A review of the Avengers in three parts. I tried to be factual, but I made no effort to be objective.
Introduction:
If you will excuse the digression, I'd like to talk about Narnia by way of introduction.
There was a time when I thought "Hey, neat fantasy books," then "Wait, Aslan is Jesus?" and then "How could I
possibly have
missed that Aslan is Jesus?!" but even now that I'm a firm atheist, I
enjoy the movies and books.
The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe remains
solid, and I think
The Magician's Nephew is one of the all time great
fantasy stories.
However, some of the books are
problematic.
Susan gets
shabby treatment. I'll just crib from Wikipedia here.
In The Last Battle, Susan is conspicuous by her absence. Peter says that she is "no longer a friend of Narnia", and (in Jill Pole's words) "she's interested in nothing now-a-days except nylons and lipstick and invitations." Similarly, Eustace Scrubb
quotes her as saying, "What wonderful memories you have! Fancy you
still thinking about all those funny games we used to play when we were
children," and Polly Plummer
adds, "She wasted all her school time wanting to be the age she is now,
and she'll waste all the rest of her life trying to stay that age. Her
whole idea is to race on to the silliest time of one's life as quick as
she can and then stop there as long as she can." Thus, Susan does not
enter the real Narnia with the others at the end of the series.
Also, in
The Horse and His Boy
contains a nonstop parade of offensive stereotypes about Islam and Arab
culture, but I'm not willing to dismiss that one out of hand, because
it contains what's probably my favorite line from the Narnia books. The
enemy Prince Rabadash has just been humiliated and captured, and now
that the heroes have him at their mercy, the prince starts mocking him,
and the king puts a stop to it.
"Shame, Corin," said the King. "Never taunt a man save when he is stronger than you: then, as you please."
That's
the mature response. Every decent person hates a bully. It offends our
sense of justice. We hate seeing people pick on those much weaker than
themselves.
And that brings us back to Joss Whedon.
"When you have to kill a man it costs nothing to be polite."
Whedon's specialty is crafting a scenario where we can cheer for people who pick on those much weaker than themselves.
More precisely, he sets up a situation where the best, and only
reasonable course of action is for the protagonists to defeat someone who has been opposing them, which is such a naked wish fulfillment to certain aspects of geek culture. They didn't
want to do it, but they were forced into it by circumstances, and if they should gloat a little, who is to blame them?
But, you say, hypothetical Joss Whedon fan, his
heroes, characters, defend the helpless, surely they're the good guys. To a
point.
Buffy is the Slayer. The series ran for 145 episodes and
let's figure Buffy dusts four or five vampires every episode. A normal
person has basically no chance of defending himself against a vampire,
but Buffy is to vampires as vampires are to people. They have no chance
against
her. And she kills them, and that's fine. I dare say it's
better than fine, because they would have gone on to kill innocent
people if not killed first.
Worthwhile? Absolutely. Good. Unquestionably.
But I'll stop short of calling it heroic. In the end, we're cheering
for someone very powerful beating up someone much weaker. Whedon has
framed the narrative that we can cheer for the bully without feeling bad
about it. (And don't feel compelled to give me counterexamples. It's
not present in
every one of the hundreds of stories he's written
over two decades, but it's pervasive enough a theme that it's the
exception when it's not there.)
Angel is pretty much the same. Ditto Firefly. On the Serenity
commentary track, Whedon giggles as he keeps a running tally of the
unarmed men Reynolds executes. The most
thuggish criminal, if he's funny, nice to his friends, and allowed to
present events from his point of view, will be seen as a hero. Reynolds
lives by a code of honor, that, much like Doctor Doom's almost always
dovetails neatly with what he was going to do anyway.
Buffy is an action/horror/comedy ensemble show, so we extend
considerably more leeway than we would elsewhere. And it's not about
dusting the vamps; they're just a device to illustrate Buffy's personal
journey. But none of that changes the facts. Buffy is a bully. She's a
bully for all the right reasons, but a bully nonetheless. Whedon wants
us to accept his characters as heroes.
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"Buffy, what is best?" "To crush your enemies, see them driven before you, and to hear the lamentation of their women."
