sideways: (►we're coming back for more)
[personal profile] sideways
Friend and I completed what will probably be one of our last dual jaunts for a while, and thus did I see Avengers: Endgame.

I did not love it - but I didn't love Infinity War, and I haven't loved each and every one of the other movies, so I can peaceably accept that I am not the audience this movie was truly made for. Overall I thought it did enough clever and enough nostalgic things to be a fitting conclusion to a long and genuinely quite impressive cinematic series. In fact, it felt like a solid enough finale that it's a bit strange knowing there are still MCU movies to come. I could easily see it wrapping up in entirety right there.

The rest of my jumbled impressions exist below the cut. Beware hefty sprinklings of salt.

• I can't believe it's been a billion fucking movies and the team still don't actually act like friends.

• It did feel like a comic book story. Like, that's not a compliment in and of itself - I don't like most of the really big ridiculous mass crossover comic events, because they're big and ridiculous and almost nobody gets proper focus and the plot-lines are just obnoxiously contrived. But the movies are comic adaptations and don't shamefacedly pretend to be anything else, and thus in many ways they truly have captured the spirit of the stories. I can appreciate that, even if the end result isn't always my thing.

• It was amazing how many actors they managed to pull back! The walk back through all the movies was EXTREMELY indulgent and the "let's fix it with ~time travel~" solution felt, well, obnoxiously contrived, but it was mostly a nice touch.

• Bomb-ass final fight scene. They did get a grin out of me with the fifteen seconds of girl squad power walk.

• Kind of thought Captain Marvel would have more to do though? Meh.

• Ronin cameo: nice. Clint's haircut as Ronin: oh ym god.

• I honestly thought Clint and Nat's struggle to sacrifice themselves would end with it turning out that sacrificing yourself willingly would circumvent the death clause but nnnnope, she's dead forever I guess. Props for not taking the cheap cheat, I suppose, but oof. A harsh ending to a partnership that has survived with surprising strength given it has mostly had to exist between the lines.

• I ate a noisy rice cracker at the wrong moment and missed the first gay character in the MCU :/ Like, he was there, but I accidentally chewed over the important line and wouldn't have known otherwise if I hadn't already heard about the scene.

• I suspect Thor fans would not have had a good time. He's often seemed to be the character that troubles the writers most of the mains - his solo movies are regarded as some of the weaker titles (save Ragnarok, sort of, depending on who you ask) and his personality has flip-flopped around wildly depending on who's in charge. It's made for a confusing end to a confusing arc, in which he sort of learns about the responsibility of authority but then also sort of decides he has to be himself and himself isn't a leader except he still is, maybe. Also "sad mood-swinging alcoholic" isn't really a great punchline to a situation that, lbr, only occurred because the script said it had to, so having that repeatedly played for laughs was mostly an awkward chuckle zone.

• I actually think I laughed more often during Infinity War, which is. Odd.

• Speaking of responsibility... as a Peter Parker fan I continue to make faces. My list of grievances is long, so here's the short version: they are digging deeper and deeper into the hole of rendering one of my all-time favourite characters as Generic Chipper Teen Hero feat. Spider Powers, and so help me god I have never been particularly sold on the Tony Stark surrogate dad schtick so every time the movies go out of their way to throw it at me I have an emotional response more appropriate to being hit in the face with a cold, wet towel. This is one area where they have critically failed to capture the spirit of the comics and the character, and from the looks of Far From Home it ain't turning around any time soon. I am quietly suffering under a tidal wave of cinnamon roll memes.

• I also didn't quite manage to have the, um, proper reaction to the most emotional moments somewhat, but my friend was sniffling loudly enough for both of us as Tony gracefully withered off into the great beyond. I did get at least partway to misty at the hologram doing the "love you 3000" to Morgan, because my weakest point is parents loving the hell out of their kids.

• Black Panther was pretty rad.

• Yay for Steve being happy I guess but that seems like a dick move to pull on Bucky and every single one of his modern day friends and, like, Peggy's original timeline husband. I still went d'aww at them FINALLY getting their dance.

• And I did like that Sam got the shield >:) Hell yeah.

• How DOES time travel work in this movie? I have no fucking idea.

Date: 2019-05-06 01:09 pm (UTC)
nyctanthes: (Default)
From: [personal profile] nyctanthes
And you're just not an Iron Man fan in general, huh? That must make the MCU a bit painful

I have :: cough :: strong feelings about Iron Man. It's one reason I've never gotten into the The Avengers as a team. I've enjoyed the occasional side movie (Black Panther and Ragnarok for sure; Ms Marvel to a lesser extent), and watched the occasional one on the plane because it was there (Dr Strange, Captain America). I think the latest Spider Man was playing at a family event, and I got bored and wandered off because, as you said so eloquently, who is that Peter Parker? I'll stick with Miles and Into the Spiderverse, thank you. (Though that movie, thinking about your comments above, also tilts toward wrapping up his story in a nice, shiny bow. At the end, he's - already - got a support system in place and is buoyed rather than burdened by his power/responsibility.)

has steadily stripped away almost everything that makes the character that character and not Someone Else Entirely

I haven't watched near enough MCU movies to answer this question, but I wonder if what you mention above is a result of i) too many characters to give all of them the depth they deserve and/or ii) reluctance to make their dilemmas internal/psychological and not primarily external/Macguffin driven. I see this so much in shows with ensemble casts; they start with potential and as the episodes and seasons pass, the plot drives them rather than vice versa.

Then there's the tendency in pop culture offerings, esp. ones with teens, to make everyone "middle class" which in reality translates into upper middle class. It used to be different, but at this point it's been years if not decades.

Great discussion!

Date: 2019-05-09 12:41 pm (UTC)
nyctanthes: (Falling)
From: [personal profile] nyctanthes
Re: Iron Man. I don't have a rant, as I'm not really an MCU fan. I just like to hit the highlights.

To try to keep my complaint really short, it's that so much attention was paid (by the movies) to a character type that I don't care for. I used to really enjoy the kind of characters that RDJ plays, but not so much anymore, and Iron Man is the most extreme example of this type. Even if he does evolve and all that.

Oh, and in case you haven't seen this linked around, a piece on Marvel and movies as content: https://www.rogerebert.com/mzs/avengers-mcu-and-the-content-endgame

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