Following from the events in Avengers: Infinity War, half of the population of the universe is gone, and the remaining Avengers, Tony Stark (Robert Downey Jr.), Steve Rogers (Chris Evans), Bruce Banner (Mark Ruffalo), Thor (Chris Hemsworth), Natasha Romanoff (Scarlett Johansson), Clint Barton (Jeremy Renner), and James Rhodes (Don Cheadle), as well as Nebula (Karen Gillan) and Rocket (voice: Bradley Cooper), are dealing with the results, and often, not dealing that well. That changes when Scott Lang (Paul Rudd), who was thought to be dead, shows up, and offers a possible course of action to undo âthe snapâ and defeat Thanos. Their quest takes them through a surprising number of past movie clips before reaching a very big battle.
And so the saga of the original Avengers ends with aâŚÂ  No, not with a whimper. As far from a whimper as is possible. Itâs sound and fury, and hopefully weâre all literate enough to know what that signifies and who it is told by. For someone like me, who has loved the MCUâfinding it one of the great movie franchises, that time after time rose high in myriad waysâit is disappointing. I wanted great, and I didnât get it. I wanted character studies and action that followed from those characters and emotions that came naturally from the characters and the situations they were placed in, and I didnât get any of that.
What I did get was fine acting, huge spectacle, and tons of cool fan-servicey moments. If thatâs what you are looking for, than you may be satisfied. But then you might as well watch Aquaman (except for the acting). Infinity War is goodâŚ-ish. It should have been more, and in so many ways it is shocking where it fell down.
Iâm staying vague in this review so as not to give away spoilers as I donât recall a film where people were this worried about them. But the joke is, it doesnât matter. There are no big surprises, no twists, and no shocks. Take the simplest story you could have deduced (after seeing the last few films, and if you havenât seen those, then skip this one as it’s for fans only), and thatâs what you get. The only surprise is how unsurprising it all is. But still, Iâll play nice and be vague.
So, what works? If you know the MCU, you know the answer to that. Weâve got a lot of good characters, performed skillfully, who spout decent dialog that occasionally is quite good. There are a few solid emotional moments and a few good laughs. And then there is the action, which is amazing. You want a magnificent (if confusing and sometimes silly) battle? Youâve got one of the best. And as for those fan service moments, there are a bunch, including one that is as good as anything offered by the MCU up to this point. Specifics would get into spoilers, but there are quite a few engaging or thrilling scenes. The art design is a big drop from past films and it often looks a bit drab, but the film is shot well.
But everything is tugged down by what Iâll call editing. Little of the story is given any build up. Like Infinity War, this is a movie of jumps. âHey, we need some wild tech.â Next scene it exists. âHey, we need to find Bob.â Next scene theyâre with Bob. âHey, we need to cross vast distances.â Next scene they have. Endgame doesnât flow. It’s a collection of scenes stitched together. And often those scenes exist only to be cool, not because they fit. There is a marvelous girl power moment, and it is marvelous and should be in the film. But they didn’t bother filming anything leading up to it. Thereâs no reason for it to happen and a whole lot of reasons why it shouldnât, but there it is, stuck in, no doubt, because the Russo brothers decided it would be cool to have the scene, but they lacked the skill to fit it into the story.
And that jerking nature also plays havoc with the wrapping-up of charactersâ storylines. We donât see shifts in those characters. One will simply say âIâm going to do thisâ and then does it, even if it isnât something that character would ever have done before. They end up where they end up because the Russos (or Kevin Feige) just decided thatâs where they wanted them to be, not because the story led them there. And that problem messes up previous films too. Apparently the character development which was key to multiple MCU films didnât really happen or the characters just changed when we werenât looking.
Sounds like some substantial problems, but there are so many more. The Avengers make odd or downright stupid choices (keeping it vague, they should have gone to pick up some relatively easily attainable supplies before setting off on their main quest; also, not bothering to wait for a few other characters is simply insane and pointless). And the way they break up into teams is just bizarre (Ok, minor, minor spoiler: wouldnât you think youâd put one of the people who knows how to fly a spaceship with the spaceship?). Sure, these characters have made stupid decisions before, but never has the gears of the franchise been so visible behind those decisions. It took over a decade, but the mega-corporation that has been behind these films is now front and center.
We also have the power-level problem that was so prevalent in Infinity War. Everyoneâs strength changes moment to moment. Sometimes a punch or stab or ray does nothing and sometimes it is devastating. Is it bad to be shot? Sometimes. Sometimes itâs no big deal, and thereâs no way to tell during the battle which attacks are actually dangerous.
Then thereâs the tonal shifts (for the first time in an MCU movie, some of the humor feels out of place) and awkward pauses (the writers donât have Joss Whedon’s skill at integrating important moments into exciting ones, so instead the film grinds to a halt whenever someone has something âdeepâ to express). And since this is a sequel, it has the often seen sequel problem: Things that were difficult or nearly impossible before are now easy. That gets into spoilers, so Iâll leave it at that.
Even with all those flaws I canât say to skip it. The whole may be weak, but some of the parts are excellent. So for the thrilling moments, and the humorous moments, and the emotional moments, I recommend it. Those moments arenât as thrilling or as emotional as they should have been (and easily could have been) with proper context, but they are still exciting. And if you’re going to see it, you really want to see it on the big screen where that giant battle shines.
But as the ending of the three phases of the MCU, I wish the two part film of Infinity War/Endgame hadnât been made. These characters deserved better.