Category Archives: The Avengers

‘The Avengers: Age of Ultron” – our first look

ultron from avengers sequel trailer

You lucky people who went to Comic-Con in San Diego got to see this teaser trailer for “The Avengers: Age of Ultron.” The rest of us have been looking forward to it ever since.

Then it was posted online this week … then it disappeared. Then it was back … then it disappeared.

So I guess we’ll see if this posting of it sticks.

The trailer is short and, as described, shows Tony Stark’s Iron Man helmet being hammered, forged into the macabre, grinning image of Ultron.

In the comics, of course, Ultron was a creation of Hank Pym, also known as Ant-Man. It makes sense that the movie version would grow, somehow, out of Stark.

If that’s what really happens, of course.

We’ll know more soon about the movie version of a favorite comic book villain, including how James Spader is to play the android. Motion capture? Voice over? Something else?

As for hints of the plot, there’s not much. Other than the sites and sounds of hammering Tony’s helmet into Ultron’s visage, there are a few lines of dialogue from previous previous Marvel movies. Most seem to be from “The Avengers.”

“I don’t play well with others,” Tony says. “Here with a mission, sir?” Cap asks. “We’re not a team. We’re a time bomb,” Bruce Banner says.

And we’ll know all in 2015, when the movie hits the big screen.

‘Agents of SHIELD’ Easter eggs

agents of SHIELD cast and logo

Joss Whedon and the talented crew behind tonight’s premiere of “Agents of SHIELD” have maintained the show won’t be loaded with Easter eggs – sneaky references to the greater Marvel movie/TV universe – but we know, we just know, that plenty of such tidbits will sneak in during the course of the season.

Heck, tonight’s premiere had a few.

Tonight’s pilot episode was fun stuff, with the newly assembled SHIELD team working under Agent Phil Coulson (Clark Gregg) trying to protect a man (Whedon vet J. August Richards) with super strength and invulnerability whose act of heroism exposes him to the outside world.

Along the way, Whedon – who directed – included some nods to the Marvel movies.

Of course, there are several references to the events portrayed in “The Avengers,” specifically the Battle of New York. Those don’t really count as Easter eggs.

Neither do the references to Iron Man, Captain America, Thor and Hulk.

That being said, there were a few others:

At one point, a character refers to “Our journey into mystery.” “Journey into Mystery,” of course, was the long-running Marvel comic that was, for decades, home to Thor.

There’s a wisecrack about “Cosplayer groupies at Stark Tower.” Now you just know that if anybody is attracting groupies, it’s Tony Stark.

The Extremis procedure to make ordinary humans into superbeings – yeah, the same process that makes them explode – from “Iron Man 3” figures into the plot here.

Other known ways of gaining superpowers are also name-checked: Gamma radiation, Dr. Erskine’s Super Soldier serum … I’m surprised they didn’t cite being bitten by a radioactive spider. Wait. They can’t cite that one. Wrong studio.

And of course there’s Lola, Coulson’s vintage red Corvette. It’s mentioned that Lola dates to the days of old-school SHIELD spy stuff, a set-up that pays off when the car flies away at the end.

 

Here’s a real stretch, but is it remotely possible that the vintage super spy status of the car might be some tip of the hat to the red Corvette’s earlier owner? And no, we don’t mean Prince. What’s the possibility that the car might have been driven by Nick Fury back in the day? And what if that connection proved that Fury – as in the comics – has been subjected to the same anti-aging treatments as in the comics? (In the comics, that explained why a World War II sergeant was still kicking ass a half-century later.)

While big-screen Fury Samuel L. Jackson has said he’s open to appearing in the series, I wonder if the series might not let us in on the possibility that the old-school Nick Fury is still around?

Anybody seen David Hasselhoff lately?

‘Thor’ trading Asgard for Fortress of Solitude?

Doc-1-cover-400

So director Shane Black is making a Doc Savage movie, based on the pulp magazine hero, as his follow-up to “Iron Man 3.”

That’s enough to have old fans of Clark Savage pretty happy. And we already knew that.

But who could conceivably play the bred-from-birth-to-be-perfect Savage, a towering man of action and intellect?

doc savage pulp cover

It’s all over the web already, but an interviewer asked Black about “Thor” and “Avengers” and “Rush” actor Chris Hemsworth.

“Not a bad idea,” Black replied.

chris hemsworth rush doc savage

Really not a bad idea at all.

Hemsworth is already about as tall as Doc. He’s got the physique and the features. He can pull off the longish hair if Black decides to go with something other than the James Bama skullcap look for Doc.

And I think he’d be totally suitable as the prototype for later comic book characters like Superman.

It probably won’t happen … but maybe it should.

 

Cooper = Rocket. Spader = Ultron.

rocket raccoon sdcc shot

So this is happening:

cooper-rocket

And so is this:

ultron-spader

Bradley Cooper giving voice to Rocket Raccoon in “Guardians of the Galaxy.”

James Spader playing (voice? motion capture and CGI? costume with Willem DaFoe style headgear?) Ultron in “Avengers: Age of Ultron.”

