He didn't even really have one did he? No rematch with Thanos, is given the snap (what I think should have been the natural resolution to Thor's arc by having a chance to redeem himself of inadvertently allowing Thanos to snap, reversing his greatest achievement in revenge for all the horror Thanos brought on Thor) but then has to be saved by Giant Man and just kind of disappears in the background of helping Steve return the artefacts with absolutely no clear image of what he's doing next or any kind of reflection on how the Infinity War and the Endgame affected him. He got ultra shafted. Plus, they never even showed him become Professor Hulk, with no interaction between Bruce and Hulk putting aside their differences to become something more. Instead he just became The Credible Hulk who's embarrassed by smashing anything and who dabs, which they thought was funny. I was not laughing.
@@-Dildo.Baggins. Good Lord man, remember when The Incredible Hulk punched the ground and it was so tame and limp that it barely made a sound let alone actually made any impact that translated to the audience members? I'm not saying he had to break the place down and endanger his team members but good God if the Hulk hits something in devastation, it normally means something more than just a slight thump.
What I hate the most is how they treated Thor’s depression compared to how they treated Wanda’s mental illness. Wanda committed atrocities as a response to her inability to deal with grief and Marvel loves to give excuses for her actions. A fake sympathy for the villain. Thor just got fat because of his deep depression and Marvel treated him as an incompetent slob that all his character arc before that must be reversed. He isn’t fit to rule so he has to give a throne to a drunken slaver who had a track record of selling thousands if not millions innocent people to their death for alcohol money.
Yep Valk is an evil slaver which Marvel (and Thor who was enslaved by her) conveniently forget about. Also we are never shown how she and the others survived off that ship and Thanos' attack at the beginning of Infinity War.
@@samr8603 She is way worse than Wanda yet was barely criticized. At least there are many of the fans called out Wanda for her actions but not for Valkyrie.
@@samr8603 not confirmed but people are saying the dude who sent Hulk to Earth did it, cant take a whole ship so he did it group by group or sum like that
Still destroys me that the only two things Tony needed to solve time travel was a single late night and Paul Rudd reminding him that time travel movies are a thing.
@@DOOM_guyEditz433 I like how Tony was working on it the entire 5 years and Scott just happened to give him the missing piece which was the quantum realm and so "Rather than invent time travel completely, he just had to make some sort of time-space gps. It wasn't a single evening, it was a few days. His AI systems allow for quick and fast calculations and simulations, allowing him to think of and test multiple possibilities in a relatively short time.
Tony is a super genius and has developed full AI and nano-robotics. Him taking "five years" is understandable and reflected in both his persona and physical being post snap. He probably was written to have had an epiphany, not doing so within a "single night". Also he wasn't working on it alone. Professor Hulk and even Scott Lang helped Tony Stark. He just managed to figure it out, which makes sense for being the second smartest person in Marvel comics to Reid Richards. His IQ is at least 186.
@@isaofujii7817 He didn't seriously consider the idea until the biggest clown of the MCU posited the idea and it's implied it took him a matter of days to crack it.
@@donotletthebeeswin Right. And that "clown" has basically a super-computer's worth of intellect. Again, you should consider the source material and look up the word "Eureka moment" because that kind of epiphany is essentially what happened with Tony Stark. Yes, he then was able to patch a way days later. Why? Really, because it's fiction and kinda in the same way that CSI can solve crimes in a manner of days rather than years. Even then, have you seen what all Tony can do? haha. This isn't really anything all to surprising in comparison.
They should of made that Thanos used the stones to maintain his memories post infinity war in every timeline. There’s no way thanos didn’t know that multiple timelines or universes existed and that one can affect another.
@@serily4524 exactly. What they did to Thor goes against everything the character is. That's not how he would react to failure. That's never how he reacts to failure. Not only that but he also hides, and then later completely abandoned his own people. This after just learning about the importance of Asgard as a people, and not just a place in Ragnorak. Undid all the lessons and character development from previous films.
chance for alotta insight on the character and the writer's could've had a good mental health arc for thor (a better one at least,one without all the fucking jokes like jeez)
I didn't mind learning of the time travel plot point while watching Endgame, since I understood there would still be worldwide upheaval. The time travel itself was largely unsatisfying, however, and the "blip" has afterward only been mentioned in passing, at best shown dramatically in one hospital scene in WandaVision. Most of the time, it's handwaved as a thing that happened and got fixed, not as a tragedy that would still shake society to its core.
It's crazy to think that half the MCU is only alive because one heroic rat pressed a button. I guess if the rat didn't do that it would've been eaten by a purple dragon at the end of time.
Yes, a Rat stumbled on a button in a garage the only real problem is that people have done the math and it would not have taken that long like a rat would of found that button within weeks because they are so infested in that part of San Fran.
They didn't even have to get all the stones. All they had to do was get the Time Stone from the past, then use it on Thanos' gauntlet to revert the stones to their original state. There you go, you now have all six stones.
yeah like, all the stones together contribute to a "wish" of sorts that can do something extraordinary like delete half of life or even self destruction.@@TheNwr1
People were so overwhelmed with emotion seeing so many heroes in one place, that they didn't realize what a waste Endgame and Thanos were, how much better it could have been.
I still liked it. I know it's a simple and maybe wrong opinion but watching it made me happy. So happy that I didn't even care for all the mistakes. If I were to defend it in any way I would say that because of the way the mcu is build it didn't need to have a regular story structure because it is the climax of all the movies. But I'm probably wrong.
@@Byronic19134 I didn't get what I wanted. who are those we? Infinity War was great (that is, if you choose to ignore how dumb Thanos' motivation and ideas are) and Endgame is just a nostalgia-fest that not only doesn't make sense, but also shits on multiple characters and their arcs and ignores common sense just for writers to not try. Endgame falls apart the second you turn on your brain
Thor almost single-handedly killed Thanos with 6 stones in Infinity War. The fact that he and Cap combined couldn’t even scratch him with 0 stones in this movie really fucks with the world-building
@@RandomizedCTRL And yet they boost Captain Marvel to the point where she receives a Thanos headbutt like a fly despite that same headbutt knocking out The God Of Thunder (who in the comics is always the greatest physical threat to Thanos and has had many battles 1-1 with him) in one. And then you remember that the same Korath who knew both her in her binary form and Thanos called Thanos 'the most powerful being in the universe' in Guardians, yet here he can't even make her blink, in the final moments of the final battle of the Infinity Saga? It's like they ignored their own continuity in favour of pandering at the expense of their legacy characters. Oh wait, that's exactly what they did, given how all the way back in 2016, at a time when the MCU was still nerfing their characters heavily and yet Feige was rushing in with his 'She'll easily be the most powerful character we've ever had' crap at the expense of the actual favourites and the actual powerful characters like Thor, Strange, Hulk, Wanda (although she has continually received justice in terms of her power and revenge on Thanos).
@Tom Right?! In Captain Marvel she struggles to throw back a missile yet in Endgame they boost her to such game breaking proportion that, in the final fight to save the universe from a genocidal maniac, a culmination of 20 odd movies, they do Thanos such a disservice as a terrifying threat that they show him completely out of control and authority of the situation, being easily overpowered by Captain Marvel before she ignores his headbutt like a fly. And yes he's shown to be resourceful by using the power stone, which is great and true to Thanos, but making him look not just weak (for no reason anyway given Captain Marvel has never traditionally been anywhere close to in his realm of power, getting one shotted by him in the comics) but like he's just shat his pants, wide eyed terrified despite being the same being who smiled a mad grin at the awesome strength of the Hulk, who confidently walked the same Tony down who made him bleed and brutally punished him, who taunted and baited Thor even despite what would have been a mortal axe wound. It's just so bizarre they changed him entirely in favour of Captain Marvel being so broken that she makes him shit himself despite ruining all tension, all stakes and all menace of Thanos in his final moments of, what should be filled with terror.
@@J1283-s1k Not to mention, logically, her being more powerful than a dude with MULTIPLE stones made zero sense as she gained abilities from just one. Blech.
So did Steve go back in time and then just leave his best friend to be brainwashed and turned into a sleeper agent, even though he knew who had him and where to find him?
Kennedy assassination, 9/11, Tony's parents being murdered and a thousand other small and large tragedies that he's aware of... I guess he just sat there, watching tv with Peggy in 2001, pretending to be surprised and horrified?
Does not a single one of you understand how that would change the time-line? Doctor Strange literally saw one possibility of Thanos being beaten, but all of you have to pretend to be smart.
@addison_v_ertisement1678 Steve staying in the past should have changed the timeline. The whole time travel plot line is complete nonsense. I'm just pointing out that the Steve we see in all of these movies would have been on the first flight to Russia as soon as he decided to stay. And Thanos was already beaten at that point anyway.
Never understood why Cap so desperately wanted to go back in time to live a life with Peggy. Not only did he make out with her niece in CW but he barely knew her. They clearly were trying to show him moving on then suddenly in Endgame “Oh I still love her I’m going back.”
I will say that Avengers Endgame shouldn't have ended with the important characters dying. I mean if Marvel didn't know what to do next with them, instead of killing them, they should have just disbanded, and let their story marinate for the future movies. This is where I think Marvel fvcked themselves.
@@FreeBlendersFromAmazon Brother… that would create a comically happy ending without any impact or emotion. Having none of the main heroes die would destroy all tension throughout the entire saga. There NEEDED to be sacrifices or else this entire story would’ve felt pointless.
Honestly. If Thor was kept as he was in the movie, but with it treated as sad and sympathetic rather than a laugh, I'd love it. Depression isn't a joke.
Like imagine Thor in Endgame, you can still have New Asgard, but you have like a big castle where Thor resides sitting in his throne. Kinda like how Asgard was originally. He doesn’t want to help outsiders but only his own people in New Asgard, and if he was to rejoin the Avengers maybe have a line to convince him. Again this is just my idea.
I noticed a lot of the fat jokes made against Thor weren’t in the original script and were improved by the actors. I think they were enjoying themselves too much to understand the gravity of the story as only RDJ got to read the whole script for the movie.
Honestly imo wat really fuks endgame up is the 5yr jump. Not even a montage or nothing just text on the screen 5yrs later, and its not really addressed. Also what they did to hulk was unforgivable 😖
@@Eking-su3tr Out of all the things wrong in Endgame (the plot holes, the time travel plot, the treatment of Thor and Hulk, the fact that a random rat pressing a button started the whole movie), the 5 year time skip is NOT one of them.
@@manolgeorgiev9664 bro everything u listed is cuz of the 5 yr jump. The rat, hulk, thor, all from the 5 yr jump. It all feels out of place cuz they rushed it.
@@Eking-su3tr you can literally make a 5 year jump without those problems and a story without a 5 year jump that still has those problems. The fact that 5 years passed is inconsequential.
Wait, Dr. Strange looked forward through time to view 14,000,604 timelines of them failing to beat Thanos. You're telling me that out of 14 million timelines, Strange never saw far enough ahead to see the TVA pop in and prune everything? If the TVA knew he was looking and just waited until he stopped to prune that universe, what if he looked thousands of years into the future? Would the TVA wait thousands of years to prune that timeline? Wouldn't that make the "one sacred timeline" concept irrelevant?
That's because the TVA didn't exist until the mentally impaired, college educated (but I repeat myself) bonobo who wrote Loki: The Sylvie Show word-defecation retconed them into existence.
The existence of the TVA really does ruin it. If the avengers success was part of the sacred timeline then every failed plan is just pruned anyway, they won by default.
@@TimedRevolver sounds like an convenient excuse to make you feel better about gaping plot holes, maybe you shouldn't come off as a rabid ape for no reason
why would any of that matter? The timeline ceases to exist as soon as he leaves it. It is true that the time stuff doesn't make consistent sense but if we go by "Loki" rules, then only the prime timeline is allowed to exist, meaning Steve basically lived out a dream of sorts and then returned to the main timeline.
Here is the thing, two Captian America always existed in the same prime timeline one who went back to Peggy and became her secret husband and the other who was frozen awaiting to be awake. Cap who went back to time didn't interfere with the events because he knew he will undo the changes. That's why we see him only in the end of the movie. Captain and Avengers weren't held accountable by TVA for messing with the timeline since then messing with time to get back the stones was part of cannon event something that was always supposed to happen. Loki and Miles Morales are anomalies who weren't supposed to exist.
One of the biggest problems with the MCU is that every time someone writes a new film they have the mindset of "fuck what already exists and the current story, I'm just gonna tell *my* story" which leads to all the contradictions between stories and the shitting over previous films that we keep seeing
Understand about this mechanic is that there are no alternate realities everything takes place in one universe for better or worse most of the bad time travel films at this world said the temporal need to be lovely time travel system is by far the most complicated one and I personally find it can be quite difficult to let me give you an example of how it works imagine Bob builds a time machine in 2021 and travels back to 1904 analogically 1900 Bob existed before 2021 Bob use the time machine whatever Bob did in the past was already baked into the
@@jamesezzard29 Did you even watch the video? Theres multiple type of time travel. Thats the first point being made. You can't just say its wrong because its not this type. The problem is internal consistency. Choose your rules and stay with them. Endgame has 80% Timelines and 20% others which completly fucks it up. If they went 100% timeline, time travel can only be used for heist of unchanging limitless things. Otherwise you're just crrating problem for that worlds avenger and they'll make time line travel to steal from you and before you know it... Interdimensional war and dead people doppleganger being kidnapped left and right. Every good thing just poofing out of existance as other worlds steals your ressource. Timeline time travels create no problem. But when steve was on the bench and other things, they fucked it up.
The other issue involving the Tesseract, is that… it was stolen twice. Loki steals it once in 2012 and Tony steals it a second time in 1970. The 2012 timeline CANNOT be set back to normal, because they don’t have a second Space Stone to bring there.
Loki doesn't travel outside of his timeline, though. The reason they had to return the stones in the first place is because they were taking them from their respective timelines.
They clearly wrote Infinity War without knowing how Endgame would go. The snap should have stayed and only the actors who wanted to retire should have been snapped.
i hate how they made a mockery out of Thor's depression, the theatre was laughing everytime he was on the screen, it was so annoying and i absolutely HATE that cheese whiz comment.
The fact that Chris Hemsworth was totally OK with even allowing that to happen, it’s just straight up more ridiculous. Or maybe simply the studio is just paying him to justify his character assassination.
I hated it too , however you have to admit the meta commerty about how a few months of living a modern lifestyle of videogames,beer, fatty foods , is enough to destroy even thors physically fit frame . I liked phat Thor I thought he looked more like Thor should look as a God who eats and drinks all day .
@@osmanyousif7849 - Nah for real, cuz there was stuff Joss Whedon wanted Gal Gadot to do as Wonder Woman, that she flat out REFUSED. (Like when the Flash tripped, fell & landed in her tits, for a cheap laugh) He had to bring in a body double cuz she straight up wouldn't even come to the set, she was so furious. She felt it dumbed down & unnecessarily over sexualized the character. And she was right. It was one of the stupidest scenes in "Josstice League". And I only bring this up to make your point that these actors DO have some power to refuse to do certain scenes, in order to protect their own brand, or to protect the image of the character they are playing. Chris Hemsworth could have done the same for Thor but...
What fucks me up most here is that its Cheese Whiz. Its so region-specific for a comment that it'll puzzle a few and drop many out of the film. This has all been built as a global event and reversing the snap will have a worldwide effect, but that one comment made me go "oh yeah there's basically no heroes that arent American or... Space. Weird" I want to know where the Russian, British, German etc heroes are. You going to really tell me that after Hydra and the Red Guardian none of the world powers developed at least one super-folk
The thought Evil or Dark Thor makes my mouth water. That would have been so badass. Instead of sadness, that trauma turns into hate which corrupts his good intentions. He essentially becomes overprotective and more hateful towards enemies. Besides his current direction is undoing 10 years worth of build up
Natasha death would have been more impactful if Captain America was the romantic interest than Bruce Banner. Chris and Scarlett shared more screen time and had more chemistry on screen. Also I feel their should have been a trilogy for this infinity war saga. The second installment should have been purely about them getting back the infinity stones that would have given good screen time to built the death of Natasha. And also to give more depths to other characters.
@@ChrisJericho22considering cap goes back in time to live with peggy, we’d be angry that he made an emotional decision like that and the fans would always see Peggy as the rebound.
They completely screwed themselves by allowing Thanos to "use the stones to destroy the stones." Instead of just defeating Thanos to retrieve the stones, or having to locate the stones after Thanos disposed of them, and then undoing the Snap, they instead FORCED THEMSELVES to break the very reality THEY CREATED.
Honestly, Endgame would have been great had they had a similar macguffin idea where the Avengers are trying to get the gauntlet back from Thanos with Thanos trying to prevent them from using it
I kinda wish that they had ended phases 3 with Infinity War and then spent phase 4 exploring the characters who survived the snap, show us the world, show us how the characters got to the points that they were in in Endgame. Then end phases 4 with Endgame.
@@Matt-wb8ni gives proper character development unlike the trash we got in endgame. Plus it would be a massive change in the status quo which would allow them to put characters through different story’s then what they’re doing now
@@NightMare-zm8mh trash character development? It was very well done in endgame. Especially during the time travel heist where the characters actually get moments with their past relatives. Plus, the movie wasn’t one big character arc, it was a conclusion to many.
Thank you for the devoted, concise, and staying-on-target analysis. There have been a lot of long form critiques about this film going back a couple of years but I do believe this is the best.
THANK YOU FOR THIS endgame has irked me from the beginning. I remember walking out of the theatre opening night deeply unsettled and confused. I kept thinking to myself, "that was it? that's what we got for an ending?"
Something I really wanted to see was Peter Quill mourning the loss of Gamora and dealing with the knowledge that he ruined the plan of taking the Gauntlet from Thanos and cost the lives of half the universe. Maybe him and Nebula could have talked, both understanding that they feel partly to blame or believe they could have done more and lost someone important to them both.
Im so fckng happy with that choice of Gunn I love how he jokes about it (Star Lord talks about it like a joke - like how they did this with Gunn's child)
Soooo basically Endgame is a classical example of a film that didn't do its homework when it comes to its story and relied solely on emotional payoffs to be regarded as a good film. Payoffs that were welcomed by the public because of the massive multiple years buildup to it. It's kind of a unique case in film history when you think about it, because it's very hard to actually make your voice heard when saying "Endgame is bad" with all the anticipation that came with it.
In all honesty Endgame was truly just a hard mid movie that was saved by the cameos, fan service, and basically like you said the payoffs. If anyone had watch this to solely rate it as a film on its own it would probably get a 5/10 I still can’t believe they turned one of the most bad a$$ villains in history to a lame in the sequel. Like bro the hype was their they didn’t even have to do the work.
I even enjoyed Avenger's: Age of Ultron despite all of that films flaws more than Avenger's Endgame. At least that movie had a more understandable albeit busy plot.
@@zolod.uchiha5102 endgame isnt a good movie because its not made to watch it by itself its the ending to a story and for that it does everything right you are like the people who raged about Kingdom Hearts 3 being not udnerstandable for new people that didnt play the 40 games that came before imagine its called ENDGAME like what else can they do to tell you youi shouldnt think of it as a solo film
If you were expecting the time travel plot from the heaps of leaks, it's way easier to digest the bullshit. Part of the reason why I enjoyed the movie so much.
I heard rumours that they could use time travel, so I naturally thought 'Oh, they're going to confront Thanos, fight him, reclaim the Time Stone somehow and use that to bring everyone back! Alright!'. So when they established that the stones (the most powerful things in the universe that hold its timestream together, according to the Ancient One) got destroyed so easily, I was so disappointed.
You were brave to skewer this sacred cow. The post-multiverse MCU is utterly wretched and Endgame has one of the worst endings in movie history. Having to listen to all the Loki nonsense literally hurt my brain cells.
Calling endgame “one of the worst movies and endings” in history actually is a statement only delusional r*tards could possibly think of. Thanks for confirming you’re one of them hence the wild take.
Steve's "retirement" should have come from a malfunction of some sort with the time traveling. He couldn't return, so he decided to live that simple life after doing what needed to be done for the "present". It shouldn't have been a choice, but a consequence of self sacrifice.
How would that be more satisfying than the character making a choice? The 2020s has nothing for him. His choice was his dignity, him finally putting himself first after years of being a good soldier.
@@MichaelSotoCE It is a choice counter to his character. He was defined as a person who does the opposite of that very act, so for him to make that choice without it being forced is counter to everything written about him and who he is. That is not to say I do not understand the choice, but having him be stuck, try to get back to the future, fail a bit and then notice he is letting his life and love slip away by obsessing over his sense of duty and so **then** deciding to live his life would have been more in character. Then the choice would have been to keep trying in spite of everything, or decide that he had done all he could and trusting the future to his team. It just would have narratively made more sense. Well, at least more narratively satisfying.
@@Kilmoran yeah he WAS defined by his dedication to duty, but it was part of his character arc to stop being a soldier and start living for himself. It would be LESS satisfying if he was forced into this action instead of deciding for himself. Remember this guy was thawed out of the ice, joined a superhero team, found out the gov he was working for was corrupt and about to be taken over by the same Nazis he was fighting in the 40s, then a DIFFERENT government tried to stop him from being the best hero he knew how to be, then he got in a big fight with one of his superhero besties, he became an international outlaw, he finally came back (at risk to his freedom) to fight Thanos, they compromised on some of their morals and yet they still lost. Then bucky got evaporated, 5 years of grief go by, Sharon Carter is missing, Peggy is long dead, they have to fight Thanos again, tony and nat die, and you know what..... After everything..... He can't give up on his best girl. Did you really need to see him make that decision? They trusted that the audience would understand. Why do you need to be spoon fed?
One thing that's weirdly underdiscussed in this extremely long video is the 5 year time skip. I'd be willing to accept a Thor who fell into an alcoholic depression, got fat, and shut himself off from the world and his responsibilities as the result of Infinity War. It's traumatic. The problem is that it comes at the end of a 5 year time skip, so we just cut to it for a gag, and we don't see the gradual fall of him going down. Same for the Hulk-they just skipped ahead 5 years and solved issues off-screen. There's no resolution of Steve and Tony's conflict because 5 years passed and of course they experienced a lot in the meantime. We just don't get to see any of it and how their relationship grew over those 5 years. There's no examination of the greater state of the world during those 5 years, just little snippets like Captain America holding a therapy session, but no answers to big questions about how everything is working. Just deciding to skip ahead 5 years creates a ton of narrative problems. I think the only reason it happens is because they wanted to...dare I say it..."subvert expectations" by destroying the stones and killing Thanos in the first 20 minutes.
Did you want the movie to be 12 hours long? Steve and Tony did not interact in those 5 years. The more logical reason as to why they didn't depict literally 5 years in an already 3 hour long movie, is because they literally can't make a movie that long.
@@VColossalV Just because the movie decided 5 years passed didn't mean it had to be written that way, you ninny. This movie could all have taken place in the 2 hours or 2 days or 2 weeks following Infinity War.
@@VColossalV Ever heard of a montage? There are ways to tell a story of time passage in a couple of mins. One perfect example is from Pixar's Up where we see Carl's relationship with Ellie start from when they were young to being old. It's an emotional scene that handles DECADES of two characters lives in just a handful of minutes without dialogue. And that was their character introduction. Imagine what the filmmakers of Avenger's Endgame could've done with pre-established Marvel characters, if they had executed something similar as Pixar's Up by showcasing what the original poster mentioned in like 5 mins at most.
@@waynesfiction4now How would a montage work? That just wouldn't fit the tone they were going for. This is the Russo brothers were talking about, if they thought it was a good idea they would have done it. The example you gave was for 2 characters, how do we have a satisfying montage for all the characters and it not be too long? Even a montage adds screen time, they scrapped so much already to get it down to 3 hours.
