Monday, April 30, 2018

Infinity War: Reaction, Review, & Analysis


I just left the theater, but I have a lot of thoughts about Infinity War. First, the movie is fantastic. It exceeded my expectations in every war, including plot, execution, character development, and conclusion. I was becoming increasingly concerned about the scope of the film and this difficulty that would present in explaining what characters were up to and why. After watching, I no longer have any of those concerns. Second, this movie is not for casual fans. I suspect some will be left wondering who some characters are and why they’re doing what they do. Marvel did not seem to care, which is awesome. Thanks for having the biggest payoffs for the biggest fans. It’s something Warner never does with their movies and it’s appreciated by the faithful. Finally, the movie is long, but not too long. The action is well-paced, heavy, and fun. I never felt like the story became plodding or trite (like I and others have complained about with some of the Netflix products) in spite of the length. It was wholly appropriate in my opinion to make this film over two hours. The grand scale renders it necessary.

Where does it rank in relation to the best Marvel products? Very highly. Probably only as low as the top three, maybe as high as number one. It is as funny as GotG Vol. 1, as twisting as Winter Soldier, and nearly as heartwarming as Homecoming with superior action to all three. The universe spanning plot has very few broken portions (I will discuss some concerns) and so many things going right that it’s an immediate contender for the best Marvel film.

Is it better than Batman TDK? No. End of story. We may never see a comic book movie like that ever again, or at least not until the current generation of Warner/DC films execs retires. Is it Marvel’s TDK? Sort of. Thanos is the same type of compelling villain as Ledger’s Joker, even if not as compelling. He’s the first villain in the same category as the Joker that Marvel has produced. It took them 826357635 movies. That said, DC films are trash, except those first two Batman movies, and, yes, I’m including Wonder Woman (sorry, but I’m not sorry). The future of Marvel films is bright and the future of DC films is questionable at best (and potentially an unmitigated disaster and my personal opinion leans this direction).

Good or bad news first? Bad news? Ok, here it goes…a definitive list about things that were not good in Infinity War:

Vision & Scarlet Witch: I loved Paul Bettany in Avengers 2. He looked great. His acting was compelling. Vision seemed to be a character on the up and up. He’s given us solid performances up to this point. Elizabeth Olsen has been less exciting of a character both because of the MCU nerfing of Scarlet Witch’s powers and because of her association with Quicksilver (who sucked) and disassociation with Magneto (who Marvel didn’t own the film rights to when she was introduced). As a result, the romance of Vizh and Wanda has basically no spark, the performances are not particularly compelling, and their sort of at the heart of the personal drama for the climax of the film. It’s just not working. The two don’t work well on screen together, no one is feeling it, and neither of the heroes is developing anything on their own to compensate. Olsen does awesomely drop some thresher spaceships on a bunch of space dogs, but that’s basically the only decent moment either has in the whole 2+ hour long movie and one of them has an infinity stone in his face. Sad!

Dinklage: Burning Tyrion on some weird dwarf (who is, ironically, super tall) with voice immodulation disorder was a waste. Unlike some others, I enjoyed Nidavellir, especially the interaction between Thor and Rabbit (Rocket, constantly referred to as Rabbit by Thor). Loved the scene where Groot improvises the handle to Stormbreaker. And showing Thor taking a star to the chest is a pretty good power-level demo. But Dinklage is an A-list actor stuffed into a D- performance (maybe, the worst of the film) burdened by poorly written dialogue, poorly envisioned vocal work, and generally looking like a bassist for a space metal band.  

The Soul Stone: Thanos doesn’t love anyone or anything except the gauntlet. He’d never get the stone by tossing Gamora into the pit of doom because he doesn’t love her. She was right, the writers were wrong, end of story. If this was the Marvel Universe, not the MCU, he could have sacrificed Death, but that’s the only thing the Mad Titan loves other than genocide. His acolytes are tools for his ego, not people he cares about for their intrinsic worth. I don’t buy the tears, I believe her, and nothing will change my mind about this. Perhaps we haven’t seen the last of Gamora’s story arc given the weird red room Thanos enters before wiping everyone. Maybe we’ll get a second try on the soul stone later. To me, this is the single plot hole I can’t reconcile myself to. It’s relatively minor, I’m a stickler and I know it, so I can let it go and enjoy the rest for what it is.

