After five years and five movies setting the stage, all four of the titular heroes come together in easily the most anticipated superhero rumble in movie history; this premise has been botched in ‘’The League of Extraordinary Gentleman’’ before it, yet somehow ‘’The Avengers’’, it’s ensemble cast and director Joss Whedon manage to balance all these characters to generate a great superhero film that sits firmly just beneath some of the best ever created.
The five movies in question have led to this; a full on
invasion of Earth by Thor’s brother and nemesis Loki and his army of Chitauri
warriors. To do this the Norse super villain steals the Tesseract from a SHIELD
research facility, indoctrinating top operative Hawkeye (Jeremy Renner) in the
process. With the world hanging in the balance, Nick Fury calls upon a team of
heroes consisting of Iron Man, Black Widow, Captain America, Hulk and
eventually Thor to combat the threat. It’s typical superhero fare, linking to
the comics but the plot of this flick in particular is taut and effective due
to the many links to the previous films in the Marvel Cinematic Universe such
as when Thor checks up on his scientist love interest (played by Natalie
Portman in the God of Thunder’s movie debut). There are also a number of
welcome homages to the comic books and their fans from the trading cards
possessed by Agent Coulson to the crowds of people commenting on the great
battle fought by the heroes at the end of the movie. The story introduces the
major players very well with each character having their own particular
introductions, from here the pace accelerates to the awesome looking SHIELD
heli-carrier that’s sure to bring back memories of ‘’Sky Captain and the World
of Tomorrow’’ then leaps straight onto the streets of New York for the final
battle. It will be a slight disappointment for some that the ending seems to
fizzle out, only showing Tony Stark in his tower rather than providing
acceptable conclusions for each character and if you haven’t seen at least half
of the movies that have come before then you’ll likely be confused over many
plot elements given that the movie jumps straight into the experiments on the
Tesseract rather than giving a recap. To all others, especially fans of the
Avengers series the plot of the cumulative flick will be a satisfying one.
The most important area of such an ambitious film is the cast
and for the most part it delivers brilliantly. Each character brings their own
specific archetypes and behaviours to the table which all play off each other
very well from Tony Stark’s endlessly witty gestures to Dr Banner’s inner
struggle to control the Hulk inside, Director Joss Whedon somehow manages to
give every character an equal amount of screen time be it an argument between
all the characters at once or the final battle which jumps between each hero
seamlessly. The only major character introduced here is Hawkeye, the legendary
archer played by Jeremy Renner. While his performance comes off as slightly
flat during his indoctrination by Loki through one third of the film, his
character is ultimately a great addition to the Marvel Cinematic Universe and
also compliments Black Widow very well through not having much in the way of
super powers. Black Widow, making her second appearance in the series truly has
a noticeable presence this time around rather than being there more for sex
appeal until the last twenty minutes in Iron Man 2. As for Captain America, he
takes on the full leadership role, breaking up fights and rallying everyone
together just as his name suggests and Thor barrels along, content on seeing
justice served to his malevolent brother’s conquest. As a villain Loki
certainly has his ambitions and schemes for conquering Earth though his acting
execution comes off as being slightly dull, rarely raising his voice and easily
being brutally smashed by the Hulk at one point; the aliens that side with him
build the most intrigue with their gigantic spaceships and towering foot
soldiers often being more in the spotlight, particularly in the final battle in
New York.
The Avengers may not quite be the greatest superhero movie
ever made, but it stands as the pinnacle of the Marvel Cinematic Universe and
an impressive achievement when compared to past efforts. Anyone looking for a
large scale, action packed superhero smack-down (practically everyone
considering the film’s place in the box office) will thoroughly enjoy what it
has to offer.
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