Just caught up myself.
It was fun enough, but I share the concerns expressed by other posters that the plot was kind of straight up when the multiverse concept and the infinity stones really laid the groundwork for all kinds of crazy events. The latter I can at least rationalize as Ultron doesn't know/care enough about the stones, or just lacks the creativity to use them to their full potential.
I had vague thoughts that we might be looking at an Endgame-style ending with different versions of the heroes and/or Ultron, but, as I said, what we got was something pretty by-the-numbers. Not bad, just...alright. I'm not quite sure how I feel about the somewhat deus ex machina ending either.
I did enjoy Killmonger's sudden-yet-inevitable betrayal, even if it was entirely unsurprising in the broad strokes that he would do so. I wonder whether Uatu saw that coming, and whether he might have even hoped that Killmonger would, in the end, choose differently.
It was fun enough, but I share the concerns expressed by other posters that the plot was kind of straight up when the multiverse concept and the infinity stones really laid the groundwork for all kinds of crazy events. The latter I can at least rationalize as Ultron doesn't know/care enough about the stones, or just lacks the creativity to use them to their full potential.
I had vague thoughts that we might be looking at an Endgame-style ending with different versions of the heroes and/or Ultron, but, as I said, what we got was something pretty by-the-numbers. Not bad, just...alright. I'm not quite sure how I feel about the somewhat deus ex machina ending either.
I did enjoy Killmonger's sudden-yet-inevitable betrayal, even if it was entirely unsurprising in the broad strokes that he would do so. I wonder whether Uatu saw that coming, and whether he might have even hoped that Killmonger would, in the end, choose differently.