@@TheNoonish Then Tony wouldn't have his family, and we wouldn't have gotten Ronan or Smart Hulk, or found out what 5 years of wallowing and sadness does to a demi-God. Some developments need the passage of time. The Russo brothers clearly thought this was necessary.
Hit the nail on the head. What pissed me off about the whole Cap thing is that lots of fans forgave him for going back to stay with Peggy because “He deserved it!” That’s not the point nor does that matter. It doesn’t matter if he suffered in life and deserved the ending. It was out of character and destroys who he is.
@@shinken6636 First off, that is not true and you're generalizing. This is an adaption, and it can almost anything you want them to be. Besides. the timeline that Steve created hasn't been said to hurt anything and unleash on the Multiverse like Infinity Ultron like in What If...? For all we know, it could've had positive events in it, Bucky becoming Captain America, the Avengers still forming, them possibly stopping Thanos before getting all the stones, a variant of Kang not existing, and etc. So, we agree with Steve's choice, not just because we think he deserves it, but because it hasn't been shown to be harmful in any way.
After Endgame and Far From Home barely paid lip service to the consequences of the Snap i was a little annoyed but i didn’t really think about it. Your segment on the consequences of the Snap however has opened a pandora’s box frustration inside my head now and also how much of a missed opportunity it was to not see the remaining heroes (and possibly villains) having to operate in this post apocalyptic galaxy. Its just like “oh that happened but things were mostly the same i guess” when in reality it would have been Mad Max with superheroes.
For me it boggles my mind as to why, if they’re introducing _time-travel_ to resolve the problem, they don’t undo the Snap, because it still happening permanently alters the setting. Like besides that stupid Falcon and the Winter Soldier show, all other MCU properties only really pay lip-service to the Snap, not its consequences, just that it happened. If they knew that the MCU was going to continue after Infinity War, then they shouldn’t have had the Snap at all.
I knew this movie was worse than infinity war, and that it had fan service, but I wasn't expecting the core of the movie to be so shallow. In retrospect, the perfect foreshadowing for the MCU going forward
@@macvadda2318 Did you just now realize that opinions on films are subjective? Cause your comment definitely alludes to you just now figuring that out.
Yeah I didn't like End Game. Which is weird cos Infinity War is really great imo. Great pacing, great action, more interesting characterization. End Game killed all that momentum right off the bat and then spent the rest of the movie slowly building up back to where we left off really. Only with a drastically less interesting version of Thanos. The movie ends with the usual mass CGI slogfest which many movies fall into. Whilst Infinity War had much smaller scale fights, but also massively more intense and grounded. I just found End Game rather boring and bloated. The only real thing I enjoyed was doing a decent job ending ongoing story of the MCU in a respectful way.
In my head canon it all ends with Infinity War, even though they failed. For some reason that movie was so much more compelling to me - I thought it was because I hate the time travel trope. But now I realize how much every character has been affected since Endgame. I’ve lost a lot of interest and haven’t even watched the majority of MCU movies since. Then again, that’s probably a good thing since I never would have wanted to sit through Black Widow’s character assassination. I think it will become increasingly difficult for MCU writers to remain consistent in world building and character development, given all the multiverse shenanigans.
I honestly dont view endgame as a movie. its just an event. it feels kinda silly to give it a grade or a number score. Its obviously not better than infinity war but like someone else said, endgame is more like dessert or a side piece to infinity war.
Another flaw with the final battle I came to realize is this: why didn't any of the heroes in possession of the gauntlet decide to use it against Thanos and his army? Both Ininity War and Endgame established that the gauntlet was (relatively) safe to use as long as you didn't try to access the power of all six stones at once, so anyone could have used the any single one of the stones to decimate Thanos and his army; use the space stone to send them all into the vacuum of space, the power stone to obliterate them all, the mind stone to put them all to sleep or brainwash them, the time stone to pause them all (if not regress their age to being an army of infants or age them all to death), the reality stone to turn them all into frogs (or something else that poses no threat), or the soul stone to remove their souls from their bodies. The good guys had the most powerful tool in the universe on their side and instead of using it against their enemy they decide it's best to deliver it straight to said enemy... only for one of them to eventually use it against the enemy anyway at the cost of his life since he DID use all six stones at once instead of just one or two.
Endgame is that movie that kinda gets worse as time past and as the MCU continues to grow and sorta treats this movie as a silly little footnote rather than the universe-shaking event it should be.
I felt the same way about force awakens It was awesome at first. Then you realize it had nothing much to offer except Member this Last Jedi felt like a breath of fresh air and is my fav star wars film. I couldn't stop talking about it for a long ass time and still love to talk about (when people don't wanna bit my head off). It had real passion behind it and wasn't just some generic rehash
@@Z-Mikes00 The only thing comparable to Endgame's incompetence is the star wars sequel trilogy. The Last Jedi is another movie that "tricks" people into thinking it is something it isn't. It is still just a rehash of ideas from previous movies and it has all of it's characters act like idiots in order to even have a story in the first place. It brings every story line from the previous movies to a screeching halt and leaves us in the most boring place imaginable to set up the final movie of the epic saga. I didn't even bother seeing The Rise of Skywalker because TFA and TLJ were such a train wreck.
I was bored throughout the movie, up until the battle at the end. Infinity war had me gripped from start to finish. I was surprised that so many people didn't see it as lazy fan service, but I'm glad most people enjoyed it. Nebula's character Arc IMO was the only meaningful piece of writing in the movie.
While I enjoyed the individual elements of fan service as I watched them by the end of the movie, I still left Endgame feeling underwhelmed. There were multiple scenes that took me out of the movie and felt solely like fan service, but the biggest two scenes that made me realize that the movie was ONLY fan service was the women banding together and Cap as an old man. In the moment I felt pandered to as a woman for a scene that made little sense since many of those women had never met before and Captain Marvel shouldn’t even need that much help. The Cap scene felt so out of character that I felt angry during it.
@@Sigmundfrued Do believe you have the objectively correct perspective of the film, and everyone should agree with you? I didn't like how character arcs closed in Endgame. I understand that you do.
@@wildwesley9328 the only other thing I found meaningful was Tony’s death, but it was ruined by all the plot holes. Why does his gauntlet work? Doesn’t it have to be forged by that star and with special metal in order to be able to handle the infinity stones? Why was he able to even hold all the stones when star lord, a Demi-god at the time, needed the power of friendship to hold just the power stone? Why didn’t literally anyone else, like captain marvel or Thor, who could of survived the snap, just do it? I like that he sacrificed himself, I though it was a good enough ending for the character and it was time for him to die anyway, but we were all expecting it and it wasn’t handled well enough.
Endgame after Infinity War was like following up a Michelin star meal with a $0.25 gumball as dessert. I saw fan theories about how to solve the snap that were miles better and would make continuity a million times easier than what they decided to go with. They should have never messed with time travel and alternate universes. It's hard to do well and they clearly weren't even thinking a single second past Endgame's credits with their solution to the snap.
@@aqualiusaidhreborn5923 It was stuff I read years ago on reddit. My personal one after hearing they were going the time travel route was thinking they would sacrifice themselves. They spend the first half of the movie searching for Tony Stark and then Thanos with the help of Nebula. Less than a year passes, they find the stones, kill Thanos and realize that if they go back in time and change anything, their timeline ceases to exist and they will fade out of existence a la Back to the Future. They stew on that realizing that they are going to need to sacrifice the second half of their universe, themselves, and their timeline to save the universe as it was. They develop some quantum state Pym tech to prevent themselves from fading the second they go into the past to prevent a paradox but it has a time limit, they fight along side their past selves, stop Thanos and the snap, then at the end of the battle and after giving their past selves some advice, tearfully fade as heroes that knew they were on a suicide mission as their countdown clocks reach zero. After that the stones are given each to a core avenger and they now have to find a location in the universe to hide them. The core team retires except Captain America and Black Widow and they oversee the new generation of Avengers, Thor decides to restore Asgard by finding the seed of Yggdrasil or something like that in the next movie. Not perfect. I'd prefer something like that to what we got. But I'm also going to be biased to my own shit. There's no snap to deal with. Time travel is not seen as a viable route as you will cease to exist yourself if you do it. And you didn't kill half the cast or your two biggest characters that still have beef from civil war and can hash it out in a future movie.
I thought it was just me. I really liked Endgame. I HATED what they did to their most powerful Avengers......Hulk and Thor. But it's like everytime I've rewatched, the Cringe Moments got More Cringy.
Rewatching any film can make the cringe worthy moments stick out more and more, but comparing Endgame to something like Empire Strikes Back, Endgame takes it from 0 to 100 for cringe worthy moments when rewatching. The film is absolutely garbage
The way Steve sits around at the beginning like he's given up/retired and left Natasha to run the Avengers is so out of character. It took me the longest time to figure out why his role in this movie felt off, but once I realized what bothered me I couldn't really believe it. Wouldn't Steve be doing his dead level best to help mend the world after the snap? Why has he just left the running of the Avengers to Natasha?
absolutely, if not running the avengers himself he should be standing up for every "little guy" who's being bullied by the warlords a global population halving would inevitably result in. He should be a *very* busy man.
There is an additional character trouble for Steve, at least from my perspective. Some wasted potential, if you'll allow some indulgence in tismry... Part of Steve's arc in the MCU about coming into his role as the leader of the Avengers is realizing how much the world around him has changed, and that he shouldn't keep dwelling in the past. After all, what's gone is gone, and it can't be reclaimed once it is... Or can it? Now the time travel provides Captain America with the ultimate temptation: a chance to, at least in some way, reclaim what he gave up in his fight. It'll mean giving up on the fight, the fight he admitted in both Age of Ultron and Winter Soldier that he couldn't bring himself to walk away from; and betraying some of the very virtues that prevented the serum from twisting him like what happened to Red Skull and the Winter Soldiers... but it'd be worth it to have his love again, right? Now, Steve could be interested by the prospect, but realize that there are still battles to be had and that he's still needed in the present, understand that he's a very different person now than the one who loved and was loved by Captain Carter, and accept the life he's made for himself in the future, to move on... Or he could do what he did in the movie, and drop everything he's stood for and is for some pegging with Peggy.
That's not out of character for him at this point though. He did try doing his best...but after a while even he can lose hope. Because even he can lose hope.
What really bugs me , is how the "infinity snap" was undone with another snap (on top of that , Russo brothers lied to everyone that "there won't be any resurrections") , yet after Tony dies, nobody tries to bring him back using the time or reality stones. Heroes getting brought back to life ought to be earned - this felt very cheap.
Someone already mentioned why they didn't try (because Black Widow still stayed dead when Hulk tried), still a dogshit excuse tbh. The real reason? Robert Downey Jr. wanted to retire (at least that's what I remember).
@@Matt-wb8ni what? did you pay attention to the film? Nat couldn't be brought back because her soul was the price for the stone, Tony died because his body couldn't handle the use of the snap, he absolutely could have been brought back to life somehow
@@Matt-wb8ninat was sacrificed to the soul stone. At no point was it ever said that being killed by the gauntlet barred you from being resurrected. Vision literally blew up with the mindstone and Thanos rewound time to bring it back. Tony’s revival should’ve been possible.
Something else about the Blip is that No Way Home establishes that to the people who were blipped, it's like nothing happened. Ignoring the mental trauma that would come with missing 5 years of your friends/family's lives, there is also the issue of remarriages. If you got snapped, but your spouse didn't, and within that 5 years they remarry and possibly have kids. Then when the person who got blipped comes back, there would definitely be a ton of tension in the air.
i was wondering how peter parker's graduation happened. like he got snapped, (did mj and ned also get snapped? i don't remember) either way how did he manage to immediately graduate highschool with everybody else? in his grade? did they put everything on hold for five years?
@@katiemorgan543 They did not. The rest of the class went on and graduated and when peter n his gang came back, they still have to take that last 5 years of school. There was a character in Far From Home that wasn't blipped and grew up to join peter's class.
Even when watching the movie opening night in 2019, the fact that the stones were destroyed always felt wrong to me: in the comics, the Infinity Stones/Gems cannot be destroyed, because doing so would mean destroying the aspects they represent.
The blip needed a phase of it's own. Or shows about the characters. Natasha could have finally had her movie. Ronin could have had a show. Steve could have become a vigilante/nomad.
Steve was a fully flushed out character other than his haphazardly ended conflict with Tony, they made a movie for Natasha and it's garbage only doing her worse than good. Part of me thinks that maybe they needed to revisit the blip as an idea, since the decision to blip everyone simultaneously back into existence rather than rewinding time really was an out of character decision for Tony and was the objectively worse decision. His reasoning was that it'd cost him his current life, but if he rewound time 5 years he could relive moments with his family and possibly even make new ones while retaining the memories he had previously (assuming this Endgame follows the alternate timeline structure of things). It's also the safer way to save his family, as they could only assume negative consequences of blipping everyone back into existence after the worst 5 years of human history (if the snap actually made an impact on the world in a logical way). At best, he'd blip everyone including his family back into a hellish world devastated by the snap. At worst he'd blip everyone into the vacuum of space including his family where they'd die rather horribly (vacuum of space does not sound like a pleasant way to die). The best course of action would have just been to rewind to pre snap regardless of if you look at it from Tony's perspective or a "for the greater good" one.
@Deadbunny have you ever heard of the butterfly effect? You can be certain that if they had chosen to do what you are suggesting, the likelihood of Tony's character being able to retain his life is vanishingly small. There is simply no way that he can have the power to rewind time and get exactly what he wants. Now, you can absolutely write that. You can write anything. But that doesn't mean you should. Do you understand the consequences of possessing such a power? Do you understand how that would affect future storylines? Tony dies. And he should die.
0:00 Video begins 4:03 Addressing Possible Criticisms 5:41 Intro continues 7:02 The MCU as a Whole, and Endgame's Place in it 11:40 Critique begins (Time travel in stories) 13:24 Loki is Terrible- A Video Essay 18:19 Time Travel Mechanics, Including a Lesson with Professor Fringy 31:50 How did Cap return all the stones? 33:56 "bUt It'S oK bEcAuSe OtHeR sToRiEs WiLl FiX iT" 34:55 A Heist for the Ages. Or the timelines in this case. A Heist for the Timelines, I guess. The Avengers are dumb basically, also including a lesson with Professor Fringy. 39:53 Spectacle Over Logic- Endgame's Final Battle. 50:45 Characters- the Backbone of Storytelling 54:56 Captain America 1:01:46 A Tangent on the Snap and the Blip 1:07:26 Iron Man 1:13:20 Civil War's Consequences are Squandered 1:21:01 Thor 1:27:08 Hulk 1:29:51 Hawkeye 1:30:51 Black Widow 1:32:45 Nebula 1:33:48 Rocket 1:34:19 Thanos ("Look how they massacred my boy ☹.") 1:36:48 Recapping Everything 1:37:34 Golden Nuggies in a Landfill of Goo 1:40:42 Spectacle Over Writing. Fan Service at all Costs! 1:42:57 Subtopic: Fiction and Suspension of Disbelief 1:46:13 Subtopic ends 1:49:58 What Could Have Been 1:57:20 The State of the Industry (Conclusion) 1:59:53 ruclips.net/video/QUAItQmq-LU/видео.html
I agree with you on Steve. Yes, he may deserve a normal life with Peggy and wish he had that, but it was his will to make sacrifices for the greater good. Even before he was a super soldier, he threw himself on what everyone believed was a live grenade, without a thought. He was chosen because he is the guy to make the sacrifice. It’s like Steve told Tony, “you’re not the one to lay down on the wire…”, because Steve knows that he is that guy because he has done it many times. I can’t believe that Steve could stand by, dancing with Peggy, while bad things were going on anywhere in his world. It is the will to make sacrifices that makes one a hero. You can’t be a hero if you can’t take risks and willing to make sacrifices to help others. So, after returning to the past, does Steve not fight Red Skull or crash the plane in the sea so he can dance with Peggy. Does Twinkle Toes Steve now use his super human endurance to win dance marathons? I just can’t see Steve mowing the lawn and fixing the picket fence while the world is going to hell. Do the other Avengers need to fight Loki and his Chitauri army without Cap? Does Steve just become Ward Cleaver instead of Captain America? Was Captain America now turned into Twinkle Toes Rogers, more famous for his dancing than fighting? I just can’t buy it. I did not think it was a great ending for Steve. The same skinny kid who would fight with a guy twice his size and leap onto a live grenade is the same guy inside all of that muscle. The super soldier serum just gave Steve a body that could back up his heroic mind.
Both Tony and Steve’s arcs are connected. Tony started off super selfish but he struggles to become more selfless. Steve started off super selfless but he struggles to become more selfish. Being too selfless is just as bad as being too selfish. Tony was too selfish in the beginning as Steve was too selfless. Tony as Iron Man protects people security but he struggled to be secure in his own life. Steve as Captain America protects people’s freedom but he struggled to be free in his own life. Tony always treated himself right but he needed to treat other people right in life and. Steve always treated other people right but needed to treat himself right in life. Ever since the first Avengers they slowly changed their attitude on working with people. Tony started as rebel but he slowly became a authority figure after realizing he is not as secure as he thought after seeing being unmatched by Aliens. Steve started as an authority figure but he slowly became a rebel after realizing he is not as free after seeing SHEILD secretly has plans to use Hydra weapons. Even though Tony buttheads for more security as Steve buttheads for more freedom they both learned and inspired from each other to obtain their goals. Tony was inspired by Steve to “make the sacrifice play” pushing him to be more authority figure as Steve inspired by Tony to be a rebel after Tony made him question SHEILD’s plans. In Endgame they both got what they needed and wanted. Tony got his security by doing a big selfless act as Steve got his freedom by doing a big selfish act and both of their superhero days ended. Dude it a frozen Steve Rogers Captain America existed in the timeline Steve went back to. It is a terrible idea for Steve to get involved fighting for another timeline because it would make thing more darker and unpredictable- and best to keep his time with Peggy a secret between them.
The biggest problem with this is that Steve’s arc was in part about letting go of his past and embracing the time he lives in after the ice. Him clinging to his past was the reason he was so adamant about protecting Bucky. He’s his only friend from that time. He already said goodbye to Peggy, Natasha pretty much had to coax him into seeing other people. He carves out a new life as an Avenger, only to fall right back into his past given the opportunity. Really unfortunate ending for his character.
@@ollytherevenant1653 He never said good to Peggy. Peggy’s untimely death in Civil War forced Steve to protect Bucky more because Bucky is the last person he has from his past life after she died. Steve arc is about him learning to not let others make him change his beliefs on freedom and he had to learn to be selfish in order to keep protecting his stance. Tony arc is about him learning to change his beliefs in providing security more by learning to be selfless. Steve is the man who promotes values as Tony is the man who promotes future values.
@@petermj1098 Steve did say goodbye to Peggy. He got to see her again in Winter Solider, as she was still alive at that time. Then he finally had to let her go when she died. If I were to entertain the idea that Steve’s arc was allowing himself to be more selfish, it didn’t work because his decision was pulled out of left field with no proper build up or arc. It was just a flippantly made decision that the character would not have done.
@@ollytherevenant1653 If you payed attention in Civil War during Peggy’s funeral, Sharon literally speaks about Peggy the quotes Steve’s “plant like a tree” quote from the comics. Her death was a reminder for Steve keep on standing for what he believes and wants in life in even hard or people are trying to stop him. Yes there was build up. In age of Ultron he struggles to admit the fact he prefers living in the past with Peggy than his current life and doesn’t want to admit. The fact he didn’t tell Tony about the truth of his parents death is him becoming selfish. And admits to Tony he didn’t tell him to spare Tony but to spare himself. The entire civil war has Tony’s side seeing him as selfish in the movie. Steve being a better liar during the time heist is him having learned to be more selfish with himself.
Trying to explain this to anyone is physically impossible because they always ignore any points your giving and dismiss you as not knowing anything (actually just happened to me)
Or you know…he was wrong the second he tilted this “endgame is terrible”. Objectively he’s incorrect, this movie was a gem and phenomenal conclusion and you all follow this loser like sheep. It’s beyond embarrassing.
Everyone can benefit from a bad example. Remember that before you ask why this video exists, folks. There’s a reason Fringy spends so much time digging into long-term problems with the MCU. This stuff is difficult, and when you have a roadmap that is so long and so remarkably broken, you have a great list of things to not do. Here’s one the green birdmn missed: Don’t have your super McMuffins get “reduced to atoms” and also establish that their absence is a very bad thing on a universal scale, in a nonspecific way that doesn’t need further explanation.
Half counter to your criticism: It could be that they still uphold the timeline as atoms, even if they can't exactly be harnessed in that form. See the aether for example, which is already atoms as far as we know. Question is if a molecular structure creates their powers. Might be for the mind stone. Unknown for the rest.
The stones cannot be completely destroyed. But if you reduce them to atoms then they can no longer be used. They still exist, they are now just microscopic dust.
I had to pause and say Thank You for your section on Steve Rogers. He's been my favorite character throughout this MCU journey, and you laid out exactly why I will forever be mad at Endgame. The Steve in Endgame is not the Steve I know. I'm repeating you, but he never would have left and abandoned Bucky, and he never would have gone back in time to a woman who Explicitly told him to move on. Endgame disrespected Steve and Peggy, end of story.
Exactly! I also agree that is shafted Peggy. She definitely would have been tempted, but also told Steve that he was abandoning his responsibilities and kicked him out of the house.
“The Steve I know was not the Steve on endgame” - 🤓 Yeah sure, the Steve in endgame who stood in front on an entire army, definitely wasn’t the determined and brave Steve who fought the Nazi’s and Hydra all those years ago. 🙄
@@Matt-wb8ni Specifically referring to the Steve in the final scene of endgame. The Steve in the fight was right on point. The Steve who stayed behind, who decided to live a happy life with Peggy while his best friend Bucky was tortured by Hydra for decades, who didn't help to prevent the Snap, that Steve is a whole different Steve.
@@canebro1 Steve living his life with Peggy was not selfish, he’s been selfless his entire life. And plus, Bucky had already gone through all of that, so what would be the point in changing it, especially if everything worked out in the end.
Wait so does Hydra conquer the world in the Endgame timeline because Steve went back to 1945 but lived happily ever after with Peggy and therefore doesn’t sacrifice himself to stop Hydra’s plan? The worst part of this whole time travel debacle is they could’ve used it to inspire a lot of cool new takes on their stories. Imagine a movie where Steve selfishly didn’t save the world because he lived his whole life a hero and decided to enjoy life for once, so Hydra wins, and a new hero also based in the mid 20th century has to rise to the challenge and defeat Hydra. They had so many opportunities and decided to make shit like She-Hulk instead smh.
I don't see why there couldn't be two Steve Rogers. One saving people and the same Steve from the future living with agent Carter, she can keep it secret.
@@craftpaint1644 ngl it wouldve been hilarious seeing some hydra agents' confused and terrified reactions at the sight of TWO steve rogers fighting off their forces (assuming they get involved enough to force steve from the future back into action TEMPORARILY just to stave them off/get them away from him and peggy)
@@nathanpierce7681 1945 Steve: "I can do this all day." 2023 Steve: *pops out of nowhere* "You mean, WE can do this all day!" 1945 Steve: "What the shit?" 2023 Steve: "Language!"
You know what the biggest issue with Steve staying with Peggy is? In The Winter Soldier, Peggy stated that she had a husband and kids, that the man she married was one of the men Steve saved back in TFA. How the hell is this timeline supposed to not be altered if Peggy married Steve instead of that guy? And if the implication is that it was him all along, I doubt people wouldn't recognize him in the streets after being declared dead and I think SHARON would recognize her RELATIVE from photos before KISSING HIM. Unless the other implication is that they only had their one dance/one-night stand before Steve moved on and lived a normal life with someone else. Which is an even worse justification for him staying back in time; an one-night stand. This endgame implies Steve effin Rogers, a paragon of heroism and Captain AMERICA, lived through 9/11 without trying to prevent it, I just... Wow.