The good news

There’s so much. This is going to take a while…

Empire: Thanos Wins! He wipes out half the life in the universe. It’s awesome. Just when you think the heroes have done it in the nick of time, he turns back the clock, wipes out Vision, then Thor kills him, but he doesn’t, and Thanos kills everyone. It’s awesome. It’s the MCU’s Empire Strikes Back. It’s the first time the villains didn’t drop the ball on the goal line. I can only imagine how ten-year-old me would be reacting right now. Jaw agape for 13 months until I get some friggin’ answers. The silence at the end of the film is deafening, both on the screen and in the audience. I can still hardly believe they did it. Making no excuses for Thanos’s power and never letting the heroes off the hook with McGuffins and freak power ups makes this movie the most unpredictable, unforgiving, and consequential MCU product to date. Empire is a once-in-a-generation movie. Infinity War may just be that same class.

Sense of Humor: The jokes are great, and, genuinely, getting better. Guardians has set the tone for this phase of the MCU and it has positively affected all of their properties and was executed here to a tee. The banter between Stark and Strange, between Parker and everyone, between Thor and the Guardians, especially Rocket, and between all the Guardians and anyone else is wonderful. It feels like a Marvel comic book and that’s a very good thing. Parker’s “Oh, we’re using our made-up names…” and Drax’s deadpan “turning invisible” bit were both fantastic. Batista has become a very strong comedic actor and Tom Holland is the future, period. He steals every scene he’s in. This movie is fun in spite of the universe-wide genocidal backdrop.

Action: The movie starts with a royal rumble Thor and the Hulk, the Avengers two biggest brutes, taking on (and getting their asses hand to them by) Thanos in the first five minutes. That’s really something. It sets the tone that this movie is not holding your hand. The film will show you what’s happening and you’ll figure the rest out on your own. They don’t do a quick introduction of the Black Order, or even refer to them as such, they just start doing nasty stuff and you figure out their Thanos’s bros, and that’s that. Everyone gets into the action, including some characters we’ve not seen do much before (like Mantis) and some others we’ve never seen do what their doing (like Tony’s even more Extremis-inspired nanotech armor and the Iron Spider version of Spider-Man). The Battle for Wakanda is epic and glorious. Wakanda Forever!

Huge Moments: The big three of the Avengers all have epic moments in the film. Thor has the most for sure, given that he takes a star in the face, he spins the rings that power a dying star with his legs, and then he bifrosts his ass to Wakanda just in time to drop Stormbreaker all over the space dogs murdering his friends. Thor’s a god. It’s only fair he has the most badass things happen to him. Tony has a lot of great moments, including dropping the ship on Thanos, the one-on-one faceoff with the titan, and his heart-wrenching embrace with a dying Spider-Man. He’s the beating heart of the Avengers, even if he’s not it’s heaviest hitter. Cap’s profiled introduction in the first attempt to de-stone Vision got a great pop from the crowd, his foot race with Black Panther is great, and his test of strength with Thanos, even in failure, reminds the audience just who Steve Rogers is, the bravest Avenger of all. For me, watching Thor light up on the field in Wakanda was, no pun intended, the most electric moment of the film.

Big Surprises: Two things stand out the most: Red Skull is alive and looking over the Soul Stone and Fury dialing up Captain Marvel in the post-credits. I’m pretty sure I audibly gasped when Skull walks out from the darkness in his introduction. That’s just rad. Skull is too important a Marvel villain to trash out in a Captain America movie that wasn’t ready for a villain of his grandeur. It is a promising prelude to his reintroduction into the MCU at some point in the future and all the Hydra (and Zemo, and Strucker, and the list goes on) glory he entails. I was blind-sided, and I’m not often surprised by anything in a comic book film. The post-credits scene was subtle and not exactly a shocker, but it was a well-executed segue into the upcoming Captain Marvel (Carol Danvers version) film debuting around a month before Avengers 4.

