Local band Stop Light Observations to perform at First Flush Festeaval, then Bonnaroo

Local band Stop Light Observations to perform at First Flush Festeaval, then Bonnaroo

In terms of rising to rock stardom, Stop Light Observations technically should still be in its infancy. The group of 20- to 21-year-olds has been...

Second annual Charleston Beer Garden aims for educational fun in the sun at Brittlebank Park

Second annual Charleston Beer Garden aims for educational fun in the sun at Brittlebank Park

There may not be any lederhosen-clad Bavarian types strolling the grounds at this weekend’s Charleston Beer Garden, but there will be a...

Queen of the Blues: Bonnie Raitt still reigns supreme after four decades

Queen of the Blues: Bonnie Raitt still reigns supreme after four decades

The instinct to help people is ingrained in Bonnie Raitt’s DNA, likely somewhere near the gene that gives her the ability to play a mean blues...

‘Star Trek Into Darkness’ has many high notes yet somehow steers its way off course

‘Star Trek Into Darkness’ has many high notes yet somehow steers its way off course

The giddiness of “Star Trek” is gone, but “Star Trek Into Darkness” maintains its love of character and pathos, the other...

‘Star Trek’ director J.J. Abrams takes USS Enterprise in a surprising direction

‘Star Trek’ director J.J. Abrams takes USS Enterprise in a surprising direction

‘You just made my day,” director J.J. Abrams said, exhaling with relief.

Event Calendar

Add an Event | More

`Avengers’ hits big screen with a blast

By CHRISTY LEMIRE
Associated Press

Monday, May 21, 2012

Zade Rosenthal/Disney/AP: Thor (Chris Hemsworth) and Captain America (Chris Evans) join forces in “Marvel’s The Avengers,” opening in theaters Friday. The Joss Whedon-directed action-adventure is presented by Marvel Studios in association with Paramount Pictures and also stars Robert Downey Jr., Mark Ruffalo, Scarlett Johansson, Jeremy Renner and Samuel L. Jackson.

The hype has been building for years, and it couldn’t possibly be more deafening at this point.

Movie Review

???? (out of five stars)

Director: Joss Whedon

Cast: Robert Downey Jr., Chris Evans, Chris Hemsworth, Tom Hiddleston, Scarlett Johansson, Jeremy Renner, Mark Ruffalo

Rated: PG-13 for intense sequences of sci-fi violence and action throughout and a mild drug reference

Running time: 2 hours, 23 minutes

What did you think?: Find this review at charlestonscene.com and offer your opinion.

  • “Marvel’s The Avengers” has Chris Hemsworth as Thor and Chris Evans as Captain America. “Marvel’s The Avengers” has Chris Hemsworth as Thor and Chris Evans as Captain America.
  • Chris Evans (left) and Robert Downey Jr. are shown in “Marvel’s The Avengers” Chris Evans (left) and Robert Downey Jr. are shown in “Marvel’s The Avengers”
  • Jeremy Renner stars as Hawkeye and Scarlett Johansson as Black Widow in “Marvel’s The Avengers,” opening Friday. Jeremy Renner stars as Hawkeye and Scarlett Johansson as Black Widow in “Marvel’s The Avengers,” opening Friday.
  • Samuel L. Jackson plays Nick Fury. Samuel L. Jackson plays Nick Fury.
  • Samuel L. Jackson stars as Nick Fury. Samuel L. Jackson stars as Nick Fury.
  • Robert Downey Jr. (left), and Chris Evans are shown in a scene from “The Avengers.” Robert Downey Jr. (left), and Chris Evans are shown in a scene from “The Avengers.”
  • Mark Ruffalo stars as Bruce Banner and Robert Down Jr. as Iron Man. Mark Ruffalo stars as Bruce Banner and Robert Down Jr. as Iron Man.
  • Chris Hemsworth (left) and Chris Evans are shown in a scene from “The Avengers.” Chris Hemsworth (left) and Chris Evans are shown in a scene from “The Avengers.”
  • Nick Fury (Samuel L. Jackson) is the director of the international peacekeeping organization known as S.H.I.E.L.D in “Marvel’s The Avengers,” opening in theaters Friday. Nick Fury (Samuel L. Jackson) is the director of the international peacekeeping organization known as S.H.I.E.L.D in “Marvel’s The Avengers,” opening in theaters Friday.
  • Agent Phil Coulson (Clark Gregg) and Thor (Chris Hemsworth). Agent Phil Coulson (Clark Gregg) and Thor (Chris Hemsworth).
  • Hawkeye (Jeremy Renner, from left), Captain America (Chris Evans) & Black Widow (Scarlett Johansson) in “Marvel’s The Avengers.” Hawkeye (Jeremy Renner, from left), Captain America (Chris Evans) & Black Widow (Scarlett Johansson) in “Marvel’s The Avengers.”
  • Nick Fury (Samuel L. Jackson, left) talks with Steve Rogers (Chris Evans), aka Captain America. Nick Fury (Samuel L. Jackson, left) talks with Steve Rogers (Chris Evans), aka Captain America.
  • Robert Downey Jr. stars as Iron Man in “Marvel’s The Avengers.” Robert Downey Jr. stars as Iron Man in “Marvel’s The Avengers.”