@@k1zer100 Given how little attention the MCU gives to the "blip" and that greater entities like The Eternals did zilch to stop it? I wouldn't be surprised.
The fact that people who were paid handsomely to make it work COULDN’T keep a work of fiction consistent is STRONG contextual evidence AGAINST the claim that the Bible could’ve been made up by men. Despite being compiled over 3500+ years by 40+ different writers, the stories are coherent and interrelated on a level the best human fiction can only daydream about. And that’s with the handicap of being rooted in real history. Try writing avengers endgame so well that people irl believe it really happened. Tldr the Bible cannot be a work of fiction because fiction authors are incapable of manufacturing such a high degree of internal and external consistency. Let your frustration with endgame cause you to reconsider how you look at the Bible
I liked the part where Captain Marvel, after having just taken out Thanos' ship singlehandedly, needed a bunch of other characters who all happened to be women to stand next to her as she flew away.
@@ShadowSonic2 I is woman, and even I was confused w the all women scene. Like in a vacuum is a good scene. Is fucking great, in the movie is fucking weird. I haven't seen the Boys, but in Mandalorian, they already know each other, the plan was for them to attack together, they didn't magically appear next to each other and they are Grogu's cool aunts. It's very different.
As a man who hasn't enjoyed Marvel since Endgame, and who rolls his eyes every time his friends start ranting about how "awesome Marvel content" on Disney+ is . . . I'm excited to watch this video.
I mean I'm not a fan of the MCU that much either. What annoys me tho is when people act like it's well liked and shit is a problem and or it's bad to enjoy it.
Got to agree. I watched Endgame but just really haven't been interested since Infinity War. Tbh though, in hindisght there is a lot of meh in the mcu even prior to Infinity War.
I have questions about Steve: 1. How did Steve return the Soul Stone when gaining it came with sacrifice? 2. What was Steve's reaction when he met Red Skull again? 3. Why didn't Steve save past Bucky from his brainwashing in the 1940's? 4. Why did Steve abandon present Bucky for past Peggy when he clearly told Bucky that "he'd be with him til' the end of the line?"
1. Perhaps Red skull gave him a refund and Natasha came back in that timeline. 2. Dunno. 3. Why do you think he didn't? Steve can save Bucky, stop World Wars, go to Wakanda, join Shield, whatever he wants in his timeline, and even visit his original timeline of gets more particles from Hank Pym. 4. The movie is called Endgame for a reason. THIS is the end of the line. They've stuck with each other like brothers to this point. Now the work is done. It's time to rest.
I thought the actual depression was well done, Chris hemsworth’s broken delivery of “should have gone for the head” is the start of a man who’s hit his low. His rock bottom To see he lost shape was understandable, hemsworth begging to be allowed to take risk of wearing gauntlet is devastating & when he meets up with Frigg, I cried. The poor taste haha jokes at his expense was gross 🤢 it’s like the writers (or maybe just hemsworth) understood how to portray guilt and depression But the jokes land like mosquitoes buzzing around and biting ruining a really honest arch I loved that he just didn’t suddenly lose weight but it was like they didn’t have the guts to see his journey through
@@zarabee2880 The fact that he become a weird dudebro bum threatening children over the internet was the baffling part. It's not done to depict a "broken man" but rather to get some cheap laughs. The scene with Thor and his mom was the only time it really seemed like he was really broken and in need of help, instead of a lazy dude acting like a baby just because things didn't go well for him. That one moment aside, Hawkeye, a man who also lost everything, was handled much better.
@@InfernosReaper well the. They understood that Thor was depressed. Whether or not the Russo Brothers intended to make Thor look like a joke, many people did laugh.
My biggest complaint about Endgame was described beautifully by you. How did Thor almost kill Thanos when Thanos had all the stones, yet stoneless Thanos can take on Thor and company without the power of said stones?
@@Fridaey13txhOktober There wasn't a single future where Ant Man crawled up his butt (or any orifice) and exploded him from the inside like that episode of The Boys? Hard to believe.
I feel like the fact that it was evident rdj and evans were leaving after endgame made their departures so much less impactful. It really takes away from the “it all comes down to this” and makes it feel more like “this is the farthest we can go”.
@@MS-vj6zt that's a fair point, but death was most likely going to be the ending of it. Tony's death was super predictable, and while steve's was interesting for also not being a death, it had a side effect of ruining the character to a certain degree.
@@elmuchacho3379 i wished steve took that sacrifice instead of tony. Tony has a family to take care of, while steve, yeah he has the avengers but its not the same. He meets peggy in the afterlife
Dude that's a really ridiculous standard to have. You're never going to have a major star or character where their last appearance isn't well-known about beforehand. It generates too much hype. Like did you walk into Logan saying, "Fuck yeah, I get to see Wolverine one last time in a bloody R-rated horror movie," or did you really say "this is the farthest Wolverine goes. Guess I don't care anymore." I knew Wolverine wasn't making out of that shit alive, but it was the only X-Men movie I've given a single shit about before watching it.
2 hours and he didnt even mention how poorly composed the final battle is. At no point during the battle do we ever understand where all the characters are in relation to each other.
Something everyone talks about with suspension of disbelief, that I feel no one talks about, is the difference between continued and initial suspension. Let's say you start a new story, that plays on an alien world. You have the premise and when something new is introduced at the start of the story, you are a lot more willing to engage with it and let it pass. The grass is purple, there are no trees, there is some weird funky metal, it's all fine, cause you are going into the story with the mindset "This is an alien world" But the more you learn of that world, the more expectations and experiences you have to draw on. Okay, the grass is now blue. Why? I thought it was purple. If the story explains it, like "The rocks here are different and the pigments make it blue, not purple" you usually go: "Yeah sure, I can buy it" and when red grass comes up with the same reason, you are, again, more likely to believe it. But when they suddenly put trees in, after specifically stating "There are no trees on this world" and then go "Oh yes, well, except this one, of course, duh. Forgot to mention." it becomes contradictory and goes against your suspension. Contradictions being the biggest grind and drain on our Suspension. So when things are first introduced in a setting, we are a lot more ready to accept it, as we don't have any, or at least a lot less, contradicting notions of what should and should not be. And the longer a story runs. The more the world and characters are fleshed out, the harder inconsistencies, contradictions or convenient coincidences grate on us. because they grind up against more of those mountains of experience and expectations, that we built ourselves. And in the case of Endgame, we got a damn decade of characterbuilding, worldbuilding and events, that this movie really flies against.
Kinda like weight lifting. Ask someone to suspend their disbelief again and again, and past a certain point it becomes too exhausting and pointless to be actually enjoyable
Well that's usually discussed in regards to consistency and establishing a premise. You don't question fantastical things in the beginning of a story because you have yet to form any preconceptions of what is or is not possible in it; you can't be thrown out of a story due to logical contradiction if there is not yet anything established to contradict. Incredibly convenient or unlikely occurrences in the beginning are similar; they are problematic because they pull characters in unnatural directions that reveal the hand of the writer, that can't happen unless there is some established direction to pull away from in the first place. The prime example is Kill Bill vs. Sicario: the Bride surviving a shot to the head works fine because that is the foundation of the whole story; del Toro surviving a shot to the head is ridiculous because it is so blatantly used to manufacture momentary drama and write him out of a no-win scenario so the writers can have the shock of a character death without committing to it. There is, however, a lot to be said for the fact that suspension of disbelief gets harder to maintain the longer a story goes on and the more that gets established. Way too many people trot out the defeatist, "the franchise is too big to make sense now" argument as if it has any merit. The increasing complexity of maintaining consistency is a fundamental aspect of storytelling, the kind of thing that is THE WRITER'S JOB to deal with. Of course there are limits to how much any writer can reasonably account for, especially given deadlines, but fanboys never want to broach the subject that maybe eternal, never-ending franchises are an inherently bad idea and the only reason they support them is because they care more about maintaining a constant stream of content generation than they do about quality.
Having just watched Multiverse of Madness, it is fully interesting that Endgame chose to not have the infinity stones destroyed, because Wanda becoming a villain is completely dependent on her not using the reality and soul stones to wish her kids alive.
She really could just zip to a defenseless universe and use its stones. What-If shows that the Stones work in other universes unlike in the comics, so what gives?
@@therealistintheboot8822 I didn't say anything about the quality of the show, only about the canon lore it introduces and how it changes things for other works of the franchise.
I always hated that Peter Quill was among the dusted in the snap. He could've had a great arc in Endgame feeling responsible for what happened and could have helped rebuild the spaceship in the beginning enough that they wouldn't need to shoehorn in Captain Marvel. I figured that he'd have been spared at least when he earned Thanos's respect in Infinity War by choosing to sacrifice Gamora, but I could see an argument as to why he was snapped away since Gamora is also the one person Thanos cared about. Also I haven't seen a single Marvel film or tv show after Endgame aside from Spider-man NWH, I truly consider Endgame to be...well, a finale. Seems like that was a good decision with how bad everything is that came out afterwards. ~('
@Tom No Way Home is even WORSE than that. In NWH, Peter learns the lesson that if he is going to make decisions that affects the lives of people he loves and cares about, he needs to make THEM a part of the decision and let them choose for themselves what THEY WANT. But at the end of NWH, he dismisses that WHOLE LESSON (even after his friends tell him that they want to be with him and they love him) because "Peter has to sacrifice EVERYTHING because its great audience emotional manipulation and will make him SEEM like a hero." Even though its just him taking the easy way out ONCE AGAIN. I fucking HATE that ending so much because of how shit it is and how it goes against its entire message to the hero just for some free feelies. its PATHETIC.
@@Jdudec367 FFH is pretty good but NWH was crap, SC was crap, Eternals was a snorefest, Wanda Vision started off amazing but ended terribly, Moon Knight sucked ass, Loki was horrible and Falcon and the Winter Soldier was utterly shit.
I live in the state with the highest suicide rate in the US. I graduated from a class of 104 students. I've been to funerals for 6 who died, 4 of direct suicide, 2 from drinking themselves to death. The way Thor's depression was handled was absolutely insulting. It's not as simple as "go eat a salad lmao". I have a pet theory that Wanda getting an excessive amount of sympathy was because Marvel realized how badly they'd fumbled with Thor. If so, that's too little, too late. I would be onboard with a telling of Thor's depression where the team was concerned and he was treated like a person. He isn't, so it makes everyone else look worse by proximity. Truly abysmal storytelling, thank you for calling that out.
Fringy, you and Mauler, and Jay taught me "Objective criticism does _not_ invalidate subjetive perception". I liked Endgame for what it was, and you can point out all the flaws the movie has; that won't make my original experience any less meaningful.
With the added note that objectively better constructed films can enhance that very subjective perception. It's ever more satisfying when the dots connect and acompany the meaningful payoffs.
@@HOTD108_ If you claim objectivity doesn't exist in art, then for example I can say that Luke Skywalker never spoke a word with Han Solo in Star Wars. Without objectivity, you can't say I'm wrong. See the problem?
@@HOTD108_ Absolutely WRONG!. There are objective components in a story, such as coherence, consistency, respect of internal logic, character development and arcs, respect of the established canon and others. Your ENJOYMENT of the story is subjective, but the quality of it is not. This ridiculous notion that objective quality doesn't exist in art is exactly how you get Disney Star Wars, GoT Season 8, Dr. Who Season 13, Terminator Dark Fate and all the other shitty pieces of media in the last decade.
Ah, damn. When you went over Tony and Steve's motivations in Civil War... They're both so reasonable and true to character. I miss good writing. Why can't we have nice things anymore?
@oatraa Endgame can only be called good if you’re saying it in jest. The source material is irrelevant. Whether the script is adapting comics or a Tolstoy novel, it’s poorly written. Perhaps the source material is equally bad, perhaps not. It doesn’t matter, because we’re not talking about the source material. Also, “funny and lighthearted” is a wildly inaccurate assessment of the comic book medium. It may apply to some comics, but certainly not all-not even all Marvel Comics. I’m not a comic reader myself, but from what I’ve heard, Punisher has a dark, tragic story in which you’ll find very little laughter. Regardless, comedy is no excuse for bad writing, and to exempt works from criticism based solely on the presence of humor is an act of incredible disrespect to the comedy genre. “It has jokes, so we should lower our standards.” No, thank you. You can be funny and have a good story at the same time. Back to the Future is an apt example. It merges comedy, a time travel plot, and meaningful character moments-just like Endgame. But where one succeeds, the other fails. Endgame could’ve been great. I’m as disappointed as anyone that it wasn’t.
When you think about it, Steve's decision to stay in the past so he can be with Peggy is far worse. After Cap got put on ice, Peggy moved on, eventually. She had her own life, which we know from the "Agent Carter" miniseries - but her career as agent and diplomat were not the most important. The series very clearly tells us she eventually moved on with her private life, grieved for, the presumed dead Steve, but eventually that was over. While we do not know for certain if she had a family on her own, in "Agent Carter" we see clearly see she's at the very least willing to try. But at the end, she had a long, fulfilling life full of nothing but admiration of those around her, be it coworkers or family. It was truly *her* life. And all of it is gets changed - the path she walked denied... because Steve wanted so. Captain America, the walking breathing embodiment of self-sacrifice in the MCU at the very end commits an act of utter selfishness, changing Peggy's life with her oblivious to it, but he knowing perfectly well what he did but is fine with it because it's good for him.
I mean after all the years of fighting struggling and losing your secondary best friend and watching almost everyone you love die for 5 years I would make a selfish decision like that tok im not saying what he did was right but I think Steve kinda needed this ending
I agree with you and I think Past Peggy wouldn't have gone along with it for a second. Maybe a dance and a kiss but then she wouldn't booted his ass back to the future fight, imo.
1 Self sacrifice is not a virtue, even with that cap is not doing that all the time 2 Pretty sure agent carter can decide for herself whatever she wants to do, you're just judging the writing instead of the character for doing something completely reasonable, and that she would realistically do.
@@BygoneT 1- Yes, yes he does, that's like, his whole theme 2- She had already grieved Steve and moved on, having a family and a legacy of her own, yeah maybe she decided to be with Steve, but he made the decision to come back and erase all that, not giving Peggy a chance to decide
@@vanillabatcave5677 With the way divergent timelines work, wouldn't both be possible?. Agent Carter would have been in one where Steve never returned, while in the main MCU universe, Steve makes his date.
The issues are covered over with the epic scenes and emotions of everyone being brought back, nearly everyone. They did a lot of characters dirty though, the vision, the hulk, fat Thor, Natasha, Howard Stark and Dr Pim. Killing off Tony Stark and letting Steve Rogers retire has pretty much killed the franchise.
The mcu is overstating it's welcome by making this film. Wiping away the infinity stones like nothing just destroys what the reality of the mcu was based on, i.e., what linked all the films together. I feel that Infinity War Part II(Endgame) should've been more of a revenge/reverse film. Have the Gauntlet shatter from the cosmic energy that was released when Thanos TRIES to destroy them, but then have him make bargains and all with others to take care of the stones. Get creative with it instead of just throwing in the last resort card that is practically guaranteed to fix any issue in films without reason. I knew right off the bat how the film was gonna play out the second I learned Thanos destroyed the stones, and Thors cut off his head.
I would also add that the Snap would have had serious religious significance too. The Infinity Stones makes whoever possesses them God. Thanos became God and willed half of all people into non-existence. As far as regular people know, Thanos still has the Infinity Stones. Therefore, wouldn't a Cult of Thanos obsessed with cutting things in half appear? After all, Thanos did have an army of minions who agreed with him. It can't just be because they're scared he can kill them. These people would definitely be the high priests of such a religion. In general, the Time Heist could have been a regular heist and that would have done the job more simply. After all, a small elite team impregnating Thanos's fortress for the Gauntlet would have led to the big fight at the end anyways. It would also have not been incredibly confusing.
Does a movie have to explore every possible consequence in the entire universe? That would be an infinitely long movie. What a bizarre criticism. Why didn't the movie depict every single consequence on all the billions of planets in the universe and the limitless complexities of each individual one? How could it be a regular heist? What stones are they recovering if they're gone in present day?
@@VColossalV As Fringy said, the movie needs a total rewrite. Instead of Thanos smashing the stones, have him keep it in a vault on his giant spaceship. What if everyone breeds really fast and pops out 10 kids? The next generation might need to also be Snapped, so Thanos might also need the Infinity Gauntlet on hand just in case. Also, this is the MCU, the series that made every movie 3 hours long and also connects with other 3 hour movies and also connects to 12 episode shows. Falcon and the Winter Soldier does (incompetently) look into the consequences of a recently Unsnapped world, so why shouldn't it delve into the Snapped world, the biggest event in the MCU ever?
@@dragonknightleader1 It did. The Flag Smashers believed the world was better during the blip, so they have already begun to explore ideas like that. Once again though, it is impossible to depict every single consequence on earth let alone the entire universe. Of course, overpopulation will become a problem again, but these things are nitpicks, and that's more of a criticism of Infinity War. You can criticise any movie like this. You can find countless problems with the time travel in Terminator for example, doesn't make it a bad movie, time travel isn't possible so it's impossible to depict it without problems. Why would he keep them in a vault, allowing for the possibility of someone taking them back? He knew the entire universe would want to undo what he did, leaving them in existence makes that a distinct possibility, given enough time. It wasn't only for that reason either, it was temptation for even him, to keep them.
@@VColossalV Because a vault makes more sense narratively than smashing them. Smashing them creates the confusion of how they can be destroyed when they're the gestalt of aspects of reality. Also, a regular heist would have required significantly less explanation and have been about using characters' strengths. The Time Heist is an incredibly jumbled mess that it had to be explained twice and even the One-Round Trip rule gets violated as an excuse to travel to 1970. The movie's flawed on many levels, which Fringy has pointed out.
@@dragonknightleader1 No it doesn't make more sense and I just explained why, he knows that the entire universe will be looking for them to try and undo what he did. Destroying them eradicates that possibility. Why would he risk some superbeing like Captain Marvel or worse, coming and taking them back? Everything I've seen here are nitpicks, the drawn out complaints about time travel mechanics applies to all time travel movies, even classics like Terminator and Back to the Future, but we don't go around saying they're terrible movies. Time travel isn't possible, so it's impossible to depict without issues. The branching timeline approach is the least problematic, I would argue Terminator and Back to the Future have significantly more issues with time travel mechanics. His complaint about Tony's arc being destroyed because he wanted to favour his family over the whole universe is a moot point, because he ultimately did put their lives at risk by even attempting to go back in time, he changed his mind. If he had stayed stubborn the whole movie he would have a point, but that isn't what happened. Even IF he favoured his family and didn't want to help, and never changed his mind, it's not inconsistent with his arc of learning to sacrifice himself, because this time it involves people he loves being at risk, not just himself. Yet he STILL makes the sacrifice play, both risking his family and ultimately his own life. Arc complete, not destroyed. The complaint about Tony and Steve not involving the other Avengers in their decision or agreement is also a pointless criticism because the rest of the team are already on board with the time heist idea, they don't need to be consulted on it. This is what happens when you have a conclusion but need to scramble aimlessly to find reasons to justify it. Are there some valid criticisms? Sure. But they're mostly nitpicks that can and have been done to any movie in the MCU, even Infinity War, even Civil War. Yes there are other videos of other people doing the same thing to those.
Any time travel story will be illogical because time travel is impossible. Judging it too harshly is like judging how much sense it makes that a mutation gene can give someone telepathy. Honestly though, out of many time travel stories this one is pretty tight. Changes cause new timelines, and the only problem the ancient one had was no infinity stones meant that new universe loses to galactic threats later on. So by returning all except the space stone, all those universes had such similar timelines following that they are pretty much the same as ours. No real differences. It was Loki’s job to address the timestone-less timeline which it failed to do Edit:spacestone not timestone
@@MamaMia-go7co Yes with time dilation, but beyond a few seconds it takes sci fi to make possible (light speed travel, cryo tubes, etc), but when talking about time travel in this regard I would hope the assumption is made that I am reffering to backwards time travel
I remember watching this movie, but I don't remember anything about it... Which is something that happens to me more and more often, even just a month after watching something. This would mean that either I'm getting old really quickly and my memory is failing, or movies are getting more bland and forgettable as we speak... Both of these options are bad, but for the common good, I hope that I just got senile at a young age.
I think there are simply few films that capture the imagination. I mean... in the last 10 years, I can count on one hand the films that have left something in me and that I can remember down to the smallest detail, even if I've only seen them a few times.
I left Endgame feeling completely satisfied...yet entirely empty. I remember saying to my friends it was more of an 'event' than a real movie. Then after a day the flaws in character and logic started to annoy me. I am on-board for this critique!
@@captainfalcon1160 Cynical fan service had an emotional influence because it was well done, so maybe "satisfied" was the wrong word. I should have said "partially satisfied".
Soon as I walked out of IMAX with my brother we were like....that...kinda sucked. I mean once your erection from Cap holding MJNOR subsides there really isn't anything left worth a shit. Actually I do want to give credit to Paul Rudd, the scene where he goes to his daughter and sees her but aged 5 years, that was fantastic acting and a powerful moment. But yeah, the rest was balls.
Fringy - PLEASE make more content like this! You have such a great personality and style. I thoroughly enjoyed this video. I'd love to see more video essays on films in the future! Well done!
Lol I am glad more people are talking about this. I was destroyed at the release of the movie way back when. People ripped me to shreds about me hating Endgame and the reasons. I told everybody this "Once the hype has left you, and you go and buy the blu ray, you'll skip through the scenes, and then you'll realize that the movie was trash." To be fair though when people were saying time travel before the movie was released I was like "No way, after infinity war would they lean on time travel" Once time travel was spoken, I hated it.
I’m not one of those Twitter users that hate how a video is 2-3 or more hours long analyzing a movie, but this is an exception as I noticed some issues with Endgame with every rewatch. Don’t get me wrong it has it’s good moments but boy it has a lot of bad moments and don’t mention the time travel, it’ll hurt your brain, but not this video on the explanation of time travel, but if you mention this to an outsider.
@@Jdudec367It’s pretty bad. I don’t get it. You’ve seen a good Endgame. It’s called Infinity War. How can you see Infinity War and not immediately notice that Endgame is nowhere near as good?
I just noticed - Tony's dilemma is nonsense. He wants to have his kid and so on as well as the snap unsnapped. Fine. The stones can do that. They can't undo a sacrifice to them, but anything else is fair game. They are infinite in terms of power, or near as much to make no difference. What is his child? Atoms in a certain order. Done. Since the spirit stone is a thing, the spirit would be bound to those atoms. That would be his real daughter, not a copy, and even if her memories would be odd, she would be alive, and the unwinding of time could be done in such a way as to preserve his family.
But you are speaking in a real comic booky way. Consider a real world, where you are a parent and have an actual child. Killing your child, and then making another similar child by the soul stone means very similar to adoption. You've seen iron man since 2008, tell me. Does this character want an adopted child right now?
Wait what? You literally wanted Tony to sacrifice his daughter? Interesting how much hatred towards kids people can have? Tony loves his daughter and of course he will never did this, and even if he did that isn’t it means it’s more like adoption?
Yet again the comics did it better. In the comics the disappearances caused by the snap only lasted 24 hours and most importantly EVERYTHING was undone. Edit: Holy shit. You did something I never thought possible. You made the whole “show your work” thing that was drilled into my head in math class actually make sense as to why it’s important.
