Joss Whedon Discusses Ultron's Powers, Avoiding Spider-Man 3 Mistakes in 'The Avengers 2: Age of Ultron'

By Andrew Meola | Feb 20, 2015 04:38 PM EST

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Director Joss Whedon's The Avengers: Age of Ultron will hit theaters on May 1, which means we have a couple of months to hear juicy tidbits from the man himself about the superhero sequel.

In an interview with Empire Online, Whedon talked about the need to de-power Ultron a bit for the sake of the movie.

"The powers in comic books – they’re always like, ‘And then I can reverse the polarity of your ions!’ Well, we have to ground things a lot more. With Ultron, we have to make him slightly less omnipotent because he’d win. Bottom line. Also, having weaknesses and needs and foibles and alliances and actually caring what people think of him, all these things, are what make him a character and not just a tidal wave. A movie about a tidal wave can be great, but it’s different than a conflict between one side and the other. When Ultron speaks, he has a point. He is really not on top of the fact that the point he’s making has nothing to do with the fact that he’s banoonoos. And that he hates the Avengers for bringing him into this world, and he can’t really articulate that or even understand how much he hates humanity. He thinks he all that. That guy is very fun to write. He combines all the iconic stuff. The powers he has are slightly different. He can control certain things, he’s not just firing repulsors."

Whedon also spoke about the addition of so many characters, such as Scarlet Witch and Quicksilver, and how to avoid the problems Spider-Man 3 infamously faced in this regard.

"They have an origin but it’s largely described. They’re already good to go by the time we’re up and running. You don’t want to fall into Spider-Man 3 territory, and I say that as a guy who actually thinks pretty well of that movie. There’s some great stuff in that movie. But there comes a point where you’re overloaded with frontstory, backstory, origin story and it becomes very hard to juggle. My instinct is always, ‘Don’t put in more, work with what you have.’ But I insisted on putting in more in this movie because I felt I needed more villains. I needed someone for Ultron to talk to, and I need more trouble for the Avengers. As powerful as Ultron is, if he builds more Ultrons, they’re Ultrons. There’s no reason for him to ever to talk to them because they’re him. ‘I need you to – I KNOW! I AM TOTALLY YOU! I DID IT EARLIER! I know that because I am also me.’ That’s not a good conversation. Actually, it sounded pretty good there. I think I’m onto something."

What do you make of Whedon's remarks? Let us know in the comments section.

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