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Warmann also praised the fight scene between the Watcher and Ultron as the series' "best action sequence yet" and the visuals as "stunning" and "ripped right out of a comic". Nevertheless, he considered the episode had "sloppy storytelling", and criticized the trivialization of Thanos' power as "sacrificing story and character" to serve the ...
Season 2 Episode 2 picks up on a loose thread from Season 1, when the show followed T'Challa as Star Lord. The end of the episode (spoilers!) sees Peter Quill as a janitor back on Earth, who is ...
[16]: 2 [17] Feige revealed half of these actors at San Diego Comic-Con in July 2019, [4] [57] along with Jeffrey Wright being cast as the Watcher, who narrates the series. [ 4 ] [ 5 ] [ 6 ] The additional actors reprising their roles for the first season were revealed in August 2021. [ 17 ]
Ultron re-engages the team and begins to overpower them until Romanoff, with Carter's help, shoots Ultron with one of Clint Barton's arrows, having uploaded Arnim Zola's A.I. onto it, [c] so Zola can destroy Ultron's mind. With Ultron defeated, Killmonger steals Ultron's armor and Infinity Stones, intending to use them to "fix [their] worlds".
The episodes once again have various tones and are set in different genres, including a Nebula episode that is a detective story inspired by the film noir genre, [37] such as Blade Runner (1982), [23] that is one of the "darker" episodes of the season; [28] one where the Avengers were formed in the 1980s and is inspired by the action films of ...
Ultron then hears the Watcher, discovers the existence of the multiverse, and attacks him. Meanwhile, Clint Barton and Natasha Romanoff survive Ultron's attacks and find a copy of Arnim Zola's mind in Siberia. They upload Zola into a drone body to try and destroy Ultron's hive mind, but it fails because Ultron has left their universe. Barton ...
She complimented Dennings' acting, which she compared favorably to the voice performances of previous episodes. Howard considered the fight between Danvers and Thor was "spectacularly put together", she thought the cliffhanger ending with Ultron's appearance was "superb", and gave the episode 4.5 out of 5 stars. [24]
The song. It wouldn't be Cruel Intentions without the Verve's iconic song "Bitter Sweet Symphony," and the TV show used it twice. First, a new cover of the song debuted in the pilot episode, and ...