AVENGERS: AGE OF ULTRON
Director : Joss Whedon
Cast : Robert Downey Jr., Chris Hemsworth, Chris Evans, Mark Ruffalo, Scarlett Johansson, Jeremy Renner, James Spader, Aaron Taylor-Johnson, Elizabeth Olsen, Paul Bettany, Samuel L. Jackson
Genre : Comics/Action/Adventure
Run Time : 141 mins
Opens : 23 April 2015
(The following review is spoiler-free)
(The following review is spoiler-free)
Earth’s mightiest heroes boldly step forth into
a new age in the closing chapter of the Marvel Cinematic Universe’s second
phase. The Avengers, comprising Tony Stark/Iron Man (Downey Jr.), Thor
(Hemsworth), Steve Rogers/Captain America (Evans), Bruce Banner/Hulk (Ruffalo),
Natasha Romanoff/Black Widow (Johansson) and Clint Barton/Hawkeye (Renner) have
unfinished business to attend to. Loki’s sceptre is being held in a Hydra
stronghold, and in the process of retrieving the otherworldly weapon, the team
confronts the twins Pietro (Taylor-Johnson) and Wanda (Olsen) Maximoff, the
products of Hydra genetic enhancement experiments. Stark and Banner have an
experiment of their own, the artificial intelligence system Ultron (Spader),
intended as a security net for the world. However, the sentient robot has
nefarious plans of its own, violently rebelling against its creators. The
Avengers’ only hope may lie in Vision (Bettany), an old friend in a new form.
2012’s
The Avengers was a monumental event, the
glorious apex of Marvel Studios’ diligent world-building. Now, the Marvel
Cinematic Universe has truly earned the right to call itself a “universe”, Age of Ultron uniting a multitude of
familiar faces while introducing new players. There’s the welcome feeling that
the gang’s all here, but not just for the sake of it. This is a significant
achievement on multiple levels; writer-director Joss Whedon taking on the
Herculean challenge of topping the first Avengers
film while charting a course forward for all of these characters. Once
again, Whedon demonstrates a remarkable command of the tone, peppering the
screenplay with delightfully zippy witticisms (Stark references playwright
Eugene O’Neill and the practice of Prima Nocta) yet establishing the stakes and
delivering genuine drama when it is required.
What stands out as the most impressive element
of this blockbuster isn’t the wham-bam spectacle, it’s the character
development. While many action movies are marketed as being “character-driven”,
more often than not, the plot seems like a minor inconvenience at best, fiddly
bits of story standing in the way of stuff blowing up. This isn’t the case
here. Whedon cleverly builds upon the relationships established in the previous
films, including the “science bros” bond between Stark and Banner and the
dysfunctional family dynamic within the team as a whole. Whedon is unafraid to
have sizeable stretches of the film driven solely by drama or comedy in between
the action, without the movie feeling like it’s spinning its wheels until Hulk
next smashes something or Cap tosses his shield. The conflict has its place,
there is angst but not moping and the bristling tension that arises from
disagreements within the team is balanced with the sheer satisfaction of seeing
our heroes work in conjunction with each other.
This is not to say that the spectacle is in
short supply – far from it. This is a major tentpole release that was
guaranteed to do gangbusters even before a single word of the screenplay was
written, but if Avengers: Age of Ultron
is anything to go by, producer Kevin Feige and the folks at Marvel Studios are
not about to rest on their laurels or just let these movies “make themselves”. The
film’s opening, which involves the Avengers storming Baron Von Strucker’s
(Thomas Kretschmann) mountain fortress, reintroduces viewers to our heroes in
the thick of it with a slick, unbroken long take. There’s also a fair bit of
globe-trotting, the story taking the team from their home base in New York to
the fictional Eastern European city of Sokovia, South Africa and South Korea.
The movie’s signature set piece is the battle
between Iron Man in his heavy-duty Hulkbuster armour and the Hulk. Stark is
reluctant to fight Banner, shading the knock-down drag-out brawl with more
emotional hues than a typical beat ‘em up. The climactic showdown, while
familiar in the sense that it’s the plucky good guys against a horde of bad
guys while trying to get innocent citizens to safety, is sufficiently different
from the “big fight in a big city” finales that have become the norm in the
Marvel Cinematic Universe.
