The New Zealand Herald

It’s lights out for the original six Avengers

Robert Downey jnr and Brie Larson can’t predict what's next for the Marvel Cinematic Universe. By George Fenwick

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THE MARVEL Cinematic Universe began in 2008 with Iron Man, the Jon Favreau-directed feature that introduced Robert Downey jr’s Tony Stark. It was the seed of a grand experiment that culminated in The Avengers (2012) and expanded from there.

“We were very strangely and groundless­ly confident 10 years ago, and it’s bigger than the sum of its parts,” said Downey at the Avengers: Endgame press conference in Seoul, Korea.

Now, 22 films later, Avengers: Endgame brings the current era of the MCU to a close. With a new slate of films planned for the next few years, Marvel Studios president Kevin Feige is excited to expand the Universe towards new horizons. “We’ll continue to introduce new heroes, as we’ve done over the past few years,” he said. “I just can’t talk about which new heroes yet.”

“It’s impossible to predict what’s going to happen,” added Downey.

The MCU has been slow to diversify; it took 18 films for a superhero of colour to lead their own feature with 2018’s Black Panther, and 21 to have a woman at the helm with

Captain Marvel. But it looks likely to make up for lost years, with a long-overdue first gay character expected in The Eternals, their first Asian superhero in ShangChi, and more female-driven stories expected such as a solo

Black Widow film.

“We’re always striving to support our female heroines from the previous movies as well as this one, so we’ll continue to explore that,” said Endgame executive producer Trinh Tran.

“Looking at the [Endgame] poster . . . I see our very strong female characters standing next to the men, and I’m so proud that they’re up there represente­d in that way.”

Brie Larson said she recognised the importance of representa­tion when Captain Marvel was released in March this year.

“Carol taught me so much,” she said. “I trained for nine months before I started filming the movie. It changed my brain and changed the way I carried myself, and it strengthen­ed my voice, so it was a great honour to be able to share that character with the world with the hope that others could get some of that through the screen.

“She is a symbol of the importance of representa­tion, the importance of the female story and the female journey, but she’s also for everyone. It’s about equality at the end of the day.”

Downey said after trying to “make space” for himself with Iron Man, he’s now thankful to be witnessing the changing dynamics of the MCU — particular­ly after the glass ceiling-smashing success of Larson’s Captain Marvel.

“I’m glad I get to be part of witnessing this cultural moment that’s coming up,” he said.

And as Endgame brings a sense of finality to the last decade of the MCU, director Joe Russo said he’s grateful to the fans who have followed every step of the way.

“This is the culminatio­n of 10 years of a narrative experiment,” he says. “This is the ending, this is the finale, this will put to bed the story of the original six Avengers, so we have all worked exceedingl­y hard and put our hearts and souls into this film.”

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Directors Joe and Anthony Russo

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