Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
She gave the episode 4.5 out of 5 stars. [26] io9 's Charles Pulliam-Moore considered the episode to be the show's "most exciting story yet," praising how it built upon the original story of Age of Ultron. Pulliam-Moore complimented Bell's and Wright's portrayal of Natasha Romanoff and the Watcher, respectively, but criticized Carol Danvers ...
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".
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 ...
When Thanos appears on Earth to complete the Infinity Gauntlet, Ultron bisects him and takes the rest of the Infinity Stones, using them to create a massive drone army to kill nearly all life in his universe. Ultron then hears the Watcher, discovers the existence of the multiverse, and attacks him. Meanwhile, Clint Barton and Natasha Romanoff ...
Each episode had an approximately 40-page script when first written. [ 34 ] : 20:54 Because of the long-lead production for animation, there was not an opportunity for audience reactions to the first season to impact the creatives' work on the second season. [ 48 ]
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 ...
Marvel Studios president Kevin Feige recalled the rumors about "Planet Hulk" in a new behind-the-scenes book called "The Story of Marvel Studios."
Vision is a vibranium-based male android (or "Synthezoid") created by Ultron to serve as his body. However, the body is stolen by the Avengers and brought to sentience by Tony Stark and Bruce Banner, who upload the core software of Stark's AI, J.A.R.V.I.S. (also voiced by Bettany), into the body constructed by Ultron, with energy provided by Thor.