Analysis

What’s next? What’s the resolution? Theories and thoughts…
So, did Thanos just kill everyone? Let’s recap: Winter Soldier, Groot, Black Panther, Falcon, Scarlet Witch, Star-Lord, Mantis, Drax, Spider-Man, Dr. Strange, Maria Hill, and Nick Fury have all been willed out of existence by the Infinity Gauntlet. Or so it seems. They similarly disappear off the face of the planet by appearing to turn to ash and then just fading away. Some things to keep in mind about the gems: we’ve never seen a stone directly kill someone. When it affected Drax and Mantis earlier on Knowhere, they just go back to normal later. The gruesome things it does to them should kill them, but they don’t. So that’s weird. The soul gem is a mystery. They say so directly in the film (“no one really knows how it works”) and it doesn’t have a direct analog to an obvious material power like the others (power is like energy manipulation, time, space, and reality all manipulate those dimensions, and the mind gem allows for powerful telepathic powers – not that Thanos ever uses those, that we know of). Is it possible that the stones can’t kill anyone and that the people Thanos “wiped out” were really just blinked into the soul gem (which, in the Marvel Universe, has a soul realm where many, including recently Gamora and historically Adam Warlock, the dude most likely in that egg at the end of GotG Vol. 2, folks have lived). IMO this is one of the most plausible resolutions of the story: half of the world is trapped in the soul gem, a weird parallel reality, and the other half has to bring them back.

The other best explanation I’ve got is that Dr. Strange already knows how the heroes win and he’s manipulating events to ensure that the heroes accomplish the moon shoot 1: 15,000,000 chance he’s seen in his trips through time. To do so, he knew he had to let Thanos win so he’d lower his guard and wouldn’t kill Tony, who is essential in some way to the ultimate victory over the Mad Titan. It’s plausible some sort of time/dimensional travel is necessary to do so and Dr. Strange has left the heroes clues through time on how to do it. Captain Marvel’s film takes place in the 1980’s and it’s feasible that Strange passed on some critical info to her in the past that could impact the ability of the Ultimate Alliance to win in the end. Time or interdimensional travel could also kickstart some changes in heroes’ identities necessary for addressing the impending retirements of some actors in key roles in the MCU, and help introduce both the Fantastic Four and the mutants once the deal with Fox is finalized, most likely in the 2020-2021 film seasons with teasers starting as early as next year.
Hawkeye and Ant-Man? As noted by Natasha, they’re on house arrest for the events of Civil War, but, really, they didn’t even show up at all when space aliens landed in Greenwich and Wakanda? Fury didn’t get them involved? Cap, the greatest strategic mind in the MCU, doesn’t drop them a line on the way to Wakanda? I have a strange feeling there’s a role yet to be played by these two and that they’re being held on deck for a reason. I understand that shoots-arrows-guy and size-manipulation-guy may not seem like a huge deal, but Hawkeye is a proven leader with not only incredibly accurate marksmanship but also great strategic sense and tactical execution. His usefulness in a global conflagration of this size is without a doubt, even if he isn’t singularly decisive. Ant-Man is more useful here for being small than being big for sure. His stealth could allow him to get under an infinity stone and break up the gauntlet’s monopoly without Thanos detecting him. He could be a real difference maker. Along with Wasp, they’d make for a formidable one-two punch between the ears as well.

Loki will come back, but not the Tom Hiddleston Loki. Asgardian gods don’t tend to stay dead for long, but they come back in new forms, sometimes de-aged, sometimes non-human, sometimes gender-swapped. I’d bet on a young Loki going forward, but perhaps alongside Hemsworth continuing as Thor. I see no reason he couldn’t go on for a couple of more films as the Odinson.
One final theory: everyone that looks like they’re dead is alive and everyone that looks alive is dead. Being stuck in the “real” reality is the hell-on-earth and Thanos’s picturesque reality created by the stones is the one where all the reality-bent heroes went to. Maybe no one is dead and Thanos just broke off a new universe. It is odd that all of the newest MCU characters are the ones that faded, and all of the impending retirees are still up and going at the end of Infinity War. It’s not what you expect so maybe it’s not what you think either. I wouldn’t be shocked if the swerve is that only the faded heroes live somehow. It makes the most sense for the ongoing MCU if they do so. I must admit that the sequels to GotG, Spider-Man, and Black Panther all seem odd going forward without their stars and all have been confirmed by Disney/Marvel.

Concluding thoughts
This is probably enough for now. I loved the movie. It’s a special ending to the first generation of Marvel heroes. I hope folks enjoy it the same way I did, on the edge of my seat for 2+ hours. I’ll be looking forward to Ant-Man & Wasp, Captain Marvel, and Avengers 4 over the next 13 months. And, of course, to the upcoming books from Marvel and DC on Free Comic Book Day this Saturday. Until then, Make Mine Marvel.