Thursday, May 2, 2019

Avengers: Endgame is at the Top, and Fairly Won


Avengers: Endgame has come at last, and its accolades and success are fairly won.  This series deserves nothing short of absolute praise.

For 11 years they've not only entertained us, but they've surprised us.  They could have just told cliché stories of superheroes and fed the comic book fandom with what they'd already seen; but they determined to do more.  They had an ongoing story that broke into multiple paths of films and TV shows, and each one had its own unique feel to it.  You had the obvious action stories, like the first Avengers movie, you had dramas like Jessica Jones, you had wild comedies like Thor: Ragnarok, you had team stories, like Agents of Shield, you had political intrigue in Captain America, you had social commentary in Luke Cage, and on and on and on.  And through it all, they had an ongoing story-line that everything led toward in addition to their own individual story-lines and character arcs.

There were also more subtle unique elements to each story, as well as subtle references to one another.  Some might call this nostalgic fan service, but in my view, these references were like glue holding it all together and reminding us that this was one large universe where everything connected.

Others have been trying to emulate Marvel, but like Hollywood so often does, they missed the one most important aspect: Marvel succeeded because it took a risk on treading new ground.  One cannot, by definition, follow this formula.  The only way to emulate the Marvel formula to success is by taking those same risks in a new direction.  It was that originality that we've all respected.  To be clear, yes, these were based off of comic books with a fan base and a long history.  However, the filmmakers researched these books thoroughly to have a complete understanding of them, and they took the characters and stories in new directions.

I watched many of the MCU movies with a comic book crowd, the ones at Emerald Knights.  They knew the stories, but they were still surprised and pleased with the way these stories were altered because it was respectful to the source material, and it added to it rather than rebuilt it.  The new Star Wars films have completely missed this concept, with Force Awakens being a copy of the originals, and Last Jedi being empty undermining of expectations without reason.

The MUC movies were daring in the way they portrayed these characters and situations in ways that honored the source material, but still found new ways to tell them.  THAT'S how they were original.

I personally watched all the movies and shows as they came out.  I've never been much of a superhero fan; definitely not of these characters.  But they did such a great job of making us care about them that I had to see how their journeys weaved through each other.  The characters altered as they went.  The filmmakers weren't afraid to change them from their iconic looks and make massive changes to their environments.  And they weren't afraid to swap the characters in and out of the stories of other characters, thus making the world more complete.

But the accomplishment is even more than that.  Anyone who has tried to get a film made knows how espically difficult it is.  Most films never get made.  In this case, they made 22 films over 11 years... with a new company.  That accomplishment is unheard of.  I'm sure the Academy Awards and other awards shows will ignore this while honoring other films that accomplished far, far less.  But those who realize what they did, and how difficult it was to do it successfully, will always know how monumental this achievement was.  They deserve every penny of what they've made.

#Endgame #Avengers #AvengersEndgame #TheAvengers #Marvel #MCU #MarvelCinematicUniverse

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