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One of the
more entertaining moments of “Next Avengers” involves the eventual
emergence of the Incredible Hulk from the eccentric form of Bruce
Banner, now a scientist in hiding. Watching the Hulk smash these
cheesy robotic copies of the avengers was quite cathartic, and it’s
also refreshing to see the team stick to the mold of Ultron as we
know him, a corruptible and despicable technological force who will
prove to the be prevalent menace if a series pans out. I also really
enjoyed watching the original Thor talk to his daughter Torrum in
the climax; it’s a surprisingly touching moment that may sell me on
watching this with my nephew.
If you’re a
fan of comic books, if you’re a fan of “The Avengers” and if you’re
a fan of Marvel canon, then the odds are you won’t enjoy “Next
Avengers” much at all. “Next Avengers” is really nothing more than
an attempt at a television pilot ranging in at barely eighty minutes
with quasi-anime style 2D art and a plot that’s equivalent to junk
like “Bakugan” or “Super Monkey Robot Team…” It’s an affront to
Marvel fans, an attempted series that takes the molds of Captain
America and Iron Man and reworks them in to younger more immature
models for us to follow and it’s pretty clear who they’re aiming
for. It’s basically “Muppet Babies” a la Marvel super heroes. Not to
sound like a fan boy comic geek again (even though it’s a title I
wear with pride), but we’re not the target audience here.
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The kids who grew up on Yu-Gi-Oh and the inoffensive
pseudo-Asian ADD addled Saturday Morning cartoons of the new
generation will probably find much to like here, but then
again, maybe not. Because “Next Avengers” (an
adaptation of the ill conceived “Avengers Next” perhaps?)
attempts to take characters who wouldn’t completely
translate in today’s youth market, and turns them in to
tweeny crime fighters battling against robotic menaces so as
to prevent mimicking. This is for them, not for us. |
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“Next Avengers” pits the younger off spring of the original Avengers
against the menace known as Ultron. In this continuity, the Avengers
have all died at his hands, and their children were scattered around
the world to be hidden by the robot; which ultimately means nothing
when we see the children gathered in a group to hear the story. And
then later we also see them training together. So… are they still
being hidden? And whatever happened to the alluded Baby of Namor?
Why does he appear briefly to never be seen again? “Next Avengers”
sets up many potential storylines for a series with the children
desperate to find out if their parents really died, all the while
Tony Stark plays babysitter to the children while searching for the
off spring of Hawkeye who just re-emerged mysteriously. Vision also
appears but completely out of character, literally playing a version
of C3PO to the avenging children throughout the proceedings. At one
point he’s used as a pillow for youngster Pym. “Next Avengers”
really does nothing to re-invent the wheel and is there just to bait
the audience who hasn’t quite reached that age where they’re old
enough to read comics, and I doubt they’ll enjoy this too much.
Sometimes there’s just no replacing the classics.
Toys, video
games, there’s so much potential for Marvel to tap this well for all its
worth should a potential series pan out. While I’m all for appealing to
a younger newer generation of possible comic book readers, “Next
Avengers” is the antithesis of what should be done to grab new
demographics. The animation is so so, but the final product is brutally
mediocre.
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