Avengers: Age of Ultron
Let me start this off with if you remove this movie
from the marvel universe and simply look at it as an action movie it is a fun
adventure that is a little rushed but all around good fun. When you insert it
in to the Marvel machine and examine what was promised and the thought that
should have gone into it, the film is an incredible disappointment. To start
the movie off the Avengers are storming a hydra base attacking human hydra
members. Form this scene, and subsequent scenes involving battles with robots,
it is incredibly clear that the humans are CGI. I mean it’s horrifically
obvious. The avengers look like they are fighting with ragdolls with what these
hydra members looked like. Having this introduce the movie to the audience
seems to be a huge let down when they are trying to hype you up with a quick
reunion battle. The audience is then rushed through the creation of the main
villain of the film in a sequence where he goes from nonexistence to the most
evil thing the avengers have faced in a matter of 10 minutes. It is difficult
for me to take a villain seriously when he is rushed into the film at lightning
speed, given little development and chooses a stupid premise to destroy humans.
James Spader does his absolute best to bring out the baddie in Ultron and does
a spectacular job when he is talking. But when it comes to action, Ultron is
about as menacing as a wet towel. There is never a point in the film where I
felt there was a chance that the Avengers would lose. Another poor decision by
Marvel is the portrayal of certain members of the team. Black Widow and the
Hulk are shoehorned into a romance that has little to no build up going from 0
to lets run away together in 10 seconds. Tony Stark makes a monumental judgment
error and creates Ultron, only to decide to make the exact same mistake again
later in the film hoping for different results. As was pointed out to me by an
online critique, Captain America gets more ribbing and flack for telling Tony
to watch his language than Tony gets for creating supposedly the deadliest
Artificial Intelligence ever. There are a few scenes that start to build the
tension between Tony and Captain for Marvels next film, Captain America: Civil
War, but by the end of the film everyone is lovey dovey. Age of Ultron was
billed as a very dark film with a prominent theme being death. As it turns out
there is actually very little death and the few that happen have little to no
emotional impact due to the build of the characters. This has mostly been a
nitpicking of a decent action film; my disappointment comes from the
expectations from marvel and what appears to simply be a placeholder Avengers
film, keeping the fans appeased until The Infinity War. 2 ½ stars out of 4.
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