Oh Vision matters... to Phase 3. In this movie he sticks out like a sore thumb. The only people I talked to who were excited about him were already comic readers, everyone else was really confused by his presence.voltair27 said:Well, I'd say that the Birth of Vision and the Maximoff Twins were pretty significant additions...
It's not so much that the movies reference them, it's that they fit together. Almost everything about Phase 1 ties into Avengers 1, and just about everything in Phase 2 spins out of it. If you decided to skip Avengers, there'd be a giant hole in the MCU that doesn't make sense. (Iron Man's PTSD, the weapons build-up in Winter Soldier, why Loki is even more reviled by Jane/Asgard, etc)Pyrian said:Oh, please. I mean, your entire argument boils down to "Avengers I is more 'substantial' in that it's referenced in subsequent movies and Avengers II isn't" at a time when there are no movies subsequent to Avengers II. Do you seriously believe that the events in Age of Ultron aren't going to come up? Scarlet Witch isn't going to come up again? Vision isn't going to come up again? Nor his infinity stone? Hulk's disappearance isn't going to come up again? Cap & Tony's disagreement isn't going to come up again?
They're ALL going to come up again.
I agree. But Age of Ultron could've easily gone one step further and ended with Iron Man and Cap still pissed at each other. It perfectly explains why Stark leaves the Avengers, and makes it easier to generate tension between them in Civil War. There's no reason to smooth their relationship over if the rift will just be torn open again immediately.Scars Unseen said:Also keep in mind that Ultron was born of Stark's hubris... and the Mind Stone. It also establishes that Stark is willing to go to unreasonable lengths to make the world secure(important for Civil War). Honestly, aside from the building of the team itself, I can't really say that the first Avengers was any more important in the long term than the second. And it would be a little weird to go straight from "The Avengers have formed and they are awesome!" to "And now they in an all out war against each other because reasons!"
I think that for Civil War to not be an abrupt "where the fuck did that come from" disruption of the MCU, it is important that they showed that the Avengers are important for more reasons than just one battle they fought in New York. Call it filler if you like, but they needed to be shown doing things together before we rip them apart.
Hold on, Vision and the Maximoffs may be a few items, but they're incredibly important characters. Perhaps the Maximoffs could have been introduced later, but Vision and Ultron are tied together inherently. You can't spontaneously have the Vision appear without Ultron and skipping over Ultron would be a terrible idea since he's a pretty major character.Fanghawk said:It's not so much that the movies reference them, it's that they fit together. Almost everything about Phase 1 ties into Avengers 1, and just about everything in Phase 2 spins out of it. If you decided to skip Avengers, there'd be a giant hole in the MCU that doesn't make sense. (Iron Man's PTSD, the weapons build-up in Winter Soldier, why Loki is even more reviled by Jane/Asgard, etc)
But if you skipped Age of Ultron, there's only a couple things you're missing (Vision and the new Avengers members) which could just have easily be introduced in the Phase 3 films where they're actually relevant. Plus Phase 3 looks like it will have its own internal storyline leading up to Infinity War, where that robot army was just a tiny blip on the radar.
Sure, it's still pretty early and I could be wrong, but it's a lot easier to sweep the events of Age of Ultron under the rug than the previous movies.
They make jokes, but they basically have S.H.I.E.L.D. again. Same equipment, same seemingly limitless amount of supplies, same control over the governments of the world (that base didn't build itself).piscian said:No they comment on it a lot. Even at the beginning. When strucker says "technically I work for shield" Cap replies "well then youre out of a job". Then entire deal with Nick fury and having to find a an old helicarrier to help out. Shield is gone and "New Avengers" is the temporary replacement.Evonisia said:Captain America: The Winter Soldier flipped everything on its head... until both Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D. and Age of Ultron quietly omit that it ever happened.
I don't watch the TV show so I wouldn't know about that. Moviebob seemed to indicate it was integrated into the show.
Na, that was the last one. However, in classic comicbook style we didn't see the last one get destroyed did we? We saw it lung at Vision followed by a cutaway and a blinding light from the gem. Given that Vision was so adamant that Ultron was Unique, and he didn't want to destroy him, but must can we really assume that Vision actually destroyed him. Also given that The Vision isn't actually a pure Vision and actuallypiscian said:Seems par for the course in the comics. The one vision destroyed was just the last one online, as long as the cortex of any of those bodies survived as soon as someone powers it up he'll be back.sirtommygunn said:Why is everybody so sure that Ultron is gone for good? The last copy of him is confronted, alone, by the one character who has told everyone else that he would "rather see [Ultron] alive than dead". He only agrees to kill Ultron because Ultron is a threat to the entire planet. When Vision finds that last Ultron, Ultron has been completely removed from any source of power. His clones are all destroyed, all his work has been dismantled, even his last body has large parts of it torn off and worst of all, he's been permanently disconnected from the internet.
So now we see Vision alone in the woods with a unique form of life that he'd like to keep alive, and in an off-screen flash of light kills him? I'm calling bullshit on that. There's pretty much no way Vision isn't hiding him somewhere that he believes Ultron can't become a threat again (and thus, most certainly will become a threat again).
Yeah, that bugged me with the start, especially considering Iron Man 3 seemed to say that Tony Stark would be stepping back from the full Iron Man mode. Maybe Agents of Shield explains it, but the beginning was a tad hand-wavy. Especially considering Shield's collapse in Winter Soldier, it makes me wonder who is actually contacting them. They say Cap's the leader, but I'm not sure how he has Thor's number. Even the "Lullaby" for the Hulk seemed like a relatively practiced element, but there was no in-universe explanation for the reformation.Virtual Boy said:I didn't like how there was no explanation as to why the Avengers were the Avengers again. In the last Avengers movie they all go there separate ways, through the phase 2 they have no interaction throughout all of their individual movies. Then all of a sudden out of nowhere they're a team again with no explanation as to why. I get that they were going after Hydra, but a scene where they reform would have been nice.