I can't stand when people use "but it's just a silly story about superheroes!" as an excuse to ignore bad writing. Yeah, most superhero stories are disposable trash, but there are plenty that are genuinely well-written, thought out, dare I say even works of actual art. And dismissing a work's strengths and faults just because it's in a fantastical genre is especially rich considering some of the most popular TV shows of the past two decades were deadly serious dramas about dragons and zombies and robots that dress up like cowboys.
The silliness of the premise of superheroes amplifies the need for good writing and internal consistency in order to allow the suspension of disbelief. I had problems with some of the decision-making behind Ragnarok in that regard, also. I'm sure that the success of Guardians Of The Galaxy influenced that movie.
Err… But it actually is a silly story about superheroes. The writing doesn’t matter, it’s there to be colourful and shiny, nothing more. It isn’t there to be a good or worthwhile or well-written piece of art, it exists only to sell action figures and other merchandise. The movie itself doesn’t matter to the company, it’s literally an advertisement to generate billions of dollars in revenue in toys, t-shirts, colouring books, frisbees, fidget spinners etc. plus movies and subscriptions to Disney+ all of which are more profitable and higher priority than the movie and it’s box office. Although the box office is important to an extent, but only as a barometer of how much interest there is in that specific property and to offset the cost of production and advertising.
@@Nevyn515 I mean no not really, argument is thrown out the window off the bat, only way it would work is by ignoring the century long history of passionate creators making genre, hell generation defining stories, many look back on superheroes stories for inspiration on telling a good tale, creator fantastical worlds, or just finding ways to become a better story, super hero stories are to us what the Greek gods are to rhe mythology of Greece, we can't just see everything in the way of greedy capitalist, they make money bc of how important and amazing they are to us, people need to stop thinking that's only it, it complety undermines the people who've creative these works of art
@@Nevyn515 No, it´s a story. It being about superheroes is irrelevant. You would say that Harry Potter is a great series not because it´s a silly story about magic, but just a really well written book series. In the same way, you can and should critique even superhero movies for what they are: movies. The movie is definitely not there to just sell action figures, that´s just an insult to the people who made the film. They made the film out of their own personal passion to the characters and world in the MCU. We, as the audience, can critique or praise it as we choose.
The thing that really gets me is that there’s no connection between the heroes and thanos from the past since they killed him in the beginning. And time travel makes me ask so many questions
Thanos never cared about the heroes, just his mission. Past Thanos found out he had accomplished his goal, which made him push harder. The heroes were always trying to stop Thanos
@histguy101 no. Loki invaded Earth in 2012 using some of Thanos forces. There's no interaction between our heroes from Endgame and Thanos until Guardians and really Infinity War.
I will never like the end they gave to Captain America. It makes no sense that he, after having three entire movies solely about saving Bucky, would leave him essentially alone in a world that is entirely foreign to him, to get married to a girl he kissed once a hundred years ago. AND he did this while knowing that she built a life for herself and had a family.
Yet another problem with the time heist is that EVERYONE traveled back in time. This means that if the time machine malfunctioned in some way then they wouldn't be able to get back to the present because nobody is there to fix the machine.
@@echo_z319 They shouldn't risk their lives let alone half the universe by leaving the equipment unguarded and without the potential for assistance if something did go wrong.
@@feathero3 you know how the process works right..? Did they not show the entire system with antman? Sure in their timelines theyll spend a decent amount of time getting the stones but in the main timeline only a few seconds would pass. Pretty sure the facility has enough protections to make sure it doesnt get destroyed by someone/something within seconds but thats just me
Also, its TIME TRAVER shuldnt it Happen all at once??? So why not send in the groups 1 after another And how did thanos come out after a delay??? How is there a Delay in TIME for something basicaly outside of TIME
This film was the point when they gave up on telling an interesting story and managing the huge cast of characters well & decided to dumb everything down. Even the final battle (other than Cap finally saying "Avengers Assemble" - an easy fan pleaser) felt by the numbers and heartless. Infinity War by comparison is a masterpiece. Fat Thor, MIA Hulk, Dumb Thanos, convenient rivers appearing to nullify the Sorcerer Supreme. This was the point where the MCU died, strangely along with Tony Stark and Steve Rodgers.
It's weird how you think that the "MCU died" when they made a really great movie followed by a movie that wasn't as good. If you get a really great meal at a restaurant, and then the next meal isn't as good, do you never go there again???
@@abates17 Spider-Man is pretty much a Sony property, and if you've seen both Loki and Multiverse of Madness you'll know their multiverse elements completely contradict each other. Multiverse of Madness also has plot holes with the first Dr Strange film, and itself. All the MCU television shows have been pretty poor regardless of RT ratings. I'll not mention Moon Knight, which butchered one of my favourite characters of all time. None of them have come anywhere close to Daredevil in terms of character building, story tension or action scenes. The quality drop off, in terms of consistency and writing standards has been astounding; which will no doubt continue with Thor's character being destroyed further, along with Ms Marvel & She Hulk being dead on arrival.
@@danieljackson3446 Spider-Man is owned by Sony but the movie was produced by Marvel. And the RT ratings show that most people disagree with you on the quality of the MCU shows. If you have specific plot holes or contradictions, I'd love to hear them! But otherwise, your claims of "quality dropoff" do not match reality.
Thank you so much for talking about steve's character assassination; that was honestly my least favourite thing about the movie and infuriates me to this day, and it's rarely brought up in any discussion of this film
Also now after all this time i don't like tony's death it felt too forced in my opinion, it's like they wanted it to happen, there are concept arts where it was nebula who did the snap and tony was the one who send captain marvel through the time machine in the end, which means they weren't considering tony's death for the most part, also i think it was not just hulk who was nerfed it was also tony who was nerfed as well, russos and the writers purposely made tony do nothing in the final war and the excuse was oh he made that suit not to survive it's bs in my opinion, tony is a tinkerer there is literally no limit to what he can develop he should have developed some nanotech ironman drones or something to make the final fight a little more interesting but no they had time for stupid jokes but not good final fight for a character you are about to kill.
Your entire section on Thanos is something I've been telling my friends since Endgame came out. Infinity War is a movie where Thanos is the protagonist. It's his journey from start to end, collecting the infinity stones, and accomplishing his goal. It's a masterclass in character building, and making the main villain of the MCU the 'hero' of the movie. Endgame completely fucks that up and kills the BBEG in the first 5 minutes. Our heroes don't defeat Thanos. They lost to Thanos, and he basically killed himself when he destroyed the infinity stones. There is absolutely no catharsis when they defeat the 'old' Thanos in Endgame. Because he doesn't have the emotional connection to the heroes that the OG Thanos does. The line that everyone memes is the "I don't even know who you are", and he's right! He has ZERO idea who Scarlet Witch is, who Vision is, and he barely understands who Iron Man, Thor, and Captain America are. It's such a frustrating conclusion to what could have been the greatest on-screen villain of all time.
It is disappointing what they did with Thanos, but I don’t know if I could call it character assassination. Even in infinity war the reasons behind his goal wasn’t that altruistic. The Russos have said he mainly wants to prove his idea to save his planet would have worked.
@@solarking952 I think the character assassination of Thanos and the weight of the Infinity Saga occured in Phase 4. It's like the new batch of writers are chipping away at it. To be fair, the MCU quality drop off started in Phase 3, immediately after Infinity War. Ant-Man and the Wasp was a fun time, but should have been released before Infinity War. If Captain Marvel wasn't a prequel, it might have been better (wasnt it set in the 90s as a middle finger to Fox's Dark Phoenix?)---hardly CMs only problem. Black Widow would have fit perfectly before End Game--again, it's release date is hardly the film's only problem.
You didn’t tell your friends that lol. The directors literally said it before the movie hit theaters it was thanos story. That’s not some original take. And it’s still the avengers movie all the way through.
The last paragraph you said makes no sense at all. They don't take away Thanos' victory or story by killing him in the beginning of endgame, they even say in the movie it meant nothing to kill him, as there was still no way to bring back their loved ones. So in the end his plan was a success and he could die knowing that. When the "Old" Thanos from the past shows up to fight, obviously he wouldn't know who these people are. He does know that these people are dangerous and can stop him, so he changes his whole plan and decides that he will just create a new universe where no one remembers that he snapped half of them away. The ending to Thanos was great.
I think it's mind-blowing that people will say things like "the time travel inner-workings aren't really that important, don't judge the movie too harshly for it" when the movie itself bothers to TRY and explain it. The *story* is telling us to think about it. I didn't latch onto this element by choice; it's just plainly a thing that I was given to ponder. If this was the 18th installment of Pacific Rim and there were suddenly just hordes of zombie samurai running around, but the movie at no point had a character point this out... I would go with it as a stupid thing for stupid's sake. Because the movie would be telling me it is nonsense, and no contemplation beyond the insane spectacle is being asked of me.
1:06:05 the very worst part about this forced contrivance is it needed nothing more than a throwaway line, even if just by Jarvis 2.0 "sir..if you are planning to snap 3 billion people back into existence, perhaps you should some provide advanced knowledge to global authorities to prepare for this event.." "yes, jarvis..good plan, make it so"
their first mistake with endgame imo was deciding that the snap should be undone. everybody was expecting it to be undone because the heroes are supposed to win in the end, but infinity war was all about them losing for once. you don't always need to return to the status quo, you can change it too because that's what long-running stories do.
Thank you for this Steve would have never. He is one of my favorite characters for so many reasons. One of them is his persistence. He would have never given up.
I really started to noticed that like why would Steve go back in time to be with Peggy? What about his friend Bucky? He always said he be there at the end of the line. I hope I’m saying that right. Just why? I know they wanted to retire the character but man they could’ve done it differently, but no they turned Steve into Joe Biden.
@@Matt-wb8niwe are not complaining that he’s having a happy ending. We are ok with Steve retiring and giving his shield to Sam. What we are actually complaining about was him going to the past to be with Peggy. Peggy who Steve kissed once and barely hung out with. Steve leaving his friends to be with her is illogical especially when his past movies were about moving on from her and the past. Another reason to complain is him going back to the past in general. It doesn’t make sense for him to sit back and relax with Peggy in the past while hydra and among other bad things are going on. Do you really think Steve(in character Steve) will be ok with staying in the past; while Bucky is being tortured and brainwashed by hydra. Do you also think he will be ok with hydra taking over Shield?
@rawan.m9472 Bucky should've gotten the Shield. It would've fit with his redemption arc, and symbolically represent Steve woth Bucky "to the end of the line". Given how integral Bucky was to all 3 Captain America movies, and how Cap never gave up on Bucky. Fighting the government and his own friends because he never blamed Bucky for what the Winter Soldier did. He would want him to move on from the Winter Soldier persona, and get a second chance.
I always thought that the best thing for Thor would have been to become hardened and embittered after the events of Infinity war like he was in the opening of End Game. Thor's take away should have been to solve all his problems by going for the head. That would align with his statement to solve his problems not run from them. He already had the eyepatch, why not become more like Odin from the first movie? Only when he reunites with the team does he start to regain some of his lost humanity an realize the best way may not always be the most direct way. Edit: holy shit I hadn't seen the deleted scene, that's incredible what the fuck
Yup, same. I would've had Thor become an overprotective king and married to Lady Sif. Relatively cut off from the rest of the world. Then he has to gain back his humanity, and relearn what it's like to be on a team. He's the one to snap and bring everyone back. Undoing the snap he couldn't stop. Losing the arm in the process.
@@DavidMartinez-ce3lp I really like that idea! Maybe then, the fourth Thor movie could have been about Jane taking over the role of Thor and becoming an Avenger while Thor himself becomes more of a political leader/king of New Asgard.
I'd settle for a little time travel and no skip. Hell, I might even do something goofy like get Present Thanos to realize his mistake _and help_ the remaining Avengers go back in time and fight Past Thanos. Or get Past Thanos to pull a Highlander "there can only be one" on Present Thanos or something, IDK I'm not a doctor.
The time skip is cool af, could have been handled better but thats a dofferent story. The skip is an excellent idea and with good planning could allow for the rise and beginnings of a plethora of new heroes
Perhaps the aspect I least appreciated about Endgame is how little Thanos' snap had an impact on that world. Leaving aside the consequences on other planets... the disappearance of 4 billion random people should lead to: -riots in every city; -loss of the balance of power; -new tensions both towards governments and towards the Avengers; -disillusionment with traditional religious systems; -economic crisis; -altered impact on the environment...etc. Instead we find ourselves seeing a post-apocalyptic semi-scenario, with no one asking the remaining Avengers what happened, nor with them being forced to fight to preserve a minimum of balance...not to mention the consequences of the return of the missings after 5 years.
One of the smartest decisions in the Infinity Gauntlet comic is the snap happening and Nebula getting the gauntlet 24 hours later and specifically willing the world back to how it was prior to the snap. That 5 year gap between Infinity War and Endgame makes the MCU incredibly messy.
Ah, no longer unlisted, eh? Neat. This was a hell of a breakdown to critique the film. Aside from the broken time travel mechanic to move the plot forward, Fat Thor and providing more in regards to the consequences of the Blip, the sheer lack of emphasis to flesh out the conflict between Tony and Steve leading to them letting bygones be bygones later in the film in a far more sensible and satisfying way really annoyed me.
It turns out that the demise of half of everyone they ever loved sort of overshadowed the now comparably insignificant squabble they had in Civil War. I'm not sure what you expected, even by the end of Civil War with the letter they were over it. Tony didn't even attempt to stop Cap from breaking everyone out of the prison, despite being told. Every time travel movie, even classic like Terminator, have countless issues, arguably more than Endgame, because as it turns out, time travel is not possible in real life. You can tear apart every time travel movie ever made by nitpicking.
@@VColossalV Fringy countered this in the beginning of the video. No shit time travel isn’t real. Neither is magic. That doesn’t mean you can’t create a fictional story that establishes rules and follows them. How did you not get that?
@@edgythehedgy6661 I notice you ignored the first half of my comment entirely. "That doesn’t mean you can’t create a fictional story that establishes rules and follows them" Arguably the only time Endgame breaks it's own rules is when Steve is old in the original timeline. There are possible explanations for it, but all of the other examples he gave are problems for all other time travel movies. He criticizes Endgame for not dealing with the impact of Hawkeye simply moving a baseball glove, when in actual fact, it's far less of a problem with branching timelines as it is with other interpretations of time travel, as it isn't effecting the main timeline, only that separate one. In Back to the Future, the mere presence of being there should immediately erase him and and have ripple effects that span way beyond that. Branching timelines makes way more sense, it avoids many paradoxes. But when you take a magnifying glass to such concepts, they fall apart. Doesn't make any of these terrible movies, despite the time travel of many of them being laughably implausible.
@@VColossalV the first half of your comment was about them getting over their feud quickly? What does that have to do with time travel or my comment? How did I ignore that, when it has nothing to do with my point?
@@edgythehedgy6661 You replied to my comment, which was in response to the OP who made claims about the conflict. I thought you would at least engage with both points.
THANK YOU for defending that it doesn't really matter which version of Time Travel is chosen in a story, as long as that choice is CONSISTENT and worked effectively. I personally find Temporal Mutability (also frequently called Closed Time Loops) to be the most satisfying, because having the whole story feel like a puzzle falling into place with consumers knowing the end result first but seeing how we got there via convoluted methods is what I call a good time. But I can enjoy any of the three types if they're done well enough, and indeed have and will. But... BUT... handwaving paradoxes or MIXING the types with no rhyme or reason is just... infuriating. It shows a clear lack of regard for worldbuilding, even for immediate plot relevance, that just transcends mere immersion and has my fuming from my core. I despise lazy time travel stories, because they can be so, so beautiful with the right amount of effort and finesse.
Were you paying attention o what kind of time travel it was? It was the branching theory, so whatever change they made would just create a separate universe.
[ 0:05 Intro ] 7:03 Context: Going into Endgame *Plot* 11:37 Let’s Begin. + Context: Why Loki will be ignored 18:19 Time Travel in Endgame 34:55 The Time Heist 39:54 Avengers Assemble *Characters* 50:45 Context: Character & Plot 54:56 Captain America 1:01:46 Context: The Snap/The Blip 1:07:26 Iron Man 1:13:20 Steve vs Tony 1:21:04 Thor 1:27:08 Professor Hulk 1:29:52 Hawkeye/Black Widow 1:32:45 Nebula/Rocket 1:34:19 Thanos *Conclusion* 1:36:47 In Summary 1:42:57 Consistency *”vs.”* Fanservice [ 1:59:53 Outro ]
Hulk had one of the most anticlimactic endings to a story arc I've ever seen.
He didn't even really have one did he? No rematch with Thanos, is given the snap (what I think should have been the natural resolution to Thor's arc by having a chance to redeem himself of inadvertently allowing Thanos to snap, reversing his greatest achievement in revenge for all the horror Thanos brought on Thor) but then has to be saved by Giant Man and just kind of disappears in the background of helping Steve return the artefacts with absolutely no clear image of what he's doing next or any kind of reflection on how the Infinity War and the Endgame affected him. He got ultra shafted. Plus, they never even showed him become Professor Hulk, with no interaction between Bruce and Hulk putting aside their differences to become something more. Instead he just became The Credible Hulk who's embarrassed by smashing anything and who dabs, which they thought was funny. I was not laughing.
@@J1283-s1k He did absolutely get ultra shafted, well put
that's because his story isn't over?
@@J1283-s1k but he threw that bench when he found out Natasha died, sooo emotional 😂😂
@@-Dildo.Baggins. Good Lord man, remember when The Incredible Hulk punched the ground and it was so tame and limp that it barely made a sound let alone actually made any impact that translated to the audience members? I'm not saying he had to break the place down and endanger his team members but good God if the Hulk hits something in devastation, it normally means something more than just a slight thump.
What I hate the most is how they treated Thor’s depression compared to how they treated Wanda’s mental illness.
Wanda committed atrocities as a response to her inability to deal with grief and Marvel loves to give excuses for her actions. A fake sympathy for the villain.
Thor just got fat because of his deep depression and Marvel treated him as an incompetent slob that all his character arc before that must be reversed. He isn’t fit to rule so he has to give a throne to a drunken slaver who had a track record of selling thousands if not millions innocent people to their death for alcohol money.
Finally, someone else who sees Valkyrie for what she actually was.
Yep Valk is an evil slaver which Marvel (and Thor who was enslaved by her) conveniently forget about. Also we are never shown how she and the others survived off that ship and Thanos' attack at the beginning of Infinity War.
@@samr8603 She is way worse than Wanda yet was barely criticized. At least there are many of the fans called out Wanda for her actions but not for Valkyrie.
@@samr8603 not confirmed but people are saying the dude who sent Hulk to Earth did it, cant take a whole ship so he did it group by group or sum like that
Also the fact that he's only known her for like....a day. Like after immediately after ragnorok was endgame so....yh like a day.
Still destroys me that the only two things Tony needed to solve time travel was a single late night and Paul Rudd reminding him that time travel movies are a thing.
@Clark Hathaway I really like how it took them 5 years to realize they could use time travel.
@@DOOM_guyEditz433 I like how Tony was working on it the entire 5 years and Scott just happened to give him the missing piece which was the quantum realm and so "Rather than invent time travel completely, he just had to make some sort of time-space gps. It wasn't a single evening, it was a few days. His AI systems allow for quick and fast calculations and simulations, allowing him to think of and test multiple possibilities in a relatively short time.
Tony is a super genius and has developed full AI and nano-robotics. Him taking "five years" is understandable and reflected in both his persona and physical being post snap. He probably was written to have had an epiphany, not doing so within a "single night". Also he wasn't working on it alone. Professor Hulk and even Scott Lang helped Tony Stark. He just managed to figure it out, which makes sense for being the second smartest person in Marvel comics to Reid Richards. His IQ is at least 186.
@@isaofujii7817 He didn't seriously consider the idea until the biggest clown of the MCU posited the idea and it's implied it took him a matter of days to crack it.
@@donotletthebeeswin Right. And that "clown" has basically a super-computer's worth of intellect. Again, you should consider the source material and look up the word "Eureka moment" because that kind of epiphany is essentially what happened with Tony Stark. Yes, he then was able to patch a way days later. Why? Really, because it's fiction and kinda in the same way that CSI can solve crimes in a manner of days rather than years. Even then, have you seen what all Tony can do? haha. This isn't really anything all to surprising in comparison.
Killing Thanos and then introducing a less interesting mustache twirling Thanos completely deflated all the tension Infinity War had.
100%
B-b-but it subverted our expectations!!
They should of made that Thanos used the stones to maintain his memories post infinity war in every timeline. There’s no way thanos didn’t know that multiple timelines or universes existed and that one can affect another.
I would have been way more interesting if they couldn’t kill Thanos here. Like, they had to send him back to 2014 to keep the timeline intact.
@@OkOk-vj9dbyep, and those expectations were a good movie 🫠 .
My issue with Thor isn't that he's a fat and depressed alcoholic. My issue is that it's mocked and made fun of
You could say they turned Thor into Homer Simpson in Endgame
my issue is both, him bein a fat and depressed alcoholic and turned into a joke
@@serily4524 exactly. What they did to Thor goes against everything the character is. That's not how he would react to failure. That's never how he reacts to failure. Not only that but he also hides, and then later completely abandoned his own people. This after just learning about the importance of Asgard as a people, and not just a place in Ragnorak. Undid all the lessons and character development from previous films.
chance for alotta insight on the character and the writer's could've had a good mental health arc for thor (a better one at least,one without all the fucking jokes like jeez)
@@markanine562yeah the Jokes for Depressed Thor was Annoying
The moment Infinity War ended I told my kids: "don't worry, they'll use time travel to bring them all back."
I thought I was joking.
@Alex based on newer films and shows that's becoming more and more true
Lol
Ye
@Alex milking?
That would be why the mcu seems to be the msheu now.
Easier to milk from a biological female.
I didn't mind learning of the time travel plot point while watching Endgame, since I understood there would still be worldwide upheaval. The time travel itself was largely unsatisfying, however, and the "blip" has afterward only been mentioned in passing, at best shown dramatically in one hospital scene in WandaVision. Most of the time, it's handwaved as a thing that happened and got fixed, not as a tragedy that would still shake society to its core.
It's crazy to think that half the MCU is only alive because one heroic rat pressed a button. I guess if the rat didn't do that it would've been eaten by a purple dragon at the end of time.
The rat is the true hero of the mcu
The rat had to press the button or it would get arrested by the TVA for being a devient 🙄
Yes, a Rat stumbled on a button in a garage the only real problem is that people have done the math and it would not have taken that long like a rat would of found that button within weeks because they are so infested in that part of San Fran.
all criminals that hawkeye killed on his post-snap spree are still dead after culk undoes the snap
If a rat can simply turn on the machine, why didn't any human do in the past five years?
They didn't even have to get all the stones. All they had to do was get the Time Stone from the past, then use it on Thanos' gauntlet to revert the stones to their original state.
There you go, you now have all six stones.
True
yeah like, all the stones together contribute to a "wish" of sorts that can do something extraordinary like delete half of life or even self destruction.@@TheNwr1
No they did have to get all of them. How could they do it to that degree though just using one stone?
That really wouldn't work.
@thatmovienitpicker8070thanos literally does exactly that to vision in infinity war
@thatmovienitpicker8070that's exactly how time stone works
The real poblem is: only Strange knows about that
People were so overwhelmed with emotion seeing so many heroes in one place, that they didn't realize what a waste Endgame and Thanos were, how much better it could have been.
I still liked it. I know it's a simple and maybe wrong opinion but watching it made me happy. So happy that I didn't even care for all the mistakes. If I were to defend it in any way I would say that because of the way the mcu is build it didn't need to have a regular story structure because it is the climax of all the movies. But I'm probably wrong.