After
defeating Loki, the Avengers’ primary adversary in this sequel is the titular
Ultron, voiced by James Spader, who also performed some motion capture work to
play the 8 foot tall robot. Ultron is both a physical and intellectual
challenge to the Avengers and his motivations are set up quickly and
efficiently. Malevolent artificial intelligence is something of a hoary sci-fi
trope and one could argue that 2001: A
Space Odyssey’s HAL 9000 still stands at the top of the heap, but Ultron
certainly fulfils all the big bad pre-requisites. Spader is a casting coup; his
sonorous, supercilious line delivery both threatening and entertaining. There’s
also the appeal of the “I’ve got no strings” motif, even more amusing given that
Robert Downey Jr. is rumoured to be playing both Geppetto and Pinocchio in an
upcoming live-action version of the story.
Whedon
has put admirable effort into improving the characterisations we were presented
with in the first film. Hawkeye in particular gets his moment in the sun;
Renner having voiced his disappointment that the character spent most of the
first Avengers under Loki’s mind
control. Paul Bettany finally steps out of the recording booth to play
cyber-butler JARVIS’ corporeal form, Vision, lending the character an elegant
combination of strength and serenity.
The
character of Scarlet Witch, with her ability to play dangerous mind games as
she enters into the memories and feelings of those under her thrall, presents
the audience with an opportunity to explore the deepest, darkest fears of our
heroes. Elizabeth Olsen is a haunted, ethereal presence as Wanda, her powers
taking their own toll on her psyche. The hallucinatory scenes also shed light
on Black Widow’s past, these unsettling sequences feeling straight out of a
horror movie.
Much
was made about how Fox’s X-Men: Days of
Future Past beat Marvel Studios to the punch when it came to putting
speedster Quicksilver on the big screen. While Aaron Taylor-Johnson’s Pietro
doesn’t quite have a bit as memorable as the “Time in a Bottle” kitchen run
from DoFP, his Quicksilver is still
pretty cool. The bond between the twins is conveyed convincingly by both
Taylor-Johnson and Olsen. Mark Ruffalo continues to be an excellent Bruce
Banner, this film showing how the character is at once Dr. Frankenstein and
Frankenstein’s Monster and the inner turmoil that results from this dichotomy. There’s
also a romance between Banner and Romanoff which can feel a little forced at
times but is for the most part really quite sweet. A scene early on in which
Black Widow tries to calm the savage beast reminded this reviewer of the
interaction between King Kong and Ann Darrow.
It
pains us a little to say this and we don’t want to come off as dismissive of
the efforts of the army of visual effects artists who slaved away on this film,
but the CGI does border on the excessive. It’s not sloppily done and there are
a mind-boggling number of visual effects shots, but at times during the
Hulkbuster vs. Hulk fight, the two computer-generated characters going at it
seem like just that, as if one were playing a video-game. Still, this is a
minor quibble and if the film were nothing but pixel-heavy battles, then we’d
have a problem. Instead, we have a compelling, dramatic story, characters that
are fleshed-out and easy to get invested in, plenty of morsels for hard-core
fans and lots of quotable lines and some imagery courtesy of cinematographer
Ben Davis that’s destined to become iconic. While there is no post-credits
stinger, there is a tag after the main-on-end titles sequence that’s as
tantalising as ever. Bring on Phase 3!
Summary: Avengers: Age of Ultron can boast that
it’s about the Avengers as characters and Joss Whedon’s ability to deliver
excellent dialogue and moving storytelling in addition to earth-shattering
spectacle remains unparalleled.
RATING: 4.5 out of 5 Stars
Jedd Jong
A very fun movie. However, the superhero craze is starting to get a tad bit over-done now. Nice review Jedd.
ReplyDeleteThanks so much for your comment Dan. There is definitely the danger of fatigue setting in. I think the bubble won't burst for a while yet; I hope the filmmakers can continue to mix things up and keep the material fresh. Within the Marvel Cinematic Universe, we've had a space opera (Guardians of the Galaxy), an conspiracy thriller (Captain America: The Winter Soldier), a high fantasy epic (Thor: The Dark World) and a street-level crime drama (Daredevil). I hope we continue to get different flavours stirred in to the superhero formula. Thanks once again for commenting; it means a great deal to me!
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