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Part 1

Coulson vs. Tony Stark 1 / Tony and Pepper 1 (cont.) A second sidebar here: I am not sure the Tony/Pepper relationship evolves in a way that makes sense between IM1, IM2, and here. That's because Tony and Pepper getting together at the end of IM2 doesn't actually fix why they were going off the rails in that movie (in the same sense that Tony dying of palladium poisoning shouldn't have been the reason for his meltdown, it should've been because he wasn't able to cope. Because the IM tone is just that bit more realistic than most superhero movies). In fact, the only archetypal arc that works for Pepper/Tony across the three films is the old-school screwball "comedy of remarriage": in a very real sense, Pepper was married to Tony to begin with. She is his chatelaine. They just had to renegotiate the terms of their marriage (more equality, less unilateral taking of BS, more sex...). I almost think Pepper had further to go, psychologically speaking; my guess is she was de facto acting CEO from the moment Obie bought it, but she couldn't picture any formal forward step from "PA" than "PA who is sleeping with her boss, thanks but no thanks." Whereas for Tony, it was always a matter of a best friend becoming more, and either he turns out to be a bad boyfriend or he doesn't, either she hates him for ruining it or she doesn't.

I could make a sidebar-within-a-sidebar re: how Gwyneth Paltrow infuses at least as much of herself into movie!Pepper as RDJ infuses himself into movie!Tony, it's just that no one thinks about Gwyneth vs. Pepper because the Gwyneth Paltrow persona pisses people off. In the IM1 DVD extras she talked about how her brother read comics so she grew up around them but she didn't read them because... she was a girl. XD

Anyway. Tony/Pepper: uber-cute in The Avengers! Thanks for being a shipper, RDJ! Tony is way more centred here than in the IM movies, not only because of Pepper, but because Pepper and superhero-ing mean he doesn't have to be "Tony Stark" a lot of the time. He's still going to blow off Phil Coulson and SHIELD, though, which is a lot of funny here but only sets up the sad later on. It does turn out that Pepper and Coulson are personally friendly, which is lovely.

EDIT -- Sidebar the third (or fourth?) I keep forgetting to mention actual plot points. In the real world (ha ha), governments would be way more interested in a scaleable arc reactor that can slot into the grid than in the Iron Man, and Stark Industries' P/E ratio would stay rock bottom as long as Tony keeps flying around in the thing. But I like the green energy angle, which was the best idea in that Iron Man anime by a long stretch (I only watched a bit of it because Fujiwara Keiji, of all seiyuu, dubs Robert Downey Jr.'s roles). And yes, in the real world, if Tony were going to proliferate the things for commercial use anywhere, it would be Japan.

LOKI2: more aliens and stuff. Does this go here? The alien stuff is negligeable, anyway, but viewers of Thor will recognize that Loki mentally edited his past in order to justify his actions. He didn't want to be king in Thor; it didn't occur to him until literally 10 minutes before the end of the movie, in the same way that it didn't occur to Pepper she could be CEO until the job was offered to her. Dude is creys and it's all kinds of sad. In general I think Loki hits that coveted movie villain sweet spot, where you go oh man I grok how saddo you are, but you deserved that beating all the same.

The hypnosis spell is interesting: it speaks to whatever could lead you astray without you even knowing it. Makes you wonder what would have happened to Tony, had he been susceptible. ...Plot? They need a chunk of iridium, IIRC.

Captain America vs. Coulson 1 / Black Widow / Bruce Banner. Coulson being a Cap fanboy: bring on the moƩ. Coulson gets a lot of perceptive statements, as if part of his characterization is that ability to sum up a person in a sentence. People want a bit of old-fashioned to ground them: that redefines the role of Captain America for the 21st century, right there.

Meanwhile, Steve and Natasha are so professionally cordial that one suspects they've worked together before -- or they came to an immediate instinctive agreement to remain in their mutually preferred mode of dry competence. (EDIT -- on watch #3, it's very definitely the latter. Future generations thank you, Peggy, for teaching him how to talk to women - professionally deadly women, anyway.) And then the Hulk was a big honking metaphor for ableism and mental health stigma. XD; Am I the only one unnerved that this action movie got the subtleties effortlessly right? What I mean is, Steve made his mind up about Bruce before they met, and what he decided was that Dr. Bruce "as smart as Steven Hawking" Banner mattered and his condition was none of Steve's business. (Except how Bruce getting gamma-rayed was obscurely the serum's fault, and therefore Steve's.) Because he is Captain America, he is 100% sincere and disarming, and Bruce believes him. But he still sets the Hulk apart as a negative, damage to manage, and not an integral aspect of Bruce himself.