After a series of summer blockbusters that individually introduced Iron Man, the Incredible Hulk, Thor and Captain America, all these characters come together alongside several other friends and foes in Marvel’s “The Avengers.”

And with director and co-writer Joss Whedon, they couldn’t be in better hands. He’s pulled off the tricky feat of juggling a large ensemble cast and giving everyone a chance to shine, of balancing splashy set pieces with substantive ideology.

Stuff gets blown up real good in beautifully detailed 3-D in “The Avengers.” The area in and around Grand Central Terminal, for example, gets obliterated beyond recognition in an exhausting, climactic battle. But the film as a whole is never a mess from a narrative perspective.

Whedon keeps a tight rein on some potentially unwieldy material, and the result is a film that simultaneously should please purists (one of which he is) and those who aren’t necessarily comic book aficionados. He also stays true to the characters while establishing a tone that’s very much his own.

As he did with the recent horror hit “The Cabin in the Woods,” which he co-wrote and produced, Whedon has come up with a script that’s cheeky and breezy, full of witty banter and sly pop-culture shout-outs as well as self-referential humor, one that moves with an infectious energy that (almost) makes you lose track of its 2-and-a-half hour running time.

The back-and-forth between Robert Downey Jr.’s glib Iron Man and Chris Evans’ old-school Captain America is electric, while Downey’s more low-key, philosophical exchanges with Mark Ruffalo’s Hulk help give the film some intellectual heft.

Actually, Downey just about runs away with this whole thing, a tough feat to pull off in a cast full of personalities who are larger than life; it just goes to show once again how irresistibly charismatic he can be with the right kind of writing.

But the film’s vibe is never smug or off-putting; these still are comic book heroes full of all the torment and introspection you’d expect. And for a movie that’s violent as all get out, “The Avengers” ends up being an earnest plea for peace.

As in the best of its predecessors, the original “Iron Man” from 2008, it’s a reminder that a summer blockbuster can be glossy and entertaining but still have meatier matters on its mind.

And we haven’t even gotten to the plot yet: It’s your basic bad-guy-wants-to-take-over-the-world kind of thing. But even Whedon seems to recognize what a hackneyed premise that is, so he has a little fun with it.

The preening, effete Loki (Tom Hiddleston), the bitter brother of hunky demigod Thor (Chris Hemsworth), descends to Earth from Asgard, which still has a distinctly ’70s cheesiness about its twinkly sci-fi aesthetic.

Once here, he steals the Tesseract, the cosmic blue cube that gives its bearer unlimited power, or some such.

The no-nonsense Nick Fury (Samuel L. Jackson), the head of SHIELD, which had been entrusted with the safety of said cube, springs into action to reacquire it by assembling a dream team of superheroes and other sundry folks with specialized skills. Nick gets help in this endeavor from his right-hand man, Agent Coulson (Clark Gregg).

Besides Iron Man, Thor and Captain America, the Hulk’s services are needed because the Tesseract exudes a radiation that will help track it, and the Hulk, despite the threat of his gigantic, green volatility, knows a little something about gamma rays. (Ruffalo, stepping into the Bruce Banner role that Eric Bana and Edward Norton played previously in the past decade, brings a sense of wry bemusement and appealing self-deprecation to this dangerous and misunderstood character.)

There’s also master assassin Hawkeye (Jeremy Renner) and super spy Black Widow (Scarlett Johansson).

But because these are superheroes with super powers, they also have super egos. And so a great deal of time is spent having them talk a lot of trash and square off against one another to prove who’s toughest.

There’s Iron Man vs. Thor, Thor vs. The Hulk, Hawkeye vs. Black Widow and so on. While they might seem like filler, these showdowns allow each character to have his or her time in the spotlight, and they do build genuine tension. They also happen to represent the adolescent fantasies of every geek in the audience. So in theory, everyone’s happy.

Eventually they will have to come together for one epic battle against their shared enemy in Midtown Manhattan, home of Iron Man Tony Stark’s latest dazzling architectural creation, his eponymous high-rise, and a cool place in general to stage massive movie destruction.

“The Avengers” is at its strongest in its quieter, simpler moments, when people are actually talking to each other. The dialogue sparkles as brightly as the special effects; these people may be wearing ridiculous costumes but they’re well fleshed-out underneath. And so in every regard, this movie truly fulfills its hype.