IRON MAN 3: Subtlety’s Kinda Had Its Day

Iron Man 3

Hi all, I’m not writing as many reviews these days due to time constraints, but I will try to write reviews for most of the movies I watch this summer. If you’re new here be very aware: SPOILERS ARE COMING. SPOILERS SPOILERS SPOILERS. I do not hold anything back in my reviews. I talk about whatever I want, so if you haven’t seen Iron Man 3 and you don’t want to know anything about it, don’t read any further. If you’re simply unable to make decisions and are looking to a stranger on the internet for advice on whether you should see this movie or not, the answer is, Yes. One last time, spoilers lie beyond this point.

Iron Man 3 (2013) – The 7th Marvel Cinematic Universe Film – Directed Shane Black – Starring Robert Downey Jr., Don Cheadle, Gwyneth Paltrow, Ben Kingsley, Guy Pearce, Ty Simpkins, Rebecca Hall, Jon Favreau, Stephanie Szostak, James Badge Dale, Paul Bettany, William Sadler, Miguel Ferrer, Ashley Hamilton, and Stan Lee.

“Ever since that big guy with the hammer fell out of the sky, subtlety’s kinda had its day.” – Aldrich Killian to Tony Stark

In Phase One of the Marvel Cinematic Universe, Marvel needed to win mainstream audiences over to characters they were likely only partly familiar with, and the payoff for this was THE AVENGERS, the third highest grossing movie of all time.

Creating a superhero cinematic universe on this level had never been attempted, and Marvel cleverly built one film on top of the other, using Nick Fury, Phil Coulson, and Tony Stark to connect the films. Anticipation for the post credits scene became an actual thing; it became a sign of membership in the Church of Marvel. Theaters emptied out but a few remained to get the thrill of evidence of the connection. Comic fans had spent forever waiting for the films to acknowledge that they weren’t just watching Spider-Man in New York, but Spider-Man in Marvel’s New York. The nature of film rights made this difficult for Marvel, of course, and DC and Warner Brothers had only a halfhearted interest in doing anything except printing Batman money. They tried and failed with Superman Returns, Bryan Singer’s $200 million love song to Christopher Reeve and Richard Donner, and then tried and failed with Green Lantern, Martin Campbell’s $200 million gamble on the precociousness of Ryan Reynolds.

Both films were stuck in the past. Superman Returns was clearly designed as a nostalgia fest, but Lantern was the more disheartening film, and not just because Martin Campbell had previously directed Casino Royale, the best action movie since Die Hard. It’s not awful, but it’s empty and cobbled together. Both films commit one of the largest sins of cinema in the 2000s – they had no souls of their own. They lacked vision: Singer borrowed his from Donner and Campbell got his from … marketing execs? Focus groups?

Forget quality for the moment – the truth of it all, the actual, honest-to-goodness, real difference between Marvel and DC at the moment isn’t that Marvel knows what it’s doing and DC doesn’t, but that Marvel and Disney want to make superhero movies and DC and Warner Brothers doesn’t.

Be real – if DC/WB had wanted a Wonder Woman movie to get made, it would have gotten made. There were rumors, there were people hired to write scripts, but … nothing. Remember when Vin Diesel was going to play the Flash? When David Goyer was going to do a Green Arrow prison movie? When Halle Berry was going to play Catwoman?

What happened to these movies? (Go with me on that last one.)

Chris Nolan’s Batman movies are excellent and it seems that DC/WB thought that was enough. (Watchmen is a DC movie but it’s not about the DC Universe.) The first and third movie in the Dark Knight trilogy aren’t so much Batman movies, anyway, but Bruce Wayne movies. As good as the films are, there’s a hint of “putting on a costume really is a silly thing to do.” Across town, Marvel has no access to Spider-Man or the X-Men, but they’re pushing on, getting a loan from Merrill Lynch to take control of the movies that get made with their characters. DC is commissioning scripts from everyone but barely committing to anything, and Marvel is tossing Iron Man and Hulk and Thor and Captain America onto the screen in solo movies and people are going to see them.

Seriously. All of a sudden, people not only know who Iron Man is, he’s the coolest superhero on the block. Jon Favreau and Robert Downey Jr. created the blueprint for the Marvel Cinematic Universe and everything built to the phenomenon that was THE AVENGERS.

So … where does one go from there? Does one regress to the past or push on to new stories?

Sequels have tended to operate on the bigger is better model: more villains, more action, more of everything. I was very curious about how IRON MAN 3 would work – was it going to be a sequel to IRON MAN 2 or AVENGERS? Were we going to get a video call to Steve Rogers? Lunch with Thor? A double date with Bruce and Betty? Was there going to be a nice easter egg on a screen somewhere about Thanos? When you’ve gone and made the third highest grossing movie of all time by filling the sandbox with all of your toys, how do you take the next step? How do you outdo what you’ve already done?

Short answer: you don’t even try.

IRON MAN 3 beautifully blends both the IRON MAN films and AVENGERS. There’s no Cap, no Thor, no Fury, no Coulson … only Banner (Mark Ruffalo) shows up for this go-round and they save him for the post-credits scene. Marvel clearly set out to make a film which refocused on the individual characters. Tony Stark (Robert Downey Jr.) is haunted from his experiences in AVENGERS which has made it hard to go back to his old life. Pepper Potts (Gwyneth Paltrow) is running Stark Industries now and she’s committed to Tony’s “no weapons” decree. When Aldrich Killian (Guy Pearce) shows up, having lost his old Igor appearance for a GQ look and pitching a new, admittedly impressive piece of tech, Pepper turns him down because it’s a tech that’s too easily weaponized.

There’s a nice mix of personal growth between Stark Industries’ three main actors: Pepper has never been better, Tony has never been worse, and Happy has never been better and worse at the same time. The expanded roles for Pepper and Happy (Jon Favreau) at the start of the film feel right. Deep in the film, when Tony has been captured by Killian, the antagonist tells the protagonist, “Ever since that big guy with the hammer fell out of the sky, subtlety’s kinda had its day,” but amidst all of the explosions and Iron Man suits, IRON MAN 3′s central argument is that subtlety has definitely not had it’s day.

Shane Black’s film will not be as influential as Favreau’s first IRON MAN, but there are some very nice, very subtle examples here that other films in Phase 2 of the Marvel Cinematic Universe would do well to emulate, and the key to that is seen in how Tony, Pepper, and Happy are used. Black deftly balances the decline of the first with the rise of the latter two. In this film, Pepper still loves Tony but she doesn’t need Tony. She’s more important to the company than he is, and while he’s still giving her large stuffed animals for Christmas, tinkering with new suits of armor, and reliving New York, she’s running a company.

