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Avengers: Age of Ultron

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***

He’s fast. She’s weird.

The quotation, from Maria Hill—Cobie Smulders, Robin on “How I Met Your Mother”—demonstrates the level of simplification this movie has. Still, Age of Ultron was almost as fun as it was expensive. As with the first Avengers movie, this one tried to be everything in one. Yet while the first one was the culmination of years of planning, this feels like a stop gap measure. See the below picture for an example. This is a cute scene where the rest of the Avengers fail to lift Thor’s mighty mjolnir, as none are worthy! At least Captain America was able to make it budge a little! It’s amusing to watch, but upon closer scrutiny has glaring flaws. Two lifting should be better than one, but what possible good is wearing a glove and gauntlet? They’re not trying to crush the hammer or shoot the hammer, so just wearing it does nothing but add the weight of what those two mortals had to lift.

Cute, but so dumb.

Tony Stark (Iron Man) and James Rhodes (War Machine), trying to lift Thor’s hammer, mjolnir. Robert Downey, Jr. and Don Cheadle in Avengers: Age of Ultron, © 2015 Marvel.

The villain, Ultron, seems like an immortal since he was an artificial life form, but the voice and digital actor was James Spader—Stargate. He was Lore. We all know Lore, right? Lt. (Cmdr.) Data’s twin brother. Lore has emotions and all the failings that human beings with them have. Brent Spiner played both of them and while his Data was excellent, his Lore tended to be a bit over the top. And Ultron was over the top and inconsistent. Sometimes he was fun, or moving, but most of the time his actions and speeches seemed simply arbitrary. Perhaps if there had been some indication that Iron Man had been working on creating Ultron, this would have felt more important, but him telling Bruce Banner—The Kids Are All Right‘s Mark Ruffalo—that he has been working on this for years feels untrue as he never mentioned it in the prior four movies.

The raison d’être¹ of Avengers 2 is clearly money. But excluding the financial motivation behind the creation of any movie, the motivating factor is a metric shit ton of money. Yet if we can truly look past that, then it serves the purpose of setting up more Marvel movies. For those who were not aware of the grand scheme of the Marvel Cinematic Universe, as revealed to comic book nerds in the mid credits scene from The Avengers, it is to have Thanos attempt to create the Infinity Gauntlet with ultra powerful objects, known collectively as the infinity gems.² If successful Thanos could make or even unmake the universe as he saw fit. In the comics this happens and when the Avengers times ten show up they are hopelessly outmatched. So this film helps move closer to that point, as much as the last season of “Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D.” helped Avengers 2—by about 30-45 seconds of screen time. There is one other reveal, just a reference really, to set up the introduction of the Black Panther, which was nice, but similarly worthless beyond the intrinsic pleasure of its recognition.

Infinity Gauntlet #1, cover art by George Pérez, © Marvel.

Infinity Gauntlet #1, cover art by George Pérez, © Marvel.

The two of the new characters I was most excited for were Scarlet Witch and Quicksilver—Elizabeth Olsen and Kick Ass (Aaron Taylor-Johnson). Still, Paul Bettany is my favorite actor of the new four, but his performance as the CGI character the Vision had less potential than Taylor-Johnson’s Quicksilver. If Quicksilver sounds familiar then you probably watched X-Men: Days of Future Past. He is the fastest man alive in the Marvel Cinematic Universe, the Marvel Universe, and the X-Men franchise. That particular power creates major cinematic challenges, similar to Superman’s. In X-Men DoFP, Evan Peters’s Quicksilver gets two scenes, both in the 1970’s. One of them stole the show. I used a screen grab of it as the first image in my review thereof. Eschewing ultra slow motion, director Joss Whedon–”Firefly”–opts for “zoom-zooming” shots where a blur represents Quicksilver and then a reveal shot to show the result of his zooming. At the time I was not impressed, but thinking over the whole film Whedon actually varied it up more than I thought. For instance, sometimes the reaction shot would be the same frame, like Captain America getting punched or something. Yet for all the difficulty that speed presents, Scarlet Witch presents even more. Avengers 2 describes her powers as similar to the X-Men’s Jean “Phoenix” Grey’s telekinesis, but truly, her powers fluctuate. In the comics they are called “hex powers” and they basically can increase or decrease the probability of something happening. Or she can shoot red beams from her hands. Also, she once took away 99% of the world’s mutants powers by merely saying “No more mutants.” Got it?

And that sums up the 141 minute movie. It is fine for what it is, but it is also a step back for Marvel. Or at least not the step forward that Cap 2, Thor 2, Guardians and the first Avengers made.

¹ I could not figure out how to say this in English, but we use raison d’être in English too, so, well, here we are.
² I am fact checking none of this. So please leave corrections in the comments so that I may correct this review and give you credit in this space here. Also, from the cover here are some of the characters you might recognize: Thanos in the middle, then upper right is Mephisto, then Silver Surfer, Gamora, Adam Warlock, Firelord, Hawkeye, Sersi, Hulk, Captain America, Nick Fury, Spider-man, and Dr. Strange.

Accuracy in…Captain America: The Winter Soldier

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Let’s take a look at the characters from Captain America: The Winter Soldier.

Captain America is Steve Rogers and I think someone calls him a capsicle in this. He also shows some of the Civil War spirit in not wanting to just follow orders.

