Review: ‘Avengers: Endgame’ is Marvel’s machine in high gear

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Satisfaction is a complicated concept in Marvel Land. On the one hand, every morsel of pre-release
information is obsessively pored over in feverish anticipation. But by the time the movie is coming out,
a sudden hush comes over die-hard fans who, to avoid spoilers, have abandoned their phones, detached
from the grid and found a quiet ditch to lie in until the coast is clear and the multiplex is open. It’s
an anguished dance between wanting to know everything and nothing, at once. And it never ceases. No
Marvel ending (usually) lasts past the credits.
Those fans won’t read this review, but "Avengers: Endgame" will, I suspect, offer them
gratification and maybe a welcome moment of respite. "Endgame" not only answers the
cliffhanger of its predecessor — that puny $300 million, 156-minute "appetizer" better known
as "Infinity War" — but ties together the entire 22-film arc of the Marvel "cinematic
universe," begun with 2008’s "Iron Man."
Generous in humor, spirit and sentimentality, Anthony and Joe Russo’s "Endgame" is a
surprisingly full feast of blockbuster-making that, through some time-traveling magic, looks back
nostalgically at Marvel’s decade of world domination. This is the Marvel machine working at high gear,
in full control of its myth-making powers and uncovering more emotion in its fictional cosmos than ever
before.
It was Robert Downey Jr.’s Tony Stark (Iron Man) who kicked things off for the MCU, and it’s he who opens
"Endgame" and most often takes center stage. Providing even the most basic of plot points in
"Endgame" is a fool’s errand, but it’s fair to say it takes place some time after the rapture
caused by the megalomaniac boulder Thanos (Josh Brolin). Having obtained all six of the "infinity
stones," he wiped away 50 percent of Earth’s creatures (and superheroes) at the end of
"Infinity War" with the snap of his fingers.
Rather than bask in the extra parking spaces and uncrowded check-out aisles, the survivors have spent the
ensuing time in a prolonged state of mourning. The remaining superheroes are also reeling, ashamed of
their defeat. One has turned angry and vengeful, another has grown a beer belly. As nauseating as the
aura of momentousness around "Endgame" has been for some, the movie — while certainly not
lacking in ominous solemnity — is frequently funny, as the Russos, working from a script by Christopher
Markus and Stephen McFeely, arrange their heroes in fresh pairings and unlikely contexts.
That’s owed sizably to the cast, which includes a number of top-tier comic actors, chief among them
Downey Jr., but there’s also the thankfully prominent Paul Rudd (Ant-Man) and Avengers regulars Chris
Hemsworth (Thor) and Mark Ruffalo (the Hulk). While Marvel has improved in gender parity (Brie Larson’s
recently launched Captain Marvel plays a small but pivotal role here), its cosmos could still use some
funny actresses. Can Maya Rudolph, please, be made queen of the galaxy?
But it has at least three clown cars’ worth of superheroes. Seldom, if ever, have more movie stars been
brought together in one place; a film with this collection of talent really can’t help but be decent, at
minimum. Among them: Chris Evans’ Captain America, Scarlett Johansson’s Black Widow, Don Cheadle’s War
Machine, Bradley Cooper’s Rocket. Yet the Russos, aided by the film’s ample running time, balance the
characters and story lines swiftly and seamlessly.
Somewhere in this juggling act is a little bit of every tone in the Marvel universe: some of the wit of
"Iron Man," a touch of the madcap romp of "Guardians of the Galaxy," a smidge of the
cosmic saga of "Thor," and even a little of the resonance of "Black Panther." More
than any of those franchises, "Endgame," at its best moments, carries the thrill of classic
comic-book twists and reversals.
But the main difference is that a dose of finality has finally crept into a universe where death is
seldom visited on anyone but the bad guys. "Endgame" will likely be most remembered for its
teary goodbyes. To say who dies would, of course, invite my own demise. But the sendoffs, tender and
sincere, capture something about the "Avengers" films. At their root, they are about family.
Never has that been more apparent than in the daughters, fathers, sons, mothers, sisters, brothers and
spouses that populate "Endgame," making up the connections that bind this fantasy realm — one
that, for all its turmoil, is far more unified than ours.
Other farewells are more legitimately somber. The late Stan Lee here makes his final cameo, and it’s a
good one. Lee’s swan song, as much as anything, verifies that "Endgame" marks the end of an
era.
The conclusion of this chapter in the MCU, of course, won’t last long; Marvel’s assembly lines are
already humming. And I suspect it will be some time before we understand just what Marvel has wrought
with these movies. At their worst, they are colossal, inhuman products built for a supersized form of
binge-watching. At their best, they are grand, mega-sized Hollywood spectacles. It’s not a spoiler to
say that "Endgame" verges more on the latter. At least I don’t think so.
"Avengers: Endgame," a Walt Disney Co. release, is rated PG-13 by the Motion Picture
Association of America for sequences of sci-fi violence and action, and some language. Running time: 181
minutes. Three stars out of four.
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Follow AP Film Writer Jake Coyle on Twitter at: http://twitter.com/jakecoyleAP

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