In the previous MCU movies, Tony Stark goes to his lab because that’s where he wants to be, but now he’s in the lab as an escape. He’s hyper aware of his public image, of course, so he’s not Howard Hughesing it, but he’s definitely a man in crisis, a man exhibiting post traumatic stress disorder over the Chitauri attack. It’s important that Killian references Thor in his “subtlety’s kinda had it’s day” speech and not the Hulk because it’s Thor and the Chitauri that Tony focuses on as the reason for his problems. He understands science, but gods and aliens don’t fit into that model. Be clear, though, that Thor and the Chitauri are what he focuses on, but his problems go deeper.

When Happy’s expanded role gets him put into a coma by agents of the Mandarin (Ben Kingsley), Stark tells the press that he’s going to go after the terrorist. “This isn’t about nations,” he insists. “It’s personal.” It’s a powerful moment but it’s not exactly Henry V’s St. Crispin’s Day speech. Tony’s words feel empty and he looks tired. He’s lashing out, desperately searching for a new project to focus on. In a great scene between Tony and James Rhodes (Don Cheadle) at a restaurant, Tony practically begs to be let in on the Mandarin issue but Rhodey shuts him down. Contrast that to earlier films where Tony actively resisted working for the government. Now, it’s he who wants them and not the other way around. This exchange is a small part of a longer talk that ends with Tony suffering an anxiety attack when two kids ask for his autograph and present him with a crayon drawing of Iron Man. Tony writes the girl’s name on the drawing but then writes, “Help me” after it as his attack hits.

Subtlety has had it’s day? Not quite. Stark, and the film itself, forwards all the explosions and drama and snark, but look past that and here’s a guy who doesn’t have it figured out anymore. Who’s scared. Who’s unsure of his place in the world. It used to be fun when he was down in that lab, making fun of Dummy and trading barbs with Jarvis (Paul Bettany) and having his new invention not quite work out, but here it’s a bit sad, almost desperate. The billionaire playboy genius philanthropist has stopped being a visionary. Instead, he’s looking for comfort. Instead of building something new, he’s endlessly tinkering with his last invention. Pepper thinks he’s on Iron Man suit Mark 15, when Tony’s actually on Mark 42. The visionary is circling. When Tony looks at his armor now, it’s like he knows he’s created his masterpiece and all that’s left is to refine it instead of leaving the refinement for others and moving on to the next Big Idea.

In most of these sequels, when a character does the same thing he always does, it plays as tired because we’ve been there and seen it, but the subtle smarts of IRON MAN 3 is that it knows you want to see this scene even if it knows you’ll probably end up feeling that it’s just an echo of better scenes from days gone by, so it gives you the scene and makes it a purposeful echo and uses it to not celebrate Tony Stark, but to show how he’s as much stuck in the past as the audience. We’re watching IRON MAN and AVENGERS over and over again on Blu-ray and he’s watching them over and over again inside his mind. We’re all stuck together on the shelf.

So what do you do? Where do you go when you haven’t gone anywhere?

Critically, it’s only after his desperate plea to the Mandarin to come get him results in the Mandarin’s goons coming and getting him, blowing up his California mansion, that Tony gets moving forward again. Tony falls into the ocean and the armor gets him out of it and while Pepper ends up driving away with Maya Hansen (Rebecca Hall), a scientist/ex-one night stand of Tony’s, Jarvis delivers Tony to Tennessee. He crashes in the snow and his armor shuts down and he has to drag the heavy suit someplace warm. He breaks into a garage and gets to work, and it’s here, in this small garage, where Tony’s life gets going again. His work is interrupted by Harley (Ty Simpkins), a kid sidekick who manages to make the film better instead of worse by challenging Tony. The two of them cut deals and help each other and give each other crap. I like that Tony actually seems most comfortable in this film with someone who he doesn’t know. Part of being a visionary, one imagines, is a restless spirit. Tony has always treated life like it’s his playground, but over the last six MCU movies, he’s increasingly had to play the grown up.

What has that brought him? He already had fame and fortune, but it gave his life a purpose, it delivered him his One True Love, it put him in position to save the entire freaking world. It’s taken away his restlessness and replaced it with stagnation.

But thanks to the Mandarin, all of that is taken away from him and he has to build himself up again, and from that moment on, you get the sense that as awful as the things are that are going on, Tony’s actually happier now that he has a new problem to solve.

And about that problem …

The Marvel Cinematic Universe has largely stayed true to the comics. Oh, the details have been altered a whole bunch but there has yet to be a really large disconnect between the films and the comics.

Which brings us to the Mandarin.

In IRON MAN 3, Iron Man’s most classic foe has been turned into a fraud. The Mandarin is presented as a terrorist mastermind, blowing people up and teaching the United States lessons in the process. Kingsley’s approach to the character is to speak in long, slow, monologues punctuated by threats and promises of additional violence. He’s got Aldrich Killian’s Advanced Idea Mechanics (AIM) think tank helping him broadcast his message of hate out to the world.

Except he’s a phony. Without the benefit of his armor, Stark plays James Bond, breaking into the Mandarin’s mansion in Miami and discovering that the Mandarin is just an out of work British actor-slash-junkie holed up doing drugs, drinking beer, and fornicating with some whores. It’s bound to be controversial, of course, as Marvel has sacrificed one of its greatest villains on the altar of comedic distraction.

For me, though, I thought it worked beautifully. Maybe IRON MAN 3 didn’t need to do something to send shockwaves through fandom the way Nick Fury showing up in a post credits scene, but what this says to me is that Marvel has made a conscious decision to remind its fans that they’re not making films simply to translate the comics into celluloid. Phase One was about establishing the heroes and building up to AVENGERS. Phase 2 apparently isn’t interested in playing things safe. Marvel doesn’t want to sit on the shelf. It wants to push forward. The risk is that it comes across as disrespectful, but the number of people who are going to be so upset by this and not come back for future MCU movies is bound to be negligible.

And here’s the thing – this might ultimately make the Mandarin and even badder-ass villain than how he appears in the first half of IM3. There’s a couple things to keep in mind here. One, this could all be a ruse. Trevor Slattery (the name of the actor playing the Mandarin) might be nothing more than a backdoor escape the Mandarin created in case he needed him. One of his ten rings of power, after all, allows him to increase his psionic energy. The film presents Aldrich as the mastermind but there’s no reason Marvel couldn’t reveal in the next movie that the Mandarin used one of his rings to make Aldrich think he’s the mastermind.

Two, Aldrich claims at one point that he’s the Mandarin since he created the terrorist to help manipulate the global war on terror. There’s no reason Pearce couldn’t come back as the Mandarin in the next movie, either. Those dragon tattoos on his body could be more than just ornamental.

