I would warn you that this review contains spoilers about Avengers: Endgame, but I feel like if you haven’t seen it yet, you just don’t care.
Avengers: Endgame
is a massive act of fan service that bookends a decade of comic movie book
nerdery the likes of which the world has never seen. Clocking in at three
hours, Endgame is the longest superhero film to date and certainly the most
epic in terms of cast, number of cameos, and cosmic implications of the plot.
It’s a big movie with dozens of super-powered types and enough Easter eggs to
blanket Central Park.
The film begins with a team of superheroes confronting
Thanos, the purple faced villain who used the Infinity Gauntlet in the last
film to turn half the population of the entire universe to dust. They discover
that he can’t undo what he’s done and so Thor promptly lops off his head with
an axe and they go home to grieve their losses.
The story then cuts to five years later, and we find the
remaining Avengers still responding to threats and still reeling from the
absence of those they love. Iron Man is retired, married, and lives with his
wife and daughter in the woods. Captain America attends grief support groups.
Black Widow runs herself ragged trying to manage all the world-saving because
she doesn’t want to stop long enough to think about what she’s been through.
Suddenly, Ant Man turns up with a possible answer as to how they might go back
in time and alter their present.
The rest of the film is a time travel heist film structured
like one of those flashback episodes tv shows used to have where all the
characters say, “Hey, remember that time aliens invaded New York?” and then we
get a long clip of that old episode. Our present day heroes get to revisit
moments from the original Avengers, Thor: The Dark World, Guardians of the Galaxy and others. It’s
a fun but a little on-the-nose way for Marvel to celebrate its very lucrative
filmography while giving shout-outs to some favorite moments and still moving
Endgame’s story forward. Tony Stark gets to reconcile with his long dead
father. Thor gets words of comfort and encouragement from his long dead mother.
Black Widow gets to clear the red in her ledger and save her friend, Hawkeye at
the same time.
There’s a lot of tying up loose ends and providing satisfying
moments for longtime fans.
In the end, the team reassembles the Infinity Stones and
brings back everyone snapped out of existence just in time to confront an
earlier version of Thanos and his massive, terrifying armies. The final battle
sequence is perhaps the most reminiscent of what those scenes look and feel
like in the comics. It’s literally a cast of thousands, and directors Joe and Anthony
Russo along with editors Jeffrey Ford and Matthew Schmidt do a good job of
managing the chaos into orderly narrative.
The big reveal is that Tony Stark, the superhero whose film
began this long, successful chain of movies, gets the Infinity Stones at the
crucial moment and uses them to destroy Thanos and his minions, but at the cost
of his own life. The film ends with a long dénouement that shows the aftermath
both of Iron Man’s death and Captain America’s efforts to get all the Infinity
Stones back where they need to be in history. It is both touching and a little
indulgent the way the film wraps up. It is a send-off to Chris Evans and Robert
Downey Jr, whose contracts have now expired, and a set-up for all the
Marvel-based programming that will soon be available on Disney’s upcoming
streaming service.
Endgame is a lot
to digest. It’s clearly made for die-hard fans primarily, but it still creates
enough emotional resonance and narrative clarity to make it a good movie, and
not just a good comic book movie.
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