I never planned to write a review for Avengers: Age Of Ultron and this still isn’t it really. You’d have to be living under a rock not to have heard about it and the general consensus agrees it’s a great film. My succinct (ish) opinion believes it’s less watertight and focused than the first, there’s very nearly an overload on the one-liners and some of the jokes are more miss than hit. The pacing is a little jarring in places and the film feels bloated with content resulting in some scenes feeling overly cut down or missing important moments. Those are my criticisms.
Besides that it’s still a fantastic movie that delivers on
the action scenes, the character interactions and development, the comedy and
the comic-book fan appealing lore accuracy. It’s not better than the first but
it comes close if not reaches being on par with it.
Incidentally my favourite scene. Probably also one of the cheapest to create. |
Now that’s out of the way let’s talk about certain people’s
reaction to the film and how their insanity outdoes Ultron himself’s own warped
logic. For those unaware there was a considerable backlash to parts of the film
and also a few events surrounding its release. The main points of criticism
were Scarlet Johansson’s Black Widow character and her storyline in the film,
then exacerbating matters was a joke Jeremy Renner made in an interview where
he called Black Widow “a slut.”
This culminated in Director Joss Whedon deleting his twitter
account and although he denies claims that the violent criticisms were the
cause, looking through the expansive archived comments, it’s hard to believe
they weren’t at least a contributing factor to his departure.
From interviews and the general palpable hype and
expectation for Avengers 2, it’s clear the pressure was getting to Whedon so a
break to “focus on writing” again seems like a reasonable idea. Frankly I think
it’s astounding the film came out as impressive as it is, given the tendency
for overhyped sequels to collapse under the weight of their own expectations
(See “The Dark Knight Rises”).
Going into the details of these criticisms I think it’s
important to point out that I’m definitely not saying criticisms of the film
are invalid or invaluable. Art should always have constructive criticism and
feedback, it’s how we improve and grow. Deconstruction and analysis often
progresses everyone’s knowledge. I’m both an amateur critic and filmmaker and I
like to think I understand both sides of the coin.
My problem is that much of these criticisms have been
anything but constructive. At best they’ve been whiney nit-picking on personal
preference and at worst they’ve been directed insults and violent threats that
don’t help anything or anyone and continue to harm a “nerd culture” that is
already heavily scrutinised for this kind of behaviour anyway.
So what does the film contain to spark such an inferno of
controversy? Well the Black Widow character has more of her backstory fleshed
out in Age Of Ultron alongside a romantic subplot with Bruce Banner. This
backstory involves how Natasha Romanoff a.k.a Black Widow was trained from
birth to be an assassin. We see glimpses of this past when Scarlet Witch’s mind
powers send the team into traumatic states of recollection and/or future
predictions. In Natasha’s case she sees her "home" (an orphanage?), ballet dancers and
increasingly punishing training sessions involving murdering live hostages and
reinforcing Guantanamo bay style “you are nothing” sentiments.
This comes to boiling point when she and Bruce discuss
escaping the Avengers together. Bruce clearly has feelings for Natasha but doesn’t
trust himself (or rather the Hulk) to ever stop being a threat. Trying to
persuade him otherwise, Natasha reveals that she can’t have children. Part of
her assassin upbringing was mandatory sterilisation and she finishes the
confession by saying “You’re not the only monster on the team”
Critics took this as an implication that infertile women are
monsters.
I can see how they reached that interpretation but if you think about
it for more than a second, do you honestly think that was the writer’s intended message?
What would that add to the film? Do they have history of holding these kinds of
views? No, nothing and no respectively. I took it to mean that her manipulated
upbringing and everything she was forced to do has left her as more of a
monster than her own person. The culmination of what her training did to her, rather
than this one feature of it being the definition of a monstrosity.
Her and Bruce have both been forced into lifestyles they'd rather escape from. |
When I first saw this scene, I was moved by it and found it
a real strong point of the film. The Marvel movies are only getting more and
more absurd so bringing some heart and real human drama back into the story was
really needed and effective I thought. Did the scene feel a little rushed or overly
edited? Arguably so yes, but I don’t think that results in the filmmaker’s
intentions to be a message of misogyny or sexism.
The film actually goes on to
accuse almost all of The Avengers of being monsters at some point, (I remember
at least Stark and Vision) Captain America also has dialogue as they sit in the
jet en-route to the finale along the lines of “Time to see if we really are
monsters”
People took a repeated theme in the film and cherry picked it to interpret as a discriminatory statement from the filmmakers.
People took a repeated theme in the film and cherry picked it to interpret as a discriminatory statement from the filmmakers.
Other criticisms latched onto how Natasha is taken prisoner
by Ultron towards the end of the film and eventually rescued by Bruce and the
other (Male) Avengers. This is considered clichéd and falling back on the
“Damsel In Distress” trope and whilst that’s technically true there is again a
lot of missed context and information surrounding this that makes it far less
offensive than it seems.
Black Widow is far from incapable and that has been
demonstrated frequently in every film. That said, her and Hawkeye are still the
two weakest of the Avengers and the film itself even highlights this. The
opening scene shows Hydra villain “Strucker” ordering his men to “focus on the
weaker ones” because “a hit will cause them to close ranks” and sure enough,
Hawkeye is injured and the team is caught off guard by the Maximoff twins
whilst Natasha and the other Avengers try to save him.
