Messofanego
Banned
After reading this longform article by Adam B Vary on Joss Whedon's "compromises" and "failures" with Avengers: Age of Ultron and especially after having seen the film, I got to thinking about what happened with both directors.
Christopher Nolan got to make three Batman films. Each with their own themes and motifs. He got to have his cake and eat it. Both the blockbuster and the artistic statement. Begins was about getting back up and conquering your fears. The Dark Knight was about terrorism in a post-9/11 time, whether a vigilante hero should even exist, and maybe he has too much power with NSA-like surveillance. The Dark Knight Rises shot right during the Occupy movement with its winter and Tale of Two Cities vibe, was about a world fractured (with nods to the No Man's Land storyline) and how a revolution would come about against the rich and Wall Street. Not to mention the arc of Batman in each: Begins is when he rises, TDK is when he has to go through various emotional/mental challenges (Rachel and Two Face), and TDKR is when he's aged so has to find one last way to end it all. Even with these varying themes, there was a signature throughout and was cohesive. All of the films feel singular and complete, rather than feeling episodic. If you were following the time between the Batman films, it didn't feel like Nolan was pressured to make sequels. He would say in interviews that he would only make them if he found the right story or theme to work on, to then put his stamp on. All the films end in climactic and almost bittersweet ways, rather than needing to sequel-bait as part of a franchise. He didn't have to participate and didn't even want to take part in a cinematic universe. No tie-ins to further movies. He got to give the character of Bruce Wayne a more satisfying conclusion than most of the comics, where he can give up the cape and live a normal life.
Even besides the flaws, at least the Nolan Batman films were about something. They were relatable to our times. Yes, Nolan is more of an experienced filmmaker than Whedon, but Batman was also his first foray into big budget studio ventures. I have this fear for Brad Bird currently. Many experienced filmmakers lose their signature when folded into such situations. James Gunn lost it for Guardians of the Galaxy, if you compare his Troma and darkly comedic, shlocky features (Super, Slither) to the swashbuckling epic that is GoTG. Kenneth Branagh retained some of his Shakespeare theatrics for Thor, but there's not enough of those bits while the Earth sections take up the majority and are the blandest.
Maybe that's the inevitabily of being in the Marvel Machine. "Forget it, Jake. It's MAHVEL, baby."
The difference between working on one hero (Nolan with Batman) versus a team of superheroes (Whedon with Avengers) should be noted, although both were built on ensemble casts.
Sure, Whedon got his typical dialogue in. But it now seems clear that Joss Whedon wanted the Avengers movie to be about something, too. More than just summer blockbusters.
He tried his best with the second movie having a touch of introspection and character development
but clearly a lot was left out in development and so the spectacle takes over the majority of the films. A lot of it felt rushed, much like the first Avengers movie. Then there's the generic end level army of mindless enemies. Sometimes I'm reminded of the Transformers movies, and how I got bored by them just going over the same things. This New York Times review by Manhola Dargis mirrors my feeling that the action setpieces felt "interminable and fatiguing", they kept on going but the characters would usually be more separate than feeling together, unlike say the recent Fast and Furious movie. Even if it's become a meme with F&F that they're all about family, the movies bear that vibe out in not just the downtime but also the setpieces so I'm at least invested.
Then all this stuff about having to put his hands on to all the other movies and especially Agents of SHIELD. From being hands-on to then handing it over to his bro, Jed. He really sounds exhausted by it all.
"I made the idiotic mistake of trying to make a great movie"
And if I dont do that, if I havent brought you on that journey and closed it out, fuck me. Thats the danger of this sort of serialized storytelling, turning the motion picture experience into episodic TV."