Three, Slattery claims that he’s completely unaware of any of the violence being perpetuated in the Mandarin’s name. He thinks he’s just playing a role, but even with all the drugs and booze and whores, that seems an illogical stretch of the truth. Does he really not think he’s talking to the President? Was his assassination on live television of a Roxxon Oil Exec all an act? Is he completely unaware that there’s no violence being committed out there? In the film, Stark and Rhodey need information from him that he’s willing to provide, so they overlook any inconsistencies in his story in exchange for stopping Killian.

Black forgoes a personal confrontation between Stark and the Mandarin for his climax, instead orchestrating a CGI orgy of multiple Iron Man suits versus Extremis soldiers. It’s effective without being excellent.

IRON MAN 3 is a very good movie. There’s no way it was going to top AVENGERS but as the duty first fell to Robert Downey Jr. to launch the MCU, it falls to him again to relaunch it. He is, once again, very good: funny, smart, fast-talking but now with self doubt added to the mix. I hate seeing him blow up all of his suits of armor, but I love that he goes back to his destroyed mansion to rescue Dummy from the wreckage without the film milking it for cheap emotion.

Subtlety’s day isn’t over, yet.

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Atomic Reactions: Marvel Comics on Film now available.

Atomic Reactions: Marvel Comics on Film now available.

When he’s not talking to other writers, Mark Bousquet is doing some writing himself. He is the author of multiple novels and collections, including the recently released The Haunting of Kraken MoorGunfighter GothicStuffed Animals for HireDreamer’s SyndromeHarpsichord and the Wormhole Witches, and Adventures of the Five. He has also published a review collection entitled Marvel Comics on Film, which covers every cinematic and TV movie based on a superhero from the House of Ideas. A complete listing of all his work can be found at his Amazon author page.

THE AVENGERS: The IRON MAN Reaction

The Avengers (2012) – The 6th Marvel Cinematic Universe Film – Directed by Joss Whedon – Starring Robert Downey Jr., Chris Evans, Chris Hemsworth, Mark Ruffalo, Scarlett Johansson, Jeremy Renner, Tom Hiddleston, Samuel L. Jackson, Clark Gregg, Cobie Smulders, Stellan Skarsgård, Gwyneth Paltrow, Paul Bettany, Alexis Denisof, Stan Lee, Powers Boothe, Lou Ferrigno, and Harry Dean Stanton.

Welcome to the eleventh (and final) character-specific reaction to Joss Whedon’s THE AVENGERS. I’ve already written a 4,200+ word review of the film, but that wasn’t nearly enough to cover everything I wanted to talk about, so I’m going to write character-specific reactions to delve a bit deeper into the film. You can find all of the relevant AVENGERS links at the bottom of this post.

Also, please note that these reactions are evolving as we go. If you see some line I got wrong or a detail I overlooked, by all means let me know. I’ve seen the movie twice, but it’s a long movie and the audience reacts wildly in parts, so some things get lost or forgotten or misinterpreted. And I’m sure some of the quotes are wrong, but I will correct the mistakes as I become aware of them. Don’t be surprised if these reactions grow a bit in the coming days.

Let me be clear about what’s coming: SPOILERS. Lots and lots of SPOILERS. Read ahead only if you’re cool with that. If you haven’t seen the movie and don’t want things ruined, come on back when you do.

Join the conversation on Twitter.

“That’s the guy my dad wouldn’t shut up about?”

I’ll be honest, I thought I’d spend the bulk of May writing about movies like Adventures in Babysitting, Eight Legged Freaks, and Snakes on a Plane. I thought I’d spend more time talking about the animated Avengers than the live action ones.

But then I watched MARVEL’S THE AVENGERS and … yeah. Wow. Best Superhero Movie Ever. (And, people, if you’ve been complaining about the name of the movie because you think Marvel put their name there so as not to confuse anyone looking for the new Patrick Macnee/Honor Blackman/Diana Rigg/Ralph Fiennes/Uma Thurman, well, I’m guessing it has more to do with building brand recognition for Marvel.) And sometime during the process of writing my review of the movie, I decided one post wasn’t enough and I’d tackle the individual characters to flesh the movie out a bit more.

We’ve now reached the end of that road. I hope you’ve enjoyed these reactions – if you’re reading this close to its publication date, you’ll note the overwhelming popularity of these posts, so thanks for stopping by, reading, and in some cases, commenting. It’s been great to hear from old friends and new ones and if I had the cash, I’d fly all of you to Reno and rent out a theater so we could watch AVENGERS one more time on the big screen.

I had planned to save the IRON MAN reaction to the end because I thought it would be the largest of reactions. While Joss Whedon did an excellent job balancing his cast, we are living in Robert Downey Jr.’s world, and his personality and screen presence is going to rise to the top. Indeed, it’s Tony Stark who gets the most traditional character arc in AVENGERS as it’s Stark who needs the most convincing to believe in the Avengers, it’s Stark who has his character most challenged (by Cap), and it’s Stark who gets to defeat the Chitauri and almost sacrifice himself to save the world, thereby meeting the challenge to his character.

Instead of going through a play-by-play for Tony Stark’s entire cinematic experience in AVENGERS (most of his best interactions have been covered in the reactions for the other half of those exchanges), I want to build this reaction around Stark’s acceptance of his fellow Avengers into his world, and his negotiation between the Avengers Initiative/SHIELD and the Avengers themselves.

As the film opens, Tony Stark is in a very comfortable, very adult space. His life is good and he is content, having moved away from being a weapons contractor to being “the only name in green energy,” as he describes himself to Captain America (Chris Evans) deeper into the movie. His journey in AVENGERS begins under water, with him hooking up the arc reactor, making Stark Tower self-sufficient. He blasts out of the water and across the city to the tower, where he lands and has his armor removed by a whirling band of mechanical arms in a slow walk down into his main apartment floor, where the beautiful Pepper Potts (Gwyneth Paltrow) is waiting for him.

This first Stark Tower walk symbolizes the domestication of the playboy and the maturation of the visionary. Stark is committed and happy, yet not fully content because he’ll never be fully content. He is happy to play the roguish bachelor with Pepper, though, and their back-and-forth, playfully antagonistic relationship is a real joy to watch. What’s impressive here and throughout the film is how well Downey plays off every single actor he shares the screen with in AVENGERS; Paltrow is not an overly dynamic actress, but you can see Downey pulling Paltrow out of her comfortable shell the same way Stark is performing his magic on Pepper.

I covered the conversation between Stark, Pepper, and Agent Coulson (Clark Gregg) in the main AVENGERS review and I won’t recap it here, except to say that it demonstrates how Whedon builds his conception of characters in this film better than any other moment. Joss Whedon’s Tony Stark is completely in line with the character from IRON MAN and its sequel, but Whedon gives him an arc (built around his feelings of inadequacy) and a character trait (referencing other movies) to help keep everything in motion.