Marvel, you crazy geniuses.

‘Avengers’ animatics, ‘Man of Steel 2’ fan teaser trailer

man of steel 2 teaser trailer logo

Ah, what might have been.

And what might still be.

Part of the fun of being a movie fan is thinking about what our favorite movies might have looked life if things had gone in a slightly different direction. Not to mention what we wish future movies might look like. So there’s a lot of talk online about a look back at an almost-was and a look ahead at what-might be.

First, some video animatics – animated storyboards, basically – that were apparently produced for “The Avengers” show how some scenes might have come out differently if they’d been filmed as originally considered.

avengers animatic w wasp

Among the big changes: Hawkeye in a more traditional costume and the presence of Janet Van Dyne as the Wasp, one of the founding members of the Avengers in comics who hasn’t made her way into the Marvel movie universe yet.

The drawings in the animatics are credited to Federico D’Alessandro and, if accurate, show not only the Wasp in an early version of the story but a scene in which Tony Stark’s Jarvis is trash-talking the other Avengers behind their backs. Some online commenters have said it’s an early indication confirming rumors Jarvis might turn into artificial intelligence villain Ultron in time for “Avengers 2,” but I think it’s more likely it’s Loki was just yanking Iron Man’s chain.

affleck man of steel 2 teaser trailer

The other fun stuff is a fan-made teaser trailer for “Man of Steel 2.” Using nicely edited clips from other movies and the TV series “Breaking Bad,” the fan trailer not only introduces Bruce Wayne (as played by Ben Affleck) and Superman/Clark Kent (Henry Cavill) to each other but shows us Superman’s Big Bad, Lex Luthor, in the person of “Breaking Bad” actor Brian Cranston.

It’s a pretty fun trailer. Cranston is an obvious choice for Luthor, of course – maybe too obvious – but the fake trailer’s creator should get hired cutting previews.

 

Great comic book covers: Avengers 57

avengers 57

Behold, a beautiful cover.

From time to time here, I’ll note some of my favorite comic books covers. They’re not necessarily the covers of milestone comic books. They’re just covers that I loved.

By default, most of the covers will be from the 1960s and 1970s, when I was actively buying, reading and collecting comics. They had their maximum impact on me back then.

I’ll start off with this one, Avengers 57, from the Marvel comic of my favorite superhero group, introducing one of my favorite characters, Vision (or the Vision, to some). The cover date was October 1968.

The android creation of homicidal robot Ultron, Vision was sent to kill the Avengers but, maybe improbably, became part of the team.

To this day, the cover by John Buscema sets the standard for comic book covers. Striking composition? Yes. Heroes in peril? Yes. Mysterious and undeniably important new character causing chaos? Yes.

I couldn’t spend my 12 cents fast enough for this one.

Late to the party: ‘The Wolverine’ good mutant action

the_wolverine_2013

I didn’t expect to like “The Wolverine” as much as I did.

I grew up loving “The X-Men” and other Marvel comics, although I had mostly exited before Wolverine made his entrance. Of course, the “X-Men” movies put the antagonistic outsider front and center and made him a leading man and household name.

Of course, with the charismatic Hugh Jackman in the role, who could argue that approach?

After “X-Men Origins: Wolverine,” though, I wasn’t sure I needed to see another Wolverine movie. Jackman redeemed the character with one line, however, in “X-Men: First Class.”

So with Jackman returning to the screen next summer, with much of the cast from the original “X-Men” trilogy as well as “First Class,” “The Wolverine” seemed like a natural intermediate chapter in the story.

Since the movie came out a couple of weeks ago – and I just got around to seeing it today thanks to vacation time and work demands – I’ll skip most of the plot recitation. Suffice it to say that Wolverine goes to Japan, accompanied by a winsome and deadly young mutant named Yukio (Rila Fukushima) sent to fetch him by a man whom we see Logan saving at the time of the atomic bombing of Nagasaki in World War II.

Logan gets an offer: If he’s tired of life – especially life alone – the young Japanese soldier he saved (now grown into Asian tech titan Yashida, played by Haruhiko Yamanouchi) promised he can make him a mortal man.

The rest of the movie finds Logan playing tag with an assortment of mutants and ninja warriors, in an effort to protect Yashia’s granddaughter, played by the lovely Tao Okamoto.

I think the movie benefits from being a fairly straightforward story punctuated by lots of cool action scenes. There’s not a lot of cross-cutting to other locations or storylines. Not even a lot of set-up for future movies (more on that later).

Random observations: I didn’t expect the end-credits scene, or “stinger,” to be so on-the-nose as far as its lead-in into “X-Men Days of Future Past.” (Spoilers if you haven’t seen it yet.) The scene takes place two years after the events of “The Wolverine,” and Logan is going through an airport, asking to be patted down rather than setting off ever metal detector in the place. Playing on a TV nearby is a commercial for Trask, the company that created the mutant-hunting robots the Sentinels in the comics and next summer’s movie. As Logan moves through the TSA checkpoint he realizes that coins and other metallic objects are moving around on the security tray. It’s Magneto (Ian McKellen) behind him in line. Wolverine pops his bone claws but Magneto tells him that “dark forces” are brewing and that he needs his help.

