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9 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Marvel Animated Universe is Half Bad,
By
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: The Next Avengers: Heroes of Tomorrow (DVD)
As a long time Marvel Comics fans, I'm almost a little scared. After years of substandard movies, Marvel has finally put together a series of films (not including X-3--that sucked) that make every Marvel comic fan happy. Things have gone so well in the live action arena, people have forgotten about the high quality animation that Marvel is putting out. Iron Man was pitch perfect in the live action outing this summer. Before that however, it was a great animated movie. The Liongates partnership with Marvel has produced great stuff and the Next Avenger is no different. Crafting new characters for younger audience, this movie promises that the animated film line can grow the Marvel audience in a way that movies and comics are not. The story is great, a well known bad guy, new kid friendly characters base on classic heroes, and great visual style all work together to make this a story that will be easy for non comic fans to enjoy. This is a crucial part of the marketing machine that Marvel should not neglect. Where is the next generation of comic readers coming from? If they are smart they will put these characters into print, create a video game, put together some easy to access digital comics (their current subscription service is not a great model) and get eyeballs on new characters and old.
11 of 13 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Radical but I liked it,
By D. Alan (CA USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: The Next Avengers: Heroes of Tomorrow (DVD)
I'm not up on the current floppies (I'm a Silver Age guy), so I don't know if this timeline is canon or not. But it sure was fun seeing a glimpse of what happens to Tony Stark and David Banner in the future--and the action is creative and non-stop. I've enjoyed both previous Avengers movies; this one's different, but exciting in its own way. If you like Iron Man, check it out. Stark plays a huge role.
5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
Next,
By Koreacollieman "MovieMan" (SongTong Korea) - See all my reviews
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: The Next Avengers: Heroes of Tomorrow (DVD)
OK...at least Marvel has done what DC has yet to do...Killed off Heroes and had them have children. As for the storyline...it could have been better. It was too predictable. Perhaps the next adventure will be better written. Still, it's worth the view and for any comic fan is a nice addition to any collection.
3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Surprisingly cool!,
This review is from: The Next Avengers: Heroes of Tomorrow (DVD)
This is a great, really well done Marvel story and the kids in no way take away from its appeal - they rather add to it. I was shocked to find that I enjoyed this much more than the previous Ultimate Avengers DVDs (which I felt suffered from unavoidable comparisons to the graphic novels they were based on). As another reviewer mentioned, Next Avengers has a lot of heart, and far more depth and action than you would expect from something for the kids. This would be a great series if they can maintain the level of the writing. Highly recommended.
5 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
"Shrinking boy no sting Hulk any more!",
By H. Bala "Me Too Can Read" (Just moved to posh Marina Del Rey, CA - where if you drop a quarter, why, you just keep on walking) - See all my reviews (TOP 100 REVIEWER) (REAL NAME)
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: The Next Avengers: Heroes of Tomorrow (DVD)
Three and a half stars, and some minor SPOILERS.
It's not great, but it's pretty good. NEXT AVENGERS: HEROES OF TOMORROW is the latest from the Marvel line of animated direct-to-video dvds, this time introducing a new and very young generation of superheroes. Sometime in the near future, the Avengers have a fateful last encounter with the invincible robot Ultron, and the Avengers fall. This gives Ultron free rein to begin his world conquest. Tony Stark survives and manages to whisk away the sons and daughter of the Avengers to the Arctic Circle. There, the offsprings while away the years in hiding, trained and mentored by an aging Stark and raised on stories of their legendary parents. And, then, one day, another Avenger appears, this event resulting in Ultron finally tracking down Iron Man and finding out about the children. There are four kids, initially. Torunn, the daughter of Thor. Pym, son of Giant Man and the Wasp. Azari, son of the Black Panther (and X-Men's Storm?). And James, the red-headed son of Captain America and Black Widow. And, later on, Hawkeye's kid enters the picture as the leader of a fugitive band barely surviving in Ultra City. These kids have huge footsteps to follow, and, because they're kids, they flaunt unblemished confidence and don't really think that far ahead. Some good character development unfolds as these kids are soon easily humbled by Ultron and his Iron Avengers (which used to be Stark's Iron Avengers, until Ultron corrupted their programming). The vigorous Torunn, in particular, who before was unshakeable in her self-belief, sinks the furthest. How she regains her faith, not only in herself but in her father, the Thunder God, is one of my favorite moments in the film. It falls to James, being the son of Captain America, to inspire and lead this team. But, ultimately, the last desperate hope for beating Ultron may rest on unearthing a certain giant green grump... Yes, most