Black Widow is Natasha Romanoff and she gets to show off some of her little tools, but still lacks any powers. She is probably the best secret agent in the world—although secret must have gone out the window with THE AVENGERS. But who trained her? In the movie she says she worked for the KGB…which is fine, except that her character was born in 1984 and the KGB ended in 1991. So she should know that she worked for the FSB once she was 7. In the comics her training started very young and one of her finest tutors was The Winter Soldier.

Sam Wilson, The Falcon, and some kind of bird, looks like a hawk of some sort...

Sam Wilson, The Falcon, and some kind of bird, looks like a hawk of some sort…

Before we get to Spoiler central and the Winter Soldier, let’s move on to Falcon who is Sam Wilson. The movie’s version of him comes from the Ultimate universe. The major difference is that in the movie Wilson does not work for Nick Fury, but instead agrees to help out Captain America. While I doubt there is a plan for this in place, Falcon agrees to join the Avengers (briefly). He also lacks his non-Ultimate universe comic book ability to talk to birds! He is the Aquaman/Namor of the air, except that there is no air kingdom nor air-people.

Promo for Cap 2 featuring Falcon (Anthony Mackie), © Marvel 2014.

Promo for Cap 2 featuring Falcon (Anthony Mackie), © Marvel 2014.

The Winter Soldier is a character created by Ed Brubaker. Winter Soldier is a thawable assassin with almost no memory and a metallic arm. Who he was in 1944 is a different story. Not everyone from the first movie truly died. He is in fact one of the longest dead characters—58 years! That is longer than Wolverine has been a character! And in some ways if anyone would replace Steve Rogers as Captain America, the Winter Soldier might have what it takes, even without the serum. One key difference, as mentioned above, is that Winter Soldier was a KGB assassin, not a Hydra one.

Speaking of Hydra, Arnim Zola was Hydra’s finest mind in World War II. In the comics he never goes to work for Uncle Sam (?) and has his head/consciousness uploaded into a robot, not into a computer.

Yeah...Cap 1, Cap 2, comics...

Yeah…Cap 1, Cap 2, comics…

Sgt. Peggy Carter is actually played by the same woman who portrayed her in Cap: The First Avenger, Hayley Atwell. Which is amazing because she looks like she is in her 80s now. She was also the original Agent 13 and a member of the French Resistance in WWII. Having her team back up with Cap made more sense in the 1960’s than it does now, because she would only have been in her late 40’s by then.

 

Captain America: The Winter Soldier

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****

Captain, in Order to build a better world, sometimes that means tearing the old one down… And that makes enemies.

  aka Winter Soldier (Sebastian Stan), © Empire Magazine, 2014, Captain America: The Winter Soldier.

<Name Redacted> aka Winter Soldier (Sebastian Stan), © Empire Magazine, 2014, Captain America: The Winter Soldier.

Who watches the watchmen? It has always been a classic question in the war between freedom and safety. Especially since when that “safety” turns out to not be safe for those who do not step in line with the those in power. That is an interesting question for regular people, even for powerful people like Nick Fury–Samuel L. Jackson–but this puts that question onto the broad shoulder’s of America’s super soldier, Captain America. Then we get introduced to The Winter Soldier, but without an origin story, which helps the movie flow—even if some of us wanted to see it. Other than lasting a little bit too long, this was a well paced, well shot, excellent action movie that makes us think.

Nick Fury (Jackson) & Alexander Pierce (Redford), Captain America: The Winter Soldier, © 2014 Marvel.

Nick Fury (Jackson) & Alexander Pierce (Redford), Captain America: The Winter Soldier, © 2014 Marvel.

With that review material out of the way, I can almost not wait to get to my “accuracy” post for this movie!  What I can say, without spoilers, is that Robert Redford’s character, Secretary Alexander Pierce, was a home run. In a film without a villain, he made an extremely interesting grey area character. He is on the that damned Counsel that tried to nuke Manhattan at the end of Marvel’s The Avengers. How he replaced Powers Boothe’s character is never addressed. The nice surprise is that at first the film has a mid-level Captain America/SHIELD baddie named Batroc—Georges St. Pierre, Canadian, UFC Welterweight Champion. He provides a legitimate challenge for Steve Rogers (Cap) to fight.

Natasha Romanoff, aka Black Widow, Steve Rogers, aka Captain America, & in the background Maria Hill. Captain America 2, © 2014 Marvel

Natasha Romanoff, aka Black Widow, Steve Rogers, aka Captain America, and in the background Maria Hill. Captain America 2, © 2014 Marvel

There are several other badasses in the movie, but Cap’s allies, Black Widow–Scarlett Johansson and Sam Wilson—Anthony Mackie, The Hurt Locker—take the cake. With a bonus taking of the cupcake going to Maria Hill—”How I Met Your Mother’s” Cobie Smulders—for a couple of leaning-back-in-a-chair headshots. I was hoping she would get promoted to Director of SHIELD in this one, but nope, I guess we will have to wait for that. And gutsier than anything in the movie is the tie in to “Agents of SHIELD”. This actually takes place between two “Agents of SHIELD” episodes. That takes more gumption than even X-Files: Fight the Future had! At least they gave us a whole summer to see the movie before the next episode aired. I am just glad that I did not wait until next week to watch this movie!