PHENOMENALITY: *marvelous*
MYTHICITY: *fair*
FRYEAN MYTHOS: *adventure*
CAMPBELLIAN FUNCTIONS: *psychological, sociological*
I find nothing stranger about the reception given AGE OF
ULTRON by comics fandom than the complaints that it didn’t give the character
of the Black Widow a satisfying character arc. While I was not mesmerized by a
romantic linkage between Natasha Romanoff and the Hulk’s alter ego Bruce
Banner, the two of them shared an arc far more impressive than any other hero
in the movie got.
Consider the poor God of Thunder. He gets some nice
moments bonding with the other Avengers over the manly art of hammer-lifting.
But as far as the plot is concerned, Thor is just there to play cosmic cop,
trying to round up stray Asgardian tech. Oh, and he has a vision that alerts
him to the future menace of the Infinity Stones, which isn’t directly relevant to the
ULTRON story, though the plot-thread of the Stones does serve as a lead-in to the cinematic incarnation of the Vision.
Captain America
doesn’t get much better character treatment. He’s still the moral bastion of the
group, laying bare the hubris of Tony Stark’s actions in creating Ultron. But his extended hand-to-hand battle with
Ultron serves no purpose in the plot, and long-time
comics-mavens may find Captain America's survival against Ultron hard to swallow. Cap too has a vision designed to make him uncertain of
his actions, but it amounts to nothing more than penny-ante nostalgia.
Iron Man’s treatment may be the worst of the batch. I
fully understand why writer-director Joss Whedon chose to make Stark the
creator of Ultron. There was no question of shoehorning any version of Henry
Pym, Ultron’s comic-book “daddy,” into this already overcrowded flick. Stark
could have made a passable 21st-century Frankenstein, given his need
to exceed his own father and his belief in solving all problems through
technology. But Stark’s creation of Ultron is rooted in a plot-contrivance-- a vision of the death of his avenging buddies-- rather than in his established character. It’s perhaps appropriate that this is
the film to introduce the character of the Vision, for visions are also the
way Whedon moves most of his character-arcs forward—visions created by Whedon’s
version of the Scarlet Witch.
This mistress of mental magic also wreaks similar
incapacitating delusions on the minds of the Hulk and the Black Widow, but
their shared arc benefits somewhat from beholding their worst nightmares. At
least their nightmares don’t serve as arbitrary plot-points, as they do with
Thor, Cap and Iron Man. Early in the film Banner’s fear that his monster will
elude his control and hurt people is mirrored by Romanoff’s anomie at having
been created to be a government-sponsored “monster:” a trained assassin who’s
implicitly got a lot of innocent blood on her hands.
The Scarlet Witch, who dispenses these intense
hallucinations to most of the Avengers, does so early in the film because she,
like her brother Quicksilver, bears a grudge against Avengers-patron Tony
Stark. This plot-line doesn’t come to much of anything, either, for its only
purpose is to bring the mutant twins into contact with the Avengers. This is important purely because one of them—the one who, in the comics, became one the group’s most enduring
members—ends up joining the super-group in the movie as well. But take
away the contrivance of the twins’ reason for hating Stark, and they too fall
apart at the seams.
Hawkeye gets a little better treatment. While in his other
film-appearances he’s something of a cipher, just another cog in the SHIELD
wheel, in ULTRON the archer becomes in this Whedon-outing the exemplar of the
“normal life” denied to most super-heroes. Hawkeye’s conversations with his
wife carry the resonance of the “noble soldier” who wants to remain home but
feels compelled to serve the greater cause. This is a far cry from the comics’
sassy scofflaw. However, though Hawkeye’s soldierly soliloquies run on a little
too long, the revelation of his home life throws into relief one of the biggest
problems with the AVENGERS franchise in any medium.
Marvel Comics has successfully defined its characters in
all media as fluid entities capable of change. But the original concept of THE
AVENGERS, as introduced in 1963, took its inspiration from DC’s JUSTICE LEAGUE,
which teamed up DC’s foremost heroes in what remained, from a
characterization standpoint, very static adventures. Stan Lee may have realized
this problem early in the evolution of the series, for he quickly wrote the Hulk
out of the group and did the same for Thor and Iron Man fourteen issues later.
From then on, though the “big guns” came and went in the AVENGERS comic, the
feature was primarily defined by the characters who, unlike characters with
their own features, could change and grow, like Hawkeye, Scarlet Witch, and the
Vision.
Did Whedon feel similar constraints in using Iron Man,
Thor, and Captain America in ULTRON? Future plotlines with the latter two may
not have coalesced as yet, and there’s no certainty that there will be another
IRON MAN feature if Downey chooses not to reprise the part. Whatever the
reason, AVENGERS: AGE OF ULTRON has the feeling of a weak second act that may
or may not yield a more resonant third act—be it the Infinity Stones megillah or
something else.
It’s not my usual practice to review the characters of the
film rather than the plot, but I have an excuse: there really isn’t much plot
to review: the result of a poor conception of the villain of the
title. While I’m not opposed across the board to a writer inverting the nature
of a popular character, I think said writer needs to be doing it for
well-considered reasons. In the comics, Ultron is a raging Oedipus Complex on
the loose: a man of metal who despises his mortal creator simply for being made
of fallible flesh. Whedon, known far and wide for his facility with snappy
patter, unfortunately decided to make his robot rogue into a smooth-talking
ironist in love with the sound of his own voice, and the casting of that voice
as the urbane James Spader only worsened the problem. Mechanisms who decide
that their creators are either undesirable or redundant have a long history in
science fiction, and one AVENGERS continuity even gave the Sentinels the idea
of wiping out mankind to prevent mutation. But Whedon does not provide any good
reason, whether of passion or cold logic, for Ultron to desire the death of
humanity. There may have been some dim idea of having Ultron mimic the
metrosexual stylings of his “father” Tony Stark, but if this was the idea, it
wasn’t pursued with any depth. The relationship between Ultron and the Vision in the comics, also a sound extension of Oedipal concepts, lacks any emotional resonance in ULTRON, and Ultron’s plan for destroying humanity may be
one of the worst ever conceived in any medium.
That is not to say that entertaining moments
in ULTRON are entirely lacking. The outstanding scene is the film's big FX-set-piece, a battle between the
out-of-control Hulk and Iron Man, clad in “Hulkbuster” armor. I noted in my review of IRON MAN 3 that I did
not like the IRON MAN franchise letting the hero utilize a bunch of Iron
Man-like robots as his helpers; “my” Iron Man only put himself on the line in his battles with
evil. Therefore I was certainly pleased that Ultron took control of these annoying
automatons to use as his shock troops. Even if the Avengers’ battles with
Ultron lacked something, at least I enjoyed seeing these suckers get picked off.
There are lots of Marvel trivia scattered throughout the
story, particularly the suggestion of a Black Panther-Klaw storyline of some
sort, and of course the de rigeur appearance of Stan Lee. But the promise of
the original AVENGERS has already begun to dim.
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