I love independent films and I love serious studio titles that court awards and I love the obscure arthouse stuff that never makes it to my local Odeon. Hey, my favourite films from the past three years were Nocturnal Animals, Moonlight and First Man respectively, so I'm totally a proper film critic. But sometimes what I really need is a big, bold, attention-grabbing, eye-popping, popcorn-munching entertainment-fest. And no one except no one in 2019 does those better than Marvel. Avengers: Endgame opens on April 25th here in the UK and I'm counting the days. Literally. As I write this there are 35 left to go. So as my own contribution to the Endgame hype-machine, here are ten reasons why my anticipation is greater than for any blockbuster movie since The Lord of the Rings: The Return of the King. (For the record, it was really easy to find the ten.)
1. 11 Years Coming
The Marvel Cinematic Universe debuted with Iron Man in 2008, a post-credits sequence linking its hero Tony Stark to something called 'The Avengers Initiative'. Since then the MCU has expanded, deepened and interconnected, its characters popping up in each other's films, groups of them occasionally banding together as full-time or honorary 'Avengers' to face off against the really big foes. How clearly head honcho Kevin Feige envisaged this year's Endgame back in 2008 I'm not altogether clear, but there's a sense looking back to the early days that it was all headed somewhere flipping huge. I described Avengers: Infinity War last year as a 'culmination'. Well in truth it was only the first half of that culmination. Endgame is where a decade's worth of storylines and character arcs finally achieve their closure. We fans have been patient, and this is the payoff.
2. Mother of All Cliffhangers
3. An Interweaving of Threads
The MCU is now famous for doing such interweaving (see 1, or better still read my full article on the topic here.). Infinity War combined the Avengers characters with those from Guardians of the Galaxy, Doctor Strange and Black Panther in the ultimate super-hero mash-up. And while there's been a certain amount of scaling down in personnel courtesy of Thanos and the infinity gauntlet, Endgame is still going to mix things up some more. Scott Lang will find some way to join the team (his Ant-Man and the Wasp outing left him ultra-miniaturised and inconveniently stranded in the Quantum Realm), while Carol Danvers is returning to Earth for the first time since her 1995 tangle with Nick Fury and the Skrulls in Captain Marvel. These movies have been dealing with character-clashes consummately well, so we can expect some wonderful drama and a few deft comic touches to leaven the gloom, as the old-guard incorporate the newbs.
4. That Enigmatic Marketing Campaign
I've given vent on Filmic Forays to my frustration at spoiler-filled movie trailers (specifically here). My pet movie gripe to this day is having multiple plot points/key moments given away by the studio publicity machine, so that the viewing experience is robbed of its impact. What's refreshing about the Endgame trailer is that it reveals the absolute minimum of what we can expect in the film, while still managing to convey a sense of utmost urgency and drama. Our heroes are devastated, but they're going to fight back, that much we know. How exactly? Unclear. In what circumstances? Not a clue. To what effect? Nope, got nothing. The marketing team has striven to prevent the story's secrets from leaking, a task as strenuous as wrestling the infinity gauntlet back from Thanos (and we all know how that ended). Well if any major spoilers do make it out there (and I pray they don't), it won't be due to crass telegraphing on the part of the Marvel team. They're doing all they can to keep the big revelations under wraps, and dropping just enough hints to make us salivate like Pavlovian dogs.
5. Streamlining Earth's Mightiest Heroes
Infinity War did a commendable job of spinning multiple stories on multiple planets at the same time. Inevitably, however, there were characters who lost out. (Steve Rogers and Natasha Romanoff spring immediately to mind). In the aftermath of Thanos' radical cast-culling that should not be a problem. While there's still a scattering of characters who were introduced to the MCU following the first Avengers movie, Endgame seems much more focused on the original team - you know, the gang who had each other's backs when New York came under attack from the Chitauri seven years ago. Hawkeye is making a welcome (if grief-stricken) return to complete the Class-of-2012 reunion, which intensifies the prospect of an epic and potentially tragic last stand. If Infinity War was sprawling, Endgame should have a tight team-based focus.
