Avengers 4 - Endgame

  • Österreich Marvel's The Avengers 4: Endgame (mehr)
Trailer 3
USA, 2019, 182 min

Vorlage:

Stan Lee (Comicbuch), Jack Kirby (Comicbuch)

Kamera:

Trent Opaloch

Besetzung:

Robert Downey Jr., Chris Evans, Mark Ruffalo, Chris Hemsworth, Scarlett Johansson, Jeremy Renner, Don Cheadle, Paul Rudd, Benedict Cumberbatch (mehr)
(weitere Professionen)

Inhalte(1)

Der Titan Thanos hat die Hälfte aller Lebewesen der Galaxie verschwinden lassen. Den verbliebenen Avengers und Guardians gelingt es zwar, ihn zu vernichten, die Trauer über ihren Verlust schmerzt sie jedoch sehr. Fünf Jahre später kehrt Ant-Man überraschend aus dem Quantenreich zurück. Seine Idee, mit einer Zeitreise die Uhr zurückzustellen, bringt neue Hoffnung: vielleicht kann Thanos schreckliche Tat in der Vergangenheit doch verhindert werden. (ORF)

(mehr)

Kritiken (17)

Lima 

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Englisch I'm not a big fan of comic book CGI coloring books, but I have to capitulate here. Especially thanks to the middle section, when it clicks together beautifully like a sophisticated jigsaw puzzle that recalls all the previous Marvel movies, and the film rolls out such incredible fan service that it's almost admirable. That and the last nostalgic quarter of an hour will actually show how the suits from Marvel have it perfectly thought out in advance, even ten or fifteen years in advance. A perfectly tuned machine that is unparalleled in today's film studio constellation. Kevin Feige is a stud. ()

J*A*S*M 

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Englisch Though not outright admiration, Endgame does at least deserve sincere recognition for how the creators managed to link the more than twenty films of the Marvel Universe so far, developing motifs from pretty much every one of them, but still holding things together somehow. And also because, even though the result was clear in advance (that end of Infinity War would be reversed), the way there managed to surprise more than once. The time travel scenes are really quite original. On the other hand, the effort to show at least for a moment almost every single character that’s had screen time in the ten-year history of the Marvel movies ended up hurting it. I felt it was way too overcrowded (both in the number of characters, as well as in the motifs, styles and moods), and I wasn’t able to fully focus and immerse myself in it. It also carries on with the typical problem of the Avengers films, the lack of a face of their own (which doesn’t apply to the solo outfits). It’s simply aesthetically uninteresting. I’m also giving it a 7/10, and the lower rating is because of what they did with Thor. That wasn’t humour, that was pure cringe. ()

Isherwood 

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Englisch There is no doubt about the fact that the realization possibilities of a Hollywood blockbuster are at their peak. An expertly crafted ride that has no time to hesitate or fumble. But it lacked emotionally for me more than I was willing to admit at first. The anticipation of Thanos' uncompromising body count disappears at the snap of a finger, and where others had tears rolling down their faces, I just sat nervously. In that spectacular wringer of emotions, I actually enjoyed one very unexpected emotion when the two grown men just chat on the way to the car. The rest passed me by. Kevin Feige will be taught about someday. Hats off to him. ()

Malarkey 

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Englisch Years ago, Marvel films were all the same for me. It is unbelievable how much the whole Marvel universe evolved, and I’ve gradually grown fond of even the characters I originally disliked. The climax came with this installment of Avengers, which I consider worthy of the walk of fame for films in Hollywood Boulevard. This is the ultimate filmmaking epic. For ten years the American filmmakers shower you with comic-book-based movies, just so everything connects into one endlessly awesome final battle against Thanos, probably the scariest adversary of comic book heroes ever. His goal is not to create evil, but to establish neutrality and the worst thing is that he has some solid arguments and fully believes in them. I had so much respect for this guy. I have also enjoyed the three hours long experience that had a good premise and message, entertained me and most of all, it gave enough space to every hero, which deserves applause. To put together all of this must have taken an enormous amount of work and I am happy I can award it today with the ultimate five stars. I could try to find some faults with it, but why would I do it? It was awesome! ()

