Avengers: Endgame - Spoiler Review





Avengers Endgame – Spoiler Review



Wow! What a film. Now that’ I’ve shared my thoughts in the Spoiler-Free Review, let’s get down to business and talk Spoilers. There is so much to unpack from this film, and I’ll be talking about the plot, the action set pieces, the development of the characters, the twists along the way, the climatic final battle scene and of course, my reaction to those characters who left us.  So if you haven’t seen the film and don’t want it spoiled, then please STOP reading. You can read the Spoiler-Free Review if you want, or better yet – just go and see the film, then come back here and read this.



Okay? 





You’ve been WARNED!



Spoilers Ahead…



The opening scene of Avengers Endgame is both poignant and chilling. Clint Barton, aka Hawkeye, is teaching his daughter how to shoot a bow and arrow. On a vast open property, with a homely abode in the background, and the rest of his family preparing lunch, Hawkeye is living happily and peacefully. Absent from events in “Infinity War” he clearly has no idea what is happening on Earth and in the vast reaches of space as his fellow Avengers battle Thanos. In a heartbeat, his daughter vanishes, then  his wife and two sons. He runs around the farm, screaming their name in terror, unaware and afraid. Where are they? And what will happen to Hawkeye? We find out a bit later of course. 


After the events on Titan, where half the Avengers got their butt kicked by Thanos, then disappeared, only Iron Man and Nebula remain. They have managed to get her ship working and started to head home. But after 23 days in space, the ships slows down, and begins to drift. This is where Tony Stark realises he is on deaths door. In a touching moment, he uses what’s left of his Iron Man helmet, and records a video message for Pepper Potts, the love of his life. Unsure if she will ever get it, he lies down, making peace with the fact that he will soon die. But as fate would have it, a bright light of hope emerges from the deep, dark of space, waking Tony up. Peering out from his weary face, he sees the face of a beautiful woman floating right outside the ship. Tony has no idea who this is, but of course we the audience know it’s Captain Marvel. 


As Tony is brought back to Earth, weakened and angry at how events transpired, Nebula reveals the location of Thanos, and our heroes head off to bring him to justice. Discovering he still has the stones and used them again recently, they try to reclaim them. What they discover upon arriving on a planet called The Garden, is a Thanos different from what they remember. He is weakened and badly injured from the power of the stones. Confessing he has destroyed the stones; Thor sees no use for the murderer anymore and chops off his head. This scene in particular and how quick and brutal it is in disposing of Thanos, was a smack in the face. I reckon most of the audience in the theatre gasped in shock. Now what? Oh yeah… FIVE. YEARS. LATER. That’s what!



Half a decade has passed, and our heroes have all tried to move on with their life in the world that is missing half its inhabitants. Cap now runs a support group for those needing to talk about the ones they lost. Natasha / Black  Widow tries to keep the Avengers initiative alive any way she can by overseeing missions and keeping her sanity. And Captain Marvel reports on her missions from space and she assists thousands of other planets going through similar situations as Earth is. It’s in this time, the most dire and hopeless of all for the remaining Avengers, that an unlikely character returns from the quantum realm.


Scott Lang / Ant-Man is accidentally pulled back out of the quantum realm we saw him enter at the end of “Ant-Man and The Wasp” but get stuck in as Hope, Hank and Janet vanished. Not realising five years have passed, Scott heads to Avengers HQ with a possible solution to the problem the world now faces. Using quantum physics to travel back through time. This is enough to get Cap and Natasha curious enough to try, and they go to visit an old friend. 


Meanwhile, in a quiet house by a lake, the former billionaire playboy and Iron Man reduced to scrap metal, has chosen to build a life, having a beautiful child with Pepper. He’s now a man at peace with himself and the world enjoying the quiet role of father and husband. But his old pals come knocking with an idea to go back in time. Tony disposes of the possibility of time travel, and also doesn’t want the current times to change, even as much as he resents the actions of the past. He’s now a man who has found something worth living for; a family. Realising that Tony is not going to play ball (at this point), Cap, Nat and Scott try one brainier person who might be able to help. 


They go and visit The Hulk. Or is that Dr. Banner? Somehow, Bruce has found a way to be both The Man and the Hulk, and it’s visually off the wall and very funny. He eats mixing bowl sized servings of scrambled eggs and poses for photos with kids. Who would have thought a half man – half Hulk mix would be so hilarious? 


As Tony decides to help with the time travel mission, given he’s made a breakthrough discovery himself, he heads back to Avengers HQ and decides to help. Then, the remaining more elusive Avengers are rounded up. 


In a hilarious few scenes, we see what’s happed to Thor. He has let go of the past as best as he could - by letting himself go! Sporting a bushy beard, long dreads and a pot-bellied beer and pizza existence, he’s formed his own refuge of New Asgard, where his remaining people live in peace by the sea. But his guilt draws him back to the team. Then Hawkeye is tracked down, and he’s been busy putting his master assassin skills to use by killing gangs, criminals and drug dealers around the world. Nat confronts him and brings him back from the dark to re-join the team, as he realises there is a chance to bring his family back and end the bloody mission of avenging them as he has been. 


As those who survived the snap are reassembled at Avengers HQ, they begin to test the combination of Tony’s time travel machine and Scott’s Pym Particle solution. After a few attempts, the team work out how to safely travel back through time and return to their reality. With the ability to go back and change past events, they set out to recover the infinity stones, one by one. As they are littered across the world and the universe, the Avengers are split into three teams, and here we revisit key moments and locations from previous films. This was a brilliant twist in the plot I didn’t see coming to be honest and I thoroughly enjoyed revisiting moments from the first  Avengers film, Thor: The Dark World and Guardians of the Galaxy. It’s here we also meet Thanos again, or at least the version of him from the past and it’s not long before he catches onto the mission of these mystery Avengers. 


