This movie just a visual treat for the fans of Marvel and the MCU franchise. This movie has just the right combination of emotion, drama, action and the bond that the heroes share with each other.
The way in which this movie has been made is just commendable.
How they were able to show the 10-year long journey of all the Avengers as well as introducing new superheroes in the movie has just been wonderful. The first half of the movie as a great character build and there was a lot of conversation between the heroes. The movie in the first half was slow paced but if you are a True marvel fan you would actually enjoy the whole experience where the different superheroes like iron man, Captain America, Thor, black widow, and the other heroes are having conversation on how to bring back the heroes that were lost in infinity war.
The second half was mindblowing the way the movie picked up the pace was just awesome and fun to watch .the last 30 minutes of the movie just took my breath away and the fight between the Thanos and Avengers was just the greatest fighting scene that I have ever seen.
Overall the movie was great but I thought that way they have handled the time travel stuff was just not right at some place especially at the end of the movie as to how if captain america became old what was he doing when the war on ney york happened the old captain america and the current captain america were in the same time period and who actually fought the red skull .
Some more review from people
Peter Rubin:
Boneheaded and poopy? Gotta be some kind of award for pulling off that particular tonal exacta. The fan service, if you can call it that, was exactly the kind we've come to expect from the MCU, an outfit that prefers meta-commentary and Easter eggs over broader forms of pandering. I'd call Professor Hulk fan service for that exact reason! Endgame doesn't have the post-credits scenes that have given us stuff like Howard the Duck and Adam Warlock teasers, so instead we got Banner's merged personality baked into the movie. Besides, "fan service" is about as cogent as "it failed to capture the spirit of the original," a phrase that is basically the freezer-burned Hot Pocket of critical insight.
Angela Watercutter:
Thank you for that, Peter. I, too, was kind of baffled by the number of reviews calling the latest Avengers fan service. In the truest sense of the term, it's correct—it is a film that does fans the service of giving them things that make them happy—but the phrase, as it's used in fandom, is a tongue-in-cheek understanding of "giving the fans what they want." It's almost always about showing skin or turning fanfic ships into canon. To give you an example, if Endgame was Fan Service for Angela, then it would've ended with Carol Danvers riding off into the sunset on Valkyrie's pegasus. (Marvel, that idea is all yours, free of charge.) Instead, it slyly tied up a lot of the plots while giving nods to the characters and moments that made audiences stick with this franchise for so long. That's just comic-book moviemaking. Moreover, this is a Disney flick, people; making fans happy is kind of their whole deal. Scoffing at Endgame's quest to please people misses the point.
Jason Parham:
But that's the thing about Endgame. It's not exactly fan service but it does do just enough, maybe more, to appease just about everyone in the theater (well, people who have a heart, anyway). It's just bad criticism—LOL at Peter labeling it the "freezer-burned Hot Pocket of critical insight"—and the kind that trivializes the incredible work the film accomplishes. To your original question, Jason, Endgame wasn't what at all what I thought it would be: After Thor's surprise-decapitation of Thanos, which completely threw me for a loop, I knew we were in for a three-hour (!!!) joyride.
I will say, one thing I didn't expect, and didn't much like, was how the movie felt so much more like a Remember When We Did This? montage.
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