MrHlad 

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Englisch On the one hand, I'm glad the Russos broke the sequel rule of "cram more in than last time" and went a different route. But the truth is that this path is going more towards comic book fans than people who have no idea what Ant-Man's real name is... but they're not going to the cinema anyway, so what? Endgame manages to shock a few times in the first ten minutes, only to evolve in a direction that the trailers practically didn't even hint at. The directing duo conceived the whole thing in a much more intimate fashion this time around, relying heavily on fan service and clearly wanting to give each of the superhero veterans plenty of space. The humour is not absent this time either, but it's nice that the heroes are still aware that they screwed up last time and everyone has to deal with it in their own way. This more intimate mode suits the Avengers and makes things happen that even the most optimistic fans probably didn't hope for. Ironically, though, it's also the biggest problem, because it doesn't really start to get spectacular until the end. In sheer magnificence, Infinity War probably trumps Endgame, but I still felt like the whole thing could have come a little sooner. I enjoyed it a little more last time, but I can't imagine putting Infinity War on in a few years and saying I don't give a shit about Endgame. All in all, it works practically perfectly. And as a farewell to an era of cinema, more than worthy as well. ()

Marigold 

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Deutsch Wenn ich das Ganze als eigenständigen Film betrachten sollte, hätte ich Vorbehalte gegen eine gewisse Länge des ersten (dramatischen) Drittels. Und Gott bewahre, ich könnte hierbei in einem zeitbedingten Paradoxum des zweiten Drittels stecken bleiben, bzw. Gott bewahre, dass ich mich durch das Sentiment des letzten Drittels beleidigt fühlen könnte. Aber The Avengers stellen eine Kategorie für sich selbst dar, und es macht wenig Sinn, sie dessen zu beschuldigen, dass sie nicht kohärent sind. Es werden hierin so viele Charaktere, Positionen und Teilmotive kombiniert, dass ich mir keine andere Lösung vorstellen kann als die ähnlich konzipierte 182-minütige Katharsis. Und wenn sofern wir Endgame als Finale einer Staffel betrachten ergibt auf einmal alles perfekt Sinn. Es handelt sich hier um einen Fokus auf die Schlüsselfiguren mit dem Ziel, ihrer Existenz eine Absolution zu verleihen, wobei die Art, wie im Geschehen auf eine witzige Weise Elemente der Nostalgie dosiert werden (Endgame stellt eine Art Matrix von Erinnerungen an frühere Filme dar) mitsamt des epischen Höhepunktes die emotionale Power eines fallenden Meteoriten haben. Hinter alledem ist ein Plan zu fühlen, der DC doch so sehr fehlt. Die einzelnen Teile passen ins Puzzle hinein, und nur um Ihnen ein Beispiel zu nennen, nehmen wir doch Thor. Ich erwarte von Marvel keine revolutionären Gedanken, formale Anreize oder psychologische Tiefgründigkeit. Ich warte auf eine Befriedigung der zuschauerischen Begierde. Und wenn sich denn etwas nach Endgame einstellt, so ist es da Gefühl einer angenehmen Sättigung. Vielleicht ist dies kein generationsumarmendes Ereignis von einem Star Wars-Ereignis-Kaliber, jedoch ist es immer noch mehr als ein würdiges Ende für etliche Stunden voller Spaß und jahrelanger ehrlicher Arbeit. Hat uns Nolans Batman gezeigt, dass ein Superheld insofern menschlich sein muss, damit nicht mehr "super“ ist, so bestehen die Avengers darauf, dass man beides zugleich sein kann. Es mag naiv klingen, aber es ist erhebend. ()

EvilPhoEniX 

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Englisch The culmination of the year's and indeed the century's cinematic event (the last time Harry Potter ended this way), the film lived up to its hype and delivered a perfect farewell to filmmaking so mature that I'm not afraid to call the Russo brothers a directorial powerhouse alongside Christopher Nolan and Quentin Tarantino. With trailers that give almost nothing away, you will be surprised, shocked and emotionally wrung to the max for two and a half hours. Even though the film feels more like a heart-pounding drama for two hours (the action proper doesn't until the end), it doesn't matter at all because story-wise the film offers a lot. The time travel in particular presented in a very creative and entertaining way. The Hulk along with Thor take care of the humour, and the emotions work very well, too, at least three scenes had me in tears. Once the epic finale starts, I was absolutely buried in my seat, enjoying the ecstasy with orgasm so much that I still had trouble getting up ten minutes after it was over and I was also half paralyzed to the point of having trouble picking up my drink. Yeah I can't even remember such an experience I took away from the cinema. I can't imagine kids having fun with this movie. 100%. ()

novoten 

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Englisch Avengers assemble! A crushing beginning, a pile of iconic moments, where whispers of disbelief mixed with deafening silence spread through the cinema, three movies in one, the best performances in eleven years (Robert Downey, Jr., Jeremy Renner), and a phenomenal conclusion that defies even the most daring expectations. In a way, three hours is too little, because those three hours are so full of glory that even a few days after the screening, I am still only retrospectively recalling fascinating scenes that were cautiously concealed under my first impressions. Definitely the movie of the year and, in terms of its pop culture impact, also a well-deserved, undeniable, extremely moving, and – precisely due to the intimacy of individual interactions – the unrivalled event of the decade. ()