of the adult Avengers are dead and Ultron has just about taken over half the planet. With the stakes so raised, an undercurrent of gravity permeates the film, this tone also tremendously aided by the film score, which bears faint echoes of THE MATRIX theme. Yet NEXT AVENGERS: HEROES OF TOMORROW caters to a younger audience than did Marvel's first four flicks in its animated direct-to-video line. The kids will eat this up. Originally under the working titles of Teen Avengers and then Avengers Reborn, NEXT AVENGERS can't help but give off faint vibes reminiscent of the Teen Titans cartoon, only with not so much anime. This similarity is marked mostly in the kids' behavior and dialogue, which often strays towards the lighthearted. The animation isn't shabby, but certainly doesn't hold a candle to what I glimpsed in the First Look segments included here, which showcase the two upcoming movies: Hulk Vs. Wolverine and Hulk Vs. Thor. This brings us to the dvd's special features. There are two blah documentaries: the self-explanatory "Legacy: The Making of Next Avengers: Heroes of Tomorrow" and "Kid Power: Next-Gen Marvel," which focuses on Marvel comic books featuring teen superheroes (New X-Men, Franklin Richards: Son of a Genius, Power Pack, etc.). What's definitely worth checking out are the First Looks for Hulk Vs. Wolverine (with Deadpool) and Hulk Vs. Thor (the Hulk comes to Asgard). The animation previewed for these two films is eye-catching, to say the least. By no means is this the first dystopian future ever presented onscreen, and there's nothing new or groundbreaking coming from that angle. The grim backdrop, however, does lend more weight to the kids' adventures and firmly elevates the film above a regular Saturday morning cartoon experience. The kids themselves, specifically created for this film, are stock characters (yet with enough flair to keep your kids' eyeballs glued to the screen). It's interesting to note how similar and how different the kids' abilities are from their parents. Hawkeye's ability is exactly the same as his dad; same for Captain America's kid, except that James's shield manifests when his wrist mechanism is activated. Pym boasts both of his parents' powers (including the Wasp's stings), while Azari has his dad's agility and also something extra, an ability to generate electrical surges (again, Storm?). Meanwhile, Torunn is strong, durable and can fly, but wields a bulky blade, instead of a hammer. By the way, for me, Torunn and Hawkeye turn out to be the most interesting characters. I particularly enjoyed Torunn's attempts to speak like an Asgardian, only to then hopelessly fall back to contemporary colloquialism. As far as I know, this film follows its own internal continuity, separate from that of the Marvel Comics mainstream and Ultimate titles. For one thing, this film has Tony Stark as Ultron's creator, rather than Hank Pym. Of these five Marvel animated direct-to-video films so far, I'd probably rank this behind the two ULTIMATE AVENGERS films (Ultimate Avengers - The Movie & Ultimate Avengers 2 (Rise of the Panther)) and maybe tied with that odd duck, Doctor Strange: The Sorcerer Supreme. It's certainly better than The Invincible Iron Man. NEXT AVENGERS: HEROES OF TOMORROW is only an hour and 18 minutes long, but that's time enough to pepper in several great action-packed sequences, culminating with the kids facing huge odds as they go against the Iron Avengers and Ultron. Two observations which made me enjoy the film even more: the Vision's noggin being lugged about like poor Yorick's skull and how the Hulk doesn't lose that aura of menace even when reduced to a receding hairline. Wispy white hair and scraggly goatee be damned, the Hulk is still the strongest one there is.
2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Next Avengers Heros of Tomorrow,
This review is from: The Next Avengers: Heroes of Tomorrow (DVD)
I didnt really expect a lot from this movie because I'm an adult and I expected it to be written for a very young audience. While to me, it did seem more like that than say the Hulk VS cartoon it turned out to be a very good cartoon.
There are a few surprise appearances from other Marvel characters. I was also skeptical of how Hulk was going to interact with kids but they played that off really well. It isnt as violent as Hulk VS but there is a lot of action and the story line was very good. For those adults who are a fan of the Xmen cartoons and such, I would recommend giving this movie a shot.
2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Kevin,
By
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: The Next Avengers: Heroes of Tomorrow (DVD)
I'm a big Marvel fan and I love animated features so I have no complaints. It's a good story line for an animated feature and it was rather interesting.
2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
A New Generation,
By
This review is from: The Next Avengers: Heroes of Tomorrow (DVD)
Very entertaining video that takes the history of the Avengers and creates bold new characters which are way more believable than the Young Avengers in comics. I hope they make a sequel to this or turn it into a series. I especially like the concept of the Iron Avengers. The fights are not as brutal as recent Marvel Animation films so children (of the right age group) will be able to enjoy it. Good film definitely worth buying.
2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
The Next Avengers,
By
This review is from: The Next Avengers: Heroes of Tomorrow (DVD)
This was a fun little movie. I had expected it to be directed at at a much younger crowd. It turned out to be entertaining to all ages.