Motion is the primary trait of Whedon’s film (not action, which there is plenty of, but motion, which is what builds and circles throughout) and this technique is best exemplified in Tony Stark, who’s seemingly always engaged on three fronts: the actual scene that’s happening with all of its physical and mental conflicts, how this scene effects his own feelings of inadequacy, and then how his quick wit verbalizes and/or releases the tension inside of him. Stark is happy with Pepper, but then Agent Coulson breaks in to spoil the fun and Stark is suddenly fifteen years old, not wanting to do what his uncle wants and jealous because he girlfriend knows his uncle’s name.

“Uh, Phil? His first name is Agent.”

It’s such a wonderful moment because Stark, for all his success bedding gorgeous women, is now bothered by Pepper knowing some other guy’s first name. It’s not simply jealousy, though, Stark is also bothered by the fact that Coulson is a person; he wants to think of him as a suit, as SHIELD middle management who’s nothing but a nuisance, and yet here’s Pepper recognizing that Coulson is a person, at the same time she’s playing mother hen to Stark, getting him to focus on the task that Coulson has for him.

Without overselling the “Phil” angle, Whedon deftly and directly touches on it with Stark later in the film. The first time this happens is almost a throwaway bit. Stark and Coulson are entering a room and Stark tells Coulson he’ll fly him to Portland to meet up with the cellist player he was involved with, the second time comes in the aftermath of Coulson’s death/”death” at the hands of Loki, and then lastly when Stark tells Loki that, “You p*ssed off someone else, too. His name was Phil.”

While we never see it, it certainly feels like Stark was embarrassed by his childish (but playful) jealousy with Pepper and sincerely wanted to make it up to Coulson. And honestly, it’s that moment on the Helicarrier when Stark is giving romantic advice to Coulson that works for me better than the “his name was Phil” finale. It’s those small moments that quintessentially become “Avengers moments,” just like the trip to the schawarma restaurant at the end of the film feels like a quintessential moment.

And really, it’s to everyone’s credit that you don’t hear any Avengers fans politely wondering, “You know what would have made that better? If Stark had said, ‘I hear Clint puts on a mean barbecue. We should totally crash at his place when this is over. I’ll get the steak. Thor, you get the beer, and Cap … get Hulk whatever he wants.’”

“We’ve got to get Loki first.”

“Right. Then barbecue at Hawkeye’s.”

Stark’s insecurity or feelings of inadequacy show up with his relationship with Steve, too, and it’s because of this feeling that Stark delivers his best line of the film. After he and Steve get into it a bit in front of Banner over what their next move should be, Steve leaves and Stark remarks to Banner, “That’s the guy my dad would never shut up about?”

The dispute was caused over Steve and Tony’s differing reactions to the amount of knowledge Nick Fury (Samuel L. Jackson) has concerning the Loki/Tesseract situation. Stark has planted a virus onto the SHIELD’s computers to disrupt Fury’s leadership while Steve thinks the best move is to follow orders; Stark distrusts the guy smarter than him while Steve decides to trust the chain of command. Stark’s snotty line, however, is every bit as much about his own dad as it is about Captain America. Clearly, Stark has daddy issues; his father was a great inventor and built the family fortune through weapons, a fact that Stark has increasingly become uncomfortable with in the Cinematic Universe. He’s gone to great lengths to distance himself from his dad’s legacy and now here’s his dad’s hero walking right into the middle of Stark’s life and potentially taking some of the glitz away from Stark.

I don’t mean this in a “Tony wants all the acclaim” manner, but rather that here he is, the creator of the Iron Man armor, and now an “old fashioned” bit of technology enters his life that his father had a hand in creating. It’s why Tony snaps at Steve how “everything great about you came out of a bottle.” That line of attack is one based on science, and on that matter Stark wants to believe himself superior to his dad. Tony doesn’t snap, “If you’re so great, how come you couldn’t land a plane,” or “Don’t worry, Cap, we’ve got computers to land planes now” because that would have made the confrontation more about him and Steve, and Tony, because of his feelings of inadequacy, must feel like that’s a losing battle.

Critically, though, it’s Tony who turns over leadership in the Avengers to Cap during the battle with the Chitauri, although he does make the final decision to take the nuke through the space portal on his own. Even that act, though, directly finishes the simmering feud between him and Steve, as the play Tony makes is one of personal sacrifice, which is the exact charge Steve had laid at his feet earlier in the film.”

On a lighter note, I love how Whedon has Tony use pop culture references in a “blink and you’ll miss it” fashion. He references Lord of the Rings in conversation with Hawkeye (“Better clench up, Legolas”), refers to the Thor/Loki feud as “Shakespeare in the park,” and in one of his funnier lines, tells Thor after their fight, “No hard feelings, Point Break.” In these small lines, Whedon and Downey seek to humanize Stark a bit by bringing him down to everyone else’s level. Let’s face it, the guy is exactly what he says he is: a genius, billionaire, playboy philanthropist. It’s really only with Steve and Fury, though, that Stark tries to Big Man them, and it’s not hard to figure out that this is because of both their military connection and a sense of distrust or inadequacy towards them.

(Curiously, there’s not much interplay between Stark and Tasha in the film, despite their history together in IRON MAN 2.)

The most interesting relationship that Tony Stark has in the movie, however, is with Bruce Banner (Mark Ruffalo). Even the casting of Ruffalo indicates that he and Stark are contemporaries, which adds to their bonding. (Interestingly, of course, Cap and Thor are much older than Stark and Banner, yet look considerably younger.) Perhaps it’s because Stark is a genius, allowing he and Banner can connect on that level, that Banner is drawn to Tony, or perhaps it’s because Tony directly addresses the issue of the Hulk. Banner is worried about Fury and Tasha’s motives because when he looks at them, all he sees is “the government.” Steve diffuses any concerns in his initial meeting with Bruce, but Steve is interested in the mission first, and people second. Tony comes right out and says, “I’m a fan of the way you lose control and turn into an enormous green rage monster” upon his initial meeting with Banner which, if nothing else, proves that Tony isn’t afraid to tip-toe around the issue that dominates Banner’s life.

In the lab, Tony and Bruce seamlessly begin working together but where Bruce is primarily about the work they need to do, and secondarily about the work they need to do, Stark takes care of the work as quickly as he can in order to get into Banner’s head, inviting him to come to Stark Tower and then suggesting that Banner “suit up” with the rest of them.

“You might not like that,” Banner warns.

“You might,” Stark counters back.

There are only two non-military/intelligence people on the ship – Banner and Thor – and it’s not surprising that Stark chooses to bond with the one that is a scientist instead of a warrior.

