Tag: avengers
20 Avengers Easter Eggs And Things You Missed In The MCU’s First Team-Up Movie
The Avengers is a great crossover film, celebrating its individual protagonists’ eccentricities, melding those unique personalities under a single banner, and setting up bigger stakes and conflicts moving forward. That it manages to do all this without once slowing down or dragging in the middle is a feat.
It’s also an extremely quippy movie. There are lots of one-liners that juxtapose with the movie’s end-of-the-world stakes. Compared to the DCEU films that followed, Avengers has a relatively light tone, as opposed to the dark, self-serious, and angst-ridden nature of Zack Snyder’s DC films. But today, one could make a somewhat similar comparison between the MCU Phase 1 and Phase 4.
The current movies are so loaded with backstory and self-referential allusions and clues that it’s almost a relief to go back to a time before all that–before there was an afterlife in Moon Knight, or a literal Zeus character in Thor: Love and Thunder–before half of all life disappeared and then reappeared. Back in 2012, a simpler time, The Avengers were just six individuals–not all of whom had superpowers)–and the biggest threat was a single portal over NYC rather than the destruction of the universe ad infinitum.
Here are 20 Easter Eggs and trivia facts about Marvel’s The Avengers, which is now streaming on Disney Plus. The next Avengers film, Avengers: Kang Dynasty, won’t be out until 2025, and its sequel, Avengers: Secret Wars, won’t be out until 2026.
1. “I don’t always get what I want.”
When Bruce Banner is talking to Natasha, and discusses his inability to control the Hulk, he’s rocking a cradle that’s splattered with green paint. It alludes to the “Other Guy,” and it underlines how Bruce feels isolated from intimate things, like falling in love or starting a family, that most people take for granted.
2. Out of Time
A deleted scene, prior to Steve Rogers’ boxing introduction, shows him walking around New York City, looking at all the technology and people, and feeling like he doesn’t belong. He also stops by a cafe near Stark Tower, where a waitress takes his order and asks if he’s there to see Iron Man fly by. We later see this same waitress on a news report near the end of the movie, praising the Avengers. There’s also a brief Stan Lee cameo in this deleted scene, but because he also appears in a newscast cameo at the end of the movie, it’s rendered redundant.
A lot of fans criticize Phase 4 for the number of references and plotlines that seemingly go nowhere. But there were lots of plotlines in Phase 1 that never materialized either. Like in this shot, which says that SHIELD contacted Mephisto to learn about the Tesseract.
4. Gwyneth Paltrow’s Height
Robert Downey is 5’8. Gwyneth Paltrow is 5’9. But in the film, she appears to be the same height or even shorter than her co-star in some shots. That’s because Paltrow is walking around barefoot the entire time, and Downey is known for wearing platform shoes to give himself a lift.
Pepper Potts, Paltrow’s character, was originally not in the movie. But Downey insisted on giving her a part, because he thought Paltrow’s character would help show Tony’s character development.
5. The Cellist
We hear Pepper asking Agent Coulson about the cellist he’s dating. On the TV show Agents of SHIELD, “the cellist” is introduced in Season 1, Episode 19 as Audrey Nathan. Amy Acker plays the role.
6. Schubert Composition
The song playing during the scene where Loki extracts the man’s eye is “Schubert’s String Quartet No. 13,” by Franz Schubert. It has an A Minor key, which gives it an appropriate level of foreboding.
7. AC/DC Love
The song that Tony Stark uses to hijack Natasha’s PA system is “Shoot To Thrill” by ’80s rock band AC/DC. This is the same song that Tony uses when he makes his grand entrance at the Stark Expo in Iron Man 2.
8. Odin’s Ravens
According to Norse legend, Odin has two Ravens, Huginn and Muninn, who serve as his eyes and ears abroad from Asgard. You can see the two ravens in this shot, during Thor’s confrontation with Loki.
9. Stark Improvisations
“Doth Mother know you wear-eth her drapes?” is an improvised line by Downey, who was riffing off the prior reference to Shakespeare in the park. Downey is notorious for these types of improvisations; the first Iron Man movie didn’t have a finished script when the filmmakers started shooting.
10. Mark VI Improvements
Tony Stark constantly improves his armor, usually in response to how the prior armor was damaged or destroyed. In Iron Man 2, Whiplash nearly short-circuited the Mark V with his electric whips. So Tony, when making the Mark VI, designed it to absorb electricity. That’s why we see its power charge to 400% capacity when Thor shoots Tony with lightning.
11. Playing Galaga
Downey improvised his line about the SHIELD agent playing Galaga. Director Joss Whedon later shot the scene of the man actually playing Galaga to build upon the joke.
12. True Lies Jet
In the director’s commentary, Whedon mentions that the fighter jet which attacks Hulk is the same one used in the 1994 action comedy True Lies, starring Arnold Schwarzenegger and Jamie Lee Curtis.
13. Ferrigno Audio Cameo
Lou Ferrigno, the original Hulk in the 1977 CBS television show, performed the Hulk’s roar effects in The Avengers.
14. “Are you an alien?”
