Daily Mail

Superheroe­s are super-funny!

The Avengers make a lot of noise — and some cracking jokes — as they save the world

- Brian by Viner

Avengers: Age Of Ultron (12A)

Verdict: CGI-driven extravagan­za

The Falling (15)

Verdict: Strange, haunting drama

WHEN nick Fury (Samuel L. Jackson), eyepatched mentor to the planet’s mightiest superheroe­s, declares in Avengers: Age Of Ultron that ‘we have nothing but our wit and our will to save the world’, he’s fibbing, just a bit.

A reported budget of more than a quarter-of-a-billion dollars comes in rather handy, too, enabling writer-director Joss Whedon to pull off one of the most extravagan­t contests of Good versus evil ever to unfold on a cinema screen.

extravagan­t, but not always coherent. As so often with these computer-generated blockbuste­rs, the narrative often plays second fiddle to the spectacle and, sometimes, second fiddle is drowned out altogether by synthesise­rs at full blast. It’s a very loud film, yet mostly shot in genteel Middlesex at Shepperton Studios.

Whatever, fans of the Marvel Cinematic Universe — the mindboggli­ngly lucrative film franchise based on Marvel Comics characters — will love this latest adventure.

It loosely adheres to the age-old theme of a good monster turned bad, though the monster is, in this case, a rogue robot, the fiendishly powerful Ultron (James Spader), conceived as a global peace-keeping programme, only to use all its artificial intelligen­ce to reach the conclusion that humans in general, and superheroe­s in particular, need wiping out.

In this inglorious project, he is assisted by two newcomers to the superhero/supervilla­in genre — a pair of vengeful orphans from the fictional country of Sokovia to whom special powers have been gifted. Scarlet Witch (elizabeth Olsen) can bend minds and Quicksilve­r (Aaron Taylor-Johnson) can move at the speed of light.

All this adds up to a considerab­le challenge for our familiar platoon of caped, masked and otherwise accessoris­ed crusaders, one that even Tony Stark/Iron Man (Robert Downey Jr.) thinks might actually be beyond them, though no such doubts afflict the perpetuall­y angry Hulk (Mark Ruffalo). In any case, he — or, rather, his gentle alterego Bruce Banner — has other matters on his mind, notably a stilted, rather touching romance with Black Widow (Scarlett Johansson).

It is in these quieter moments that Whedon, who also wrote and directed

The Avengers (2012), is able to show another side to his pedigree. In what must sometimes seem like a former life, he was the creator of the TV series Buffy The Vampire Slayer and one of the co-writers on Toy Story, so humour is one of the major tools in his workbox, and gets wielded here about as often as he thinks he can get away with it.

Which might be a fraction too much for those who believe that the threat of Armageddon is essentiall­y a serious business.

Moreover, and this might just be me, but having sat through the courtroom saga The Judge fairly recently, I’ve just about had my fill of Downey Jr doing his wittily sardonic, po-faced act.

Still, there are some genuine laugh-out-loud moments, most of them involving Thor (Chris Hemsworth, again playing the Norse god more or less as captain of a public- school first XV), who invites his fellow superheroe­s to lift his hammer (they can’t — cue predictabl­e jokes about not getting it up), and later starts issuing a grandiose pronouncem­ent: ‘I am Thor, son of Odin, as long as there’s life in my breast . . .’ — only to fizzle out, admitting that he’s run out of things to say.

But who goes to see Avengers movies for laughs? When ten- cylinder push comes to jet-propelled shove, Whedon knows his audience, and supplies the required fireworks.

The closing battle scene is outrageous­ly spectacula­r, the collateral damage basically extending to the entire country of Sokovia as our planet-savers, by now boosted by the world’s deadliest acronym in the form of Stark’s butler J.A.R.V.I.S. (Paul Bettany), go toe-to-toe with Ultron’s robot army.

It’s rousing, CGI-tastic stuff, and it will show you how a film can not only cost more than $250,000,000 to make but, more than likely, make it all back — and some.

FOR all the ideas and ingenuity behind it, Avengers: Age Of Ultron is nothing if not formula- driven. That’s the last thing that can be said about the week’s other standout film, The

Falling, a thoroughly enigmatic, if not downright weird, and yet captivatin­g story about an outbreak of mass hysteria, which takes the form of fainting fits, at an all-girls’ school somewhere in England in 1969.

Conceived, written and directed by Carol Morley, the film is inspired by actual episodes of mass hysteria, or mass psychogeni­c illness, as it is more properly known.

Here, the narrative flows around two 16- year- old best friends, Abbie (Florence Pugh) and Lydia (Maisie Williams).

At first, it is the charismati­c Abbie who does the fainting, but as she is sexually active, not least with Lydia’s priapic, rather predatory brother Kenneth (Joe Cole), it is hinted that pregnancy might be at the root of the problem.

ONLY then, Lydia starts fainting, too, and soon all the girls and even one of their teachers are at it, to the consternat­ion of the chain-smoking headmistre­ss (Monica Dolan) and her fierce deputy (Greta Scacchi, looking terrifying­ly severe).

Is it a physical phenomenon, or emotional? Might it be faked, or even supernatur­al, or just an intense expression of sisterhood?

Cleverly, Morley keeps us guessing, not just to the end but beyond. It’s one of those films that you think about all the way home.

At times, I was strongly reminded of Peter Weir’s Picnic At Hanging Rock (1975), especially when an inexplicab­le tragedy strikes, but this is a truly singular picture, and beautifull­y acted, above all by Williams (only 18, but already something of a veteran, as Arya Stark in the TV series Game Of Thrones) and Pugh, a strikingly pretty newcomer and a proper, goldplated find.

It takes some doing to steal the eye from Maxine Peake, who plays Lydia’s strange, preoccupie­d mother, but both these young actresses manage it.

Here’s a timely reminder, in a week of such excess, that small budgets can pay off, too.

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 ??  ?? Marching into battle: The comic stars of Avengers: Age Of Ultron. Inset: Florence Pugh (left) and Maisie Williams in The Falling
Marching into battle: The comic stars of Avengers: Age Of Ultron. Inset: Florence Pugh (left) and Maisie Williams in The Falling

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