I have been in a state of processing
after seeing this movie, my immediate thought after viewing was to give it two
and a half unicorns out of five....which is essentially a 6/10, in human
terms. It feels as though I am pressured to love this movie as it is The
Avengers, but I have never been one to conform to conventions. There
was a moment of reflection that caused me to bump the film up to a 6.5/10 but I
guess the way to get an unresolvable rating is to break it down. So lets get
started.
The film didn't mess around, getting straight to the point through an amazing scene that allowed us to view all of our heroes in the their element, as they battled an army of Hydra initiatives in order to retrieve Loki's staff - a search it seems the team have been conducting for a very long time.
As well as finding the staff, they
discover another hydra secret, genetically modifying humans to have
supernatural abilities. Hydras best experiments are the Maximoff twins,
Pietro (Aaron Taylor Johnson) and Wanda (Elizabeth Olsen), more
favourable known by the comic book universe as Quicksilver and
Scarlet Witch. The twins have a vendetta against Tony Stark which fuels their
determination to destroy the Avengers, Scarlet Witch uses her ability to get
into his mind and view his worse fear causing Tony Stark to build the ultimate
defender who becomes the worlds greatest threat; Ultron
Ultron was originally created as a superior
interface by Stark (Robert Downey Jr) and Banner (Mark Ruffalo) who managed to
secretly harness the intergalactic power of Loki's staff. Ultron
exceed expectations and fails to meet predicted requirements when he
uploads himself into a number of Iron Man suits and attacks the unsuspecting
Avengers calling them an enemy of Peace - Ooops.
Always nine steps ahead and working
with the supernatural twins Ultron builds himself multiple
sleek models so that he can easily upload himself should his form be
destroyed - which was pretty darn cool. However it is soon discovered that
Ultron wants to destroy more than the Avengers - Try the Earth; Go figure, with
his devil inspired robotic form and his evil tone of voice and what not, who
would have thunk it?
The film explores problems with
working in a team including trust, fear and hope - if you ask me they all need
some kind of work retreat to get their issues in order, but there's no rest for
the wicked or the uniquely skilled.
One of the most interesting
things about The Avengers is that it brings together an assemble
- no pun intended - of characters that already have their own
deeper back story that can be and has been explored in their own separate
movies which essentially means that there is no need for any fluff, they can
just jump straight into the action with maybe a cleverly placed line or two
that allows the audience who follow their individual stories to nod in
understanding, and those who don't to be very quickly bought up to speed. That
being said with so many characters it is easy to fall into plot holes, covering
them up in post-production by cutting it between a bigger, more important and
action packed scene. But we all know that "Fix it in Post" is a myth
and by attempting to do so you just draw more attention to the problem.
I honestly think this film could not
have been pulled off without the voice talents of James Spader who was behind
the ruthless Ultron. With every head tilt, I could sense him channelling his
Blacklist Character; Raymond Reddington. It was positively delightful and
exceeding creepy hearing his deep emotionless voice singing along to a classic
Pinocchio tune. - Chills.
It was nice to view the team just
kicking back and having a laugh together when they thought the fight was over
- Oh silly Avengers, the fighting is never over - and
seeing a more.... humane side to them they don't have the luxury of wearing on
their sleeves when their mission in life is to kill the bad guys.
With most films that have
no sequential end in sight, I always ponder on where they
can go next, whilst simultaneously holding on to some sense of
continuity and originality. Although the ending left you with possible hints
into the development of the team known as "The Avengers" and possible
plot points for individual movies, I was ultimately left feeling
uninspired. Would each new film just be cause to create a new and
unrelated terror? If it forever to be Battle, Defeat, Repeat? Sure this is the
core element of every movie, but I'll just say, if you want me to expect more,
then you're going to have to give me
more.
So this review was hella long, so
apologies for that, but after getting out all my thought on this metaphorical
paper, I think the film does in fact deserve a solid 7/10 which is a step up
from 6, and translate roughly to...
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