Thursday 18 January 2018

Avengers Age of Ultron Adoption Movie Review

Bmovies manages to to write some reviews on this great movie Avengers and bmovies also have this movie on the site available for everyone. here's the review,
The Avengers are raiding a base in an Eastern European nation where the villainous Baron von Strucker is using a powerful artifact to experiment on two orphaned twins, Wanda and Pietro. Over the span of the assault, the Avengers obtain the artifact, and a few of the Avengers start some experiments of their own. These experiments bring great risk that undermines the whole world and threatens the unity of the Avengers themselves.

The Adoption Connection

Wanda and Pietro were orphaned during a military clash. They have a solid bond with each other, and the person that they hold responsible for the loss they have experienced.

One character shows an interesting view of the function of kids, “People make children to help them, to support them end.”

Two characters uncover to each other that they are infertile. One was sterilized as a major aspect of her spy/assassin training; she explains that her coaches trusted infertility “makes everything simpler” because kids would be too important to the operative.

Strong Points

The recent Marvel movies think about in inspiration – what motivates people to act? Wanda and Pietro are motivated by vengeance. Wanda is able to manipulate others’ thoughts. She makes the Avengers see and confront their deepest fears, and the fears motivate them to action. Another character proposes that calamity happens when countries  act out of fear, “Every time somebody tries to end a war before it begins, innocent people die.” Examining our inspirations is worthwhile because the reasons we do things affect the manner in which we do those things. Actions done out of frightened or anger will be carried out differently than the same (or similar) actions done out of concern or rational idea or love. It’s valid about adoption, too – the inspiration behind an action, whether a choice to pursue adoption, or a choice about whether to keep an adoption open or even a choice about whether to maintain a challenging foster care placement – the inspiration propelling the action is very important and worth examining and challenging.


The twins, in the end, understand the potential cost of their thirst for vengeance and appear to have a change of heart.

One character (Scarlet Witch) gives an interesting example of a clearly manipulative person; I always think it’s worthwhile for parents to talk with teens about how peers can be manipulative.

The Avengers show that friends can stick together in spite of hard times and hurt emotions.

Recommendations

Avengers: Age of Ultron is an enjoyable movie with action, humor, and opportunities for real-life reflection.   Some violence, discussion of parents dying, and the on-screen death of a character could be jarring for a few viewers, but overall this should be a good decision for most watchers 12 and up, and their parents.