd counsel them to stick to it.
>
> As always, there's an Easter Egg during the trailers. I assume that
> this tells us who the bad guy is in the next movie, but I can't figure
> out who it's meant to be. Answers on a postcard...
>
> FoFP
>
--
"Without music to decorate it, time is just a bunch of boring production deadlines or dates by which bills must be paid."
— Frank Zappa
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