Enjoy it. -Mitch
4 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Had no right to be this good.,
By
This review is from: The Next Avengers: Heroes of Tomorrow (DVD)
When I saw the previews for "Next Avengers: Heroes of Tomorrow" one thought instantly coalesced in my mind. Worst idea ever. I mean with all the decades of classic storylines being nearly untouched outside of the comic medium and only two underwhelming short-length straight to DVD animated features released so far -not to mention hype for the future live-action crossover film- why on Earth would Marvel choose to do a Baby Avengers film right now? Still, I am a superhero/animation fanatic and a man's gotta watch what a man's gotta watch, so I gave this a chance. This movie kicks the hell out of the previous two entries. It's the perfect example of a horrible idea executed (almost) flawlessly.
This is Marvel on a sci-fi bender reminiscent of classics like The Matrix series and The Terminator. In it, sentient AI being Ultron has shattered The Avengers and is rapidly progressing in conquering the world in order to replace every imperfect living being with flawless machines. 13 years after Earth's Mightiest Heroes fell, we catch up with their offspring, taken by Tony Stark and hidden in a remote hideaway undetectable to Ultron's mechanical army. The line-up includes James Rodgers son of Captain America and Black Widow (!?!?), Pym is obviously Hank and Jan's kid (annoying as hell, too), Azari whose parents were Black Panther and presumably Storm, and Torunn daughter of Thor, who left our realm to take the throne of Asgard after his father's death. When curiosity kills their cover, the super-powered tweens are forced to flee the only home they've known with only The Vision's head to guide them. After a sound thrashing attempting to rescue Iron Man, who was captured buying them time to escape, the kids meet Lil' Hawkeye, who was assumed lost with his father but carved out an existence for himself right under Ultron's nose along with his band of renegades. Finding Betty Brant among them the team finds that there is only one way to defeat the invincible Ultron: find the strongest one there is and unleash the beast. The science fiction setting does wonders for this concept. Bringing Marvel fans into an unfamiliar setting (for a comic movie, that is) is a great way to offset the initial resistance to the changes made to the source material. A short list of WTF's: Widow and Hawkeye were the item, Hank Pym built Ultron, Ultron built Vision and Jocasta, Cap's shield is vibranium and therefore unbreakable, etc, etc, whiny fanboy nitpicking and all that. Fact is, this is obviously non-canon material and that makes a lot of the changes -unnecessary as some of them are- less annoying. Most of the characters are handled very well. The pacing of the story is outstanding for being only a little over an hour and has a lot of goodness crammed in without ever feeling rushed. Some of the action scenes are killer, with Iron Man's duel with Ultron being particularly kicka$z. The substory with Torunn's longing for her father seemed to telegraph an obnoxiously obvious deus-ex-machina finale similar to the comic The Ultimates 2: Grand Theft America that thankfully didn't materialize and turned out rather sweet all around. Now just because the pacing was spot-on doesn't mean there shouldn't have been more. Hank and Jan Pym -aka Giant/Ant Man and The Wasp- are scarcely mentioned while the other kids all get moments to reflect on their parents deeds and fates. Their kid gets on my nerves, too. A little more T'Challa wouldn't have hurt either. They didn't even bother naming Storm as Azari's mother, you just have to be nerdy enough to figure it out yourself. Considering this is aimed squarely at a casual audience, that is hardly a smart move. And why, oh why would Anthony Stark -one of the smartest human beings alive- attempt to combat an AI that subsists by controlling machines by building fraking battle-bot representations of the old Avengers? Turns out THAT was the worst idea ever. And boy is the Black Widow-bot ugly. I had written a scathing review for this cartoon in my head before I even watched the thing. That's how much I thought I was going to hate this. Junior Avengers, my a$z! But I really can't dislike this film. To think that there have been so many crummy adaptations of brilliant concepts (I see you over there, Spider-Man 3, you can not hide!) and this dumb idea turns out a winner. It's a crazy world we live in, people. This disc comes with a making-of doc and two previews for the upcoming animated features "Hulk vs Wolverine" (yay if it's brutal!) and "Hulk vs Thor" (meh). Also in the works is a Planet Hulk film which should be sweet. Anybody else detecting a theme, here, or is it me? I expect a World War Hulk adaptation after that. Go Big Green! If you're into seeing a futuristic post-apocalyptic version of Earth's Mightiest Heroes come to animated life than this will certainly float your boat. Color me shocked, but this is loads better than anything I could have come up with for that concept. Have a look. |
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The Next Avengers: Heroes of Tomorrow [Blu-ray] by Iron Man (Blu-ray - 2008)
$19.99 $14.64
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