You're out of your mind the movie is amazing and unprecedented. It's not perfect obviously but that is not what we wanted, we got what we wanted.
i honestly wish it didn't put too much Superheroes in the Movie
@@Byronic19134 I didn't get what I wanted. who are those we? Infinity War was great (that is, if you choose to ignore how dumb Thanos' motivation and ideas are) and Endgame is just a nostalgia-fest that not only doesn't make sense, but also shits on multiple characters and their arcs and ignores common sense just for writers to not try. Endgame falls apart the second you turn on your brain
@@Byronic19134 It's cheap and emotionally manipulative. It assassinates the character of every single avenger and plays it off as catharsis.
Thor almost single-handedly killed Thanos with 6 stones in Infinity War. The fact that he and Cap combined couldn’t even scratch him with 0 stones in this movie really fucks with the world-building
Yeah not only did they have to nerf Thor because he was the strongest avenger after Infinity War (if not most powerful entity in the MCU, period).
@@RandomizedCTRL And yet they boost Captain Marvel to the point where she receives a Thanos headbutt like a fly despite that same headbutt knocking out The God Of Thunder (who in the comics is always the greatest physical threat to Thanos and has had many battles 1-1 with him) in one. And then you remember that the same Korath who knew both her in her binary form and Thanos called Thanos 'the most powerful being in the universe' in Guardians, yet here he can't even make her blink, in the final moments of the final battle of the Infinity Saga? It's like they ignored their own continuity in favour of pandering at the expense of their legacy characters. Oh wait, that's exactly what they did, given how all the way back in 2016, at a time when the MCU was still nerfing their characters heavily and yet Feige was rushing in with his 'She'll easily be the most powerful character we've ever had' crap at the expense of the actual favourites and the actual powerful characters like Thor, Strange, Hulk, Wanda (although she has continually received justice in terms of her power and revenge on Thanos).
Yeah, thor with the stormbreaker needs like 2 seconds of thanos(with the full gauntlet) being distracted to completely rip him apart
@Tom Right?! In Captain Marvel she struggles to throw back a missile yet in Endgame they boost her to such game breaking proportion that, in the final fight to save the universe from a genocidal maniac, a culmination of 20 odd movies, they do Thanos such a disservice as a terrifying threat that they show him completely out of control and authority of the situation, being easily overpowered by Captain Marvel before she ignores his headbutt like a fly. And yes he's shown to be resourceful by using the power stone, which is great and true to Thanos, but making him look not just weak (for no reason anyway given Captain Marvel has never traditionally been anywhere close to in his realm of power, getting one shotted by him in the comics) but like he's just shat his pants, wide eyed terrified despite being the same being who smiled a mad grin at the awesome strength of the Hulk, who confidently walked the same Tony down who made him bleed and brutally punished him, who taunted and baited Thor even despite what would have been a mortal axe wound. It's just so bizarre they changed him entirely in favour of Captain Marvel being so broken that she makes him shit himself despite ruining all tension, all stakes and all menace of Thanos in his final moments of, what should be filled with terror.
@@J1283-s1k Not to mention, logically, her being more powerful than a dude with MULTIPLE stones made zero sense as she gained abilities from just one. Blech.
So did Steve go back in time and then just leave his best friend to be brainwashed and turned into a sleeper agent, even though he knew who had him and where to find him?
And didn't bother to free Isaac Walker
Kennedy assassination, 9/11, Tony's parents being murdered and a thousand other small and large tragedies that he's aware of...
I guess he just sat there, watching tv with Peggy in 2001, pretending to be surprised and horrified?
Does not a single one of you understand how that would change the time-line? Doctor Strange literally saw one possibility of Thanos being beaten, but all of you have to pretend to be smart.
@addison_v_ertisement1678 Steve staying in the past should have changed the timeline. The whole time travel plot line is complete nonsense. I'm just pointing out that the Steve we see in all of these movies would have been on the first flight to Russia as soon as he decided to stay. And Thanos was already beaten at that point anyway.
@@criticalfailgaming1976 The fact that you're calling it nonsense says that you don't understand it. You didn't counter a single one of my points.
Never understood why Cap so desperately wanted to go back in time to live a life with Peggy. Not only did he make out with her niece in CW but he barely knew her. They clearly were trying to show him moving on then suddenly in Endgame “Oh I still love her I’m going back.”
I will say that Avengers Endgame shouldn't have ended with the important characters dying. I mean if Marvel didn't know what to do next with them, instead of killing them, they should have just disbanded, and let their story marinate for the future movies. This is where I think Marvel fvcked themselves.
@@FreeBlendersFromAmazon
Brother…
that would create a comically happy ending without any impact or emotion.
Having none of the main heroes die would destroy all tension throughout the entire saga.
There NEEDED to be sacrifices or else this entire story would’ve felt pointless.
Honestly. If Thor was kept as he was in the movie, but with it treated as sad and sympathetic rather than a laugh, I'd love it. Depression isn't a joke.
Like imagine Thor in Endgame, you can still have New Asgard, but you have like a big castle where Thor resides sitting in his throne. Kinda like how Asgard was originally. He doesn’t want to help outsiders but only his own people in New Asgard, and if he was to rejoin the Avengers maybe have a line to convince him. Again this is just my idea.
I noticed a lot of the fat jokes made against Thor weren’t in the original script and were improved by the actors. I think they were enjoying themselves too much to understand the gravity of the story as only RDJ got to read the whole script for the movie.
@@RealogOnlyBrodie Why did only ONE actor get to read the script!?
@@eway44 they wanted to prevent spoilers cuz the actors started to slip up around the 2016-2018 years of the mcu.
@@RealogOnlyBrodie still, it makes problems like THIS!
I enjoy Endgame but fully recognize just how utterly flawed the story is.
Honestly imo wat really fuks endgame up is the 5yr jump. Not even a montage or nothing just text on the screen 5yrs later, and its not really addressed. Also what they did to hulk was unforgivable 😖
@@Eking-su3tr Out of all the things wrong in Endgame (the plot holes, the time travel plot, the treatment of Thor and Hulk, the fact that a random rat pressing a button started the whole movie), the 5 year time skip is NOT one of them.
@@manolgeorgiev9664 bro everything u listed is cuz of the 5 yr jump. The rat, hulk, thor, all from the 5 yr jump.
It all feels out of place cuz they rushed it.
@@Eking-su3tr you can literally make a 5 year jump without those problems and a story without a 5 year jump that still has those problems. The fact that 5 years passed is inconsequential.
If only more people were like you. A single sentence acknowledging and not dismissing the criticisms but saying you like it anyway.
Wait, Dr. Strange looked forward through time to view 14,000,604 timelines of them failing to beat Thanos. You're telling me that out of 14 million timelines, Strange never saw far enough ahead to see the TVA pop in and prune everything? If the TVA knew he was looking and just waited until he stopped to prune that universe, what if he looked thousands of years into the future? Would the TVA wait thousands of years to prune that timeline? Wouldn't that make the "one sacred timeline" concept irrelevant?
That's because the TVA didn't exist until the mentally impaired, college educated (but I repeat myself) bonobo who wrote Loki: The Sylvie Show word-defecation retconed them into existence.
The existence of the TVA really does ruin it. If the avengers success was part of the sacred timeline then every failed plan is just pruned anyway, they won by default.
Every single marvel show post Endgame literally contradicted everything.
@@TimedRevolver sounds like an convenient excuse to make you feel better about gaping plot holes, maybe you shouldn't come off as a rabid ape for no reason
@@TimedRevolver They have a rage boner for shit writing. Get out of here with your poorly written fuccgirls.
The thing that bothered me most about the captain America time travel was he went back in time and didn't rescue bucky... how???
Or stop any of the other bad stuff he had learned was going to happen by living in the present. Especially to his friends he made there.
why would any of that matter? The timeline ceases to exist as soon as he leaves it. It is true that the time stuff doesn't make consistent sense but if we go by "Loki" rules, then only the prime timeline is allowed to exist, meaning Steve basically lived out a dream of sorts and then returned to the main timeline.
"oh no peggy look they hit the second tower who would've guessed something like this would've happened"
Here is the thing, two Captian America always existed in the same prime timeline one who went back to Peggy and became her secret husband and the other who was frozen awaiting to be awake. Cap who went back to time didn't interfere with the events because he knew he will undo the changes. That's why we see him only in the end of the movie.
Captain and Avengers weren't held accountable by TVA for messing with the timeline since then messing with time to get back the stones was part of cannon event something that was always supposed to happen.
Loki and Miles Morales are anomalies who weren't supposed to exist.
@@ChrisJericho22 it's always a cop-out. That's why I hate the time travel and alternate dimension things.
One of the biggest problems with the MCU is that every time someone writes a new film they have the mindset of "fuck what already exists and the current story, I'm just gonna tell *my* story" which leads to all the contradictions between stories and the shitting over previous films that we keep seeing
Understand about this mechanic is that there are no alternate realities everything takes place in one universe for better or worse most of the bad time travel films at this world said the temporal need to be lovely time travel system is by far the most complicated one and I personally find it can be quite difficult to let me give you an example of how it works imagine Bob builds a time machine in 2021 and travels back to 1904 analogically 1900 Bob existed before 2021 Bob use the time machine whatever Bob did in the past was already baked into the
well you didnt really know anything about the mcu how it is now? they need to talk to the heads like kevin feige if they want to change things
@@FreekyPower Yeah, exactly. Which is why Feige is the greatest sham in this whole ordeal.
@@jamesezzard29
Did you even watch the video? Theres multiple type of time travel. Thats the first point being made. You can't just say its wrong because its not this type.
The problem is internal consistency. Choose your rules and stay with them.
Endgame has 80% Timelines and 20% others which completly fucks it up.
If they went 100% timeline, time travel can only be used for heist of unchanging limitless things. Otherwise you're just crrating problem for that worlds avenger and they'll make time line travel to steal from you and before you know it... Interdimensional war and dead people doppleganger being kidnapped left and right.
Every good thing just poofing out of existance as other worlds steals your ressource.
Timeline time travels create no problem.
But when steve was on the bench and other things, they fucked it up.
@@90enemies lol wut
WOOOOOOOOOOOO LESSS GOOOOOOOO!
Now we're gonna wait for Rags to post his Mando video
This is where the fun begins
@@ponczos_2293 Then the trilogy will be completely when MauLer finishes his TFA autopsy.
@@Zathren won’t be for another few years lol
Good times.
Fun isn’t something one considers when critiquing media. But I must admit…this does put a smile on my face.
Dread it... run from it... Fringle arrives just the same.
Best comment! 😂😂
@@AnAmericanMusician but how you ask? Alas the secrets of the goo are yet to be revealed.
Don't say stupid things.
@@scottchaison1001 But you did. No one likes a hypocrite
The other issue involving the Tesseract, is that… it was stolen twice. Loki steals it once in 2012 and Tony steals it a second time in 1970. The 2012 timeline CANNOT be set back to normal, because they don’t have a second Space Stone to bring there.
Loki doesn't travel outside of his timeline, though. The reason they had to return the stones in the first place is because they were taking them from their respective timelines.
Existence of Loki had led to creation to multiverse. So different timelines definitely branch out when Loki escaped.
They clearly wrote Infinity War without knowing how Endgame would go. The snap should have stayed and only the actors who wanted to retire should have been snapped.
"only the actors who wanted to retire should have been snapped"
So almost no one?
Thanos should have
snapped harder…
Snap ya fingers
Or wait about 10 movies before bringing everyone back or something
I always thought it would be baller as fuck to permanently end the mcu with infinity war
i hate how they made a mockery out of Thor's depression, the theatre was laughing everytime he was on the screen, it was so annoying and i absolutely HATE that cheese whiz comment.
The fact that Chris Hemsworth was totally OK with even allowing that to happen, it’s just straight up more ridiculous. Or maybe simply the studio is just paying him to justify his character assassination.
I hated it too , however you have to admit the meta commerty about how a few months of living a modern lifestyle of videogames,beer, fatty foods , is enough to destroy even thors physically fit frame . I liked phat Thor I thought he looked more like Thor should look as a God who eats and drinks all day .
@@osmanyousif7849 - Nah for real, cuz there was stuff Joss Whedon wanted Gal Gadot to do as Wonder Woman, that she flat out REFUSED. (Like when the Flash tripped, fell & landed in her tits, for a cheap laugh) He had to bring in a body double cuz she straight up wouldn't even come to the set, she was so furious. She felt it dumbed down & unnecessarily over sexualized the character. And she was right. It was one of the stupidest scenes in "Josstice League".
And I only bring this up to make your point that these actors DO have some power to refuse to do certain scenes, in order to protect their own brand, or to protect the image of the character they are playing. Chris Hemsworth could have done the same for Thor but...
I honestly hated half of Rhody’s dialogue in general, he was infuriatingly obnoxious with his constant stupid jokes. Same with Ant-man
What fucks me up most here is that its Cheese Whiz. Its so region-specific for a comment that it'll puzzle a few and drop many out of the film. This has all been built as a global event and reversing the snap will have a worldwide effect, but that one comment made me go "oh yeah there's basically no heroes that arent American or... Space. Weird"
I want to know where the Russian, British, German etc heroes are. You going to really tell me that after Hydra and the Red Guardian none of the world powers developed at least one super-folk
The thought Evil or Dark Thor makes my mouth water. That would have been so badass. Instead of sadness, that trauma turns into hate which corrupts his good intentions. He essentially becomes overprotective and more hateful towards enemies. Besides his current direction is undoing 10 years worth of build up
The thing is, they KNOW that fat Thor is shit, they hide it in all the trailer, I don't even know that Fat Thor is a thing until I saw it in theater.
@@protato911 They don't know that as it isn't shit. Huh? Wasn't Thor in in the trailers though?
Natasha died and no one even acknowledged that.
Who?
huh? theres an entire scene about her death
Russo Bros: you must realize, there was only enough time for Bruce to throw a bench
Natasha death would have been more impactful if Captain America was the romantic interest than Bruce Banner. Chris and Scarlett shared more screen time and had more chemistry on screen.
Also I feel their should have been a trilogy for this infinity war saga. The second installment should have been purely about them getting back the infinity stones that would have given good screen time to built the death of Natasha. And also to give more depths to other characters.
@@ChrisJericho22considering cap goes back in time to live with peggy, we’d be angry that he made an emotional decision like that and the fans would always see Peggy as the rebound.
They completely screwed themselves by allowing Thanos to "use the stones to destroy the stones." Instead of just defeating Thanos to retrieve the stones, or having to locate the stones after Thanos disposed of them, and then undoing the Snap, they instead FORCED THEMSELVES to break the very reality THEY CREATED.
Bingo!!! Exactly.
Honestly, Endgame would have been great had they had a similar macguffin idea where the Avengers are trying to get the gauntlet back from Thanos with Thanos trying to prevent them from using it
And they will pay the consequences they set out for themselves oh shit I forgot the gauntlet was fucked shit
Also using the stones to destroy the stones is literally impossible, its one of the rules of the infinity stones
@@Eking-su3tr Was that ever said. I don´t remember that being a rule
I kinda wish that they had ended phases 3 with Infinity War and then spent phase 4 exploring the characters who survived the snap, show us the world, show us how the characters got to the points that they were in in Endgame. Then end phases 4 with Endgame.
What would be the point of that?
@@Matt-wb8ni gives proper character development unlike the trash we got in endgame. Plus it would be a massive change in the status quo which would allow them to put characters through different story’s then what they’re doing now
@@NightMare-zm8mh trash character development? It was very well done in endgame. Especially during the time travel heist where the characters actually get moments with their past relatives. Plus, the movie wasn’t one big character arc, it was a conclusion to many.
@@Matt-wb8ni mmmmmmm…I think you need to rewatch it
Yes, snap should not be undone because after 5 years people move on and population growth back exponentially.
Thank you for the devoted, concise, and staying-on-target analysis. There have been a lot of long form critiques about this film going back a couple of years but I do believe this is the best.
$9.99?
@@mightyraccoon7155 It’s a SuperThanks (donation).
@@mightyraccoon7155 loser spent money to comment on RUclips
@@TheManInBlack11
How can I do that?
@@mightyraccoon7155 There should be a button for it toward the far right of the Like, Dislike, and Share buttons.
THANK YOU FOR THIS
endgame has irked me from the beginning. I remember walking out of the theatre opening night deeply unsettled and confused. I kept thinking to myself, "that was it? that's what we got for an ending?"
I felt the same way I felt watching The Last Jedi. So disappointed and confused.
Yessss! Same! I asked my friends and they were so hyped and I was like no something isn't right here
@ just had a permanent thousand-yard stare for the entire week following
Something I really wanted to see was Peter Quill mourning the loss of Gamora and dealing with the knowledge that he ruined the plan of taking the Gauntlet from Thanos and cost the lives of half the universe. Maybe him and Nebula could have talked, both understanding that they feel partly to blame or believe they could have done more and lost someone important to them both.
luckily vol 3 got you covered.
@@SHESTAGOOEYFROMOPIUSehhh Peter never really acknowledged how he royally screwed everything up, all he ever talked about was Gamora
@@gamervevo-s8v He literally says in the movie that he got half the universe killed. So yes, he did acknowledge it.
How is it Quills fault? I think you meant the writers not the character....
Im so fckng happy with that choice of Gunn
I love how he jokes about it (Star Lord talks about it like a joke - like how they did this with Gunn's child)
Soooo basically Endgame is a classical example of a film that didn't do its homework when it comes to its story and relied solely on emotional payoffs to be regarded as a good film. Payoffs that were welcomed by the public because of the massive multiple years buildup to it.
It's kind of a unique case in film history when you think about it, because it's very hard to actually make your voice heard when saying "Endgame is bad" with all the anticipation that came with it.
In all honesty Endgame was truly just a hard mid movie that was saved by the cameos, fan service, and basically like you said the payoffs. If anyone had watch this to solely rate it as a film on its own it would probably get a 5/10 I still can’t believe they turned one of the most bad a$$ villains in history to a lame in the sequel. Like bro the hype was their they didn’t even have to do the work.
I even enjoyed Avenger's: Age of Ultron despite all of that films flaws more than Avenger's Endgame. At least that movie had a more understandable albeit busy plot.
@@zolod.uchiha5102 then u make it then
no they just thought people would understand what they are saying and showing theme they didnt include the fact that most people are dumb
@@zolod.uchiha5102 endgame isnt a good movie because its not made to watch it by itself its the ending to a story and for that it does everything right you are like the people who raged about Kingdom Hearts 3 being not udnerstandable for new people that didnt play the 40 games that came before imagine its called ENDGAME like what else can they do to tell you youi shouldnt think of it as a solo film
I went into Endgame blind, and immediately got super sad when I realised they were going with a time travel plot.
If you were expecting the time travel plot from the heaps of leaks, it's way easier to digest the bullshit. Part of the reason why I enjoyed the movie so much.
They really missed the opportunity to do inter-universal stuff.
I heard rumours that they could use time travel, so I naturally thought 'Oh, they're going to confront Thanos, fight him, reclaim the Time Stone somehow and use that to bring everyone back! Alright!'.
So when they established that the stones (the most powerful things in the universe that hold its timestream together, according to the Ancient One) got destroyed so easily, I was so disappointed.
How else were they supposed to reverse the snap lmao?
@@elias_xp95 THEY WEREN'T. IT SUCKS THAT THEY DID.
You were brave to skewer this sacred cow. The post-multiverse MCU is utterly wretched and Endgame has one of the worst endings in movie history.
Having to listen to all the Loki nonsense literally hurt my brain cells.
Worst endings in movies history? This type of hyperbole makes you guys look nuts.
@@WL1264yeah, WORST is a stretch. This movie definitely could’ve been better, but for what it was trying to do, it was alright.
Calling endgame “one of the worst movies and endings” in history actually is a statement only delusional r*tards could possibly think of. Thanks for confirming you’re one of them hence the wild take.
Steve's "retirement" should have come from a malfunction of some sort with the time traveling. He couldn't return, so he decided to live that simple life after doing what needed to be done for the "present". It shouldn't have been a choice, but a consequence of self sacrifice.
That would be cool Makes more sense
How would that be more satisfying than the character making a choice? The 2020s has nothing for him. His choice was his dignity, him finally putting himself first after years of being a good soldier.
@@MichaelSotoCE It is a choice counter to his character. He was defined as a person who does the opposite of that very act, so for him to make that choice without it being forced is counter to everything written about him and who he is. That is not to say I do not understand the choice, but having him be stuck, try to get back to the future, fail a bit and then notice he is letting his life and love slip away by obsessing over his sense of duty and so **then** deciding to live his life would have been more in character.
Then the choice would have been to keep trying in spite of everything, or decide that he had done all he could and trusting the future to his team. It just would have narratively made more sense. Well, at least more narratively satisfying.
if you want a good example of mcu’s desired “self sacrifice” angles check out aunt may in no way homr
@@Kilmoran yeah he WAS defined by his dedication to duty, but it was part of his character arc to stop being a soldier and start living for himself. It would be LESS satisfying if he was forced into this action instead of deciding for himself.
Remember this guy was thawed out of the ice, joined a superhero team, found out the gov he was working for was corrupt and about to be taken over by the same Nazis he was fighting in the 40s, then a DIFFERENT government tried to stop him from being the best hero he knew how to be, then he got in a big fight with one of his superhero besties, he became an international outlaw, he finally came back (at risk to his freedom) to fight Thanos, they compromised on some of their morals and yet they still lost.
Then bucky got evaporated, 5 years of grief go by, Sharon Carter is missing, Peggy is long dead, they have to fight Thanos again, tony and nat die, and you know what..... After everything..... He can't give up on his best girl.
Did you really need to see him make that decision? They trusted that the audience would understand. Why do you need to be spoon fed?
One thing that's weirdly underdiscussed in this extremely long video is the 5 year time skip. I'd be willing to accept a Thor who fell into an alcoholic depression, got fat, and shut himself off from the world and his responsibilities as the result of Infinity War. It's traumatic. The problem is that it comes at the end of a 5 year time skip, so we just cut to it for a gag, and we don't see the gradual fall of him going down. Same for the Hulk-they just skipped ahead 5 years and solved issues off-screen.
There's no resolution of Steve and Tony's conflict because 5 years passed and of course they experienced a lot in the meantime. We just don't get to see any of it and how their relationship grew over those 5 years. There's no examination of the greater state of the world during those 5 years, just little snippets like Captain America holding a therapy session, but no answers to big questions about how everything is working.
Just deciding to skip ahead 5 years creates a ton of narrative problems. I think the only reason it happens is because they wanted to...dare I say it..."subvert expectations" by destroying the stones and killing Thanos in the first 20 minutes.
Did you want the movie to be 12 hours long? Steve and Tony did not interact in those 5 years. The more logical reason as to why they didn't depict literally 5 years in an already 3 hour long movie, is because they literally can't make a movie that long.
@@VColossalV Just because the movie decided 5 years passed didn't mean it had to be written that way, you ninny. This movie could all have taken place in the 2 hours or 2 days or 2 weeks following Infinity War.
@@VColossalV Ever heard of a montage? There are ways to tell a story of time passage in a couple of mins. One perfect example is from Pixar's Up where we see Carl's relationship with Ellie start from when they were young to being old. It's an emotional scene that handles DECADES of two characters lives in just a handful of minutes without dialogue. And that was their character introduction.
Imagine what the filmmakers of Avenger's Endgame could've done with pre-established Marvel characters, if they had executed something similar as Pixar's Up by showcasing what the original poster mentioned in like 5 mins at most.
@@waynesfiction4now How would a montage work? That just wouldn't fit the tone they were going for. This is the Russo brothers were talking about, if they thought it was a good idea they would have done it. The example you gave was for 2 characters, how do we have a satisfying montage for all the characters and it not be too long? Even a montage adds screen time, they scrapped so much already to get it down to 3 hours.