JFL 

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Englisch SPOILERS INCLUDED: Every long-running franchise matures with its viewers and incorporates motifs that resonate with their current ages. Just as Harry Potter advanced from children’s adventures to teen angst and turmoil, Marvel advanced through 22 movies. However, it is rather humorous that the longed-for culmination is dad cinema in spandex. Unfortunately, this does not pertain only to the central dirty trick on the female audience in the transformation of the physiognomy of the whole series’ main hunk, but primarily to the central motif of Endgame. It’s nice that a certain percentage of male viewers will proudly admit that they shed tears, but is that actually evidence of their supposed sensitivity or even of the film’s qualities? Do we rather have nothing to do with the fact that the film’s creators captured the pain of the current crisis of masculinity, where men themselves have made the whip in the form of accepting the diktat that they have to provide for their family and, concurrently, that they do not have to abandon their own self-fulfilment? What does it say about our society that if, in bidding the hero farewell, we hear the standard “I love you”, that would be an object of ridicule, but if hear “Don’t worry, we’re taken care of”, young fathers and husbands shed emotional tears? I also said to myself that hiring Alan Silvestri was a fine attempt to add a bit of a melodic background to a series afflicted with the curse of forgettable music. However, I did not expect that the master would steal from himself, resulting in a programmatically intentional copy of Forrest Gump. While you don’t know what you are going to get out of life, everything in this box of chocolates is by the book, including, unfortunately, the development in the style of the oft-ridiculed cliché “I have two days until I retire and I am the only character who has a private life in which something like this could happen”. But it is clear that these are merely the bitter words of someone who is not invested in the series as a true believer. After all, the individual scenes cannot be appreciated because there is no continuity. Seriously? Isn’t this pseudo-argument simply a justification for the time invested, because the mechanically cranked-out scenes of absolute exertion without structure simply cannot in any way enrich any memories? The fact that Iron Man argues with Captain America is no deeper than when your parents argue for the millionth time. Not because you have seen them go through a relationship crisis, but because in both cases only those affected play transparent roles and act in accordance with automatically accepted formulas. Let’s stop kidding ourselves that the MCU is anything more than a brilliant PR victory over viewers and critics because it was able to create the impression of an event and a unique experience of something that is calculated to the smallest detail, not from the bottom up by individual artists, but by seasoned corporate creatives from the top down. And that it was a wild ride and not at all a sure thing from the beginning. Does anyone still remember Hulk today? Not Ang Lee’s version, but the one with Edward Norton. That was a critical moment in the whole Marvel campaign, because for the first and last time, the creatives let go of the reins and lost their control over the result, after which they deleted the film and destroyed Norton’s career. This was followed by a strictly managed one-sided campaign in which the directors were either no-name assemblers of a puzzle pre-designed by the showrunner, or craftily chosen names that, long before the premiere, lent themselves to shaping the viewers’ acceptance of the film as something serious (Branagh), dark and gritty (Black) or refreshingly light-hearted (Waititi), even though all Marvel movies are always built based on the same foundation. Those who resisted were not allowed in at all or were promptly sent packing (Wright). In this there is something unique, a value and place in the history of the cinematography of this mammoth endeavour, regardless of the fact that the emperor not only has no clothes, but struts around for his fans. The icing on the cake is the vanity found in the closing credits, where the stars of the series even condescend to sign autographs for their admirers. While, like every proper manipulator, the true creators and geniuses of the MCU enjoy their position in the shadows. () (weniger) (mehr)

3DD!3 

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Englisch At first I though I understood this, but then I realized I don’t. Basically it doesn’t matter, because this was a farewell with all the trimmings. If Infinity War was a showcase, Endgame is a nostalgic way back to the sentence where it all started. I am Iron Man. ()

Kaka 

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Englisch For the first time, Marvel has made a solid comic book drama with existential overtones instead of a flat CGI fest about the destruction of the world, and everyone's completely stoked. Easily watchable, character-driven, with a delightfully sentimental finale. The catharsis of Captain America's character outweighs the others, though it's hard to say whether intentionally or not, while the time travel with all its paradoxes – equals an annoying pile of bullshit, as usual. ()