Part 3

Date: 2012-05-15 04:46 pm (UTC)
sub_divided: cos it gets me through, hope you never stop (Default)
From: [personal profile] sub_divided
I guess I disagree with the review because I thought the movie had an emotional climax: Banner being Hulk in a constructive way, Cap'n Amerrca being recognized by the NYPD as a commander on the ground, Iron Man sacrificing himself (though really it's kinda in keeping with his character to go out in the most dramatic way possible so, not so much a character development moment as a "your time to shine" moment), Hawkeye getting to make good after betraying the others, etc. There's no TEAM revelatory moment, but nearly every member of the cast has an INDIVIDUAL revelatory moment.

I do agree there was a bit of sloppy editing re: Loki's staff of doom (though I caught that it was influencing everyone to fight). "The Avengers can't work together" theme is more "the Avengers are distrustful of authority and can't work for SHIELD" - and the movie shows that they are right to think this way - it was never about whether they would individually get along. So I guess I think the unresolved conflict has to do with them working for SHIELD more than working with each other, and the way to resolve that would be to show that while they might not trust the institution, they like and trust the good people who are working there like Fury, Maria Hill, Coulson, BW, Hawkeye, perhaps that scientist dude who was never seen again, etc. Actually this is just reinforcing my feeling that the SHIELD weapons-reveal thing was mishandled because it should have been used to show how Nick Fury is playing the game. (Someone should write that fanfic.)

In other words, "the Avengers can't get along" is a fiction SHIELD uses to justify not wanting these people to team up and, perhaps, represent a threat to SHIELD's monopoly on shady extra-national power. (Which is why Cap'n America working for them is the most ironic thing, but BW and Hawkeye working for them makes perfect sense.)

Date: 2012-05-16 07:50 pm (UTC)
sub_divided: cos it gets me through, hope you never stop (Default)
From: [personal profile] sub_divided
Yeah, that's exactly what I mean - that he actually brought the Avengers on board so they could find the weapons and get rid of them, because Nick Fury doesn't like having all that firepower concentrated in one place. He'd rather work with a bunch of "unstable" individuals who can exercise independent judgement than have a bunch of superweapons lying around that can be used by anyone with security clearance.

It's really anti-democratic, in the superhero way, because it assumes that some special people can be trusted with power, but a (representative?) committee can't be. Or maybe he knows something about his bosses that we don't. I dunno, there's a kind of tension in the movie because SHIELD are so shadowy, but their tech and ability to spy on everyone etc. actually helps to defeat the aliens.

Oh! That reminds me: about Treize Kushranada, I thought he was crazy too, until I watched the original Gundam where 9/10 of humanity is wiped out before the series even starts because they live in space stations that can be blown up. The whole Gundam concept from the beginning is a way to limit the amount of damage that's done when very industrialized nations fight each other. I think it makes sense to think of war as a kind of contract where each side agrees to only fight the designated soldiers of the other side with designated weapons, to limit the casualties... using Gundam tech is a way that the GDP/development powers of the two sides can still come into play, because those things are hella expensive to make. It's confused, and Treize is crazy because he's obsessed with earlier eras of combat and "aesthetics" more than winning, but I kind of see GW as being about, like... cycles of forgetting the reason for setting up rules of combat in the first place, going back to more destructive/impersonal forms of fighting, and having to be reminded through atrocity why sometimes it's not rational to be 'rational'. Also like you said, it's more exciting to watch >_>.

I thought I put the thing about Nick Fury in a comment to you somewhere, but maybe it was just at metafilter. I hope they address this Nick Fury/SHIELD thing in the next movie, because I don't think it's really been resolved - who are SHIELD really? (Ironically, I guess this means I agree with the US Pentagon.)

About Cap'n America and Tony Stark butting heads, I now wonder if it's because, in his over-preparatory zeal, RDJ and/or Joss Whedon read all the Avengers backissues where this is the main conflict within the group. You mentioned the one where Iron Man turns into a woman and marries Cap'n America on tumblr, right?

It's awesome how ScarJo becomes the center of every group interview. That's a charismatic person.

Date: 2012-05-16 07:57 pm (UTC)
sub_divided: cos it gets me through, hope you never stop (Default)
From: [personal profile] sub_divided
Maybe the staff just amplifies what's already there. Maybe it was even good in a way, because normally everyone except Tony would have been repressing their natural annoyance, anger, distrust, etc and been adult and professional. And so, because they would have been guarded, it would have taken ages for them to really talk and/or to work through their issues, so that they could bond afterward. Maybe Loki did them a favor! Maybe this is why Tony Stark/RDJ prods people in the first place, because he doesn't have the patience for "niceties".

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