@@TheNoonish Then Tony wouldn't have his family, and we wouldn't have gotten Ronan or Smart Hulk, or found out what 5 years of wallowing and sadness does to a demi-God. Some developments need the passage of time. The Russo brothers clearly thought this was necessary.
Hit the nail on the head.
What pissed me off about the whole Cap thing is that lots of fans forgave him for going back to stay with Peggy because “He deserved it!”
That’s not the point nor does that matter. It doesn’t matter if he suffered in life and deserved the ending. It was out of character and destroys who he is.
It is not out of character, there’s nothing in the MCU that says he wouldn’t do this.
@@shinken6636 First off, that is not true and you're generalizing. This is an adaption, and it can almost anything you want them to be.
Besides. the timeline that Steve created hasn't been said to hurt anything and unleash on the Multiverse like Infinity Ultron like in What If...? For all we know, it could've had positive events in it, Bucky becoming Captain America, the Avengers still forming, them possibly stopping Thanos before getting all the stones, a variant of Kang not existing, and etc.
So, we agree with Steve's choice, not just because we think he deserves it, but because it hasn't been shown to be harmful in any way.
@@Starkstar502Its just not the real cap.
It’s not out of character. The first thing he thought about when he woke up in the modern world was his date with Peggie.
@@diablo595 Yes but the point was about him moving on.
After Endgame and Far From Home barely paid lip service to the consequences of the Snap i was a little annoyed but i didn’t really think about it. Your segment on the consequences of the Snap however has opened a pandora’s box frustration inside my head now and also how much of a missed opportunity it was to not see the remaining heroes (and possibly villains) having to operate in this post apocalyptic galaxy. Its just like “oh that happened but things were mostly the same i guess” when in reality it would have been Mad Max with superheroes.
For me it boggles my mind as to why, if they’re introducing _time-travel_ to resolve the problem, they don’t undo the Snap, because it still happening permanently alters the setting. Like besides that stupid Falcon and the Winter Soldier show, all other MCU properties only really pay lip-service to the Snap, not its consequences, just that it happened.
If they knew that the MCU was going to continue after Infinity War, then they shouldn’t have had the Snap at all.
I knew this movie was worse than infinity war, and that it had fan service, but I wasn't expecting the core of the movie to be so shallow.
In retrospect, the perfect foreshadowing for the MCU going forward
1:37:03
I mean its not a bad movie you just think its shallow and worse than infinity war, personally i like both the same
@@macvadda2318 Same but my favourite is still Endgame
@@macvadda2318 Did you just now realize that opinions on films are subjective? Cause your comment definitely alludes to you just now figuring that out.
Tbh Infinity War was worse, and its failure is the main reason Endgame was the way it was.
Just remember that Captain America got old and went back to the time when getting old doesn't matter because of Pym Particles.
Yeah I didn't like End Game.
Which is weird cos Infinity War is really great imo. Great pacing, great action, more interesting characterization.
End Game killed all that momentum right off the bat and then spent the rest of the movie slowly building up back to where we left off really. Only with a drastically less interesting version of Thanos. The movie ends with the usual mass CGI slogfest which many movies fall into. Whilst Infinity War had much smaller scale fights, but also massively more intense and grounded.
I just found End Game rather boring and bloated. The only real thing I enjoyed was doing a decent job ending ongoing story of the MCU in a respectful way.
In my head canon it all ends with Infinity War, even though they failed. For some reason that movie was so much more compelling to me - I thought it was because I hate the time travel trope. But now I realize how much every character has been affected since Endgame. I’ve lost a lot of interest and haven’t even watched the majority of MCU movies since. Then again, that’s probably a good thing since I never would have wanted to sit through Black Widow’s character assassination. I think it will become increasingly difficult for MCU writers to remain consistent in world building and character development, given all the multiverse shenanigans.
I think of endgame as the dessert to infinity war's main course.
Unnecessary, and awful in retrospect.
I still enjoyed it tho
“Mass cgi slog fest”
Oh yea. Infinity War definitely didn’t have anything like that, lol.
I honestly dont view endgame as a movie. its just an event. it feels kinda silly to give it a grade or a number score. Its obviously not better than infinity war but like someone else said, endgame is more like dessert or a side piece to infinity war.
It was a terrible movie.
Another flaw with the final battle I came to realize is this: why didn't any of the heroes in possession of the gauntlet decide to use it against Thanos and his army? Both Ininity War and Endgame established that the gauntlet was (relatively) safe to use as long as you didn't try to access the power of all six stones at once, so anyone could have used the any single one of the stones to decimate Thanos and his army; use the space stone to send them all into the vacuum of space, the power stone to obliterate them all, the mind stone to put them all to sleep or brainwash them, the time stone to pause them all (if not regress their age to being an army of infants or age them all to death), the reality stone to turn them all into frogs (or something else that poses no threat), or the soul stone to remove their souls from their bodies. The good guys had the most powerful tool in the universe on their side and instead of using it against their enemy they decide it's best to deliver it straight to said enemy... only for one of them to eventually use it against the enemy anyway at the cost of his life since he DID use all six stones at once instead of just one or two.
Well great. Now Iron Man’s death is utterly meaningless.
Yeah, outside of the power stone i agree because only immortals can use it as revealed in gotg
Endgame is that movie that kinda gets worse as time past and as the MCU continues to grow and sorta treats this movie as a silly little footnote rather than the universe-shaking event it should be.
I felt the same way about force awakens
It was awesome at first. Then you realize it had nothing much to offer except
Member this
Last Jedi felt like a breath of fresh air and is my fav star wars film. I couldn't stop talking about it for a long ass time and still love to talk about (when people don't wanna bit my head off). It had real passion behind it and wasn't just some generic rehash
@@Z-Mikes00
Y... you're not serious... Last Jedi? Passion? In Last Jedi? The single most cynical and plot lazy Star Wars THING?
@@sparxskywriter2589 correct
@@Z-Mikes00 The only thing comparable to Endgame's incompetence is the star wars sequel trilogy. The Last Jedi is another movie that "tricks" people into thinking it is something it isn't. It is still just a rehash of ideas from previous movies and it has all of it's characters act like idiots in order to even have a story in the first place. It brings every story line from the previous movies to a screeching halt and leaves us in the most boring place imaginable to set up the final movie of the epic saga. I didn't even bother seeing The Rise of Skywalker because TFA and TLJ were such a train wreck.
@@Z-Mikes00 Damn dude your opinions are certainly….something.
I was bored throughout the movie, up until the battle at the end. Infinity war had me gripped from start to finish.
I was surprised that so many people didn't see it as lazy fan service, but I'm glad most people enjoyed it. Nebula's character Arc IMO was the only meaningful piece of writing in the movie.
While I enjoyed the individual elements of fan service as I watched them by the end of the movie, I still left Endgame feeling underwhelmed. There were multiple scenes that took me out of the movie and felt solely like fan service, but the biggest two scenes that made me realize that the movie was ONLY fan service was the women banding together and Cap as an old man. In the moment I felt pandered to as a woman for a scene that made little sense since many of those women had never met before and Captain Marvel shouldn’t even need that much help. The Cap scene felt so out of character that I felt angry during it.
The entire film closed so many arcs, I regardless of whether you think the film is good or not, saying nebula had the only good arc is ridiculous
@@Sigmundfrued Do believe you have the objectively correct perspective of the film, and everyone should agree with you?
I didn't like how character arcs closed in Endgame. I understand that you do.
@@Sigmundfrued who had a better arc?
@@wildwesley9328 the only other thing I found meaningful was Tony’s death, but it was ruined by all the plot holes. Why does his gauntlet work? Doesn’t it have to be forged by that star and with special metal in order to be able to handle the infinity stones? Why was he able to even hold all the stones when star lord, a Demi-god at the time, needed the power of friendship to hold just the power stone? Why didn’t literally anyone else, like captain marvel or Thor, who could of survived the snap, just do it? I like that he sacrificed himself, I though it was a good enough ending for the character and it was time for him to die anyway, but we were all expecting it and it wasn’t handled well enough.
Endgame after Infinity War was like following up a Michelin star meal with a $0.25 gumball as dessert. I saw fan theories about how to solve the snap that were miles better and would make continuity a million times easier than what they decided to go with. They should have never messed with time travel and alternate universes. It's hard to do well and they clearly weren't even thinking a single second past Endgame's credits with their solution to the snap.
What fan theories were better and less convoluted?
What fan theories do you mean? I'd love to read them!
I am also intrigued these by these fan theories.
I also am curious about this fan theories! 👋
@@aqualiusaidhreborn5923 It was stuff I read years ago on reddit. My personal one after hearing they were going the time travel route was thinking they would sacrifice themselves. They spend the first half of the movie searching for Tony Stark and then Thanos with the help of Nebula. Less than a year passes, they find the stones, kill Thanos and realize that if they go back in time and change anything, their timeline ceases to exist and they will fade out of existence a la Back to the Future. They stew on that realizing that they are going to need to sacrifice the second half of their universe, themselves, and their timeline to save the universe as it was. They develop some quantum state Pym tech to prevent themselves from fading the second they go into the past to prevent a paradox but it has a time limit, they fight along side their past selves, stop Thanos and the snap, then at the end of the battle and after giving their past selves some advice, tearfully fade as heroes that knew they were on a suicide mission as their countdown clocks reach zero. After that the stones are given each to a core avenger and they now have to find a location in the universe to hide them. The core team retires except Captain America and Black Widow and they oversee the new generation of Avengers, Thor decides to restore Asgard by finding the seed of Yggdrasil or something like that in the next movie. Not perfect. I'd prefer something like that to what we got. But I'm also going to be biased to my own shit. There's no snap to deal with. Time travel is not seen as a viable route as you will cease to exist yourself if you do it. And you didn't kill half the cast or your two biggest characters that still have beef from civil war and can hash it out in a future movie.
I thought it was just me.
I really liked Endgame.
I HATED what they did to their most powerful Avengers......Hulk and Thor.
But it's like everytime I've rewatched, the Cringe Moments got More Cringy.
Rewatching any film can make the cringe worthy moments stick out more and more, but comparing Endgame to something like Empire Strikes Back, Endgame takes it from 0 to 100 for cringe worthy moments when rewatching. The film is absolutely garbage
The way Steve sits around at the beginning like he's given up/retired and left Natasha to run the Avengers is so out of character. It took me the longest time to figure out why his role in this movie felt off, but once I realized what bothered me I couldn't really believe it. Wouldn't Steve be doing his dead level best to help mend the world after the snap? Why has he just left the running of the Avengers to Natasha?
absolutely, if not running the avengers himself he should be standing up for every "little guy" who's being bullied by the warlords a global population halving would inevitably result in. He should be a *very* busy man.
There is an additional character trouble for Steve, at least from my perspective. Some wasted potential, if you'll allow some indulgence in tismry...
Part of Steve's arc in the MCU about coming into his role as the leader of the Avengers is realizing how much the world around him has changed, and that he shouldn't keep dwelling in the past. After all, what's gone is gone, and it can't be reclaimed once it is...
Or can it?
Now the time travel provides Captain America with the ultimate temptation: a chance to, at least in some way, reclaim what he gave up in his fight. It'll mean giving up on the fight, the fight he admitted in both Age of Ultron and Winter Soldier that he couldn't bring himself to walk away from; and betraying some of the very virtues that prevented the serum from twisting him like what happened to Red Skull and the Winter Soldiers... but it'd be worth it to have his love again, right?
Now, Steve could be interested by the prospect, but realize that there are still battles to be had and that he's still needed in the present, understand that he's a very different person now than the one who loved and was loved by Captain Carter, and accept the life he's made for himself in the future, to move on... Or he could do what he did in the movie, and drop everything he's stood for and is for some pegging with Peggy.
@@insulttothehumanrace3807 so.... you just honna repeat what Fringy said huh?
Word
That's not out of character for him at this point though. He did try doing his best...but after a while even he can lose hope. Because even he can lose hope.
What really bugs me , is how the "infinity snap" was undone with another snap (on top of that , Russo brothers lied to everyone that "there won't be any resurrections") , yet after Tony dies, nobody tries to bring him back using the time or reality stones. Heroes getting brought back to life ought to be earned - this felt very cheap.
They tried to bring back Nat and tha didn’t work, what would be the point of bringing back Tony when you know that it wouldn’t work?! Stupid
Someone already mentioned why they didn't try (because Black Widow still stayed dead when Hulk tried), still a dogshit excuse tbh.
The real reason? Robert Downey Jr. wanted to retire (at least that's what I remember).
In Infinity War, the Snap seemed to be an "erase half of living creatures" button. In Endgame, it was a wish with the Dragon Balls. 😅
@@Matt-wb8ni what? did you pay attention to the film? Nat couldn't be brought back because her soul was the price for the stone, Tony died because his body couldn't handle the use of the snap, he absolutely could have been brought back to life somehow
@@Matt-wb8ninat was sacrificed to the soul stone. At no point was it ever said that being killed by the gauntlet barred you from being resurrected. Vision literally blew up with the mindstone and Thanos rewound time to bring it back. Tony’s revival should’ve been possible.
Something else about the Blip is that No Way Home establishes that to the people who were blipped, it's like nothing happened. Ignoring the mental trauma that would come with missing 5 years of your friends/family's lives, there is also the issue of remarriages. If you got snapped, but your spouse didn't, and within that 5 years they remarry and possibly have kids. Then when the person who got blipped comes back, there would definitely be a ton of tension in the air.
Ssshhhh
Don't think, just consume...
i was wondering how peter parker's graduation happened. like he got snapped, (did mj and ned also get snapped? i don't remember) either way how did he manage to immediately graduate highschool with everybody else? in his grade? did they put everything on hold for five years?
@@katiemorgan543 They did not. The rest of the class went on and graduated and when peter n his gang came back, they still have to take that last 5 years of school. There was a character in Far From Home that wasn't blipped and grew up to join peter's class.
@@phyokyawkhaing2251 yeah I think that was Brad Davis the boy that likes Mj in Far from home.
Yeah. I'm watching "Manifest" and there are ton of problems with just one plane of people reappearing after 5 years, imagine the billions...
Even when watching the movie opening night in 2019, the fact that the stones were destroyed always felt wrong to me: in the comics, the Infinity Stones/Gems cannot be destroyed, because doing so would mean destroying the aspects they represent.
The blip needed a phase of it's own. Or shows about the characters. Natasha could have finally had her movie. Ronin could have had a show. Steve could have become a vigilante/nomad.
Imagine they waited 5 years in real time to make Endgame, releasing it next year in 2023.
Steve was a fully flushed out character other than his haphazardly ended conflict with Tony, they made a movie for Natasha and it's garbage only doing her worse than good. Part of me thinks that maybe they needed to revisit the blip as an idea, since the decision to blip everyone simultaneously back into existence rather than rewinding time really was an out of character decision for Tony and was the objectively worse decision. His reasoning was that it'd cost him his current life, but if he rewound time 5 years he could relive moments with his family and possibly even make new ones while retaining the memories he had previously (assuming this Endgame follows the alternate timeline structure of things). It's also the safer way to save his family, as they could only assume negative consequences of blipping everyone back into existence after the worst 5 years of human history (if the snap actually made an impact on the world in a logical way). At best, he'd blip everyone including his family back into a hellish world devastated by the snap. At worst he'd blip everyone into the vacuum of space including his family where they'd die rather horribly (vacuum of space does not sound like a pleasant way to die). The best course of action would have just been to rewind to pre snap regardless of if you look at it from Tony's perspective or a "for the greater good" one.
@Deadbunny have you ever heard of the butterfly effect?
You can be certain that if they had chosen to do what you are suggesting, the likelihood of Tony's character being able to retain his life is vanishingly small.
There is simply no way that he can have the power to rewind time and get exactly what he wants.
Now, you can absolutely write that.
You can write anything.
But that doesn't mean you should.
Do you understand the consequences of possessing such a power?
Do you understand how that would affect future storylines?
Tony dies.
And he should die.
0:00 Video begins
4:03 Addressing Possible Criticisms
5:41 Intro continues
7:02 The MCU as a Whole, and Endgame's Place in it
11:40 Critique begins (Time travel in stories)
13:24 Loki is Terrible- A Video Essay
18:19 Time Travel Mechanics, Including a Lesson with Professor Fringy
31:50 How did Cap return all the stones?
33:56 "bUt It'S oK bEcAuSe OtHeR sToRiEs WiLl FiX iT"
34:55 A Heist for the Ages. Or the timelines in this case. A Heist for the Timelines, I guess. The Avengers are dumb basically, also including a lesson with Professor Fringy.
39:53 Spectacle Over Logic- Endgame's Final Battle.
50:45 Characters- the Backbone of Storytelling
54:56 Captain America
1:01:46 A Tangent on the Snap and the Blip
1:07:26 Iron Man
1:13:20 Civil War's Consequences are Squandered
1:21:01 Thor
1:27:08 Hulk
1:29:51 Hawkeye
1:30:51 Black Widow
1:32:45 Nebula
1:33:48 Rocket
1:34:19 Thanos ("Look how they massacred my boy ☹.")
1:36:48 Recapping Everything
1:37:34 Golden Nuggies in a Landfill of Goo
1:40:42 Spectacle Over Writing. Fan Service at all Costs!
1:42:57 Subtopic: Fiction and Suspension of Disbelief
1:46:13 Subtopic ends
1:49:58 What Could Have Been
1:57:20 The State of the Industry (Conclusion)
1:59:53 ruclips.net/video/QUAItQmq-LU/видео.html
Thank you ^^
You sure you got that first timestamp right?
@@shanustheanus no
Hopefully fringy puts these in the description so the video itself will have timecodes
Pin this pls
I agree with you on Steve. Yes, he may deserve a normal life with Peggy and wish he had that, but it was his will to make sacrifices for the greater good. Even before he was a super soldier, he threw himself on what everyone believed was a live grenade, without a thought. He was chosen because he is the guy to make the sacrifice.
It’s like Steve told Tony, “you’re not the one to lay down on the wire…”, because Steve knows that he is that guy because he has done it many times.
I can’t believe that Steve could stand by, dancing with Peggy, while bad things were going on anywhere in his world. It is the will to make sacrifices that makes one a hero. You can’t be a hero if you can’t take risks and willing to make sacrifices to help others.
So, after returning to the past, does Steve not fight Red Skull or crash the plane in the sea so he can dance with Peggy. Does Twinkle Toes Steve now use his super human endurance to win dance marathons?
I just can’t see Steve mowing the lawn and fixing the picket fence while the world is going to hell. Do the other Avengers need to fight Loki and his Chitauri army without Cap?
Does Steve just become Ward Cleaver instead of Captain America? Was Captain America now turned into Twinkle Toes Rogers, more famous for his dancing than fighting? I just can’t buy it. I did not think it was a great ending for Steve.
The same skinny kid who would fight with a guy twice his size and leap onto a live grenade is the same guy inside all of that muscle. The super soldier serum just gave Steve a body that could back up his heroic mind.
Both Tony and Steve’s arcs are connected. Tony started off super selfish but he struggles to become more selfless. Steve started off super selfless but he struggles to become more selfish. Being too selfless is just as bad as being too selfish. Tony was too selfish in the beginning as Steve was too selfless.
Tony as Iron Man protects people security but he struggled to be secure in his own life. Steve as Captain America protects people’s freedom but he struggled to be free in his own life.
Tony always treated himself right but he needed to treat other people right in life and. Steve always treated other people right but needed to treat himself right in life.
Ever since the first Avengers they slowly changed their attitude on working with people. Tony started as rebel but he slowly became a authority figure after realizing he is not as secure as he thought after seeing being unmatched by Aliens. Steve started as an authority figure but he slowly became a rebel after realizing he is not as free after seeing SHEILD secretly has plans to use Hydra weapons.
Even though Tony buttheads for more security as Steve buttheads for more freedom they both learned and inspired from each other to obtain their goals. Tony was inspired by Steve to “make the sacrifice play” pushing him to be more authority figure as Steve inspired by Tony to be a rebel after Tony made him question SHEILD’s plans.
In Endgame they both got what they needed and wanted. Tony got his security by doing a big selfless act as Steve got his freedom by doing a big selfish act and both of their superhero days ended.
Dude it a frozen Steve Rogers Captain America existed in the timeline Steve went back to. It is a terrible idea for Steve to get involved fighting for another timeline because it would make thing more darker and unpredictable- and best to keep his time with Peggy a secret between them.
The biggest problem with this is that Steve’s arc was in part about letting go of his past and embracing the time he lives in after the ice. Him clinging to his past was the reason he was so adamant about protecting Bucky. He’s his only friend from that time. He already said goodbye to Peggy, Natasha pretty much had to coax him into seeing other people. He carves out a new life as an Avenger, only to fall right back into his past given the opportunity. Really unfortunate ending for his character.
@@ollytherevenant1653 He never said good to Peggy. Peggy’s untimely death in Civil War forced Steve to protect Bucky more because Bucky is the last person he has from his past life after she died. Steve arc is about him learning to not let others make him change his beliefs on freedom and he had to learn to be selfish in order to keep protecting his stance. Tony arc is about him learning to change his beliefs in providing security more by learning to be selfless.
Steve is the man who promotes values as Tony is the man who promotes future values.
@@petermj1098 Steve did say goodbye to Peggy. He got to see her again in Winter Solider, as she was still alive at that time. Then he finally had to let her go when she died. If I were to entertain the idea that Steve’s arc was allowing himself to be more selfish, it didn’t work because his decision was pulled out of left field with no proper build up or arc. It was just a flippantly made decision that the character would not have done.
@@ollytherevenant1653 If you payed attention in Civil War during Peggy’s funeral, Sharon literally speaks about Peggy the quotes Steve’s “plant like a tree” quote from the comics. Her death was a reminder for Steve keep on standing for what he believes and wants in life in even hard or people are trying to stop him.
Yes there was build up. In age of Ultron he struggles to admit the fact he prefers living in the past with Peggy than his current life and doesn’t want to admit. The fact he didn’t tell Tony about the truth of his parents death is him becoming selfish. And admits to Tony he didn’t tell him to spare Tony but to spare himself. The entire civil war has Tony’s side seeing him as selfish in the movie. Steve being a better liar during the time heist is him having learned to be more selfish with himself.
Trying to explain this to anyone is physically impossible because they always ignore any points your giving and dismiss you as not knowing anything (actually just happened to me)
The curse of social media. People just blindly go by the headlines rather than looking at the details.
Or you know…he was wrong the second he tilted this “endgame is terrible”. Objectively he’s incorrect, this movie was a gem and phenomenal conclusion and you all follow this loser like sheep. It’s beyond embarrassing.
Everyone can benefit from a bad example. Remember that before you ask why this video exists, folks. There’s a reason Fringy spends so much time digging into long-term problems with the MCU. This stuff is difficult, and when you have a roadmap that is so long and so remarkably broken, you have a great list of things to not do.
Here’s one the green birdmn missed: Don’t have your super McMuffins get “reduced to atoms” and also establish that their absence is a very bad thing on a universal scale, in a nonspecific way that doesn’t need further explanation.
Half counter to your criticism: It could be that they still uphold the timeline as atoms, even if they can't exactly be harnessed in that form. See the aether for example, which is already atoms as far as we know. Question is if a molecular structure creates their powers. Might be for the mind stone. Unknown for the rest.
The stones cannot be completely destroyed. But if you reduce them to atoms then they can no longer be used. They still exist, they are now just microscopic dust.
The second highest grossing movie
@@turtleboy1188 And? Lmao
I love how Thor's plan was to use the hammer to push the axe closer to thanos rather than... smashing him in the head with it.
Oh yeah I remember everyone going "hey look, Thor is using the hammer to push the axe closer to Thanos's head!!!"