Why would I trust you? Logan asks, held in place by Magneto because of the remaining adamantium in his body. Magneto notes that he wouldn’t, but …. at that point, Patrick Stewart rolls up as Charles Xavier. Logan is startled to see Professor X alive. “You’re not the only one with gifts,” Xavier says.

Also about that end credits scene: Has anyone noticed that nobody is waiting until after the credits to play out their super-secret scene anymore? For most of the early Marvel movies, the scene (Nick Fury shows up in Tony Stark’s house, Agent Coulson finds Thor’s hammer in New Mexico) touting the coming of the next movie was after the credits. But beginning with “The Avengers” and the woeful version of DC’s “Green Lantern,” the scene has been partway into the end credits, usually right after the principal credits are done.

A couple of exceptions, of course: “Iron Man 3” and its love letter to the Stark/Banner bromance comes at the very end of the credits. And, as we know, “The Avengers” had two credits scenes.

Maybe filmmakers don’t have much faith that we’ve learned by now to stick around until after the last caterer, effects guy and music credit is listed.

Did anybody keep track of how many times Hugh Jackman gets knifed, sliced, skewered with swords and arrows and otherwise pierced in this movie? Surely that number is out there somewhere, Internet?

Captain America on the Fourth of July

cap uncle sam

It’s pretty easy to draw a line between Captain America, the classic Marvel Comics character, and the Fourth of July, the U.S.’ most patriotic holiday.

The guy’s dressed in the Stars and Stripes, for pete’s sake.

But those who dismiss Cap and his alter ego, Steve Rogers, as an empty American symbol are wrong.

cap poster

As a matter of fact, Cap’s real patriotism is what the Marvel movie producers got so right in “Captain America: The First Avenger” and “The Avengers.”

avengers 4 cap returns

Like Superman, Captain America is a man without his own people. When Cap returned in Avengers No. 4, he was nearly 20 years removed from his era and his battleground, World War II. That “man out of time” feeling, which directors Joe Johnson and Joss Whedon captured so well in those movies, is what sets Cap apart from hip, funny heroes like Spider-Man.

cap superhero squad

Heck, the former Cartoon Network series “Superhero Squad,” which made Marvel heroes appealing and accessible to young fans, even got Cap right even as they poked fun at him. Cap in that series was always talking about some conversation he had with FDR or making some other “frozen in amber” reference. It was as funny as it was on-the-nose.

But besides Cap’s stranger in a strange land status, he’s also known for doing what’s right. Always. For a period in his comic in the 1970s, that meant forgoing the Cap name and costume and, thanks to disillusionment with the government, operating as Nomad, the man without a country.

I’m looking forward to “Captain America: The Winter Soldier” next year in great part because it looks like more of a political thriller than a spandex slugfest and in great part because it looks to pit Cap against SHIELD. Cap’s character in “The Avengers” certainly showed more than a little skepticism about SHIELD and Nick Fury’s motives. That’s perfectly in keeping with the character and I couldn’t be happier about that.

So while Steve Rogers would, if he existed, be enjoying a hot dog and some fireworks today, he’d also be mindful of what enabled him to enjoy the Fourth of July, the sacrifices of men and women that allowed that and the individual liberties of the people around him.

Because while Captain America might have been a man without his own people, he has embraced – and been embraced by – his new people.

‘Avengers 2’ update: Quicksilver, Scarlet Witch planned

The_Avengers_2_quicksilver scarlet witch

So this is happening.

Joss Whedon, after having referred to wanting to add a “brother-sister” team to the mix in “The Avengers 2” or whatever the sequel will be called when it’s released in 2015, confirmed this week he was talking about Quicksilver and Scarlet Witch, early Avengers members, children of Magneto of “X-Men” fame.

Quicksilver, or Pietro Maximoff, is Marvel’s fastest mutant. Scarlet Witch, or Wanda Maximoff, has powers that appear magical. They’ve been villains at times but heroes more often than not.

If you remember way back in May 2012, I wrote about the online guessing game that began after Whedon wrote several mentions of SHIELD agent Phil Coulson’s cellist girlfriend into “The Avengers.”

Quint and other folks speculated that the reference was to Scarlet Witch because the character – and this is a point of contention – supposedly had some background as a cellist in the comics.

Why would that be interesting?

vision and scarlet witch

Well, because Coulson was killed off and we all hoped he would come back as the Vision, the android Avenger. Cause Vision and Wanda were a longtime couple in the comics.

Of course now Coulson’s come back, somehow, for this fall’s “Agents of SHIELD” TV series. So now we don’t know what to think.

Anyway, if the cellist references and Vision hints didn’t pan out, at least we have Whedon saying outright he plans to bring the two into the mix.

saoirse-ronan scarlet witch

Of course, they’re also talking about Saoirse Ronan as Wanda in the movie, and there’s just way too big an age difference between the young actress and Coulson actor Clark Gregg.

Even in Hollywood.

Oh, Vision.