All told, Whedon and Downey doing a spectacular job with Tony Stark, making him seem like a real person while still giving Downey plenty of opportunity to shine. The Marvel Cinematic Universe and AVENGERS owe so much to Downey. Not only is he a charismatic actor that turned a secondary Marvel hero into a first rate movie star, his willingness and generosity to share the spotlight helps make AVENGERS the phenomenal film it is. I mentioned in another reaction that there were reports way back at the start of the production that Downey wanted the film to be more centered around him, and that issues like that are something he doesn’t have to worry about.

Because of who is he, because of his talent, and because of the importance of Tony Stark and Iron Man to the Marvel Cinematic Universe, Robert Downey Jr. will always have a prominent role. He’s the only lead actor in the world that steals every scene he’s in – even when the scene is designed to be his, he finds a way to steal it. In AVENGERS and other MCU film, Downey and Tony Stark are still the gold standard. One of the lessons here for both Downey and Stark is that by taking the occasional step back to allow other actors and other heroes to step forward, it makes you better in the process. Stark needs to separate the Avengers from the Avengers initiative; he tells Steve, “I’m not marching to Fury’s fife,” and when Steve say that he isn’t either, it opens the door for Stark to believe the Avengers can be something more than a militarized band of soldiers marching under the flag of SHIELD. Nick Fury might have brought them all together, but it’s Tony’s acceptance of, and willingness to trust Steve that bind them to one another.

And that’s it on the reactions. I’m sure I’ll tweak them here and there, but it’s been a blast writing them and I sincerely hope you’ve had a blast reading them.

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THE AVENGERS REVIEW INDEX

THE AVENGERS: THE MOVIE REVIEW
THE AVENGERS: THE HAWKEYE REACTION
THE AVENGERS: THE AGENT COULSON REACTION
THE AVENGERS: THE BLACK WIDOW REACTION
THE AVENGERS: THE NICK FURY REACTION
THE AVENGERS: THE MARIA HILL REACTION
THE AVENGERS: THE CAPTAIN AMERICA REACTION
THE AVENGERS: THE CHITAURI/THANOS REACTION
THE AVENGERS: THE HULK REACTION
THE AVENGERS: THE THOR REACTION
THE AVENGERS: THE LOKI REACTION
THE AVENGERS: THE IRON MAN REACTION

THE MARVEL CINEMATIC UNIVERSE REVIEW INDEX

1. IRON MAN
2. THE INCREDIBLE HULK
3. IRON MAN 2
4. THOR
5. CAPTAIN AMERICA: THE FIRST AVENGER

THE AVENGERS: The CAPTAIN AMERICA Reaction

The Avengers (2012) – The 6th Marvel Cinematic Universe Film – Directed by Joss Whedon – Starring Robert Downey Jr., Chris Evans, Chris Hemsworth, Mark Ruffalo, Scarlett Johansson, Jeremy Renner, Tom Hiddleston, Samuel L. Jackson, Clark Gregg, Cobie Smulders, Stellan Skarsgård, Gwyneth Paltrow, Paul Bettany, Alexis Denisof, Stan Lee, Powers Boothe, Lou Ferrigno, and Harry Dean Stanton.

Welcome to the sixth character-specific reaction to Joss Whedon’s THE AVENGERS. I’ve already written a 4,200+ word review of the film, but that wasn’t nearly enough to cover everything I wanted to talk about, so I’m going to write character-specific reactions to delve a bit deeper into the film. You can find all of the relevant AVENGERS links at the bottom of this post.

Let me be clear about what’s coming: SPOILERS. Lots and lots of SPOILERS. Read ahead only if you’re cool with that. If you haven’t seen the movie and don’t want things ruined, come on back when you do.

Also, please note that these reactions are evolving as we go. If you see some line I got wrong or a detail I overlooked, by all means let me know. I’ve seen the movie twice, but it’s a long movie and the audience reacts wildly in parts, so some things get lost or forgotten or misinterpreted. And I’m sure some of the quotes are wrong, but I will correct the mistakes as I become aware of them. This Cap reaction clocks in at over 4,700 words for a first draft and I still haven’t said absolutely everything I want to say, so don’t be surprised if this reaction grows a bit in the coming days.

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“The uniform? Aren’t the stars and stripes a little old fashioned?”

“Everything that’s happening, the things that are about to come to light, people might just need a little old fashioned.”

Chris Evans has now risen to the occasion twice. While not dissatisfied, I was not completely sold on the decision to hire him as Captain America before THE FIRST AVENGER, because he’s a bit limited as an actor, but he turned out to be a perfect choice for the idealistic Steve Rogers. He gave Steve and Cap a kind of obstinate earnestness, and in the context of a throwback war-slash-superhero film, it worked really well.

Coming into AVENGERS, however, I was still a bit concerned about how Evans would stand up to Robert Downey Jr.’s Tony Stark. To be blunt, I thought Downey would bury him through the sheer power of his personality, and that we’d end up with a lopsided Avengers roster where it wasn’t a Big Two, let alone a Big Three, but Iron Man and his Five Sidekicks. I thought they needed an older actor than Evans, or at least someone with a little more gravitas to their screen presence, but I was wrong. Downey is still the most charismatic actor in AVENGERS, but Evans’ obstinate earnestness serves him well, and he does an excellent job of transferring Captain America into the modern age simply by refusing to change who he is or what he stands for.

Co-writer and director Joss Whedon and Evans combine to make the “man out of time” angle work. What they don’t do – and thank all the gods for this – is go the whole, “What?!?!?! You can get music out of your phone? And you can carry your phone with you? But where’s the rotary dial?” angle, because that’s played out and stupid. Instead, Whedon does two things to remind you that Rogers is a man out of time: he gives us a flashback sequence from THE FIRST AVENGER to remind us he was in the middle of World War II just a few days ago, and he subtly coats Rogers with slightly anachronistic air.

Whedon doesn’t have Steve crank up his old phonograph or wonder what happened to Benny Goodman, either, but rather, he makes a consistent point to have Steve look “old fashioned,” and he builds this anachronistic vibe by contrasting Rogers to Tony Stark.

Stark is introduced in the film underwater, in his Iron Man armor, connecting up his high-tech arc reactor to make his brand new Stark Tower self-sufficient. He flies to the tower, lands, and goes through this awesome de-armor process, with machines pulling off pieces of the armor as Stark slowly walks into the main floor, where Pepper Potts (Gwyneth Paltrow) waits for him with good news and happy smiles. Everything about the sequence enforces the idea that Stark is a man ahead of his time, but at peace in the bubble he’s created from the contemporary world. He stands on top of it.

