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4.2

Summary

Avengers: Age of Ultron
MUkesh Rana@mukeshrana
Apr 27, 2015 06:00 PM, 1763 Views
Good but not best as name

Yesterday. me and went went to see the avengers. the movie was not so full of entertaining. my some question are arise after movies are.




  1. Where has The Hulk gone and when will he be back?




By the end of Avengers: Age of Ultron, it was clear that poor Bruce Banner(Mark Ruffalo) wasin serious need of some alone time. The gentlest Avenger of all – when not in green mode –, he was evidently struggling with the destruction caused by his alter-ego, and with the naked fear on the faces of some of the bystanders caught up in it.However, contrary to some of the rumours doing the rounds ahead of the film, he wasn’t"shot into space" at its finale.


Nor did he skip into the sunlight with Scarlett Johanssen’s BlackWidow(consumed by fear that he’ll end up hurting those he loves, he opted to leave her behind). Instead, it was left ambiguous as to where exactly Banner had gone, and when he’d be back from his Hulk-sulk.•The 21 greatest superhero movies of all timeWhat we do know is that Marvel have no plans for a standalone Hulk movie anytime soon.


Plus, unlike many of his fellow Avengers, it seems thecharacter definitely won’t be appearing in 2016’sCaptain America: Civil War(Chris Hemsworth’s Thor will also be missing: he’s busy back home in in Asgard).Rumours that Banner would be turning up in Guardians of the Galaxy 2, presumably after being shot into space, have also been denied by the film’s director, James Gunn, dashing fans’ hopes of seeing Hulk come face to face with the likes of Groot and Dave Bautista’s Drax.(But Bautista himselfrecently revealed that he’d loveto see an Avengers/Guardians crossover.


We’re totally with you on that, Dave.)Instead, it looks like the next time we’ll be seeing Banner/Hulk and getting some answers will be in Avengers: Infinity war, in 2018. It’ll be interesting to see whether this movie will mark the character’s reunion with Black Widow, or whether it’ll be implied that the pair have been incontact since Age of Ultron.




  1. Just how hideous was Black Widow’s background?




Some of the darkest moments in Age of Ultron were the flashbacks experienced by Natasha Romanoff, which included a forced sterilisation, and eerily lit scenes of a young, long-haired Natasha practising ballet and carrying out an execution.Romanoff’s feelings towards not being able to have children were also explored during a heartbreaking exchange with Banner, as she revealed that, thanks to the operation, she now felt like "a monster".•Read: Age of Ultron: 17 things you need to knowFans of the character, and Marvel’s comic books, will know that as a young girl Russian-born orphan Romanoff was trained by her country’s Black Widow organisation to become a super assassin.(The character was first introduced in 1964, at the height of Cold War paranoia). As part of the process, which took place in a facility known as the "Red Room", she was also brainwashed, and given false memories of being a ballerina - although, in Whedon’s film, it looked as if the ballet lessons could have been part of her super-strict training regime.•Is Disney ignoring Marvel’s female fans?Scarlet Johansson as Black Widow in Avengers: Age of Ultron




