What makes the avengers
At the very beginning, I wrote entire drafts that had no bearing on what I would eventually film. There was a moment where we thought we weren't gonna have Scarlett [ Johansson ], and so I wrote a huge bunch of pages starring The Wasp. That was not useful. I also worried that one British character actor was not enough to take on Earth's mightiest heroes, and that we'd feel like we were rooting for the overdog.
Like this is really good wrong. Once the story was settled, it came time to fill out the cast. Robert Downey Jr. Jackson assembling the team as Nick Fury. The new major character was Hawkeye, which Jeremy Renner had been eyed for since his breakout role in The Hurt Locker , but Supernatural actor Jensen Ackles who was in the running to play Captain America was also rumored to be in the mix.
Ultimately, Renner signed on. Then came that pesky Hulk. Edward Norton filled the role of Bruce Banner in The Incredible Hulk , but took over screenwriting duties himself on that film and was locked in many creative battles with Marvel over the movie's direction — all the way up through post-production. So when it came time to make The Avengers , Marvel put out a statement that essentially fired Norton in public back in July — weeks before Comic-Con:. Our decision is definitely not one based on monetary factors, but instead rooted in the need for an actor who embodies the creativity and collaborative spirit of our other talented cast members.
The Avengers demands players who thrive working as part of an ensemble, as evidenced by Robert, Chris H, Chris E, Sam, Scarlett, and all of our talented casts.
We are looking to announce a name actor who fulfills these requirements, and is passionate about the iconic role in the coming weeks. In any event, Marvel moved forward without Norton and announced the recasting with Mark Ruffalo at San Diego Comic-Con that summer, when they brought the entire Avengers cast onstage to mark the monumental film to thunderous applause. Filming on The Avengers got underway in April in Albuquerque, New Mexico, where the bulk of the production was based.
The production later moved to Cleveland, Ohio for four weeks of filming to capture exteriors for the Battle of New York, but Albuquerque served as the base of operations.
Although this was before Marvel Studios built their gargantuan production facility in Atlanta, Georgia, which is where most Marvel movies are made nowadays.
Who they were, what they were, and how they interacted was all Joss and Joss is a huge fan of Thanos. Obviously the Thanos we saw in Infinity War and Endgame not only looks different, but has motivations different from what Whedon said back in , but this is a fascinating look inside the Marvel creative process.
There are also deeply personal stories like Vision's struggle with love and humanity, Black Panther's wedding and divorce, Carol Danvers and Tony Stark 's struggle with addiction, and Scarlet Witch 's tragic life, which are integral to their characters but rarely touched upon on screen though this could change.
And Hawkeye is a much more dynamic character in the comic books. Finally, because comic books aren't subject to the same rights battles as the films, characters like Beast, Spider-Man, and Wolverine are becoming Avengers, while the Avengers are crossing over with the X-Men and the Fantastic Four. Granted, the entirety of such an expansive universe would be impossible to portray on film.
The common refrain from reviews of Avengers: Age of Ultron is that the movie can feel too crowded at times — and that's with just a fraction of the Avengers. For a long time, evil was typically represented in comic books by a villain with dreams of amassing a ton of wealth. He or she would rob a bank, get caught, and that would be the end of it. That didn't happen with Ultron. Technically, the character first appears in Avengers N o.
In disguise, Ultron goes by the name Crimson Cowl and is, yes, draped in a crimson pink cowl. Readers soon learn the Cowl has assembled a group of villains who want to take down the Avengers. Ultron wants to capture the Avengers, stick them in a hydrogen bomb, and blow it up over Manhattan:. In writing a story with such high stakes, Thomas wasn't just setting the form of one of the greatest Avengers villains in history — he was also changing the characterization of evil.
The move helped usher in a different, darker way to tell stories. Thomas, an English teacher in Missouri before his Marvel years, was an avid fan of comic books before joining Marvel, carefully positioned Ultron as a leader and ultimately demoting the Avengers' established group of foes, the "Masters of Evil" — a ragtag group of silly super villains like the Klaw and Whirlwind— by making them Ultron's puppets:.
Thomas's work on Ultron reflects the fears of the Cold War era. Joss Whedon has tweaked that in Age of Ultron, making Ultron embody the fears of AI and the singularity rather than a hydrogen bomb. But Ultron's nihilistic heart and mission remain the same. Avengers: Age of Ultron is already a hit, and Marvel has lined up sequels and Avengers tie-ins through So the next question is, "What kind of stories will Marvel choose to tell next?
The studio has yet to showcase a female character or a nonwhite character in its movies. That's why there's a lot of attention on its upcoming Black Panther and Captain Marvel films — both characters are A-list Avengers in the comic books, and both have a rich history for Marvel to drawn on.
And Marvel, as it did with Iron Man, will have to figure out how to make these characters and their stories stand out if it wants to avoid the oncoming tsunami of superhero fatigue.
Superman, and a bevy of other films in its own hopper. If Age of Ultron feels crowded with the addition of two characters, what will we be looking at come , when the second half of Avengers: Infinity War hits theaters? Even though Infinity War is the last Avengers movie on Marvel's schedule, that's only temporary.
There's a deep well full of stories and characters that the company has yet to tap into. And there are plenty of stories involving characters already in the mix that Marvel hasn't even touched. If there's one thing Marvel and the Avengers have taught us, it's that this franchise will never die.
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Related Story. The Avengers were first assembled by Marvel Comics in Avengers 1 , back in September , with the gang deciding to unite following some spirited scrapping between Iron Man and the Hulk. In Whedon's re-telling, the geometry of discord is considerably more complex: Captain America bickers with Iron Man, who bickers with Thor, who bickers with the Hulk, who bickers with Black Widow.
It's like an episode of Desperate Housewives with repulsor rays. The only one not to join in the squabbling is Hawkeye who goes by his street name of Clint Barton , and that's because he's genuinely trying to kill them all, having been psychically enthralled by the villainous Loki
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