6. Scintillating New Character Combos
There's still room post-Thanoid apocalypse for some intriguing MCU connections to take place. Along with the integration of Ant-Man and Captain Marvel with the core group, we have a couple of enticing prospects. What kind of marooned space-buddies will wise-cracking Tony Stark and vengeful humour-vacuum Nebula make? And how bad-ass a pairing will we have in Rocket Raccoon and War Machine? (Very, the above picture would suggest.) With Danai Gurira's Wakandan warrior Okoye still knocking around, plus who knows what other survivors waiting in the shadows, there's no knowing what additional encounters might be in store. That's the wonder of the MCU - the sense that all your 'What if character A met character Q?' questions will eventually be answered.
7. An Epic Runtime
Directing team the Russo Brothers recently spoke in terms of a three-hour final edit of Avengers: Endgame and there's little sign that they're trimming it significantly shorter. Movies of equivalent length were in vogue fifteen years ago, largely due to Peter Jackson's Middle Earth trilogy, but studio executives and cinema multiplex owners tend not to like them; the longer the runtime, the fewer screenings can be crammed in during the movie-going day. It's a sign of the production team's confidence (and that of the execs) in what they've created that they're keeping it close to the three-hour mark. In addition we can expect a finale that's got much more than spectacle. It's going to devote all the time required to those crucial character moments - resolving all those tantalising sub-plots and giving this classic crew the send-off they deserve.
8. Emotional Punch
Have you seen that final trailer? The one that gives virtually nothing away, save the height of the stakes involved? Everyone is grieving, everyone is lost, everyone is struggling to process the outcome of their war with Thanos. Steve and Tony can't believe they failed to stop the big purple guy. Thor holds himself personally responsible (because he failed to aim for the head). Hawkeye (above) has been bereft of all he truly loved. Natasha, it seems, is acting as everyone's grief counsellor. They should try to find a way to move on, but they can't. Not if there's some glimmer of a chance they could reverse the situation and claim victory where they failed first time around. And however tough their mission, this time they'll see it through - whatever it takes. Gives you chills, right? No? Seriously? Don't you have a soul???
9. Trust the Russo Boys (and their writing team)
Writers Christopher Markus and Stephen McFeely knew their MCU already, having written screenplays for Captain America: The First Avenger (good) and Thor: The Dark World (passable). They found their perfect compliment, however, in directing partnership Anthony and Joe Russo. These talented siblings came from a background in TV comedy to helm some of the best entries in the Marvel cinematic canon to date - Cap America episodes The Winter Soldier and Civil War and last year's awe-inspiring first half to the Thanos story. While not necessarily fully-fledged auteurs, the Brothers Russo have nonetheless a terrific grasp of storytelling structure, pacing and tone. Their Cap stories are arguably the most bruising MCU titles (physically and emotionally), while their Avengers movie navigated a clean and hugely satisfying path through a narrative that was dauntingly ambitious. Since Infinity War and Endgame were made Lord of the Rings-style in a single shoot, we can be pretty damn sure that this closing episode will match the quality of the opener, if not surpass it.
10. That Climactic Feeling
Speaking of The Lord of the Rings (and why wouldn't anyone?), think back to Christmas 2003. Remember when Frodo and Sam were picking their way through the sulfurous ruins of Mordor, while Aragorn and his battle-weary troops squared up to the massed hoards of Sauron? Never in my cinematic adventures had I felt such a sense of desperate heroism in the face of insurmountable odds - and I'd read the book! That's until now, I think. The Avengers' final stand against Thanos has that nothing-left-to-lose Return of the King vibe - like its heroes are choosing to stand tall as the world ends around them. Yes we know there are other MCU movies on the way, that Peter Parker can't really be expected to stay dead and that Black Panther was too big a cultural phenomenon not to be granted a sequel. But time (to say nothing of contracts) is running out for the classic A-team, and this feels for all the world like their last hurrah. They've got the tiniest sliver of a chance (one in fourteen million six hundred and five, if Doctor Strange got his mystical sums right) to defeat Thanos and reverse the snap. But they're determined to beat those odds. Whatever it takes.
So - do our guys, girls and raccoon really have a prayer? Will Hawkeye get his family back, Wakanda its King, Queens its friendly neighbourhood Spider-Man? Will Tony have his happy ending with Pepper, or a chance to kiss and make up with Cap? Will Bruce Banner get his Hulk on, and will Black Widow finally get it on with him? Will Nebula sort out her Daddy issues? Will Rocket remain the Galaxy's sole Guardian? Is there a way back from despair, and if so, will it come at a terrible price for some of our heroes? Am I geeking out just a little bit too much?
I honestly don't care. I'm way too stoked. See you on April 25th, everyone. It's going to be awesome.
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