D.Moore 

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Deutsch Ein ausgezeichnetes Finale voller Überraschungen. Lassen Sie sich nichts verraten, gehen Sie ins Kino und verraten Sie dann auch niemandem etwas – der Film ist es wert. Zusammen mit den ständigen Überraschungen hat mich Endgame auch dadurch begeistert, wie er nicht nur mit der Geschichte von Infinity War fortfährt, sondern gleichzeitig verschiedene Punkte, Ausrufezeichen und Fragezeichen hinter Geschichten macht, die dem Film vorangegangen sind; wie er auf irgendeine Art und Weise fast jede Figur nutzt (sogar auch von einer Serie), die es je wert war; und wie er z. B. einem Witz aus Age of Ultron durch eine unglaublich epische Szene eine prima Pointe verleiht… Den Film muss man einfach sehen. ()

lamps 

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Englisch Dozens of characters, more than three hours of runtime, time travel, the farewell to an era and the positions set up for the next, Avengers: Endgame is the most ambitious and massive blockbuster the world has ever seen. This is also thanks to the fact that it’s a very different film from Infinity War, it works with more genre templates and more narrative perspectives and has lots of moments and twists that will surprise most viewers, and amazingly, everything works. What surprised me the most is that this time they know how to slow down the story, in the tense moments they rely on the expressions of the actors and stay with them, even in situations that in previous films would have been quickly cut to another storyline. Though this does not generate an impression of expansiveness, it reinforces the personal stories of each of the heroes, all deeply marked by Thanos’s snap, and builds a superbly strong basis for the inevitable final clash. The film rides a lot on a wave of nostalgia and the time travel greatly strengthens its connections with previous episodes, where we get to see several confrontations that will warm the heart of any fan. At the same time, however, it differs significantly from other works in its construction, and triumphs in what the MCU has been successfully doing for a long time: oscillating between genres and narrative approaches. Up until now, that mix was spread only externally and not inside the films (the second Captain America is a spy thriller, the third Thor is a colourful comedy and Captain Marvel is a buddy movie), but here the genres alternate on the go to support the events in a reasonable way. The first 15 minutes basically bring the characters together exactly where Infinity War left them, and, after an unexpected twist, the story settles on a drama about a group of mentally normal people (though that normality is quite shaky in some cases) coming to terms with their failure and trying to restore the hope of a possible reversal. That is followed by a thoroughbred heist movie where the heroes have to outdo each other and carry out a difficult mission where everyone has their role, and the plot alternates more dynamically between them. But I don’t want to spoil anything, so I’ll jump straight to the climax, the most insane blockbuster carnage you can imagine. Yeah, the final battle is a visual and emotional barrage that perfectly completes the movements of the characters over the massive chessboard of the story, culminating in a check-mate that will cause unavoidable ecstasy. And even though there are moments when they joke too much, and not very tastefully at that, and there are a couple of scenes that make you say “come on, go on”, everything works brilliantly together, with the most important characters completing their arcs in an impressive fashion, and, though fans will shed tears over the closing of a beloved era, the ambitious structure of the film will also make them tremble in anticipation for the beginning of the new one. The epilogue is a bit too protracted, but I had long wished for a popcorn movie that would tell me more about the future fate of the characters instead of ending right after the climax. But this is not your average popcorn flick, it’s a fully respected form of the art of filmmaking that can entertain, impress and bring goosebumps all over the body, able to bring together dozens of characters and a massive world in a precisely organised narrative rhythm and to also be unpredictable and original. 90% () (weniger) (mehr)

Filmmaniak 

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Deutsch Was alle dachten, dass es in Avengers: Endgame drei Stunden dauern würde, ist tatsächlich in zwanzig Minuten erledigt und in totaler Depression gehüllt. Der Rest ist ein Heist-Komödie im Stil der Ocean's-Filmreihe feat. Zurück in die Zukunft 2 feat. The Big Lebowski unter der Leitung von Marvel in bester Form und mit epischen Finale, das die Fans in den letzten 15 Minuten zum Weinen bringt. Ein Abschluss einer Ära, wie er sein sollte, trotz etwas verwirrenden Spielereien mit Paradoxen. Dieses Jahr bin ich auf jeden Fall zufriedener aus dem Kino gegangen. ()

