When comparing the Marvel Cinematic Universe against its biggest competitors, it's hard to consider it anything less than the champion. Despite its financial success, some aspects of the formula have become prime targets for critics and even lost favor with devoted fans.
Quality dialogue writing is probably not the first thing fans would mention when asked what they love about the MCU or even superhero movies in general. Even if people think that the punching and explosions are the draws, the MCU holds some of the most beloved characters in modern history. Watching these larger-than-life figures interact is a huge part of the appeal of superhero comics, but the way the MCU handles this interplay brings the viewer back to Earth all too often.
Every MCU Project That Could Introduce Doctor Doom
Avengers: Age of Ultron features what might be considered the first real character-building moment for Clint «Hawkeye» Barton. The film is far from beloved, typically ranking in the lowest rungs of most fans' MCU rankings. There's plenty of Hawkeye in the film, but his big emotional climax comes in the midst of the film's underwhelming final battle. He's in a shed, hunkered down with former enemy Wanda Maximoff as plasma fire rattles the wooden walls. He takes the moment to try to attempt to induct her into The Avengers on the field of battle. The line he uses is the apotheosis of Marvel's worst writing trait. He explains, point by point, the absurdity of the scene they find themselves in, then tops it off with «none of this makes sense». That moment is passed by largely unmentioned, but it's a perfect moment of Marvel's writing lacking any faith in the audience's ability to buy into a comic book narrative.
The events of the MCU are
Read more on gamerant.com