In contrast, Captain America’s story also starts underwater. In his solo movie, he crashed into the Arctic, got frozen, then fished out and brought into our contemporary world. We only get a brief glimpse of Captain America all frozen-like, strapped to a table where scientists or doctors tell us they can’t believe he’s still alive, but it’s in the water where his story starts, as far as AVENGERS is concerned. It was Howard Stark’s search for Captain America that allowed him to find the Tesseract, and it’s Steve’s time in the drink that Stark focuses on when he wants to make a dig about him being a man out of time, referencing Steve’s time as a “Capsicle.”

Where Stark was in the water as a conqueror, then, Steve was in it as a prisoner.

Both Stark and Steve are men out of time, but where Star’s position as a man ahead of time gives him comfort, Steve’s position as a man behind it gives him unsteady footing. Compare the recruitment visits. Agent Coulson (Clark Gregg) visits Stark at the top of his tower while Nick Fury visits Steve in a musty old boxing gym. The old fashioned gym provides a bit of the “old fashioned” for Steve, and it’s to Whedon and Evans’ credit that they don’t oversell this. There’s no, “Hey, Cap, you’re in a boxing gym because boxing gyms used to be popular in the 1940s, and even though you’ll get a better workout in the new SHIELD Helicarrier state-of-the-art facility, you feel more comfortable here.”

As I keep mentioning in these reactions, this is a very smart script, one that condenses all you need to know down to its purest essence and doesn’t feel the need to make every little thing obvious. But just because it’s not obvious doesn’t mean it’s not there. Everything is included for a reason, right down to Cap using battered old Everlast bags. SHIELD could certainly spring for some new heavy bags, but Steve feels more comfortable among older things, which just proves that SHIELD’s unseen shrinks were right, in their misguided way, to have the unfrozen Steve Rogers wake up in a 1940s-style room. They just should have let him come to that conclusion on his own.

Steve Rogers heads to SHIELD’s HQ in a jet with Agent Phil Coulson, who reveals himself to be a huge Captain America fan (which you can read about on the other end of this link in the AGENT COULSON Reaction. Steve is a bit unnerved and even a little confused by this, as he clearly doesn’t like or understand Coulson’s hero worship, even beyond Coulson’s awkward (and funny), “I watched you while you were sleeping” comment.

Probably because it’s funny, that’s the line that’s been getting the bulk of the attention from this scene, but it’s what comes next that has a greater importance to the film. Coulson mentions that Cap’s got a new uniform and that they’ve made improvements, sheepishly adding that he had some input into the redesign. Steve wonders, “Aren’t the stars and stripes a little old fashioned?” Coulson assures him he thinks not: “Everything that’s happening, the things that are about to come to light, people might just need a little old fashioned.”

It’s an important idea because Captain America’s costume does make him look out of place. Hawkeye and Black Widow’s (Jeremy Renner and Scarlett Johansson) costume get the eternally cool black look, Iron Man is cutting edge tech coolness, and Thor’s traditional, Asgardian garb somehow seems more in tune with the contemporary world than does Cap’s classic star-spangled number. (This might be because it jibes better with the Chitauri and Loki.) Honestly, Cap is the only Avenger who looks like an old fashioned, traditional superhero, and this, too, marks his look as anachronistic.

I would really have preferred to see his final costume from THE FIRST AVENGER back.

The World War II costume felt more real, and the new costume, though designed to make Cap look more contemporary, actually makes him look more anachronistic to me, as if by trying to make the costume look modern it simply reinforces the idea that “superheroes” are a relic of past. Maybe that was the idea, I don’t know. It’s a really nice costume to look at, but I’m not sold on it the way I was with the WWII outfit.

I’ve long hated, too, the hoops superhero films jump through to get a hero’s mask to come off for the big, important, final fight scene. I don’t know if it’s actor’s ego, or Hollywood misunderstanding of the genre, but I don’t know too many comic books fans who say things like, “Yeah, that final battle was really enhanced by having Batman’s mask get torn off, because I really paid my money to see Michael Keaton fight the Penguin, not Batman.” And yet, here, I think Cap’s costume works better without a mask, in large part because the mask just looks too big, too clunky, too awkward, too rubbery. I’m all for future movies just leaving the mask out of the films entirely, if they can’t get a cleaner design. It’s not like we really need to worry about secret identities in the Marvel Cinematic Universe because they don’t really serve a point here, do they? There’s no real effort to make Steve Rogers be a separate person from Captain America.

Steve arrives on the Helicarrier (which is in battleship mode) and meets Black Widow and Bruce Banner (Mark Ruffalo). Like Widow before him, Cap assures Banner that he’s only interested in what Banner can do, and not in the Hulk. There’s a really nice scene between Banner and Steve, where Bruce tries to some empathy for the man out of time by offering that all of this must be really confusing to the guy from the ’40s. Steve corrects Banner, though, as he looks around at all the military hardware, and lets him know that this actually feels familiar to him. It’s a nice idea; however anachronistic Steve Rogers and Captain America are, there’s still wars to be fought and while the actors, the theater, and the equipment has changed, the sentiment is still the same.

Shortly after the battleship turns into the Helicarrier, they locate Loki in Stuttgart, and Cap and Widow are off to bring him in.

The scene in Stuttgart reveals the strongest aspects of Chris Evans’ performance; unlike Downey, who provides the hip, fast-talking, pop-reference dropping, coolness of AVENGERS, Evans provides the measured foundation of the film. When I watched AVENGERS the first time, I ended up talking about a lot of other stuff before I got to the Captain America parts of the film, but Cap doesn’t have a lot of great, catchy lines like Stark has, and while he doesn’t have a lot of great, flashy action scenes like the Hulk has, he does have a lot of really great smaller lines and quieter moments that really stood out the second time around. Films need balance and Evans and Downey provide it; for all that I was concerned that Evans couldn’t hang with Downey, the truth of AVENGERS is that he more than holds his own, but he does it on his own terms, by staying true to the character and not trying to outshine the film’s brightest light.

We see this right away in Stuttgart. Loki is in town doing devilish things (getting the brainwashed Clint Barton the “distraction and eyeball” he needs to steal some iridium for Erik Selvig), and he steps outside to force everyone in the crowd to kneel before him. One old man rises to his feet and tells Loki he will not kneel to a man like him.

“There are no men like me,” Loki grins.

“There are always men like you,” the old man says defiantly.

Loki chuckles and gets ready to blast the man to atoms when Cap shows up at the last second for a rescue. (This “appears out of nowhere from the edge of the screen” technique is used by Whedon quite frequently in the film.) Cap and Loki have a bit of a verbal sparring session, with Cap referencing his time in Germany in World War II and Loki calling Cap a “man out of time,” to which Cap replies that Loki is the one out of time. Compared to the much better verbal battles between Loki and Stark later in the film, and the more emotional Loki v. Thor confrontations, the singularly great interrogation between the Widow and a vicious Loki, and the hilarious showdown between Loki and the Hulk, this scene in Stuttgart falls way short in terms of its memorability.