After collecting the stones in a series of confrontations and the loss of Black Widow (first time I cried in the film), the Avengers return to their time with the ability to snap their own fingers and change what Thanos did. But they aren’t aware he has sent his version of Nebula back through the time portal, and she wastes no time in bringing her mass-murdering father back as well. He is quick to strike, blowing the shit out of Avengers HQ. As our heroes emerge from the rubble, the original Holy Trinity of Heroes take on Thanos. But as strong as they are, and in another surprise turn with Cap being able to wield Thor’s hammer, Thanos is just too dam big and strong.


When all seems lost, a familiar voice comes through Cap’s ear piece; “On Your Left” in a nice call back to Captain America: The Winter Soldier. Falcon appears through a portal, followed by every other hero who went missing after the snap. This had to be the most visually satisfying and emotionally uplifting scene in the whole film. Watching our beloved heroes join the battle, bring their powers and skills, and a sense of hope to a dark and dire situation was inspiring. Thanos is certainly caught off guard and the biggest superhero smackdown ever takes place. 


It reminded me of the battle of Isengard in Lord of the Rings: Return of the King, where the screen was filled from left to right, and you didn’t know where to look. The handling of this epic action scene is nothing less than spectacular. Watching each hero be handled in the way they deserve, all getting their own moment to shine in the face of evil and work together as a team – simply awesome! Rest assured, Thanos and his horde put up a bloody good fight, but our Avengers are not stopping until they win the day, Whatever It Takes. 


As you, I and pretty much everyone else going into this film would have expected, we would witness the fall of a hero. Before seeing the film, I had my money bet on either Iron Man or Captain America meeting their end, and I was half right. But damn you Marvel for making it so emotionally crippling to watch. When Iron Man uses his own gauntlet containing the Infinity Stones to snap his fingers after boldly saying “I… Am….Iron Man”, the theatre went silent. We watched our heroes win as first, the ships of Thanos’s army faded to dust, followed by his army, then lastly, the Titan himself. Sitting down before he vanishes, the look on his face is one of complete surprise that he has been defeated. And his loss came at the loss of the hero who started it all… Iron Man. 


After doing the greatest deed in the universe, Tony crawls over to a safe spot, and realises his life is slowly slipping away from him. As the power of the stones was too much to handle, he gasps for his final breaths, and is comforted by the love of his life, Pepper Potts. She simply says, “It’s going to be okay Tony…You can rest now”, and Boom – I balled my eyes out. Seeing the vulnerability on the face of Tony and the chilling music accompany his death really got me in that moment, and I felt the connection I’ve had to this character that began a decade ago, come back to end. 


Who seriously would have thought a movie about comic book characters would be so affecting? Watching Iron Man die was deeply sad, and also somehow cathartic, as the character of Tony Stark, who once made weapons and sold them, never caring about anyone but himself, went on to find a heart, build a suit and save more lives than any other being ever could. His funeral scene towards the end of the film was beautiful and heartbreaking. Watching the Iron Man pour his heart out in his final video message for his daughter, with the sign off “Love You 3000”, followed by the procession of heroes dressed in black, overlooking the lake, honouring the memory and legacy of the man who pioneered the Avengers initiative. Tony Stark was pivotal in bringing them all together, while also dividing them, then reuniting them once more, and here, he gets the silent send-off he deserves. This scene alone is what these movies resemble the most to viewers; the love and respect we have for these characters. 


Knowing we might not see Iron Man on screen again, or certainly not under the performance of Robert Downey Jr, left me leaving this film on a sombre note. 


But then, it takes another turn for the tender, showing us how Captain America’s journey also comes full circle. After one last mission, to return the Infinity Stones to their place of origin, he returns not as the young soldier he was when he left, but as a man, older and certainly not running around with a shield any more. After Completing his mission, Steve Rogers goes back to the 1940’s; the time in history he was stolen from, to reclaim the life he once gave up and rekindle his long-lost love.

The final shot of the movie is perfect in every sense of the word. In a small, quaint home, a couple dance in their living room. It’s Steve Rogers and Peggy Carter. It turns out Cap kept his promise to have that dance with his girl. 


Now excuse me, while I go and cry again. 


Walking out of the theatre, I couldn’t stop thinking about the film for hours. This viewing experience really was the closing of a chapter. The end of an era in a film series that broke new ground, broke the rules, and ended up breaking our hearts with the passing of one it’s greatest heroes. But I suppose everything comes to an end, and as much as we want a story to go on, and a character we love to live forever, they can’t. everything that has a beginning has an end, and I’m hoping “Avengers: Endgame” is just the ending of the first story. 


There are many more characters left to take on the mantle, with stories to tell, more villains to fight, and worlds to save. The stories will continue, and in some form or another, the creations of the late, great Stan Lee and his army of comic book artists and story-tellers, have left a legacy that will be brought to life through the talents of directs, actors, writers, film composers, editors, special effects wizards and most of all, by us… The Fans. I’ve been a fan for the past decade, and as a fan, I couldn’t be more satisfied with how  this film ended the greatest ensemble of superheroes every committed to the silver screen. In whatever shape or form it continues, I’ll be there to enjoy it. 


Bravo Marvel. And Thank You. 



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