Sunday, April 15, 2012

The Avengers (2012) Movie Review by Lon Harris


THE AVENGERS





★★★★★ out of 5 stars

"The Gold Standard for Superhero Team-Ups"

Review by Lon Harris

(This review originally appeared on our legacy site PassMeThePopcorn)

Release
May 4, 2012
RT Score
91%
Letterboxd
3.7 / 5
Runtime
143 Minutes

Official Synopsis

Nick Fury is compelled to launch the Avengers Initiative when Loki poses a severe threat to Earth. Loki steals the Tesseract, planning to lead an alien army to subjugate humanity. The team must learn to work together to stop Loki and protect the planet from annihilation.




Expanded Ensemble

Robert Downey Jr. as Tony Stark / Iron Man
Chris Evans as Steve Rogers / Captain America
Mark Ruffalo as Bruce Banner / The Hulk
Chris Hemsworth as Thor
Scarlett Johansson as Natasha Romanoff / Black Widow
Jeremy Renner as Clint Barton / Hawkeye
Tom Hiddleston as Loki
Clark Gregg as Phil Coulson
Cobie Smulders as Maria Hill
Stellan SkarsgΓ₯rd as Erik Selvig
Samuel L. Jackson as Nick Fury
Gwyneth Paltrow as Pepper Potts

Expanded Architects

DirectorJoss Whedon
Screenplay ByJoss Whedon
Story ByZak Penn, Joss Whedon
Based on the Comic Books byStan Lee, Jack Kirby
CinematographerSeamus McGarvey
Film EditorsJeffrey Ford, Lisa Lassek
Music ComposerAlan Silvestri
ProducerKevin Feige

Production Vault

Motion Picture Rating PG-13 (Intense Sequences of Sci-Fi Violence and Action, and a Mild Drug Reference)
Aspect Ratio 1.85:1 (Flat presentation framework)
Production Budget $220 Million
Worldwide Box Office $1.519 Billion
Locations Albuquerque (New Mexico, USA), Cleveland (Ohio, USA), New York City (USA)
Behind The Lens Spotlight Cinematographer Seamus McGarvey opted to frame the team-up spectacle in a 1.85:1 aspect ratio. This deliberate choice accommodated the vast differences in character heights, allowing the camera to capture Hulk scale next to human actors seamlessly within the same frame. Primary tracking operations deployed Arri Alexa digital camera sensors, paired with extensive industrial set builds across Albuquerque soundstages.

Production Info

The cinematic crossover functioned as the massive, high priority culmination of Marvel Studios Phase One initiative layout. Principal tracking protocols commenced operations in April 2011, coordinating dense overlapping character storylines from previous standalone features. Financed through Marvel Studios, Walt Disney Studios Motion Pictures managed the broad global theatrical distribution slate, yielding historic box office records upon its initial summer launch frame.

Official Trailer

Lon's  Review
During the climactic battle scene in “The Avengers,” I was more than once reminded of a moment from the “Lord of the Rings” trilogy. Legolas is running beside a galloping horse, and using just one arm, flings himself gracefully on top of the animal. It happens very quickly and it’s shot from a distance, yet it’s kind of remarkable in a way. Here’s a purely visual moment that gives the audience so much insight and information about the experience of being an elf. Peter Jackson doesn’t just suggest but shows us how different this race is from our own. Writer/director Joss Whedon has this same kind of insight, but about a muscular, angry green behemoth.

I know, I know, it’s a long-anticipated movie about a legendary superhero TEAM, not just The Hulk. Fine, fair enough. But it has to be said that Whedon is the first filmmaker who has successfully realized Hulk in live action (and many have tried.) I’d suggest it’s because he’s NOT really reaching for the Hulk-as-metaphor-for-inner-turmoil angle, Ang Lee-style, but instead just making him work as a character in his own right, an extension of Bruce Banner rather than a CG villain. This Hulk has inner life and personality. He’s not just a disaster movie in purple pants like his prior incarnations. In a larger sense, what works about the Hulk in The Avengers is what works about the entire movie. Whedon had no easy task ahead of him meeting the insane expectations for this movie, but he did have something of a leg up on other filmmakers who have tackled iconic comic book properties.

He and his audience both have a bit of history with these characters. Not having to develop endless backstory EXPLAINING such-and-such about gamma radiation or this-and-that about rainbow bridges means more time for things like action and comedy and fun little character moments, which is pretty much what audiences want out of these movies in the first place.

He wisely capitalizes on this opportunity, making a first “Avengers” movie that’s generally light on plot. We spend more time catching us up with all of our heroes than establishing the threat against humanity they’ll be battling. This is a good thing. Even so, and despite an exciting pre-credit sequence set at SHIELD HQ, the movie takes about 20 minutes to click into place. Once the entire cast is present, things get moving. That’s… basically… it. At least as far as the story goes. Much more focus is put on the characters all, well, assembling, having interpersonal conflicts and basically refusing to work as a team. In particular, there’s much concern over bringing in the unpredictable and largely unstoppable-when-angry Dr. Bruce Banner (played by Mark Ruffalo, because no one likes Ed Norton.)

Certainly, some complaints could be registered, were I feeling curmudgeonly. Though I come largely to praise Mr. Whedon here, there are some moments here reminiscent of his less-successful work on, say, “Serenity.” Conversations that feel a bit overly blustery and theatrical. Obvious sitcom-style setup-punchline jokiness. There’s one scene in particular, where Black Widow (Scarlett Johansson) interrogates Loki, that seems sort of endless and winds up not serving much of a purpose aside from getting ScarJo’s backside an extra 4 minutes or so of screen time. Don’t get me wrong… it’s a nice backside… but in a movie so packed with character and incident, you’d think Whedon would be keen to push things forward.

But let’s not nitpick. There’s a lot to love in “The Avengers” for action movie fans – face-offs and throw downs between iconic superheroes, narrow escapes from collapsing buildings, assaults on invisible flying aircraft carriers. But few effects-driven sequences in ANY superhero or comic book film to date can stand toe-to-toe with the Manhattan-set battle sequence that finishes off this film.

Whedon’s never really worked in full-on effects-heavy action mode before, but he out-Bays Bay with this one. This sequence is massive, bringing all of the characters together in a dramatic, complicated and, as I said, extended alien attack on NYC. Yet we’re never confused about who’s doing what, or lost in the swirling digital chaos that tends to define the 2012 action movie experience. (I saw the film in 3D, and though I doubt it would lose too much in the standard 2D format, I was delighted to find that the picture wasn’t dark or blurry as I’ve come to expect. The 3D is largely used in a subtle fashion, save for one goofy shot of alien guts flying at the camera.)

Best of all, the scene isn’t just cutting between different Avengers heroes in different scenarios all happening simultaneously, which we’ve become kind of trained to expect from these kinds of big ensemble pieces. The whole climax establishes the notion that these characters are now a TEAM of soldiers under the command of Captain America, using their individual talents to function as a single unit. (One long take in particular whizzes around the New York skyline showing us each Avenger playing his or her part in the war effort, and it’s as close as films will likely get to a comic book “splash page.” It’s awesome.) And yes, finally, we’re back to The Hulk, the purest embodiment of “The Avengers” sense of fun, and ability to ground these far-out fantastical goings-on by sprinkling in dashes of humanity here and there. Watching him fling himself between buildings and smash flying alien jet skis is alone worth the price of admission. ”

The Verdict


AN UNFORGETTABLE CINEMATIC ACHIEVEMENT.


Reviewer: Lon Harris


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