Stanislaus 

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Deutsch Vor acht Jahren hat uns das Potter-Universum verlassen (und versucht vergeblich, es mit PhT zurückzuholen), und jetzt müssen wir uns von der MCU-Saga verabschieden, die uns seit über einem Jahrzehnt begleitet. Für meine Generation, die mit diesen Filmen aufgewachsen ist, ist dies ein weiteres bittersüßes Ende einer äußerst erfolgreichen Reihe, das zwar einen gewissen Nachhall haben wird, aber es wird nicht dasselbe sein. Wie viele Nutzer hier muss ich mich tief vor den Filmemachern verneigen, die es geschafft haben, eine solche Vielzahl von Charakteren und Filmen zu einem großartigen und wahrhaft epischen Abschluss zusammenzuführen, der im zeitgenössischen Kino seinesgleichen sucht, ohne dabei ein albernes und inkonsequentes Durcheinander zu schaffen. SPOILER! Ein eingefleischter Fan - so wie ich - hätte in die vorherigen Filme eintauchen können, die absichtlich so ineinander verwoben waren, dass man ins Taumeln geriet - und doch funktionierte alles und wirkte in keiner Weise verkrampft oder künstlich. Ich habe mich über Thor "Dude" Odinson und das typische Marvel-Geplänkel zwischen den Figuren sehr amüsiert, was die tragischen Szenen, die leider unvermeidlich waren, aufwog. Es gab zwei Momente während des Films, in denen Konzentration von Zwiebeln im Kinosaal buchstäblich zum Schneiden war, und in letzterem Fall war es eine sehr starke und schwere Viertelstunde, in der die Filmemacher vielleicht zu sehr mit den Emotionen gespielt haben, aber ich habe es trotzdem mit Haut und Haar verschlungen. Die Rolle des Captain Marvel, die mir funktionell wie ein LOTR-Adler vorkam, war mir trotzdem nicht ganz klar. Abgesehen von dieser serienübergreifenden Assoziation konnte ich die Ähnlichkeit mit HP nicht übersehen - Thanos als Voldemort. Was das Ende des Films angeht, so wären es keine Amerikaner, wenn sie nicht unverhohlen korrekten Einschub über die Rassenfrage eingefügt hätten - meinetwegen. (SPOILER OFF!) Wenn man den Film genauer unter die Lupe nehmen wollte, gäbe es ein paar Macken im Drehbuch und in der Logik, aber die stehen im Gegensatz zu der überwältigenden Überzahl an Mega-Action und tragikomischen Momenten, die Avengers - Infinity War zu einem Spektakel von noch nie dagewesenem Ausmaß machen - und genau darum geht es im Kino. P. S. Whatever it takes! ()

claudel 

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Deutsch Eine riesige Enttäuschung, ich rudere wieder gegen die hiesige Strömung, doch man kann die Freude nach dem epischen Actionspektakel nicht beschreiben, wie der vorherige Teil es war, und die Verlegenheit bei Die Mandela-Verschwörung, wo ich nach dreißig Minuten eingeschlafen bin. Ich danke meinem Freund, dass er dies bemerkt hat und mich rechtzeitig weckte, denn ich drohte den gesamten Film zu verschlafen. Eine langweilige erste Stunde, eine extrem seltsame, verworrene und chaotische zweite Stunde und schließlich ein etwas actiongeladener Schluss und ein typisch amerikanischer absoluter Schluss. Muss eine Staffel von 22 Filmen so blöd enden? Doch den meisten gefällt es offensichtlich, und sicher wird es auch weiter fröhlich Milliönchen regnen. ()

Remedy 

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Englisch For the casual passerby: you can bend over backwards and it still won't work without knowing the previous films. To enjoy Endgame and fully appreciate all of its references and many of its secondary themes, you simply have to watch those previous 21 films before watching. However, the overseas reviews didn't lie, as Endgame is an epic conclusion to one huge comic book saga with all the fanfare. Many viewers will compare it to the previous Infinity War (myself included), but Endgame is actually a pretty specific film within the universe. After all, the Avengers got their asses kicked in Infinity War, and they have to fix it in Endgame. When you think about it, that fact alone demands a continuation of the story. That's what I thought before viewing – that it would actually be very hard to surprise increasingly demanding fans in any significant way. Yet the opposite is true, because Endgame's paths are often truly inscrutable, and there will be extremely intense, stunning, shocking, and damn moving moments. Still, there were a few things (but really only a few) that rubbed me the wrong way and unfortunately, compared to Infinity War, I had a slightly weaker sense of wholeness and compactness. But if I'm going to rate this as the culmination of a still-for-me incredible cinematic/comic book era (which I've been watching for 11 years), I can't go below 5 stars. As a "standalone film" (which of course it can never be) it would probably be 4 stars. On the other hand – compared to the previous installment, I have to appreciate that Endgame really goes to the bone in working with the characters and more than one moment here was a fan dream come true for me. It's damn admirable that the entire gigantic creative team around Kevin Feige can still surprise, shock, and move their most loyal viewers, even at this advanced stage of the MCU. ()

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