Avengers: Age of Ultron is Avengers-worthy, as proven by its $200 million opening weekend and its Marvel-ous mix of human-scale comedy-drama amidst earthshaking fantasy. It’s also studded with LOLs, and not all them from Downey. He gets plenty, but the comic relief is more broadly spread around this time.
However, it’s wearisome trying to keep up with the plot, especially when it takes long detours into the mind-control of half a dozen key characters, each of whom have their own neuroses. In writer-director Joss Whedon’s defense, it all seems to hold together, in a Marvel Cinematic Universe kind of way, even if we puny humans have trouble keeping up. Hence, Avengers 2 is really great entertainment, albeit not perfect.
Whedon’s movie opens in classic Marvel fashion with a bravura action scene that reintroduces the characters, including their powers and idiosyncrasies, sets the stage for this episode and tees up the credits. Whew, even writing that sentence wasn’t simple, so consider the challenge of reentering the Avengers’ complex universe as a casual fan after three years away. Yet the movie barely slows down for exposition.
This is all the more remarkable because Age of Ultron introduces several new Avengers, expands the usage of several other lightly-used Avengers, and tees up the next episode, which apparently will be Captain America: Civil War. If it wasn’t all so tremendously entertaining, it’d be like a rigorous history lesson.
Tremendously entertaining it is. So assemble Avenger fans, assemble. Oh, I guess you already knew that.
There are eleven Avengers by the time the closing credits roll, so you may need a program to keep them straight. Spoiler alert: several become Avengers after starting as enemies.
Stan Lee’s cameo is as a veteran of Omaha Beach who gets seriously sloshed on alien booze. Here’s to ya!
Joss Whedon and the Marvel crew wisely stick to their knitting: exploiting the well-honed storyboards laid down over decades of Marvel Comics. Thus what appears convoluted on screen is, well, convoluted, yet proven. Even more, Stan Lee and Jack Kirby’s creations, as interpreted by Whedon, maintain Marvel’s trademark neuroses and foibles. This makes for plenty of charming and even affecting scenes, e.g., when the Avengers sit around reveling over a victory. Taking turns trying to lift Thor’s magical hammer, they endear themselves yet more to each other, and to us.
Whedon gets the credit for embedding antecedents in even these lighthearted scenes that get picked up later. Such supremely accomplished filmmaking isn’t surprising from the man who nailed the first Avengers.
Some subtle double entendres liven up the dialogue for we adults in the audience. As to the superpowered violence, it’s all bloodless and hence PG-13.
The Marvel Cinematic Universe disrespects Conservation of Energy most of all, with other Laws of Science also treated like Silly Putty. Fantastic fakery aside, Marvel movies are always interesting for their deeper meanings and topical allusions.
Regarding BrianSez’s Review
Great review Bri. Tough but fair.