When Natasha is captured she is taken to Ultron’s factory
and he intimidates her by tearing apart his own body by a new superior
vibranium-infused model. This could appear stereotypical as Natasha shuffles
backwards in fear but the purpose here is just for Ultron to have a cool
monologue and for Natasha to move back so he can close the prison cell door on
her.
Three of the Avengers couldn’t be put in this position due
to super strength and being able to break out of the cell immediately, so that
leaves Iron Man (assuming he has no access to any of his suits or gadgets)
Bruce Banner (assuming he has a reason why he can’t transform into the Hulk),
Hawkeye (assuming he has none of his weapons and gadgets) and Black Widow
(assuming she has none of her weapons or gadgets). With all these assumptions
in place would the others scuttle back unknowingly into a jail cell at an
approaching violent Ultron? I’m pretty convinced they would.
Y'see he rather outmatches them individually. |
So yes, Natasha being the one locked up is a bit clichéd but
it could have just as easily been coincidence. We have to be careful not to
condemn every instance of something falling in line with a common trope
otherwise women characters would never do certain things and that’s kind of
creating clichés of a whole new type. Furthermore, the only reason the rest of
the Avengers find Ultron’s base is because Black Widow has a secret
communication device (I’m not sure exactly what it was. Morse code?) unseen by
Ultron that she uses to contact Hawkeye.
Once Bruce lets her out of the cell, it’s him who wants to
run away together and not get involved in the conflict, but Natasha knows
they’re needed and forces a Hulk transformation before they both join the
fight. I’m not a huge Whedon fan who’s seen everything he’s ever done, but I’ve
seen enough to know he doesn’t generally write the kind of characters he’s
being accused of and Black Widow has more than enough badass moments in Age Of
Ultron to stop her being anything close to a damsel in distress.
The kind of people making these criticisms seem to actively
search for things to be offended by and then fuelled by crusader-like righteous
fury they paradoxically become some of the most offensive and discriminatory
people on the internet.
The other event I mentioned was an interview outside of the
film. Jeremy Renner and Chris Evans were being interviewed and the opening
question was about the romantic hints between Black Widow and Hawkeye and then
Captain America in films leading up to Age Of Ultron and how it was surprising
that she ended up with Bruce Banner. Renner becomes completely deadpan and
states “she’s a slut” to uproarious laughter by Evans. I only saw this clip
after all the controversy so it didn’t strike me as funny by that point if it
would have at all.
Chris Evans later apologised, Renner ultimately didn't. |
The point is, it’s quite clearly a joke, meant as an
icebreaker for the start of an interview.
This wasn’t mid-discussion in a serious topic with Jeremy
Renner stating that “I think Black Widow is fundamentally a very slutty
character”. No, it was a dumb joke because Renner had nothing better to say on
the subject and you’re well within your right to not find it funny at all or to
find it rib-splittingly hilarious, that doesn’t matter.
The level of vitriol
and hatred directed at Renner afterwards was nothing short of ludicrous. Some
even tried to stir up calls for him to lose his job acting in the Avenger’s
movies. I can’t believe I have to point out how much of an absurd overreaction
that is and whilst we’re stating the obvious, Renner made this joke about the
fictional character Black Widow NOT his co-star and the actress portraying
Black Widow, Scarlet Johansson.
Overall there’s this sense that certain people are forcing
something onto these movies. Whether it’s their own ideologies, a desperate scrape
for self-righteous fame and superiority or a cathartic need to be enraged by
something, there’s a considerable amount of people irrationally displeased with
the content in these movies. I say “irrationally” because in terms of very
mainstream cinema, Marvel has actually one of the most liberal and diverse
movie franchises being released these days.
Are they perfect and immune to criticism? Of course not
but should you form that criticism in death threats and unconstructive barrages
of swearing and insults? No you definitely shouldn’t because in case you
weren’t taught this in primary school, that’s mean and offensive. If the
counter to this is that you are offended by the content in the movie I bring up
another age-old lesson “An eye for an eye leaves everyone blind”
It’s not impossible for filmmakers to hide offensive
messages and ideas in their films but if that’s the case you need to decipher
them through rational and civil discussion. You then bring these criticisms to
light and if other people see truth, logic and coherence in your argument then
you can take these criticisms further and hopefully influence the filmmaker’s
themselves or the studio producing the films.
Oh I’m sorry did you fall asleep? Yes I suppose that can
happen with boring old logic, fairness and civility. You’ve been brought up on
action, explosions, shouting and violence. The stuff of blockbuster movies.
You’d better just apply that strategy to real life then because loud,
controversial, accusatory yelling will get you more noticed than logic. Let’s
keep going with that until we live in a culture of entitled crying immature
babies all trying to yell the loudest and the most crassly.
Do you want to live in that world? A chaotic, uncivilised
and violent world? If you don’t and are culpable for the kind of reactions I’ve
detailed here you need to look at yourself and listen to yourself and then
think long and hard before you open your mouth again. You think you don’t
influence anything? Well you do, and whilst you might think the ends justify
the means, very often the means actually define the ends.
No comments:
Post a Comment