Subject: doctorlit reviews Avengers: Infinity Wars
Author:
Posted on: 2018-05-13 20:34:00 UTC

And that leaves Avengers: Infinity Wars. Well. It was a well-done movie, but I can’t say I necessarily enjoyed it. Spoilers for Thor: Ragnarok and Avengers: Infinity Wars.

With all the characters they had to juggle, they did introduce them on-screen in a smart way. They basically went backwards through the Phase Three movies, so that newer watchers saw the characters they were already familiar with before characters who hadn’t done much recently appeared. (Although it just occurred to me that Black Panther got saved until last, but that’s probably unavoidable when the final showdown was being saved for Wakanda.)

Since they apparently felt some weird need to wipe out all of Asgard between this movie and Thor: Ragnarok, we end up losing Loki and Heimdall right at the start. They were both really cool and popular characters, so I don’t understand why we have to lose them. I am glad that they at least allowed Loki to demonstrate for once and all that he was truly allied to his brother. I don’t entirely understand how Heimdall was able to activate the rainbow bridge magic now that the bridge has been destroyed, but I’m not arguing with Bruce Banner getting rescued, so.

I was worried that the Guardians of the Galaxy wouldn’t fit in well with the rest of the cast, with their stupid potty humor and constant jokes. Fortunately, the potty humor was left out (so far as I remember), and while they still used a lot of humor, they were notably serioused up compared to their own titles. Their introduction was flawless, with the “Space” title card and the funky music. The theater filled with laughter at that point, as we all knew what characters were about to show up.

Basically all the fight scenes were great. Every character got at least a little to do. The alien wolf things in the end didn’t really pose much threat, but the four creepy alien generals who served under Thanos all felt very dangerous, and their defeats were very rewarding. One weak point was that the Power Stone and Reality Stone felt really weakened compared to their portrayals in Guardians of the Galaxy and Thor: The Dark World. They had seemed to have potentially deadly powers in those movies, but in this one, Thanos mostly just uses them to knock people backwards. Maybe he’s just not focused on them closely enough because he’s usually fighting too many combatants at a time, but it feels weird for the two most physically powerful stones to do so little.

It was cool seeing the Red Skull again. The MCU has killed off way too many of its villains, so it was nice to see one is still hanging around somewhere, even if he seems beyond the capacity to become a threat again, and might be a little repentant of his past? It would be interesting for him to interact with Captain America again, though I can’t see any way of that happening. Actually, I rather hope his spirit has been released to death now that he no longer needs to guard the Soul Stone. Regardless of his actions during World War II, he’s clearly suffering now, and keeping him around as a wraith can’t seem to serve any narrative purpose. (Plus, it looks like we’re not getting Hugo Weaving back at all, so.)

And, here’s the section that really matters. The ending. Since seeing the movie, I’ve had Boarders and real life friends alike explain that the characters who disappeared are likely to be resurrected in the next Avengers title. And uh. Well. THEY’D BETTER. I was furious watching that ending sequence play out. The entire theater was silent when the credits started to roll. Just seeing so many characters dropped off the face of the Earth setting with no fanfare, no real goodbye, was just disappointing and frustrating, and certainly not enjoyable. It doesn’t help that two of my favorite characters, Bucky Barnes and Maria Hill, are gone. And even worse, I now have to slowly continue watching the tie-in TV shows, knowing that once they reach the same point in the timeline as A:IW, that I have to watch a bunch of the Defenders and S.H.I.E.L.D. agents vanish as well.

So yeah. I don’t like seeing the bad guys win. I’m perfectly happy with the standard good guy ending. I don’t like thinking that so many characters I love are just gone right now, and I really want to “read ahead” to get them back, plzkthx.

—doctorlit, Infinitely Warring with his feelings for this movie

“You aren’t the only one cursed with spoilers, Stark.” “You aren’t the only one cursed with spoilers, Stark.” “You aren’t the only one cursed with spoilers, Stark.”

Reply Return to messages