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And it's fine that they're not heroes. There are plenty of
properties where the main characters aren't heroes. This is a blog that
began so I could review the works of
Roger Zelazny, who wrote his thesis
on the Revenger's Tragedy, and who made a career out of writing
vengeance-seeking superman, many of whom would not be out of place as
villains in other works. What's the difference between the two?
For me it's that Zelazny's characters oppose villains of their own
caliber, and face legitimate challenges. When Corwin manages to cut down
a couple mooks in pursuit of his goal, he doesn't spike the football,
he doesn't pretend it was a challenge and he doesn't pretend he did it
for any reason other than to get what he wanted.
"In the mirrors of the many
judgments, my hands are the color of blood. I am a part of the evil that
exists in the world and in Shadow. I sometime fancy myself an evil
which exists to oppose other evils...and on that Great Day of which
prophets speak but in which they do not truly believe, on that day when
the world is completely cleansed of evil, then I, too, will go down into
darkness, swallowing curses. Perhaps even sooner than that, I now
judge. But whatever.... Until that time, I shall not wash my hands nor
let them hang useless."
Crowing about your victory over a legendary hero who arrived
half-dead to your fight because he took a nuke to the face saving twenty
million people doesn't make you a hero. It just makes you the strongest guy in the
room.
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But if it makes you forget about all your dead Robins and your
performance problems with Selina, I guess it's worth it, eh, Bruce? |
And the actual Avengers review:
(This part has some SPOILERS)
First, stuff I liked. Thor twirled his hammer before he flew. That was
awesome. Mark Ruffalo's performance was great. (“I got low. I didn't see
a way out. So I put a bullet in my mouth and the other guy spit it
out.") I'd like to see him return for another Hulk movie, but my friend
Eric made the quip that actors playing Banner are like Defense against
the Dark Arts teachers, which was quite a bit funnier than anything in
the movie. And Harry Dean Stanton was great. Agent Coulson was pretty
awesome, as always.
It was, much like most of Whedon's work, competently crafted from a
technical standpoint, though with a budget of a quarter billion dollars,
I would hope it would be. I chuckled once or twice during the movie, (I
liked the "Shakespeare in the Park" line), but I chuckle once or twice
during just about any movie.
Stuff I didn't like. The characters often missed their beats when
delivering a stinger, the writing was mostly flat. "As of now, we are at
war." Is this what they mean by Joss Whedon's good
writing? Or is it when they call the heroes "freaks"? Because that's
not tired at all. Samuel L. Jackson can usually be relied upon to give a
solid performance, but it feels like he was just phoning it in here.
Another blog quipped that he's become the black Christopher Walken.
As I mentioned above and
elsewhere,
it's a distillation of Whedon's personal style. The people who like it
happen to be vocal about it. I happen not to like it, for the reasons I
outlined above.
The casting was.....questionable.
Aunt Robin
did not make a great Maria Hill. Particularly egregious was, in the
aftermath of an attack, she's sitting with pursed lips as a medic swabs
the mild scrapes on her face, when, in other parts of the carrier,
bodies are being carted off.
Scarlett Johansson was excellent back in her Ghost World days, and
increasingly, she's just like a mannequin with a good agent. I've seen
reviews that praised her performance, but I don't know movie they were
watching.
Whedon loves his heroes and is entirely dismissive of his villains.
Hawkeye can't hit a damn thing when he's evil and suddenly turns into,
well, Hawkeye, when he's not.
Loki, the villain of the piece, blunders into every trap there is, from
the "catch the exploding arrow" trap to "the throw Tony Stark out the
window when you've given him ample time to get ready for it" one, and
gets schooled by not only Thor, the Black Widow, the Hulk, Cap, and
Iron Man but also an elderly man in Germany, which goes back to what I
said about Whedon's characters picking fights below their weight class.
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It took you two and a half hours to beat this guy? Really? |
And we get the other Whedon tropes, including the Council of Always
Wrong Elderly White People, who exist only for the the protagonists to
defy and thereby prove their maverick cred.
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I'm a loner, Dottie. A rebel. |
Also, Thanos looked like a skinny purple skrull. That was terrible.
Final Grade: C, not terrible, but fantastically overrated, much like most of Whedon's work.