Let’s not overlook it, though. It’s still a great scene, but not because of what Cap says (the old German dude’s line is not only better than anything Cap says, but it’s perhaps the single best line in the film), but rather what it reveals about Cap. Sure, he’s willing to stand toe-to-toe with a powerhouse like Loki and take a beating (the Widow even remarks at one point that Cap’s fighting technique is “all over the place”), but when Iron Man arrives and Loki surrenders, Cap’s strategic mind kicks in and he realizes that Loki surrendered far too easily.

That this scene takes place in Stuttgart, Germany is, of course, not coincidental, and it shows that Cap might be a man out of time, but he’s not still living in the past. (It shouldn’t be overlooked, either, that Norse mythology was very popular among some Germanic Pagans in the early days of the Nazi party.) Cap makes mention of “the last time I was in Germany,” which in actual story time was, what, a few days ago? A week? Captain America has the ability to focus on the threat at hand and leave the geopolitical discussions to others. He might be cloaked in the imagery of the United States, but he’s less the embodiment of the nation as he is the protector of innocents.

Back on board the SHIELD jet, we begin to see Whedon explore the Rogers/Stark relationship. On the ground, Cap had expressed surprise that Fury had called Iron Man in, too, and Stark lets Steve know that he’d better get used to that because, “there’s a lot Fury doesn’t tell you.” In the jet, Stark is happy to have Loki in custody and his mind is already on to the next stage, while Steve can’t get past how easy it was to capture Loki. The master strategist can smell the trap that Loki is setting but before he can let that thought fully develop, bad weather kicks up.

“Afraid of a little lightning?” he asks Loki when he sees the Asgardian is looking nervously out the window.

“I’m not overly fond of what follows,” Loki admits, and we cut outside to see Thor land on top of the jet, then enter the back door when Stark opens it to check out the problem. With little thought for the people in the jet, Thor grabs Loki and takes off, leaving Stark, Cap, and Widow behind. Tony immediately wants to take off after them, but Cap insists, “Tony, we need a plan of attack!”

“I have a plan … attack!” Tony says just before jumping into the stormy night.

Cap’s response is to grab a parachute, and when Widow tells him he should sit this round out because they’re gods, Cap replies, “There’s only one God, ma’am, and I’m pretty sure He doesn’t look like that.”

There’s two character traits revealed here that I really admire. The first is that Cap has no qualms about jumping into that stormy night after them. He knows Loki is powerful, he can clearly see that Thor is powerful, and he knows Iron Man is best equipped to handle this situation purely from a power standpoint, but he’s not willing to trust Stark to deliver the outcome that he wants. The second trait is that Cap believes in God. It’s such a small thing, but a powerful admission, too. During Cap’s history in the comics there has, on occasion, been a desire for certain writers and editors to keep Cap neutral in order to appeal to every single American. The thinking is that because Cap is the symbol of America, he needs to represent every American. Or, for other writers, that religion is just something that shouldn’t be brought into the world of superheroes in any kind of significant manner.

I’m not a religious person myself (I consider myself a agnostically spiritual), but I have no problem with anyone expressing their faith, and I like that Whedon and Marvel Studios put this line into the movie. Spoken where it is in the film, Cap’s “there’s only one God” line adds to his anachronistic aura, given that everyone else in the film seems perfectly comfortable referring to Thor and Loki as “demi-gods.” (And maybe “aliens.”)

Thor and Iron Man’s exits from the SHIELD jet are much more visually cool than Cap’s, but I really love Cap’s jump from the ship. There’s just something so … so … so Captain America about that jump out of a jet and into a storm, landing site both unseen and unknown. It’s just such a great moment for the character.

On the ground, Cap arrives after Iron Man and Thor have knocked each other around a forest (and I’ll cover their battle more in their individual reactions). He asks them if they’re finished, then challenges Thor to “put the hammer down” as a sign of good faith if he’s really here as a friendly instead of a hostile. Thor decides to put the hammer down right onto Cap’s shield and the subsequent explosion knocks the Big 3 to the ground and calms their emotions. In the wake of the explosion, we get the money shot of the Big 3 standing together in the forest, and this is the first moment that all of Fury’s planning starts moving beyond his control. It’s the moment the Avengers Initiative takes its first self-motivated baby steps to become the Avengers.

Back aboard the Helicarrier, Steve and Tony continue to get on each other’s nerves. Steve doesn’t like that Tony is spying on SHIELD and Tony doesn’t like that Cap is naive about what Fury is capable of doing. Curiously, it’s Bruce Banner who plays the third wheel in these scenes instead of Thor, but with Banner serving as intermediary, Steve becomes convinced that Tony’s suspicions are worth investigating. Breaking into a SHIELD storage area, Steve discovers that SHIELD has Hydra-looking weapons, which means that Fury and SHIELD were planning to weaponize the Tesseract. When everything reaches a boil on board the ship, Steve challenges Tony by asking, “Taking away the suit and what are you?”

“Billionaire genius playboy philanthropist,” Stark replies.

“I know men without a tenth of that that are more than you,” Steve shoots back.

The core issue between them is how they conduct themselves. Steve is irritated that Tony always looks for a way out instead of making the sacrifice while Tony sees Cap as a loyalist soldier. Tony is now interested in pushing his company to create clean energy instead of military weapons, so he sees Cap as a piece of his own past (he even says to Banner at one point, “This is the guy my father would never shut up about?”), and he recoils at that thought.

What’s really interesting to me is that during the scene where emotions begin to boil over (thanks, in part, to Loki’s influence), it’s Steve who’s itching for the fight with Tony more than the other way around. “Put on the suit and let’s go a few rounds,” he says at one point, and then repeats the first part. “Put on the suit,” he challenges, getting in Tony’s face. It’s at that moment that Hawkeye’s assault hits the Helicarrier and Steve and Tony instantly put aside their differences to team up. Cap repeats himself yet again, except this time when he says, “Put on the suit,” it’s not to challenge Tony but to acknowledge they need Iron Man’s help. The two of them spend the bulk of the assault working together to get one of the Helicarrier’s big engines up and running again.

Critically, when the battle is over, Coulson has died, and Loki has escaped, it’s only Steve and Tony left to talk with Fury. Thor and Hulk have been jettisoned and Widow is with Hawkeye in the infirmary, so it’s Tony and Steve that are present when Fury drops Coulson’s now blood-soaked Captain America trading cards on the table, and it’s Steve and Tony who figure out what Loki is up to, and Steve and Tony who decide to steal a jet to go after Loki on their own.

Before they go, however, comes one of my favorite scenes in the movie. Clint and Tasha are in the infirmary having a moment when Cap comes in. “Can you fly a jet?” he asks Tasha.

