I don't want to talk much about Infinity War, with it still being so newly released. What I will say is that it represents a decade of hard work put in by a group that changed the reception and perception of blockbuster filmmaking in a way that hasn't been seen since...1980, at least. You can carp about Marvel's ubiquity, but the fact of the matter is that the vast majority of films they put out are at least solid and entertaining to legitimately great (there's really only one that I would declare to be legitimately bad, and that's Iron Man 2; even the first two Thor movies' biggest sin was being mostly forgettable). Infinity War suffers only from the surfeit of meta-knowledge that modern filmgoers enjoy; it's difficult to feel certain stakes are very high when you know who's still got films left on their contract, what sequels have already been announced, etc. That's not the fault of this film, though; Infinity War is by turns thrilling, hilarious, and heart-wrenching, and truly is the culmination of the lead-up only having 18 previous films can provide (a benefit, mind, that no other film has ever enjoyed). If you go to see it without being on the up-and-up of the MCU, you will be lost; this is advanced filmgoing, not for novices. Threads set up years ago are paid off, and this film, unique in this regard, relies on that shared cultural experience to raise the stakes for its characters and its audience.
While Josh Brolin's Thanos didn't quite sell me on full-CGI creations being threatening, it got pretty close, closer than any character before; the effects were so good that it was often easy to intentionally forget the pantomime, and Brolin's performance shone through (quite to the film's benefit). Amazingly, few if any of the massive cast felt short-served; for a film with, effectively, 16 leads or co-leads, everyone got their moments, some even getting full-fledged arcs in this one chapter of a much larger whole. The action and spectacle were top-notch, two moments resulted in the entire theater breaking into spontaneous cheers and applause, and moments toward the end pulled vocalizations from unsuspecting audience members. It's been a long time since we were treated to such a cultural phenomenon. Infinity War earns it, and then some.
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