Christopher Nolan got to make three Batman films. Each with their own themes and motifs. He got to have his cake and eat it. Both the blockbuster and the artistic statement. Begins was about getting back up and conquering your fears. The Dark Knight was about terrorism in a post-9/11 time, whether a vigilante hero should even exist, and maybe he has too much power with NSA-like surveillance. The Dark Knight Rises shot right during the Occupy movement with its winter and Tale of Two Cities vibe, was about a world fractured (with nods to the No Man's Land storyline) and how a revolution would come about against the rich and Wall Street. Not to mention the arc of Batman in each: Begins is when he rises, TDK is when he has to go through various emotional/mental challenges (Rachel and Two Face), and TDKR is when he's aged so has to find one last way to end it all. Even with these varying themes, there was a signature throughout and was cohesive. All of the films feel singular and complete, rather than feeling episodic. If you were following the time between the Batman films, it didn't feel like Nolan was pressured to make sequels. He would say in interviews that he would only make them if he found the right story or theme to work on, to then put his stamp on. All the films end in climactic and almost bittersweet ways, rather than needing to sequel-bait as part of a franchise. He didn't have to participate and didn't even want to take part in a cinematic universe. No tie-ins to further movies. He got to give the character of Bruce Wayne a more satisfying conclusion than most of the comics, where he can give up the cape and live a normal life.
it was because of that finality that I honestly teared up a bit as a big Batman fan
Even besides the flaws, at least the Nolan Batman films were about something. They were relatable to our times. Yes, Nolan is more of an experienced filmmaker than Whedon, but Batman was also his first foray into big budget studio ventures. I have this fear for Brad Bird currently. Many experienced filmmakers lose their signature when folded into such situations. James Gunn lost it for Guardians of the Galaxy, if you compare his Troma and darkly comedic, shlocky features (Super, Slither) to the swashbuckling epic that is GoTG. Kenneth Branagh retained some of his Shakespeare theatrics for Thor, but there's not enough of those bits while the Earth sections take up the majority and are the blandest.
Maybe that's the inevitabily of being in the Marvel Machine. "Forget it, Jake. It's MAHVEL, baby."
The difference between working on one hero (Nolan with Batman) versus a team of superheroes (Whedon with Avengers) should be noted, although both were built on ensemble casts.
Sure, Whedon got his typical dialogue in. But it now seems clear that Joss Whedon wanted the Avengers movie to be about something, too. More than just summer blockbusters.
Im glad you could see this dramatic and Oscar-worthy scene that will no doubt be quoted for generations, Whedon said minutes later in the directors tent as the crew went through the final preparations to shoot the explosion. Boom! children will say. Boom!
"I didn't do enough...Here's failure...Here's compromise."With Avengers 2, its like, I feel like I can do better, he said. It can mean more. And I can work harder. And I can enjoy it more.
"By being smaller. More personal. More painful."Eight months later, however, as Whedon was close to completing Age of Ultron in time for its international debut on April 22, and U.S. debut May 1, he looked and sounded like hed been hit by an exploding truck for real. His voice was choked into a ragged croak, and his lower lip sported a nasty-looking scab where it had split in half. Well, I have been to the other side of the mountain, he said. I gotta say, its been dark. Its been weird. Its been horrible. About a month and a half ago, I said goodbye to my kids, and Ive been living in Burbank next to the studio. I feel every day like, I didnt do enough, I didnt do enough, I didnt do enough. I wasnt ready. Heres failure. Heres failure. Heres compromise. Heres compromise.
In practically the same breath, Whedon added that the worst, he hoped, was behind him. Im now coming out the other side, realizing that once again, for all its many varied and soon to be heralded flaws, its my movie, he said. Its the movie I set out to make. And I have the honor of saying, its fucking bonkers. So theres that.
A little over a month before The Avengers opened in May 2012, Whedon was asked by the British magazine SFX how he might try to top the spectacle of the first film if he were to direct the sequel. By not trying to, he said. By being smaller. More personal. More painful.
What was that again about making the Avengers sequel smaller? That has not gone my way, Whedon said with a laugh en route home from the set in July. I totes failed to make it smaller. There is a lot of movie.
He tried his best with the second movie having a touch of introspection and character development
(hallucination flashbacks, Hawkeye's homes exploring their daily struggles)
Then all this stuff about having to put his hands on to all the other movies and especially Agents of SHIELD. From being hands-on to then handing it over to his bro, Jed. He really sounds exhausted by it all.