I had to pause and say Thank You for your section on Steve Rogers. He's been my favorite character throughout this MCU journey, and you laid out exactly why I will forever be mad at Endgame. The Steve in Endgame is not the Steve I know. I'm repeating you, but he never would have left and abandoned Bucky, and he never would have gone back in time to a woman who Explicitly told him to move on. Endgame disrespected Steve and Peggy, end of story.
I agree Steve and Peggy were disrespected
Exactly! I also agree that is shafted Peggy. She definitely would have been tempted, but also told Steve that he was abandoning his responsibilities and kicked him out of the house.
“The Steve I know was not the Steve on endgame” - 🤓 Yeah sure, the Steve in endgame who stood in front on an entire army, definitely wasn’t the determined and brave Steve who fought the Nazi’s and Hydra all those years ago. 🙄
@@Matt-wb8ni Specifically referring to the Steve in the final scene of endgame. The Steve in the fight was right on point. The Steve who stayed behind, who decided to live a happy life with Peggy while his best friend Bucky was tortured by Hydra for decades, who didn't help to prevent the Snap, that Steve is a whole different Steve.
@@canebro1 Steve living his life with Peggy was not selfish, he’s been selfless his entire life. And plus, Bucky had already gone through all of that, so what would be the point in changing it, especially if everything worked out in the end.
Wait so does Hydra conquer the world in the Endgame timeline because Steve went back to 1945 but lived happily ever after with Peggy and therefore doesn’t sacrifice himself to stop Hydra’s plan? The worst part of this whole time travel debacle is they could’ve used it to inspire a lot of cool new takes on their stories. Imagine a movie where Steve selfishly didn’t save the world because he lived his whole life a hero and decided to enjoy life for once, so Hydra wins, and a new hero also based in the mid 20th century has to rise to the challenge and defeat Hydra. They had so many opportunities and decided to make shit like She-Hulk instead smh.
That would be a perfect What If story.
I don't see why there couldn't be two Steve Rogers. One saving people and the same Steve from the future living with agent Carter, she can keep it secret.
@@craftpaint1644 ngl it wouldve been hilarious seeing some hydra agents' confused and terrified reactions at the sight of TWO steve rogers fighting off their forces (assuming they get involved enough to force steve from the future back into action TEMPORARILY just to stave them off/get them away from him and peggy)
@@nathanpierce7681
1945 Steve: "I can do this all day."
2023 Steve: *pops out of nowhere* "You mean, WE can do this all day!"
1945 Steve: "What the shit?"
2023 Steve: "Language!"
You know what the biggest issue with Steve staying with Peggy is? In The Winter Soldier, Peggy stated that she had a husband and kids, that the man she married was one of the men Steve saved back in TFA.
How the hell is this timeline supposed to not be altered if Peggy married Steve instead of that guy? And if the implication is that it was him all along, I doubt people wouldn't recognize him in the streets after being declared dead and I think SHARON would recognize her RELATIVE from photos before KISSING HIM. Unless the other implication is that they only had their one dance/one-night stand before Steve moved on and lived a normal life with someone else. Which is an even worse justification for him staying back in time; an one-night stand.
This endgame implies Steve effin Rogers, a paragon of heroism and Captain AMERICA, lived through 9/11 without trying to prevent it, I just... Wow.
Is 9/11 even confirmed in the MCU?
@@k1zer100 Given how little attention the MCU gives to the "blip" and that greater entities like The Eternals did zilch to stop it? I wouldn't be surprised.
@@k1zer100 do infinity stones melt steel beams?
The fact that people who were paid handsomely to make it work COULDN’T keep a work of fiction consistent is STRONG contextual evidence AGAINST the claim that the Bible could’ve been made up by men. Despite being compiled over 3500+ years by 40+ different writers, the stories are coherent and interrelated on a level the best human fiction can only daydream about. And that’s with the handicap of being rooted in real history. Try writing avengers endgame so well that people irl believe it really happened. Tldr the Bible cannot be a work of fiction because fiction authors are incapable of manufacturing such a high degree of internal and external consistency. Let your frustration with endgame cause you to reconsider how you look at the Bible
@@cosmictreason2242 Tolkein has written a more consistent story than the Bible.
I liked the part where Captain Marvel, after having just taken out Thanos' ship singlehandedly, needed a bunch of other characters who all happened to be women to stand next to her as she flew away.
Oh, but when the Boys or the Mandalorian do it then it's fine?
@@ShadowSonic2 yes
@@ShadowSonic2 I is woman, and even I was confused w the all women scene. Like in a vacuum is a good scene. Is fucking great, in the movie is fucking weird. I haven't seen the Boys, but in Mandalorian, they already know each other, the plan was for them to attack together, they didn't magically appear next to each other and they are Grogu's cool aunts. It's very different.
@@CommanderLexaa It's no different, they just had fewer women to work with.
@@jarjarrose3935 Nah, just hypocrisy.
As a man who hasn't enjoyed Marvel since Endgame, and who rolls his eyes every time his friends start ranting about how "awesome Marvel content" on Disney+ is . . . I'm excited to watch this video.
I mean I'm not a fan of the MCU that much either. What annoys me tho is when people act like it's well liked and shit is a problem and or it's bad to enjoy it.
Or to put it better
People who like it are beneath me attitude.
Got to agree. I watched Endgame but just really haven't been interested since Infinity War. Tbh though, in hindisght there is a lot of meh in the mcu even prior to Infinity War.
I enjoyed no way home but yeah I agree
@@Tom-ie1uh No way home is an exception to the rule, literally 1 in 10
I have questions about Steve:
1. How did Steve return the Soul Stone when gaining it came with sacrifice?
2. What was Steve's reaction when he met Red Skull again?
3. Why didn't Steve save past Bucky from his brainwashing in the 1940's?
4. Why did Steve abandon present Bucky for past Peggy when he clearly told Bucky that "he'd be with him til' the end of the line?"
1. Perhaps Red skull gave him a refund and Natasha came back in that timeline.
2. Dunno.
3. Why do you think he didn't? Steve can save Bucky, stop World Wars, go to Wakanda, join Shield, whatever he wants in his timeline, and even visit his original timeline of gets more particles from Hank Pym.
4. The movie is called Endgame for a reason. THIS is the end of the line. They've stuck with each other like brothers to this point. Now the work is done. It's time to rest.
@@hiloskylast point is meta though
Yeah, I *despised* how Thor was turned into a broken shell of a person and we're *supposed* to laugh at that... until we're suddenly not.
I thought the actual depression was well done, Chris hemsworth’s broken delivery of “should have gone for the head” is the start of a man who’s hit his low. His rock bottom
To see he lost shape was understandable, hemsworth begging to be allowed to take risk of wearing gauntlet is devastating & when he meets up with Frigg, I cried.
The poor taste haha jokes at his expense was gross 🤢 it’s like the writers (or maybe just hemsworth) understood how to portray guilt and depression
But the jokes land like mosquitoes buzzing around and biting ruining a really honest arch
I loved that he just didn’t suddenly lose weight but it was like they didn’t have the guts to see his journey through
@@zarabee2880 The fact that he become a weird dudebro bum threatening children over the internet was the baffling part.
It's not done to depict a "broken man" but rather to get some cheap laughs.
The scene with Thor and his mom was the only time it really seemed like he was really broken and in need of help, instead of a lazy dude acting like a baby just because things didn't go well for him.
That one moment aside, Hawkeye, a man who also lost everything, was handled much better.
Yeah, you’re not supposed to laugh at him, but ya did. And that’s kinda ur fault tbh
@@Matt-wb8ni what about all the people who didn't laugh?
@@InfernosReaper well the. They understood that Thor was depressed. Whether or not the Russo Brothers intended to make Thor look like a joke, many people did laugh.
My biggest complaint about Endgame was described beautifully by you. How did Thor almost kill Thanos when Thanos had all the stones, yet stoneless Thanos can take on Thor and company without the power of said stones?
Also, 1 in +14,000,000 chances to stop Thanos??! He would have to be truly invincible, with few being able to stand any sort of stance against him.
the stormbreaker is the perfect counter for the gauntlet, they are both made by the same magic
@@Fridaey13txhOktober There wasn't a single future where Ant Man crawled up his butt (or any orifice) and exploded him from the inside like that episode of The Boys?
Hard to believe.
They really fucked up Thor's and Thanos' power levels. Completely inconsistent.
@@erion9134 except one item is channeling 6 infinity stones
I feel like the fact that it was evident rdj and evans were leaving after endgame made their departures so much less impactful. It really takes away from the “it all comes down to this” and makes it feel more like “this is the farthest we can go”.
So true
not really at all because you had zero idea how their stories were going to end
@@MS-vj6zt that's a fair point, but death was most likely going to be the ending of it. Tony's death was super predictable, and while steve's was interesting for also not being a death, it had a side effect of ruining the character to a certain degree.
@@elmuchacho3379 i wished steve took that sacrifice instead of tony. Tony has a family to take care of, while steve, yeah he has the avengers but its not the same. He meets peggy in the afterlife
Dude that's a really ridiculous standard to have. You're never going to have a major star or character where their last appearance isn't well-known about beforehand. It generates too much hype. Like did you walk into Logan saying, "Fuck yeah, I get to see Wolverine one last time in a bloody R-rated horror movie," or did you really say "this is the farthest Wolverine goes. Guess I don't care anymore." I knew Wolverine wasn't making out of that shit alive, but it was the only X-Men movie I've given a single shit about before watching it.
2 hours and he didnt even mention how poorly composed the final battle is. At no point during the battle do we ever understand where all the characters are in relation to each other.
Something everyone talks about with suspension of disbelief, that I feel no one talks about, is the difference between continued and initial suspension.
Let's say you start a new story, that plays on an alien world. You have the premise and when something new is introduced at the start of the story, you are a lot more willing to engage with it and let it pass. The grass is purple, there are no trees, there is some weird funky metal, it's all fine, cause you are going into the story with the mindset "This is an alien world"
But the more you learn of that world, the more expectations and experiences you have to draw on. Okay, the grass is now blue. Why? I thought it was purple. If the story explains it, like "The rocks here are different and the pigments make it blue, not purple" you usually go: "Yeah sure, I can buy it" and when red grass comes up with the same reason, you are, again, more likely to believe it.
But when they suddenly put trees in, after specifically stating "There are no trees on this world" and then go "Oh yes, well, except this one, of course, duh. Forgot to mention." it becomes contradictory and goes against your suspension. Contradictions being the biggest grind and drain on our Suspension. So when things are first introduced in a setting, we are a lot more ready to accept it, as we don't have any, or at least a lot less, contradicting notions of what should and should not be.
And the longer a story runs. The more the world and characters are fleshed out, the harder inconsistencies, contradictions or convenient coincidences grate on us. because they grind up against more of those mountains of experience and expectations, that we built ourselves. And in the case of Endgame, we got a damn decade of characterbuilding, worldbuilding and events, that this movie really flies against.
Kinda like weight lifting. Ask someone to suspend their disbelief again and again, and past a certain point it becomes too exhausting and pointless to be actually enjoyable
Very well put!
Well that's usually discussed in regards to consistency and establishing a premise. You don't question fantastical things in the beginning of a story because you have yet to form any preconceptions of what is or is not possible in it; you can't be thrown out of a story due to logical contradiction if there is not yet anything established to contradict. Incredibly convenient or unlikely occurrences in the beginning are similar; they are problematic because they pull characters in unnatural directions that reveal the hand of the writer, that can't happen unless there is some established direction to pull away from in the first place. The prime example is Kill Bill vs. Sicario: the Bride surviving a shot to the head works fine because that is the foundation of the whole story; del Toro surviving a shot to the head is ridiculous because it is so blatantly used to manufacture momentary drama and write him out of a no-win scenario so the writers can have the shock of a character death without committing to it.
There is, however, a lot to be said for the fact that suspension of disbelief gets harder to maintain the longer a story goes on and the more that gets established. Way too many people trot out the defeatist, "the franchise is too big to make sense now" argument as if it has any merit. The increasing complexity of maintaining consistency is a fundamental aspect of storytelling, the kind of thing that is THE WRITER'S JOB to deal with. Of course there are limits to how much any writer can reasonably account for, especially given deadlines, but fanboys never want to broach the subject that maybe eternal, never-ending franchises are an inherently bad idea and the only reason they support them is because they care more about maintaining a constant stream of content generation than they do about quality.
Having just watched Multiverse of Madness, it is fully interesting that Endgame chose to not have the infinity stones destroyed, because Wanda becoming a villain is completely dependent on her not using the reality and soul stones to wish her kids alive.
She really could just zip to a defenseless universe and use its stones.
What-If shows that the Stones work in other universes unlike in the comics, so what gives?
@@gabrielcote8211 What if is garbage.
@@therealistintheboot8822 I didn't say anything about the quality of the show, only about the canon lore it introduces and how it changes things for other works of the franchise.
I always hated that Peter Quill was among the dusted in the snap. He could've had a great arc in Endgame feeling responsible for what happened and could have helped rebuild the spaceship in the beginning enough that they wouldn't need to shoehorn in Captain Marvel. I figured that he'd have been spared at least when he earned Thanos's respect in Infinity War by choosing to sacrifice Gamora, but I could see an argument as to why he was snapped away since Gamora is also the one person Thanos cared about.
Also I haven't seen a single Marvel film or tv show after Endgame aside from Spider-man NWH, I truly consider Endgame to be...well, a finale. Seems like that was a good decision with how bad everything is that came out afterwards. ~('
not everything was bad afterwards, like the two spider man films.
@@Jdudec367 Well yeah, I did say aside from Spider-man. Those were still good
@@scales78 Well I meant both Spider-Man films, I dunno if you saw FFH or not.
@Tom No Way Home is even WORSE than that. In NWH, Peter learns the lesson that if he is going to make decisions that affects the lives of people he loves and cares about, he needs to make THEM a part of the decision and let them choose for themselves what THEY WANT. But at the end of NWH, he dismisses that WHOLE LESSON (even after his friends tell him that they want to be with him and they love him) because "Peter has to sacrifice EVERYTHING because its great audience emotional manipulation and will make him SEEM like a hero." Even though its just him taking the easy way out ONCE AGAIN. I fucking HATE that ending so much because of how shit it is and how it goes against its entire message to the hero just for some free feelies. its PATHETIC.
@@Jdudec367 FFH is pretty good but NWH was crap, SC was crap, Eternals was a snorefest, Wanda Vision started off amazing but ended terribly, Moon Knight sucked ass, Loki was horrible and Falcon and the Winter Soldier was utterly shit.
I live in the state with the highest suicide rate in the US. I graduated from a class of 104 students. I've been to funerals for 6 who died, 4 of direct suicide, 2 from drinking themselves to death. The way Thor's depression was handled was absolutely insulting. It's not as simple as "go eat a salad lmao". I have a pet theory that Wanda getting an excessive amount of sympathy was because Marvel realized how badly they'd fumbled with Thor. If so, that's too little, too late. I would be onboard with a telling of Thor's depression where the team was concerned and he was treated like a person. He isn't, so it makes everyone else look worse by proximity. Truly abysmal storytelling, thank you for calling that out.
As someone who cares about mental health, fat Thor is insulting to me.
Don't let the depressing surrounding take you down. Stay strong, stranger :)
Fringy, you and Mauler, and Jay taught me "Objective criticism does _not_ invalidate subjetive perception".
I liked Endgame for what it was, and you can point out all the flaws the movie has; that won't make my original experience any less meaningful.
With the added note that objectively better constructed films can enhance that very subjective perception. It's ever more satisfying when the dots connect and acompany the meaningful payoffs.
There's no such thing as objective criticism when it comes to art. Anyone who tells your otherwise is either delusional or trying to manipulate you.
@@HOTD108_ Explain
@@HOTD108_ If you claim objectivity doesn't exist in art, then for example I can say that Luke Skywalker never spoke a word with Han Solo in Star Wars. Without objectivity, you can't say I'm wrong.
See the problem?
@@HOTD108_ Absolutely WRONG!. There are objective components in a story, such as coherence, consistency, respect of internal logic, character development and arcs, respect of the established canon and others. Your ENJOYMENT of the story is subjective, but the quality of it is not. This ridiculous notion that objective quality doesn't exist in art is exactly how you get Disney Star Wars, GoT Season 8, Dr. Who Season 13, Terminator Dark Fate and all the other shitty pieces of media in the last decade.
Ah, damn. When you went over Tony and Steve's motivations in Civil War... They're both so reasonable and true to character. I miss good writing. Why can't we have nice things anymore?
@oatraa Endgame can only be called good if you’re saying it in jest.
The source material is irrelevant. Whether the script is adapting comics or a Tolstoy novel, it’s poorly written. Perhaps the source material is equally bad, perhaps not. It doesn’t matter, because we’re not talking about the source material.
Also, “funny and lighthearted” is a wildly inaccurate assessment of the comic book medium. It may apply to some comics, but certainly not all-not even all Marvel Comics. I’m not a comic reader myself, but from what I’ve heard, Punisher has a dark, tragic story in which you’ll find very little laughter.
Regardless, comedy is no excuse for bad writing, and to exempt works from criticism based solely on the presence of humor is an act of incredible disrespect to the comedy genre. “It has jokes, so we should lower our standards.” No, thank you. You can be funny and have a good story at the same time. Back to the Future is an apt example. It merges comedy, a time travel plot, and meaningful character moments-just like Endgame. But where one succeeds, the other fails.
Endgame could’ve been great. I’m as disappointed as anyone that it wasn’t.
When you think about it, Steve's decision to stay in the past so he can be with Peggy is far worse.
After Cap got put on ice, Peggy moved on, eventually. She had her own life, which we know from the "Agent Carter" miniseries - but her career as agent and diplomat were not the most important. The series very clearly tells us she eventually moved on with her private life, grieved for, the presumed dead Steve, but eventually that was over. While we do not know for certain if she had a family on her own, in "Agent Carter" we see clearly see she's at the very least willing to try. But at the end, she had a long, fulfilling life full of nothing but admiration of those around her, be it coworkers or family. It was truly *her* life.
And all of it is gets changed - the path she walked denied... because Steve wanted so. Captain America, the walking breathing embodiment of self-sacrifice in the MCU at the very end commits an act of utter selfishness, changing Peggy's life with her oblivious to it, but he knowing perfectly well what he did but is fine with it because it's good for him.
I mean after all the years of fighting struggling and losing your secondary best friend and watching almost everyone you love die for 5 years I would make a selfish decision like that tok im not saying what he did was right but I think Steve kinda needed this ending
I agree with you and I think Past Peggy wouldn't have gone along with it for a second. Maybe a dance and a kiss but then she wouldn't booted his ass back to the future fight, imo.
1 Self sacrifice is not a virtue, even with that cap is not doing that all the time
2 Pretty sure agent carter can decide for herself whatever she wants to do, you're just judging the writing instead of the character for doing something completely reasonable, and that she would realistically do.
@@BygoneT 1- Yes, yes he does, that's like, his whole theme
2- She had already grieved Steve and moved on, having a family and a legacy of her own, yeah maybe she decided to be with Steve, but he made the decision to come back and erase all that, not giving Peggy a chance to decide
@@vanillabatcave5677 With the way divergent timelines work, wouldn't both be possible?. Agent Carter would have been in one where Steve never returned, while in the main MCU universe, Steve makes his date.
The issues are covered over with the epic scenes and emotions of everyone being brought back, nearly everyone. They did a lot of characters dirty though, the vision, the hulk, fat Thor, Natasha, Howard Stark and Dr Pim. Killing off Tony Stark and letting Steve Rogers retire has pretty much killed the franchise.
The mcu is overstating it's welcome by making this film. Wiping away the infinity stones like nothing just destroys what the reality of the mcu was based on, i.e., what linked all the films together. I feel that Infinity War Part II(Endgame) should've been more of a revenge/reverse film. Have the Gauntlet shatter from the cosmic energy that was released when Thanos TRIES to destroy them, but then have him make bargains and all with others to take care of the stones. Get creative with it instead of just throwing in the last resort card that is practically guaranteed to fix any issue in films without reason. I knew right off the bat how the film was gonna play out the second I learned Thanos destroyed the stones, and Thors cut off his head.
I would also add that the Snap would have had serious religious significance too. The Infinity Stones makes whoever possesses them God. Thanos became God and willed half of all people into non-existence. As far as regular people know, Thanos still has the Infinity Stones. Therefore, wouldn't a Cult of Thanos obsessed with cutting things in half appear? After all, Thanos did have an army of minions who agreed with him. It can't just be because they're scared he can kill them. These people would definitely be the high priests of such a religion.
In general, the Time Heist could have been a regular heist and that would have done the job more simply. After all, a small elite team impregnating Thanos's fortress for the Gauntlet would have led to the big fight at the end anyways. It would also have not been incredibly confusing.
Does a movie have to explore every possible consequence in the entire universe? That would be an infinitely long movie. What a bizarre criticism. Why didn't the movie depict every single consequence on all the billions of planets in the universe and the limitless complexities of each individual one?
How could it be a regular heist? What stones are they recovering if they're gone in present day?
@@VColossalV As Fringy said, the movie needs a total rewrite. Instead of Thanos smashing the stones, have him keep it in a vault on his giant spaceship. What if everyone breeds really fast and pops out 10 kids? The next generation might need to also be Snapped, so Thanos might also need the Infinity Gauntlet on hand just in case.
Also, this is the MCU, the series that made every movie 3 hours long and also connects with other 3 hour movies and also connects to 12 episode shows. Falcon and the Winter Soldier does (incompetently) look into the consequences of a recently Unsnapped world, so why shouldn't it delve into the Snapped world, the biggest event in the MCU ever?
@@dragonknightleader1 It did. The Flag Smashers believed the world was better during the blip, so they have already begun to explore ideas like that. Once again though, it is impossible to depict every single consequence on earth let alone the entire universe.
Of course, overpopulation will become a problem again, but these things are nitpicks, and that's more of a criticism of Infinity War. You can criticise any movie like this. You can find countless problems with the time travel in Terminator for example, doesn't make it a bad movie, time travel isn't possible so it's impossible to depict it without problems.
Why would he keep them in a vault, allowing for the possibility of someone taking them back? He knew the entire universe would want to undo what he did, leaving them in existence makes that a distinct possibility, given enough time. It wasn't only for that reason either, it was temptation for even him, to keep them.
@@VColossalV Because a vault makes more sense narratively than smashing them. Smashing them creates the confusion of how they can be destroyed when they're the gestalt of aspects of reality.
Also, a regular heist would have required significantly less explanation and have been about using characters' strengths. The Time Heist is an incredibly jumbled mess that it had to be explained twice and even the One-Round Trip rule gets violated as an excuse to travel to 1970.
The movie's flawed on many levels, which Fringy has pointed out.
@@dragonknightleader1 No it doesn't make more sense and I just explained why, he knows that the entire universe will be looking for them to try and undo what he did. Destroying them eradicates that possibility. Why would he risk some superbeing like Captain Marvel or worse, coming and taking them back?
Everything I've seen here are nitpicks, the drawn out complaints about time travel mechanics applies to all time travel movies, even classics like Terminator and Back to the Future, but we don't go around saying they're terrible movies. Time travel isn't possible, so it's impossible to depict without issues. The branching timeline approach is the least problematic, I would argue Terminator and Back to the Future have significantly more issues with time travel mechanics.
His complaint about Tony's arc being destroyed because he wanted to favour his family over the whole universe is a moot point, because he ultimately did put their lives at risk by even attempting to go back in time, he changed his mind. If he had stayed stubborn the whole movie he would have a point, but that isn't what happened. Even IF he favoured his family and didn't want to help, and never changed his mind, it's not inconsistent with his arc of learning to sacrifice himself, because this time it involves people he loves being at risk, not just himself. Yet he STILL makes the sacrifice play, both risking his family and ultimately his own life. Arc complete, not destroyed.
