freckles_and_doubt: (Default)
Freckles & Doubt ([personal profile] freckles_and_doubt) wrote2012-04-30 11:51 am

Hulk? smash!

Ways in which The Avengers, seen yesterday at Cavendish, was precisely calculated to elicit outbreaks of geeky and fangirly glee:

  1. Trailer for The Hobbit. Squeee! (The dwarves singing still makes me cry.)
  2. Trailer for Prometheus. It looks both gritty and beautiful, and I will overcome my dislike of being scared in movies to actually see it.
  3. Trailer for Spiderman. I like Spidey, and anything has to be better than Tobey McGuire.
  4. Trailer for Men in Black III. Even if it's terrible, the essential good nature both of the movie and of its stars is likely to make it watchable. Also, aliens ftw. And, could the summer releases be any more geek-friendly? We've mainstreamed. Oo, er.
  5. The movie. Joss Whedon is my master now. That was a perfect balance of character development, humour, pathos and severely kick-butt action. Wheee. I shall probably dissect it at length anon, but I'm still cogitating.
Ways in which watching The Avengers in Cavendish was precisely calculated to eject me from the cinema growling and swearing and gnashing my teeth at passing kiddies:

  1. The 3-D. While this was nicely handled in the movie, I deeply and fundamentally object to the darkness of picture which inevitably results. Cavendish's light levels are always too low anyway, and there were tracts of this which were murky beyond belief. I will be delaying my re-watch until someone puts it on in 2-D.
  2. The ham-fisted and oblivious incompetence of the Cavendish projector team, who turned the lights on full halfway through the mid-credit scene, rendering it both illegible and inaudible as two-thirds of the audience immediately started talking and leaving. I also have no idea if there was the usual post-credits easter egg, as there was no point in waiting for a tantalising washed-out glimpse. The level of fury this has engendered in me is slightly worrying. They may as well have replaced the entire credits with a large sign reading "YOUR EXPERIENCE FAR LESS IMPORTANT THAN YOUR SPEEDY EJECTION IN FAVOUR OF THE NEXT LOT OF BUTTS ON SEATS".
  3. The inutterable twit who insisted on waiting for my parking place as I was leaving, blocking the road and forcing me to approach the ticket machine at right angles and necessitating a lot of backing and filling in the middle of a stream of cars. I'm afraid I shouted rude words at him.
It's actually bizarre how badly the lights-on thing wrecked my experience of the movie. The easter eggs are a sort of geeky in-joke, and staying for them is an expression both of insider knowledge and of investment in the text, both of which the unspeakably malignant cinema is obliviously slapping in the face. I swear, most of my future watching is going to be on the DVD version, and I hope Ster-Kinekor, its empty cinemas and all its bloody incompetent ilk sink gently into the sea.

On the other hand, mad props to the actual 6 students in my class this morning. There should be about 40, but on a Monday between public holidays I was expecting about 3, and I'll cheerfully settle for twice that.

[identity profile] strawberryfrog.livejournal.com 2012-04-30 09:54 am (UTC)(link)
1) You got much, much better trailers than us. Prometheus. Soon.

2) We did get a much better look at The Easter Egg than you. Followed by late-night googling of What It Meant. I'm not that much of a Marvel comics nerd to just know.

[identity profile] pinkthulhu.livejournal.com 2012-04-30 12:22 pm (UTC)(link)
I enjoyed the film, although I thought the use of that Tesseract McGuffin was a little lame. Shurely any infinite energy device would have been emphatically stamped on by the vested oil-interests in the US government. :-)

The easter egg used to appear right at the very very end of the credits, after you've read who was PA to Ms Johannson and who provided corporate finance - now they have it just after the main credits?! Whats with that? :-)

Eggie.

[identity profile] first-fallen.livejournal.com 2012-05-01 06:46 pm (UTC)(link)
There was no post-credit Easter Egg, it was that bit sort of partway through the credits. I wonder if they realised that people just weren't staying until the end of the credits? I always do anyway, just in case.

Lots of place are showing it in 2D, we saw it at Canal Walk. It's still selling out though so I would encourage anyone going to see it in any format before the end of May to book :). We definitely want to go see it again.

I found Whedon's dialogue a little irritating and I didn't like the way Tony was reduced to "the comic relief" at some points but I guess that's what you get in an ensemble movie. Overall I really enjoyed it and thought it was awesome.

[identity profile] pinkthulhu.livejournal.com 2012-05-04 01:52 pm (UTC)(link)
On a non-related note, have you seen this?

http://hungoverowls.tumblr.com/

I’m in the lost and found sitting on the shelf*

[identity profile] livejournal.livejournal.com 2012-05-07 11:17 am (UTC)(link)
User [livejournal.com profile] bending_sickle referenced to your post from I’m in the lost and found sitting on the shelf* (http://bending-sickle.livejournal.com/484349.html) saying: [...] The Avengers: 's Squee review [...]