"Never underestimate the entertainment value
of, Hulk Smash."
Plot
When global security is threatened by Loki,
“adopted” brother of Thor, Nick Fury and his team will need all their powers to
save the world from disaster.
Nick Fury of S.H.I.E.L.D, an international
peace keeping agency, sets the Avengers Initiative into action.
The Avengers Initiative is a who's who of
Marvel Super Heroes, with Iron Man, The Incredible Hulk, Thor, Captain America,
Hawkeye and Black Widow all playing their part to restore peace.
Firstly I should say that I was pleasantly
suprised by the implementation of the characters whose individual outings where
less than enjoyable to me! With the exception the Iron Man films which are
awesome. The rest just bored me to tears. The most disappointing was The First
Avenger's outing only beaten by two Hulk outings which where outshone by a
video game made for the last generation of consoles.
With interspersing flip one-liners, a host
of larger-than-life characters and the usual flurry of fight-and-flight scenes,
the film is never less than amusing. Still, it's never more than amusing
either. Marvel Studios has made it a point of pride to diverge from the grim
severity popularized in the DC / Warner Bros Batman films. The lightness is fun
but it doesn't offer much of a foundation on which to build an epic.
And let's face it, there's more than a
whiff of opportunism about a project that pits a defrosted World War II hero,
Captain America (Chris Evans), an inventor-industrialist, Iron Man (Robert
Downey Jr.), the pagan lightning god, Thor (Chris Hemsworth), a scientist with
anger-management issues, Hulk (Mark Ruffalo), and SHIELD agents Black Widow
(Scarlett Johansson) and Hawkeye (Jeremy Renner) against the Norse god of mischief,
Loki (Tom Hiddleston) and a legion of marauding aliens. In 3-D, which I was
impressed by for the first time ever and easily warrants paying the 3D tax
which seems to be tacked onto the already ridiculously high cinema prices.
The movie delivers the kind of pleasures
usually reserved for fan fiction or playground stand-offs. Not surprisingly,
Robert Downey Jr.'s flip, cynical Stark (Iron Man) gets a good measure of the
movie's best lines, bouncing off Steve Rogers' (Captain America) boy scout
idealism and Thor's guileless sledgehammer style (sometimes literally). Whedon
also crafts a couple of choice scenes beautifully tailored for Scarlett
Johansson's Black Widow, a far more interesting character here than she
appeared to be in "Iron Man 2."
The films secret weapon is most definitely
The Hulk. Mark Ruffalo is the third actor to play Bruce Banner/Hulk in the past
decade, and even though the soft-spoken star would seem to have the longest
fuse (when we first see him he's tending to the sick in an Indian slum) he's
immediately both more dangerous and more fun than either Edward Norton or Eric
Bana in the same role. Whedon gives him a long build up.
For the first hour of the movie we're
invited to speculate along with his new allies just how much havoc Banner's
rampaging id might cause. Then the lead comes off!
If at this point you are still wondering
whether or not to see this film? I have some words of wisdom that will help you
decide!
Never underestimate the entertainment value of
“Hulk Smash”.
That's probably the most important lesson
to be drawn here, and one that clearly hasn't been lost on the filmmakers, who
have reportedly signed Ruffalo to a six-picture deal.
This movie pull no punches (hammers,
shields or smashes) and is easily one of the best comic book films I have seen
in a while. All we have to do now is see how Warner Brothers and DC Comics
respond with The Dark Knight Rises coming to the big screen later this year.
If it's a Friday Night SmackDown you're
after, "Avengers" gets the job done. The 3D is very impressive and if
you wanted more reasons to go see the movie and pay the extra £2 I have two for
you! "Scarlett Johansson's breasts"
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