Another complicating factor with Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D.: They didnt actually want me to make it, said Whedon. Its like, Uh, Joss, we really wanted you to do [Age of Ultron]. Instead you created a TV show, you moron. I thought you wanted me to! No, we just wanted you to make a movie. Oh. My bad. It went from being absolutely 100% the driving force and totally hands-on to That sounds great, Jed! You should do that!

"I made the idiotic mistake of trying to make a great movie"
After a while, all that course correcting began to debilitate Whedons creative resolve. I made the idiotic mistake of trying to make a great movie, Whedon said with an exasperated growl. I was like, I want this movie to be great. Im just going to go ahead and say it, even though Im a WASP. And then I feel like Ive been punished for that for the last two years. I put a level of pressure on myself that Ive never done before. Ive been a sketch artist, and now Im painting. And then also to know there are not millions, but billions of dollars riding on your artistic decisions? He dropped into a terrified muppet-y voice. Err, uhh, sometimes you wish you could forget that.
For the first time in Whedons career, however, he couldnt. The dollars, whats riding on this, the burden of having done the first one and trying to come up to that level started to freak me out in the way it never has, he said. One of the biggest audiences Buffy the Vampire Slayer ever reached was for an episode that ranked 78th in the ratings for the week. But now Whedons own yardstick is the third-highest-grossing movie of all time. I feel like I have to make a movie good enough to be the next third-highest-grossing movie of all time, he said. I do feel like if it doesnt make a certain ridiculous amount of money, I will have failed the people who have faith in me. Ill fold in on myself.
And if I dont do that, if I havent brought you on that journey and closed it out, fuck me. Thats the danger of this sort of serialized storytelling, turning the motion picture experience into episodic TV."
Theres a lot about the experience that has been debilitating, to the point where at one time I thought, Oh, Ive lost it. I lost the movie. I dont know what I have here. I dont know what Im doing. I dont know what youre going to ask me to promote.
Whedons initial cut for Age of Ultron was over three hours, and his own desire to make the movie shorter than its predecessor meant he had to lose a great deal of the character-building hed written including more details about Quicksilver and Scarlet Witch, and more backstory for Scarlett Johanssons Black Widow while also ensuring there was enough room in his film for hints at what was still to come in the MCU. Some of that seeding was actually accidental. Whedon said he cast Andy Serkis as war profiteer Ulysses Klaue, one of the main villains for Marvel Comics superhero Black Panther, months before he learned that Marvel Studios was going to make a Black Panther movie. And when Whedon wrote and shot a pointed confrontation between Steve Rogers and Tony Stark, he said he didnt realize they would literally become enemies in next years Captain America: Civil War. Other elements, however like suggesting the world-ending plans of a certain powerful purple alien who first popped up after the credits of 2012s The Avengers were much more deliberate. And they put Whedon at odds with one of his most deeply held convictions, that a feature film should always be its own discrete story, with a clear beginning, middle, and end.
No matter how much they may talk about, Well, this is going to lead to some terrible stuff down the line, in my movie, its designed to be a complete experience, he said. And if I dont do that, if I havent brought you on that journey and closed it out, fuck me. Thats the danger of this sort of serialized storytelling, turning the motion picture experience into episodic TV. Because we have episodic TV, and now you dont even have to wait to watch it, you can binge it. So thats to me a dreadful mistake.
Whedon chuckled bitterly. Somebody said, Well, that was a great setup for the next thing! in one of the test screenings, and I died inside. [Marvel executives] were like, No! They say that all the time, its fine. I was like, No, thats the worst thing I could have heard. I want people to come out feeling done.
And Whedon is done, with Marvel Studios, at least for the foreseeable future. On set in July, in fact, he was already pretty clear that he wanted to move on, in his Joss Whedon way: My dad said about quitting Captain Kangaroo, You know, I figured out all the ways there are to have Ping-Pong balls rain on a bunny. In April, after months of well-reported negotiations, Captain America: Civil War directors Joe and Anthony Russo officially signed on to direct the two-part Avengers: Infinity War, and Whedon had no regrets. Mostly.