Avengers: Age of
Ultron is noisy, colorful, brightly lit, mostly enjoyable comic book
nonsense. It is, in other words, the latest in the Marvel Cinematic Universe,
that mega-franchise of interlocking superhero series currently dominating a
section of big budget filmmaking. This is only the second outing to bring
together the now familiar team of Iron Man (Robert Downey Jr.), Captain America
(Chris Evans), Thor (Chris Hemsworth), Black Widow (Scarlett Johansson),
Hawkeye (Jeremy Renner), and Hulk (Mark Ruffalo) to battle a foe no single hero
could take on alone. But because producer Kevin Fiege and MCU screenwriters
have allowed a great deal of cross-pollination in the interim, it feels like
the Avengers have never left. In fact, the latest picture begins with the team
in the middle of a mission, hitting the ground running.
Shorn of the need to endlessly introduce itself, this sequel
launches right into its action, letting the group snatch a MacGuffin from the
claws of evil HYDRA before the opening title card even appears. We know these
characters, how they relate to one another, what their individual problems are,
and how their personalities clash. Now it’s just a matter of sitting back and
letting the plot carry them away. And, oh, does writer-director Joss Whedon
supply the plot. There is a constant churn of incident and spectacle, new
introductions, returning side characters, exposition, cameos, and
foreshadowing. The Avengers banter, then cross in and out of the main action with
their own throughlines, though some naturally get a little buried in the mix.
(Sorry, Thor.) It’s dense with nerdy detail, yet aerodynamically simple in plot,
ceaselessly hurtling forward.
Their big concern this time around is an evil robot named
Ultron (voiced with funny pomposity by James Spader). He was created by Iron
Man to protect the world and prevent further damage from cosmic nastiness like
we saw in the first Avengers. But let
this be a lesson: don’t expose your experimental artificial intelligence to an
Asgardian mind-control staff. That’s what turns the robot evil, charging up his
mind so much he thinks the only way to save the world is to rid it of those
pesky people messing it up. I mean, he has a point, but that solution wasn’t
exactly what Iron Man had in mind. At least it’s not another interchangeable
grump looking for a glowing crystal or giant laser, which describes every
villain in the last half-dozen of these things. Whedon mixes up the formula by
finding the heroes the cause of and solution to their outsized problems,
struggling to save the world from themselves. The action involves saving
civilians from the path of destruction instead of merely letting collateral
damage interminably rain down, a welcome change.
To stop Ultron, and his army of other robots he’s making in
a commandeered factory, the Avengers trot across the globe, finding large-scale
action set-pieces at every turn, each one better then the last. The filmmakers provide token downtime for
feelings and expressions thereof – rivalries, romances, and the like – but
wastes little time picking up velocity again. There’s a raid on a HYDRA base, a
rampage through an African metropolis, a multi-vehicle chase through downtown
Seoul, and a fictional Eastern European city imperiled in a clever high-flying
climax. Whedon fills the screen with elaborate, CGI-heavy chaos. Laser beams
zigzag across the frame as debris falls, sparks fly, robots swarm, vehicles soar,
background objects go boom, and superheroes flex their powers. It’s
recognizable characters doing their familiar Whedon quipping shtick while
boisterously effective – if occasionally incomprehensible – excitement erupts
around them. The funniest line comes late in the climax when the least
superpowered among them takes stock of his contribution, says, “This doesn’t
make sense,” then heads out to do his part anyway.
There’s lots of smash-bang popcorn entertainment to be had
here, the screen bursting with dazzling movement, the sound mix booming to
match. It’s hard to keep up. There’s also not room for the eccentric character
work that’s usually my lifeline in these sorts of things. We meet new
characters (a speedy Aaron Taylor-Johnson and witchy Elizabeth Olsen, and Linda
Cardellini in a sadly under-powered stock role of supportive wife). We glimpse
familiar faces from other MCU productions (Samuel L. Jackson, Idris Elba,
Anthony Mackie, Don Cheadle, Cobie Smulders). But no one gets much of a chance
to make an impact. There's not a lot of acting beyond personality and posturing. We’re too busy bustling to the next conflict, the next
explosion, the next dropped thread or portentous reference as promissory note
for More Excitement in Future Installments.
The Avengers
franchise has fully disappeared into itself. It is the beginning and ending of
its entire worldview, able only to refer back to itself or look ahead for
future story. It’s a hermetically sealed alternate universe in which no glimmer
of the outside world – politics, culture, emotion – is allowed. It’s a
frictionless experience, big excitement without a need to think about it beyond
the literal visual stimulation and basic story beats. Whedon brings a smidgen
of personality, the actors project charm, and the gears of industrial strength
effects work their light and magic. The ultimate Hollywood blockbuster as empty
calories, Age of Ultron is an exciting
experience of sugar and fat, but completely devoid of anything more sustaining.
No comments:
Post a Comment