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4.2

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Avengers: Age of Ultron
Chinamoulali Shaik @skchinamoulali
Jul 10, 2016 01:15 PM, 1721 Views
Avengers age of ultron

It is a awesome movie to see At one point in "Avengers: Age of Ultron, " the hammer-swinging superhero Thor(Chris Hemsworth) tells the android villain Ultron(James Spader) that “there’s no need to break anything.” “Clearly you’ve never made an omelet, ” Ultron replies. It’s nice when a movie hands you a metaphor like that. The second “Avengers” is a gigantic omelet combining everything in writer-director Joss Whedon’s refrigerator, pantry and spice rack, and dozens of eggs are broken in its creation. This film about a team of good guys battling a brilliant, genocidal robot is bigger, louder and more disjointed than the first "Avengers”—which, like this new installment, was a crescendo picture, meant to merge strands from solo superhero movies within the Marvel Universe. But it’s also got more personality—specifically Whedon’s—than any other film in the now seven-year-old franchise. And in its growing pains you can see a future in which these corporate movies might indeed be art, or at least unique expressions, rather than monotonous quarterly displays of things crashing into other things, with splashes of personality designed to fool people into thinking they’re not just widgets stamped out in Marvel’s hit factory. You shouldn’t go into it expecting a smooth ride, and you should know that there are basic ways in which it’s not up to snuff.

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