  1. Why did Quicksilver have to die?




Otherwise expressed as: "Whhhhhhyyyyy? BUT WHYYYYYYYYYYYYY?"There’s no real answer to this, obviously, other than that it provides a great, punch-to-the-guts emotional moment, and cements the last-minute commitment that both the Maximofftwins made to the Avengers. It’s also particularly poignant that Aaron Johnson’s Pietro dies whilst saving the Avenger who initially seemed the most hostile to him: JeremyRenner’s Hawkeye.•Avengers: Age of Ultron review:’a pop culture sugar rush’Given the inherent nobleness of Maximoff’s self-sacrifice, it feels a little cruel to speculate as to whether or not the Avengers would have been more interesting if Quicksilver had just let Hawkeye take the bullet, and replaced him in theteam(but the answer’s yes). Either way, Marvel’sQuicksilver was a fantastic character, whose complex past, easy-to-identify-with hunger for vengeance and close relationship with his sistermade him a lot more more interesting than the bratty teen incarnation of the character seen in X-Men: Days of Future Past.And what about Scarlet Witch?While we’re on the subject of Pietro’s sister, it’s also worth noting that his death puts Elizabeth Olsen’s Scarlet Witch in an interesting position. It’s pretty clear that Wanda Maximoff is now oneof the Avengers, so she isn’t, technically speaking, alone in the world.But the closer-than-close bond between the twins has been severed, and she’ll likely be suffering from some severe emotional fallout when we next see her in 2016’s Captain America: Civil War.(Olsen recently confirmed that she will be appearing in the film).•Marvel and DC’s female superhero movies: what’s the score?Intriguingly, in the comic books, Wanda Maximoff also ends up marrying the Vision, the android portrayed in Age of Ultron the film by Paul Bettany. While there’s been no indication that the films are going to go in this direction, it’s still worth pointing out that, near the end of the movie(basically, the bit when everything was exploding), it was the Vision who swooped in, scooped up and rescued Scarlet Witch .Aaron Johnson and Elizabeth Olsen as Pietro and Wanda Maximoff(Quicksilver and Scarlet Witch) in Avengers: Age of Ultron4. Why could The Vision lift Thor’s hammer?There were two intriguing hammer moments in Age of Ultron. The first came early on, when the Avengers were jokily competing to lift Thor’s famous weapon, Mjolnir, and we saw it shift a tiny amount in the hands of Captain America(Chris Evans). Secondly, and much more dramatically, we saw the newly-born Vision(Paul Bettany) lift the hammer with ease.Normally, the weapon can only be wielded by those deemed worthy: a requirement very few fulfil. Did Vision - who certainly seemed to be a remarkably moral creation - fit the bill? And was the film implying that Captain America is a little bit worthy?(In the comic books, Rogers is one of the few characters, other than Thor himself, to have lifted the hammer).•Robert Downey Jr is adorably interviewed by Mini Thor




  1. Just how similar was Ultron to Tony Stark?




The similarity between Ultron and his creator, Stark, was one of the most interesting aspects of Age of Ultron, and one which director Joss Whedon went to great pains to emphasise. Ultron’s megalomaniac egotism, overriding ambition, and obsessive focus on a "logical" goal were all distorted, magnified versions of Stark’s own qualities, while the moments in which Ultron began using Stark-like language and making Stark-like comments were eerily effective.The link between the two makes sense: it was clear that, while creating the Ultron programme, Stark had poured a great deal of his own personality into the AI. But perhaps even more intriguing than the question of Ultron’s genesis, is the question of his death: in the comics books, the AI is able to come back several times(sometimes with an altered personality). While it’s unlikely that the character will be reincarnated any time soon within the Marvel cinematic universe, it’s not entirely impossible –he is, after all, a programme, rather than a flesh and blood entity.Robert Downey Jr as Iron Man/Tony Stark in Avengers: Age of Ultron




  1. What does the tension between Stark and Captain America mean for Civil War?




As most fans now already know, Captain America: Civil War will see Steve Rogers(Chris Evans) and Tony Stark(Robert Downey Jr) comeinto conflict over a new superhero registration act: Stark will support the instigation of the act while Rogers will oppose it, going into hiding. But tension between the two was already evident in Age of Ultron, particularly during the scenes in which Rogers discovered that Stark and Banner’s experiments had led to Ultron.In the film, the pair managed to put aside their differences and, in Rogers’s words, face Ultron"together". But the film showed that, while the Avengers might now be an official "team", the potential for secrey and discord between individual members is still strong.




  1. Why is Wakanda so important?




Wakanda is the name of a fictional African nation in the Marvel universe, home to the world’s only natural source of the super-super-powerful metal vibranium(used in Captain America’s shield, and in Vision’s body). It’s also ruled by the Marvel superhero Black Panther, who’ll be getting his very own movie in 2018, starring Chadwick Boseman.(In the comics, Panther, also know as T’Challa, is a fiercly intelligent technology genius, with a PhD in Physics from Oxford University, and super-honed athletic and martial arts skills. He was also the first black superhero to appear in a mainstream comic book franchise)It’s not entirely clear whether the African country visited by Ultron and the Maximoff twins(and later the Avengers) in Age of Ultron isactually Wakanda itself, or simply a place in which vibranium is being stockpiled. But, either way, the fact that the film is setting up the existence of Wakanda, and of vibranium, means that Marvel is already paving connections between the Avengers franchise and Black Panther.Many people have also speculated that Ulysses Klaue, the shady arms dealer portrayed by Andy Serkis in Age of Ultron, will crop up as the main villain – or at least a villain.


So guys before you guys go the multiplex think if you are avenger fan or not.if yes then you can go.for it.!

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