“I can,” says Clint, and all it takes for Cap to agree to let Hawkeye come with them is a single nod from Tasha. I just flat-out love this moment. Cap has zero history with Hawkeye, but Tasha has already earned his respect, so even though Clint was a Loki drone who led the assault that caused all the damage to the Helicarrier, all Tasha has to do is nod her approval of him for Cap to agree to let him come, too. “Do you have a suit?” he asks Clint, who affirms that he does. “Then suit up,” Cap says.

We get a great shot of the three of them walking slowly through the Helicarrier hangar, which ends with them strolling right into a jet, and a SHIELD tech saying, “You’re not allowed to be in here.”

“Just don’t,” Cap says, and the tech doesn’t, allowing them to steal the jet and get to the big battle scene with the Chitauri.

What’s noteworthy about this massive battle sequence is that Cap’s role is largely relegated to saving all the humans caught in the middle of the Chitauri vs. Avengers epicness. Evans is great in the battle scenes, and Cap is unofficially sanctioned as the team leader by Stark, but moments that the comics would probably give to Captain America are given to others in the film. For instance, it’s Natasha that collects Loki’s staff that will allow them to shut down the interstellar doorway that’s opened up over Manhattan, and it’s Iron Man that gets to play the ultimate hero and ride the nuclear missile up through the big opening in the sky and aim it towards the Chitauri mothership.

Both decisions interest me. I’m not really sure why Tasha got to be the one to jump up, steal a Chitauri sky-cycle, and then shut the machine down instead of Cap, and while Iron Man riding the rocket makes narrative sense (Steve had chided him earlier about how sometimes there isn’t a way out), it also would have also made narrative sense for Cap to make that ride. One, it’s the ultimate sacrifice, and two, it would have been eerily similar to the end of THE FIRST AVENGER. It would have been a really strong character moment if the guy who’s last ride ended up with him frozen in ice for 70 years did not hesitate to do it again. For whatever reason, Whedon went the Iron Man route, which is a moment that defines Tony Stark, instead of the Captain America moment which would have been more of an Avengers-defining moment because of the differences in their personalities.

Now, I’m not complaining about the decision. I think it makes a lot of sense and it’s a great scene. It also, in its way, serves as an Avengers-defining moment, but based on how this film’s narrative played out, the emphasis here is more revelation than inspiration. In the comics, I think this moment would have gone to Cap – the quintessential Avenger making the quintessential sacrifice – but perhaps because of Iron Man’s cinematic popularity, the moment is Stark’s. So, again, I’m not complaining about it, I’m simply interested in how the moment plays.

Throughout AVENGERS, though, there is a bit of “prove it, flag man” in how people deal with Captain America. Coulson is a fan, obviously, and Fury is on Cap’s side, but there is a definite streak of people underestimating Cap in the film. Loki is dismissive of him, but Loki is dismissive of anyone not named Thor. Widow is clearly skeptical of his abilities during the sequence where Thor steals Loki from their custody, Thor drops the hammer on him, Stark is constantly needling him, and even the NYC cops don’t want to listen to him.

During the battle against the Chitauri, Cap orders two cops to rescue survivors and set up a perimeter. In the comics, of course, the cops would have immediately jumped to follow his orders, but here, one of the cop looks at Cap like he’s nuts and asks, “Why should we listen to you?” In response, Cap takes down several attacking Chitauri, which immediately causes the cops to jump into action and fulfill every single one of Cap’s orders.

I think was a smart move on Whedon’s part. If the world simply accepted and embraced the return of Captain America, it would have taken away something from Cap’s story arc. I really like that the film makes Cap a bit of an underdog, that it forces him to prove himself to nearly everyone, and that by the end, he’s earned their respect.

During the film’s signature shot (the 360-circle around the assembled Avengers in the middle of the Chitauri battle), Stark crowns Capt their leader. “Call it, Captain,” he says, and Cap instantly takes to his leadership role. If everyone had pulled a Coulson and walked on eggs around Cap, the narrative would have been weaker, but the way the film has progressed, this moment has a real weight to it in the narrative and a real celebratory quality to it for me. This is the moment this team finally recognized themselves as the Avengers and their roles in that group. This is the moment that egos were put aside for the greater good.

“All right, listen up,” Cap orders. “Until we can close that portal up there, we need containment. Barton, I want you on that roof, eyes on everything. Call out patterns and strays. Stark, you’ve got the perimeter. Anything gets more than three blocks out, you turn it back or you turn it to ash. Thor, you’ve gotta try and bottleneck that portal, slow them down. You’ve got the lightning – light the bastards up! You and me,” he says to Tasha, “we stay here on the ground, keep the fighting here. And Hulk … smash!”

What a moment. The team instantly responds and Cap’s plan proves successful at keeping the battle contained while they figure out how to win the day. Cap has a whole handful of great moments during the Chitauri conflict, including one brief, quiet exchange with Thor that clearly shows the respect the two men have gained for each other. In exchange for not getting either Widow or Iron Man’s big moments, Cap saves a group of trapped humans and as a consequence of that, seems to become the public face of the team, as a waitress he saves uses his rescue as an example to the press of the Avengers being a good thing.

Chris Evans turns in a fantastic acting performance in AVENGERS, but it’s not a flashy performance. Instead, he takes the role of Captain America to heart, delivering a largely understated, solid performance that succeeds because it delivers what the film needs. Like Captain America himself, Evans seems happy to let others take the spotlight, but is more than willing to step to the fore when he needs to take control. It’s the scenes with Downey that really win me over, though. Instead of being buried under all that charisma and star power, Evans holds his ground. It’s often said that Captain America is the heart of the Avengers, but that’s not really the role Whedon asks the character to play in the film. Instead of being the heart of the team, Chris Evans proves himself to be the backbone of an absolutely fantastic film.

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THE AVENGERS REVIEW INDEX

THE AVENGERS: THE MOVIE REVIEW
THE AVENGERS: THE HAWKEYE REACTION
THE AVENGERS: THE AGENT COULSON REACTION
THE AVENGERS: THE BLACK WIDOW REACTION
THE AVENGERS: THE NICK FURY REACTION
THE AVENGERS: THE MARIA HILL REACTION
THE AVENGERS: THE CAPTAIN AMERICA REACTION
THE AVENGERS: THE CHITAURI/THANOS REACTION
THE AVENGERS: THE HULK REACTION
THE AVENGERS: THE THOR REACTION
THE AVENGERS: THE LOKI REACTION
THE AVENGERS: THE IRON MAN REACTION

THE MARVEL CINEMATIC UNIVERSE REVIEW INDEX

1. IRON MAN
2. THE INCREDIBLE HULK
3. IRON MAN 2
4. THOR
5. CAPTAIN AMERICA: THE FIRST AVENGER