The complaint about Tony and Steve not involving the other Avengers in their decision or agreement is also a pointless criticism because the rest of the team are already on board with the time heist idea, they don't need to be consulted on it. This is what happens when you have a conclusion but need to scramble aimlessly to find reasons to justify it.
Are there some valid criticisms? Sure. But they're mostly nitpicks that can and have been done to any movie in the MCU, even Infinity War, even Civil War. Yes there are other videos of other people doing the same thing to those.
fun fact: subsequent stories did NOT address these time travel issues
Nor will they ever I believe
Still haven’t : D
Any time travel story will be illogical because time travel is impossible. Judging it too harshly is like judging how much sense it makes that a mutation gene can give someone telepathy. Honestly though, out of many time travel stories this one is pretty tight. Changes cause new timelines, and the only problem the ancient one had was no infinity stones meant that new universe loses to galactic threats later on. So by returning all except the space stone, all those universes had such similar timelines following that they are pretty much the same as ours. No real differences. It was Loki’s job to address the timestone-less timeline which it failed to do
Edit:spacestone not timestone
@@nerdcorner2680 time travel is possible you can't travel to the past but the Future
@@MamaMia-go7co Yes with time dilation, but beyond a few seconds it takes sci fi to make possible (light speed travel, cryo tubes, etc), but when talking about time travel in this regard I would hope the assumption is made that I am reffering to backwards time travel
I remember watching this movie, but I don't remember anything about it... Which is something that happens to me more and more often, even just a month after watching something. This would mean that either I'm getting old really quickly and my memory is failing, or movies are getting more bland and forgettable as we speak... Both of these options are bad, but for the common good, I hope that I just got senile at a young age.
Did you stop to consider it might be both?
@@Full_Throttle_Axolotl Who are you? And who am I? Where are we? Why are we?
I think there are simply few films that capture the imagination. I mean... in the last 10 years, I can count on one hand the films that have left something in me and that I can remember down to the smallest detail, even if I've only seen them a few times.
I left Endgame feeling completely satisfied...yet entirely empty. I remember saying to my friends it was more of an 'event' than a real movie. Then after a day the flaws in character and logic started to annoy me. I am on-board for this critique!
How do you feel completely satisfied but empty? That’s an oxymoron.
@@captainfalcon1160 Cynical fan service had an emotional influence because it was well done, so maybe "satisfied" was the wrong word. I should have said "partially satisfied".
I’m just saying the movie was fun they delivered 10 years worth of movies. For better or worst it was a dope journey.
@@magellanthecat yep exactly like that
Soon as I walked out of IMAX with my brother we were like....that...kinda sucked. I mean once your erection from Cap holding MJNOR subsides there really isn't anything left worth a shit. Actually I do want to give credit to Paul Rudd, the scene where he goes to his daughter and sees her but aged 5 years, that was fantastic acting and a powerful moment.
But yeah, the rest was balls.
Fringy - PLEASE make more content like this! You have such a great personality and style. I thoroughly enjoyed this video. I'd love to see more video essays on films in the future! Well done!
"Make more"??? It took him over a year to make this!
@@luciferthedoberman8991 true
Lol I am glad more people are talking about this. I was destroyed at the release of the movie way back when. People ripped me to shreds about me hating Endgame and the reasons. I told everybody this "Once the hype has left you, and you go and buy the blu ray, you'll skip through the scenes, and then you'll realize that the movie was trash."
To be fair though when people were saying time travel before the movie was released I was like "No way, after infinity war would they lean on time travel" Once time travel was spoken, I hated it.
It's good to hear someone analyzing the problems with Endgame.
I’m not one of those Twitter users that hate how a video is 2-3 or more hours long analyzing a movie, but this is an exception as I noticed some issues with Endgame with every rewatch. Don’t get me wrong it has it’s good moments but boy it has a lot of bad moments and don’t mention the time travel, it’ll hurt your brain, but not this video on the explanation of time travel, but if you mention this to an outsider.
It really isn't that bad though.
@@JonathanGaeta It really doesn't have many bad moments and time travel is fine really.
@@Jdudec367It’s pretty bad.
I don’t get it. You’ve seen a good Endgame. It’s called Infinity War. How can you see Infinity War and not immediately notice that Endgame is nowhere near as good?
@@teapouter It isn't bad. Because Endgame is as good, seriously Infinity War has it's issues too, it isn't better.
I just noticed - Tony's dilemma is nonsense. He wants to have his kid and so on as well as the snap unsnapped. Fine. The stones can do that. They can't undo a sacrifice to them, but anything else is fair game. They are infinite in terms of power, or near as much to make no difference.
What is his child? Atoms in a certain order. Done. Since the spirit stone is a thing, the spirit would be bound to those atoms. That would be his real daughter, not a copy, and even if her memories would be odd, she would be alive, and the unwinding of time could be done in such a way as to preserve his family.
But you are speaking in a real comic booky way. Consider a real world, where you are a parent and have an actual child. Killing your child, and then making another similar child by the soul stone means very similar to adoption.
You've seen iron man since 2008, tell me. Does this character want an adopted child right now?
Wait what? You literally wanted Tony to sacrifice his daughter? Interesting how much hatred towards kids people can have? Tony loves his daughter and of course he will never did this, and even if he did that isn’t it means it’s more like adoption?
Yet again the comics did it better. In the comics the disappearances caused by the snap only lasted 24 hours and most importantly EVERYTHING was undone.
Edit: Holy shit. You did something I never thought possible. You made the whole “show your work” thing that was drilled into my head in math class actually make sense as to why it’s important.
Yeah if the Snap has only lasted 24 hours, while I admit would be a bit of a copout, at least wouldn’t fuck the franchise going forward.
I can't stand when people use "but it's just a silly story about superheroes!" as an excuse to ignore bad writing. Yeah, most superhero stories are disposable trash, but there are plenty that are genuinely well-written, thought out, dare I say even works of actual art. And dismissing a work's strengths and faults just because it's in a fantastical genre is especially rich considering some of the most popular TV shows of the past two decades were deadly serious dramas about dragons and zombies and robots that dress up like cowboys.
The silliness of the premise of superheroes amplifies the need for good writing and internal consistency in order to allow the suspension of disbelief. I had problems with some of the decision-making behind Ragnarok in that regard, also. I'm sure that the success of Guardians Of The Galaxy influenced that movie.
Err… But it actually is a silly story about superheroes.
The writing doesn’t matter, it’s there to be colourful and shiny, nothing more.
It isn’t there to be a good or worthwhile or well-written piece of art, it exists only to sell action figures and other merchandise.
The movie itself doesn’t matter to the company, it’s literally an advertisement to generate billions of dollars in revenue in toys, t-shirts, colouring books, frisbees, fidget spinners etc. plus movies and subscriptions to Disney+ all of which are more profitable and higher priority than the movie and it’s box office.
Although the box office is important to an extent, but only as a barometer of how much interest there is in that specific property and to offset the cost of production and advertising.
@@Nevyn515 I mean no not really, argument is thrown out the window off the bat, only way it would work is by ignoring the century long history of passionate creators making genre, hell generation defining stories, many look back on superheroes stories for inspiration on telling a good tale, creator fantastical worlds, or just finding ways to become a better story, super hero stories are to us what the Greek gods are to rhe mythology of Greece, we can't just see everything in the way of greedy capitalist, they make money bc of how important and amazing they are to us, people need to stop thinking that's only it, it complety undermines the people who've creative these works of art
All movies are art by definiton. Now, whether that art is worthwhile, that's entirely up to the individual to decide.
@@Nevyn515 No, it´s a story. It being about superheroes is irrelevant. You would say that Harry Potter is a great series not because it´s a silly story about magic, but just a really well written book series. In the same way, you can and should critique even superhero movies for what they are: movies.
The movie is definitely not there to just sell action figures, that´s just an insult to the people who made the film. They made the film out of their own personal passion to the characters and world in the MCU. We, as the audience, can critique or praise it as we choose.
The thing that really gets me is that there’s no connection between the heroes and thanos from the past since they killed him in the beginning. And time travel makes me ask so many questions
Thanos never cared about the heroes, just his mission. Past Thanos found out he had accomplished his goal, which made him push harder. The heroes were always trying to stop Thanos
The decision to kill our Thanos in the beginning of this movie took all the tension built up from Infinity War out of this movie.
@@eugeneperry8347 exactly my point
Thanos invaded earth in 2012. The avengers defeated his army. He knows them and says so.
@histguy101 no. Loki invaded Earth in 2012 using some of Thanos forces. There's no interaction between our heroes from Endgame and Thanos until Guardians and really Infinity War.
I will never like the end they gave to Captain America. It makes no sense that he, after having three entire movies solely about saving Bucky, would leave him essentially alone in a world that is entirely foreign to him, to get married to a girl he kissed once a hundred years ago. AND he did this while knowing that she built a life for herself and had a family.
Yet another problem with the time heist is that EVERYONE traveled back in time. This means that if the time machine malfunctioned in some way then they wouldn't be able to get back to the present because nobody is there to fix the machine.
okay…?
it didnt malfunction soo… whats your point..
@@echo_z319
They shouldn't risk their lives let alone half the universe by leaving the equipment unguarded and without the potential for assistance if something did go wrong.
@@feathero3 you know how the process works right..? Did they not show the entire system with antman?
Sure in their timelines theyll spend a decent amount of time getting the stones but in the main timeline only a few seconds would pass. Pretty sure the facility has enough protections to make sure it doesnt get destroyed by someone/something within seconds but thats just me
Wait wasn't the hulk back there
Also, its TIME TRAVER shuldnt it Happen all at once???
So why not send in the groups 1 after another
And how did thanos come out after a delay???
How is there a Delay in TIME for something basicaly outside of TIME
This film was the point when they gave up on telling an interesting story and managing the huge cast of characters well & decided to dumb everything down. Even the final battle (other than Cap finally saying "Avengers Assemble" - an easy fan pleaser) felt by the numbers and heartless. Infinity War by comparison is a masterpiece. Fat Thor, MIA Hulk, Dumb Thanos, convenient rivers appearing to nullify the Sorcerer Supreme.
This was the point where the MCU died, strangely along with Tony Stark and Steve Rodgers.
It's weird how you think that the "MCU died" when they made a really great movie followed by a movie that wasn't as good. If you get a really great meal at a restaurant, and then the next meal isn't as good, do you never go there again???
@@abates17 everything beyond infinity war has been different flavors of terrible.
@@danieljackson3446 WandaVision: 91% on Rotten Tomatoes. Loki: 92%. Spider-Man: 93%. Lots of well-loved movies and shows in there.
@@abates17 Spider-Man is pretty much a Sony property, and if you've seen both Loki and Multiverse of Madness you'll know their multiverse elements completely contradict each other. Multiverse of Madness also has plot holes with the first Dr Strange film, and itself. All the MCU television shows have been pretty poor regardless of RT ratings.
I'll not mention Moon Knight, which butchered one of my favourite characters of all time. None of them have come anywhere close to Daredevil in terms of character building, story tension or action scenes.
The quality drop off, in terms of consistency and writing standards has been astounding; which will no doubt continue with Thor's character being destroyed further, along with Ms Marvel & She Hulk being dead on arrival.
@@danieljackson3446 Spider-Man is owned by Sony but the movie was produced by Marvel. And the RT ratings show that most people disagree with you on the quality of the MCU shows. If you have specific plot holes or contradictions, I'd love to hear them! But otherwise, your claims of "quality dropoff" do not match reality.
"Rain fire!"
"Sire, but our troops!"
*They literally did that trope. Seriously.*
@Purple Emerald just do it.
@Purple Emerald Bad guy kills his own troops trope.
@@kylevernon Not the troop trope!
@@abates17 I don’t know what’s worse, the troop trope or a troop of tropes.
Oh noes! No the troop trope! Lol
Thank you so much for talking about steve's character assassination; that was honestly my least favourite thing about the movie and infuriates me to this day, and it's rarely brought up in any discussion of this film
Also now after all this time i don't like tony's death it felt too forced in my opinion, it's like they wanted it to happen, there are concept arts where it was nebula who did the snap and tony was the one who send captain marvel through the time machine in the end, which means they weren't considering tony's death for the most part, also i think it was not just hulk who was nerfed it was also tony who was nerfed as well, russos and the writers purposely made tony do nothing in the final war and the excuse was oh he made that suit not to survive it's bs in my opinion, tony is a tinkerer there is literally no limit to what he can develop he should have developed some nanotech ironman drones or something to make the final fight a little more interesting but no they had time for stupid jokes but not good final fight for a character you are about to kill.
Your entire section on Thanos is something I've been telling my friends since Endgame came out.
Infinity War is a movie where Thanos is the protagonist. It's his journey from start to end, collecting the infinity stones, and accomplishing his goal. It's a masterclass in character building, and making the main villain of the MCU the 'hero' of the movie.
Endgame completely fucks that up and kills the BBEG in the first 5 minutes. Our heroes don't defeat Thanos. They lost to Thanos, and he basically killed himself when he destroyed the infinity stones. There is absolutely no catharsis when they defeat the 'old' Thanos in Endgame. Because he doesn't have the emotional connection to the heroes that the OG Thanos does. The line that everyone memes is the "I don't even know who you are", and he's right! He has ZERO idea who Scarlet Witch is, who Vision is, and he barely understands who Iron Man, Thor, and Captain America are. It's such a frustrating conclusion to what could have been the greatest on-screen villain of all time.
It is disappointing what they did with Thanos, but I don’t know if I could call it character assassination. Even in infinity war the reasons behind his goal wasn’t that altruistic. The Russos have said he mainly wants to prove his idea to save his planet would have worked.
@@solarking952 I think the character assassination of Thanos and the weight of the Infinity Saga occured in Phase 4. It's like the new batch of writers are chipping away at it. To be fair, the MCU quality drop off started in Phase 3, immediately after Infinity War. Ant-Man and the Wasp was a fun time, but should have been released before Infinity War. If Captain Marvel wasn't a prequel, it might have been better (wasnt it set in the 90s as a middle finger to Fox's Dark Phoenix?)---hardly CMs only problem. Black Widow would have fit perfectly before End Game--again, it's release date is hardly the film's only problem.
You didn’t tell your friends that lol. The directors literally said it before the movie hit theaters it was thanos story. That’s not some original take. And it’s still the avengers movie all the way through.
The last paragraph you said makes no sense at all.
They don't take away Thanos' victory or story by killing him in the beginning of endgame, they even say in the movie it meant nothing to kill him, as there was still no way to bring back their loved ones. So in the end his plan was a success and he could die knowing that.
When the "Old" Thanos from the past shows up to fight, obviously he wouldn't know who these people are. He does know that these people are dangerous and can stop him, so he changes his whole plan and decides that he will just create a new universe where no one remembers that he snapped half of them away.
The ending to Thanos was great.
How does Thanos becomes the hero?
I think it's mind-blowing that people will say things like "the time travel inner-workings aren't really that important, don't judge the movie too harshly for it" when the movie itself bothers to TRY and explain it. The *story* is telling us to think about it. I didn't latch onto this element by choice; it's just plainly a thing that I was given to ponder. If this was the 18th installment of Pacific Rim and there were suddenly just hordes of zombie samurai running around, but the movie at no point had a character point this out... I would go with it as a stupid thing for stupid's sake. Because the movie would be telling me it is nonsense, and no contemplation beyond the insane spectacle is being asked of me.
1:06:05
the very worst part about this forced contrivance is it needed nothing more than a throwaway line, even if just by Jarvis 2.0
"sir..if you are planning to snap 3 billion people back into existence, perhaps you should some provide advanced knowledge to global authorities to prepare for this event.."
"yes, jarvis..good plan, make it so"
their first mistake with endgame imo was deciding that the snap should be undone.
everybody was expecting it to be undone because the heroes are supposed to win in the end, but infinity war was all about them losing for once. you don't always need to return to the status quo, you can change it too because that's what long-running stories do.
Thank you for this
Steve would have never. He is one of my favorite characters for so many reasons. One of them is his persistence. He would have never given up.
I really started to noticed that like why would Steve go back in time to be with Peggy? What about his friend Bucky? He always said he be there at the end of the line. I hope I’m saying that right. Just why? I know they wanted to retire the character but man they could’ve done it differently, but no they turned Steve into Joe Biden.
The dude was not being selfish, he’s been selfless his entire life, yet you’re practically complaining that he got a happy ending.
@@Matt-wb8ni56:16
@@Matt-wb8niwe are not complaining that he’s having a happy ending. We are ok with Steve retiring and giving his shield to Sam. What we are actually complaining about was him going to the past to be with Peggy. Peggy who Steve kissed once and barely hung out with. Steve leaving his friends to be with her is illogical especially when his past movies were about moving on from her and the past.
Another reason to complain is him going back to the past in general. It doesn’t make sense for him to sit back and relax with Peggy in the past while hydra and among other bad things are going on. Do you really think Steve(in character Steve) will be ok with staying in the past; while Bucky is being tortured and brainwashed by hydra. Do you also think he will be ok with hydra taking over Shield?
@rawan.m9472 Bucky should've gotten the Shield. It would've fit with his redemption arc, and symbolically represent Steve woth Bucky "to the end of the line". Given how integral Bucky was to all 3 Captain America movies, and how Cap never gave up on Bucky. Fighting the government and his own friends because he never blamed Bucky for what the Winter Soldier did. He would want him to move on from the Winter Soldier persona, and get a second chance.
I always thought that the best thing for Thor would have been to become hardened and embittered after the events of Infinity war like he was in the opening of End Game. Thor's take away should have been to solve all his problems by going for the head. That would align with his statement to solve his problems not run from them. He already had the eyepatch, why not become more like Odin from the first movie? Only when he reunites with the team does he start to regain some of his lost humanity an realize the best way may not always be the most direct way.
Edit: holy shit I hadn't seen the deleted scene, that's incredible what the fuck
Yup, same. I would've had Thor become an overprotective king and married to Lady Sif. Relatively cut off from the rest of the world. Then he has to gain back his humanity, and relearn what it's like to be on a team. He's the one to snap and bring everyone back. Undoing the snap he couldn't stop. Losing the arm in the process.
@@DavidMartinez-ce3lp I really like that idea! Maybe then, the fourth Thor movie could have been about Jane taking over the role of Thor and becoming an Avenger while Thor himself becomes more of a political leader/king of New Asgard.
Endgame would've been much better with no timetravel and no timeskip.
I'd settle for a little time travel and no skip.
Hell, I might even do something goofy like get Present Thanos to realize his mistake _and help_ the remaining Avengers go back in time and fight Past Thanos.
Or get Past Thanos to pull a Highlander "there can only be one" on Present Thanos or something, IDK I'm not a doctor.
The time skip is cool af, could have been handled better but thats a dofferent story. The skip is an excellent idea and with good planning could allow for the rise and beginnings of a plethora of new heroes
@@jchud13 yes, if it was used in that way, that is
Abso-fucking-lutely.
Yes! Yes! Yes!
Perhaps the aspect I least appreciated about Endgame is how little Thanos' snap had an impact on that world. Leaving aside the consequences on other planets... the disappearance of 4 billion random people should lead to:
-riots in every city;
-loss of the balance of power;
-new tensions both towards governments and towards the Avengers;
-disillusionment with traditional religious systems;
-economic crisis;
-altered impact on the environment...etc.
Instead we find ourselves seeing a post-apocalyptic semi-scenario, with no one asking the remaining Avengers what happened, nor with them being forced to fight to preserve a minimum of balance...not to mention the consequences of the return of the missings after 5 years.
One of the smartest decisions in the Infinity Gauntlet comic is the snap happening and Nebula getting the gauntlet 24 hours later and specifically willing the world back to how it was prior to the snap.
That 5 year gap between Infinity War and Endgame makes the MCU incredibly messy.
it's still shit, though. Don't write problems you can't deal with. "it was all a dream" is the most unsatisfying trope.
@@Wyzai facts, but atleast keep it within a reasonable time period
Ah, no longer unlisted, eh? Neat. This was a hell of a breakdown to critique the film. Aside from the broken time travel mechanic to move the plot forward, Fat Thor and providing more in regards to the consequences of the Blip, the sheer lack of emphasis to flesh out the conflict between Tony and Steve leading to them letting bygones be bygones later in the film in a far more sensible and satisfying way really annoyed me.
It turns out that the demise of half of everyone they ever loved sort of overshadowed the now comparably insignificant squabble they had in Civil War. I'm not sure what you expected, even by the end of Civil War with the letter they were over it. Tony didn't even attempt to stop Cap from breaking everyone out of the prison, despite being told.
Every time travel movie, even classic like Terminator, have countless issues, arguably more than Endgame, because as it turns out, time travel is not possible in real life. You can tear apart every time travel movie ever made by nitpicking.
@@VColossalV Fringy countered this in the beginning of the video. No shit time travel isn’t real. Neither is magic. That doesn’t mean you can’t create a fictional story that establishes rules and follows them. How did you not get that?
@@edgythehedgy6661 I notice you ignored the first half of my comment entirely.
"That doesn’t mean you can’t create a fictional story that establishes rules and follows them"
Arguably the only time Endgame breaks it's own rules is when Steve is old in the original timeline. There are possible explanations for it, but all of the other examples he gave are problems for all other time travel movies. He criticizes Endgame for not dealing with the impact of Hawkeye simply moving a baseball glove, when in actual fact, it's far less of a problem with branching timelines as it is with other interpretations of time travel, as it isn't effecting the main timeline, only that separate one. In Back to the Future, the mere presence of being there should immediately erase him and and have ripple effects that span way beyond that.
Branching timelines makes way more sense, it avoids many paradoxes. But when you take a magnifying glass to such concepts, they fall apart. Doesn't make any of these terrible movies, despite the time travel of many of them being laughably implausible.
@@VColossalV the first half of your comment was about them getting over their feud quickly? What does that have to do with time travel or my comment? How did I ignore that, when it has nothing to do with my point?
@@edgythehedgy6661 You replied to my comment, which was in response to the OP who made claims about the conflict. I thought you would at least engage with both points.
THANK YOU for defending that it doesn't really matter which version of Time Travel is chosen in a story, as long as that choice is CONSISTENT and worked effectively.
I personally find Temporal Mutability (also frequently called Closed Time Loops) to be the most satisfying, because having the whole story feel like a puzzle falling into place with consumers knowing the end result first but seeing how we got there via convoluted methods is what I call a good time. But I can enjoy any of the three types if they're done well enough, and indeed have and will.
But... BUT... handwaving paradoxes or MIXING the types with no rhyme or reason is just... infuriating. It shows a clear lack of regard for worldbuilding, even for immediate plot relevance, that just transcends mere immersion and has my fuming from my core. I despise lazy time travel stories, because they can be so, so beautiful with the right amount of effort and finesse.
Were you paying attention o what kind of time travel it was? It was the branching theory, so whatever change they made would just create a separate universe.
Infinity War is superior. Endgame sucked ass.
[ 0:05 Intro ]
7:03 Context: Going into Endgame
*Plot*
11:37 Let’s Begin.
+ Context: Why Loki will be ignored
18:19 Time Travel in Endgame
34:55 The Time Heist
39:54 Avengers Assemble
*Characters*
50:45 Context: Character & Plot
54:56 Captain America
1:01:46 Context: The Snap/The Blip
1:07:26 Iron Man
1:13:20 Steve vs Tony
1:21:04 Thor
1:27:08 Professor Hulk
1:29:52 Hawkeye/Black Widow
1:32:45 Nebula/Rocket
1:34:19 Thanos
*Conclusion*
1:36:47 In Summary
1:42:57 Consistency *”vs.”* Fanservice
[ 1:59:53 Outro ]
You are a diamond my friend
You are the MVP indeed
Thank you
this needs to be top comment
Gold medal here