Right. Which I would assume happens in the movie next year, so I didn't really feel the full weight of those losses at the end because you'd just assume they're not really fully dead.
Again, that's the phone that was delivered to Tony at the very end of Civil War, sent to him by Cap._lefraud_ said:PooDoo said:
The Banner/Hulk erectile disfunction bit was funny.
Pirate Angel was good too.
Anyone find it odd that Tony Stark had a flip phone?-
I took it as a shot at Cap. Tony only uses an outdated phone to get a hold of Cap, I assume "Steve Rogers" is the only contact saved to that phone.
AverageJones said:
So how the hell is Tony supposed to get back to earth? It's just him and Nebula on Titan with no ship? I guess Thor can rainbow them back if the can communicate somehow
Must suck to go through all of that crap on the island from Lost only to then get disintegrated back in the real world. Her actually name is Hope van Dyne though, not Kate Austen.ScottBowen said:
I've heard Ant-Man takes place before and during IW. So the last scene of the movie will probably be one of them disintegrating, probably Kate.
TCTTS said:
Had a ton of fun with this.
I was shocked at how well-distributed the story is. To have a cast this huge, with this many big names to service, and to have not one character feel even remotely short-changed... it's just an incredible feat.
I laughed a ton. The action was great. The effects were phenomenal. And they did an amazing job with Thanos. After how much he's been built up over the years, and how it was starting to feel like they weren't going to deliver, they came through ten fold and gave us a truly formidable and compelling villain.
Really, this was a sold effort that I'd probably place somewhere in the top eight or so of the MCU.
That, said...
I ******* hate "magic" in movies so damn much.
It's the same reason I could never truly connect with the Harry Potter franchise. There was always a spell for every situation, so it never felt like they were truly in a pickle, but at least in that franchise death actually seemed to be permanent.
And I know everything in this universe is technically based on science, but man, the finger snap effectively ruined this franchise for me going forward. And trust me, I get it. This is what it's always been building to and where it always had to go. We all knew that moment was coming. Still, never mind the myriad characters who bit the dust (or became it, rather), the death of *stakes* is what got me most.
I honestly don't understand all the "shocked," "I need some time to compose myself," "That was so emotional" sentiments I've seen in this thread and on Twitter. Nothing at the end of this movie meant a thing to me because every last bit of it is so clearly going be undone in the next movie.
There's going to be a Spider-Man 2.
There's going to be a Guardians 3.
There's going to be a Black Panther 2.
And there's likely going to be a Doctor Strange 2.
None of those characters truly died. And thus, none of those fleeting, heartfelt goodbyes meant a damn thing.
And what's worse is, say they (obviously) manage to reverse the deaths of those turned to dust... but then not Loki and Gamora? Because they happened to die a few hours earlier do they not get saved? Conversely, if they manage to turn back the clock to before even their deaths, death itself in this universe becomes even less permanent than it already is now. It's a no win situation.
I mean, Peter Parker has now not only been to space, he has literally died. So what can they possibly do with him in his next solo adventure that's going to feel even remotely consequential comparatively? I'm sure it'll still be fun and charming, but this movie rendered the outcome of that one pointless for me. Are we supposed to fear that, ok, he can really die this time?
I'm still interested to see the sheer mechanics of the next Avengers movie and how they get out of this mess, but it's strictly a curiosity of the process at this point and not of the end result anymore.
I don't know, again, I'm conflicted because I really did enjoy the movie itself. I just hated how cheap the ending was, even though we saw it coming from a mile away. I guess I just hoped it wouldn't be that blatantly hollow somehow.
Ant-man (maybe Captain Marvel?) and time travel.Quote:
I'm still interested to see the sheer mechanics of the next Avengers movie and how they get out of this mess, but it's strictly a curiosity of the process at this point and not of the end result anymore.
cav14 said:
- Did the axe give Thor Bi-frost intergalactic transport abilities now?
titanmaster_race said:
Avengers: Infinity War was a better movie about the rapture than Left Behind was.
TCTTS said:
Had a ton of fun with this.
I was shocked at how well-distributed the story is. To have a cast this huge, with this many big names to service, and to have not one character feel even remotely short-changed... it's just an incredible feat.
I laughed a ton. The action was great. The effects were phenomenal. And they did an amazing job with Thanos. After how much he's been built up over the years, and how it was starting to feel like they weren't going to deliver, they came through ten fold and gave us a truly formidable and compelling villain.
Really, this was a sold effort that I'd probably place somewhere in the top eight or so of the MCU.
That, said...
I ******* hate "magic" in movies so damn much.
It's the same reason I could never truly connect with the Harry Potter franchise. There was always a spell for every situation, so it never felt like they were truly in a pickle, but at least in that franchise death actually seemed to be permanent.
And I know everything in this universe is technically based on science, but man, the finger snap effectively ruined this franchise for me going forward. And trust me, I get it. This is what it's always been building to and where it always had to go. We all knew that moment was coming. Still, never mind the myriad characters who bit the dust (or became it, rather), the death of *stakes* is what got me most.
I honestly don't understand all the "shocked," "I need some time to compose myself," "That was so emotional" sentiments I've seen in this thread and on Twitter. Nothing at the end of this movie meant a thing to me because every last bit of it is so clearly going be undone in the next movie.
There's going to be a Spider-Man 2.
There's going to be a Guardians 3.
There's going to be a Black Panther 2.
And there's likely going to be a Doctor Strange 2.
None of those characters truly died. And thus, none of those fleeting, heartfelt goodbyes meant a damn thing.
And what's worse is, say they (obviously) manage to reverse the deaths of those turned to dust... but then not Loki and Gamora? Because they happened to die a few hours earlier do they not get saved? Conversely, if they manage to turn back the clock to before even their deaths, death itself in this universe becomes even less permanent than it already is now. It's a no win situation.
I mean, Peter Parker has now not only been to space, he has literally died. So what can they possibly do with him in his next solo adventure that's going to feel even remotely consequential comparatively? I'm sure it'll still be fun and charming, but this movie rendered the outcome of that one pointless for me. Are we supposed to fear that, ok, he can really die this time?
I'm still interested to see the sheer mechanics of the next Avengers movie and how they get out of this mess, but it's strictly a curiosity of the process at this point and not of the end result anymore.
I don't know, again, I'm conflicted because I really did enjoy the movie itself. I just hated how cheap the ending was, even though we saw it coming from a mile away. I guess I just hoped it wouldn't be that blatantly hollow somehow.
my wife got mad at me cause I reached for a big ole handful of popcorn and started munching away during the scilence...Cromagnum said:
It was all fun and games until the snap, then my theater was as quiet as a church until the end credits.