Famous character actor Harry Dean Stanton plays the security guard who finds Bruce Banner after he crashes from the sky and asks, “Are you an alien?” It’s a direct reference to the 1979 Ridley Scott movie Alien, starring Sigourney Weaver and co-starring Stanton in a supporting role.
15. Shawarma Restaurant
At the end of the movie, Tony says that he saw a shawarma restaurant that he would like to try. In this shot, you can see the restaurant in the background during the fight.
16. Stan Lee Cameo
During the newsreel footage at the very end of the film, we see Marvel’s creative visionary Stan Lee, who plays a skeptical old man in the park. Lee appeared in every single MCU up through Avengers: Endgame, until his unfortunate passing at the age of 95 in 2018.
17. A113
We see “A113” in the corners of the SHIELD computer monitors. It’s a common Easter egg in visual effects-heavy movies, and it’s a reference to a classroom at the California Institute of the Arts, where many digital effects and animation artists learned their craft.
18. Senator Boynton
The senator we see in the newsreel footage is Senator Boynton. An enemy of Tony Stark in the comics, Boynton attempts to gain possession of the Iron Man armor and wants to create his own version of it via Project Firepower.
19. First Look at Thanos
In the mid-credits scene, we learn that Loki is not the Big Bad; he’s having his strings pulled by the Mad Titan Thanos. This is the first time we see Thanos in the Marvel Cinematic Universe. The reference to “courting death” is a reference to the Infinity Stones storyline. In the comics, Thanos collects the Infinity Stones as a means of courting Lady Death, an all-powerful cosmic entity.
20. Cap’s Beard
Captain America is covering his jaw in the end credits scene. The filmmakers shot the scene late into production, and by that time, actor Chris Evans had already moved on to filming the Korean film Snowpiercer, which required that he grow a beard. He’s wearing a prosthetic over the beard in this scene, and he’s using his hand to cover it and mask the effect.
Disneyland Paris’ Avengers: Power the Night Show Turns MCU Heroes Into Flashy Drones
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Marvel’s New Core Avengers Team Will Prove Its Might Starting in May
Every couple of years, Marvel Comics’ Avengers shakes up its roster so the creative team on hand can tell new stories that will eventually rise to cataclysmic heights. Since 2018, Jason Aaron and Ed McGuinness’ run has put Earth’s Mightiest Heroes through the ringer, but that run’s on its way to winding down after the…
Marvel’s Avengers development is coming to an end
The development of Marvel’s Avengers is coming to a close. In a blog post, developer Crystal Dynamics announced that the game won’t receive any new updates after March 31st, with support ending on September 30th (via IGN).
While you’ll still be able to play the game in both single-player and multiplayer mode, Crystal Dynamics says it “can’t guarantee that we will be able to address issues that occur” after support ends.
The last — and final — balance update will take place in March, and from then on, all cosmetics, including “every Outfit, Takedown, and Nameplate” will be available for free and without the purchase of credits. Any remaining credits “will be converted into in-game resources,” Crystal Dynamics says. It also provides a…
Marvel’s Avengers will receive no new content and its final patch arrives in March
Crystal Dynamics are ending support for Marvel’s Avengers, their live service superhero game. That means it won’t receive any further new content, its final balance patch will be released on March 31st, and all other support and the sale of the game will cease on September 30th. Players who already own the game at that point will be able to continue playing in single- and multiplayer, for at least a while.
‘Marvel’s Avengers’ won’t receive official support after September 30th
Following a two-year run that saw the game struggle for much of it, Crystal Dynamics is winding down the development of Marvel’s Avengers. Following a report of the project’s imminent demise, the studio published a blog post on Friday announcing it plans to stop supporting the live-service title after September 30th.
Crystal Dynamics will release one final balance patch and shut down Marvel’s Avengers in-game cosmetics store on March 31st. On that same day, players will see their remaining Credit balance converted to in-game resources, as shown in the chart below. Additionally, “as a show of our appreciation for our community,” Crystal Dynamics says cosmetics that were previously only obtainable through the marketplace will be free for all players who own a copy of the game.
After official support ends on September 30th, players can continue playing Marvel’s Avengers on their own and with friends over Xbox Live and PlayStation Plus. “The changes we are making to how the game functions will ensure as long a life as possible,” the developer said. “However, after September 30th, 2023 we can’t guarantee that we will be able to address issues that occur due to unforeseen circumstances.” Crystal Dynamics said it decided to end support for the title “in conjunction with our partners.”
The effective end of Marvel’s Avengers won’t come as a surprise to fans. In November 2020, two months after the game went on sale, publisher Square Enix said it had failed to recoup the cost of making the title. From that point forward, the company seemed reluctant to put any more money behind the project. Then, last May, Square sold Crystal Dynamics to Embracer Group. In December, the studio announced it was working with Amazon on a new Tomb Raider release. All of that seems to have factored into the decision to shut down Marvel’s Avengers.
Avengers game shutting down as Steam sale makes singleplayer worthy
Square Enix and Crystal Dynamics’ Marvel’s Avengers is shutting down after three years as a live service game. While it struggled from the start, the superhero game definitely still has its merits, so it could very well be the perfect time to go to the Marvel’s Avengers Steam page and nab it, or you can alternatively get it at a colossal discount.
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