Stars: Robert Downey, Jr., Chris Evans, Mark Ruffalo, Chris Hemsworth,
Scarlett Johansson, Jeremy Renner, Tom Hiddleston, Clark Gregg, Cobie Smulders,
Stellan Skarsgård, Samuel L. Jackson
Director: Joss Whedon
Director: Joss Whedon
Genre: Action, Adventure, Comic
Rating: A
The Avengers was
awesome. So far, it’s definitely the
best movie that I’ve seen of 2012, and I’ve seen more than a few. The action was stellar, the special effects
great, the comedy subtly genius. The
basic idea of this film was nicely set up in the previous Marvel movies (the Iron Mans, Captain America, Thor,
and the Hulks), with the introduction
of both many of the characters and the elements that were at play. My one problem with this movie was that there
were still a lot of names that I didn’t really pick up on, because they weren’t
really said often enough. Without doing
an internet search I would be unable to tell you the superhero alter ego of
Renner’s character.
The premise of the movie is a bit complicated. Asgardian Loki (Hiddleston) has made a deal
with an alien race; in exchange for retrieving the Tesseract he will receive an
army that he can use to conquer Earth.
Using his scepter Loki manages to enslave Dr. Erik Slevig (Skarsgård), Clint
Barton/Hawkeye (Renner), and several other S.H.E.I.L.D. agents, while also
stealing the Tesseract and blowing up S.H.E.I.L.D.’s remote research
facility. S.H.E.I.L.D. director Nick
Fury (Jackson) reactivates the “Avengers Initiative” and calls in Tony
Stark/Iron Man (Downey), Steve Rogers/Captain America (Evans), Dr. Bruce
Banner/Hulk (Ruffalo), and Natasha Romanoff/Black Widow (Johansson). In the pursuit of Loki they are also joined
by Thor (Hemsworth), Loki’s brother and the god of thunder. The group don’t exactly work well together
and are as likely to fight each other as Loki and with the exception of
Romanoff none entirely trusts Fury, suspecting him of withholding the entire
story. It is up to the group of them to
come together for the greater good, stop Loki, and save the planet.
The
best part of a movie like this is the action, and The Avengers doesn’t fail to meet expectations. It’s an action packed movie, and despite the league
of some of the characters none of the fights are one sided. There’s no moment when the bad guys line up
and wait to be slaughtered one-by-one by the good guys, nor does the fact that
Thor and Loki are gods make the outcome of a fight rather obvious. Even the very human Phil Coulson (Gregg) gets
a few good shots in. The space bits were
a bit over the top and I have to admit that the alien invasion kind of reminded
me of Transformers: Dark of the Moon.
The
second best part of this movie was the cast.
Downey, as always, is stellar as Tony Stark. I don’t think he was as funny as he was in
the Iron Man films, and I would have
enjoyed a little more between him and Pepper Potts, although his interactions
with Jarvis did make up for it a bit.
Seeing him squaring off with Captain America, Loki, and Thor really gave
us an idea of just how powerful Iron Man is, and for the first time he seemed
to really be up against an opponent who is his match. I liked Captain America more in this film
than I did in Captain America,
although I do hope that by the next movie he’s gotten an upgrade on his
uniform. I think I liked Thor more in Thor, although part of that is because
he’s quieter and more stoic than the other Avengers and thus fades a bit when
in a larger group. Hiddleston makes an
amazing villain; I spent part of the movie hoping for his sake that he doesn’t
look as creepy in real life as he does when he’s playing Loki. His timing was amazing, I just wish that he
hadn’t been wearing that horrible horned helmet for so much of the film. I enjoyed both Johansson and Renner’s
characters, and I liked that the Black Widow was utilized more – I’d like to
see standalone films for them in the future.
I’d also love to see a standalone film for Nick Fury. Smulders character left me wanting more – it was
nicely acted, I just found myself questioning who she was every time she
appeared on screen (did they even mention her by name?). I didn’t really care for Ruffalo’s Bruce Banner,
although he’s not my least favourite Bruce Banner. When Stark asks Banner if he smokes pot I was
waiting for him to say yes. Ruffalo,
however, had the distinction of playing two very different characters, and
while his Banner was lacking his Hulk was amazing – easily the best part of
this movie. It says a lot about an actor
when he manages to make the Hulk funny.
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