Questioning the Time Heist in Avengers: Endgame Part two in a series of plot hole rebuttals.

One type of plot hole that is often the easiest to dispel is a “plot hole” based on a character’s decisions. People in real life often make decisions that seem out of character, so trying to prove that a character in a movie is making a decision that doesn’t make any sense for them is a near impossible task. So this installment of my series of articles focused on explaining away some of the supposed plot holes in Avengers: Endgame is going to be easy. That’s because this whole article is devoted to the idea that the Avengers’ Infinity Stone time heist makes no sense because the times they chose to go to were unreasonably difficult.

If you haven’t read my previous article on Endgame, check it out (The Stretched (yet stable) Reality of Avengers: Endgame). I explain exactly where I’m getting my list of plot holes to discuss. In short, these ideas are coming from one specific article (10 Things That Made Absolutely No Sense in Avengers: Endgame), but I’ve seen people across social media make similar statements. There are ten main points in the article I’m reacting to, and I am now on point two. So here we go.

Six stones and a rock solid plan. Almost.

The second main point in the article asks why the Avengers chose the specific points in time they did for the time heist. The argument made is that the times they chose were more difficult than they needed to be. However, they explicitly explain in Endgame why they chose those points in time.

The Avengers only had enough Pym particles for one round trip each through time. Convenient, sure, but not unreasonable. With the exception of the Soul Stone, at least one person present in the room when they were discussing their plan had come in contact with each of the other five stones. With no do-overs, they wanted to go to places (and times) where they knew for absolute fact where the stones were. They also wanted to go in as few groups as possible so they would have as much backup as possible for each heist.

Nebula and War Machine go for the Power Stone. The article states that 2014 was a terrible time to go to because, as Nebula tells Rhodey, lots of people were after the Power Stone then. That’s true enough. Peter Quill, Thanos, Ronan, Gamora, and The Collector were all after the stone as the first Guardians of the Galaxy movie began, and even more were after it as the movie went along. But Nebula knew for a fact that Quill found it first, and she knew he found it on Morag. That’s why they went there at that time. The stone would have still been there if they had gone to a time slightly before Peter Quill arrived, but surprising Quill and using his own tools to steal the stone was the most efficient and simple way to accomplish their goal. Nebula knew they had the element of surprise on their side, and she knew Quill wouldn’t be difficult to deal with at that time.

The writer of the article suggests that going to Xandar after the Guardians left it there would have been easier, but I really don’t think that’s true. Trying to take an Infinity Stone from someone with an army who knows what the Power Stone is and what it can do would be vastly more difficult than taking if from a single person who has no clue. Quill had no clue.

Next up, Black Widow and Hawkeye went after the Soul Stone on Vormir. Nebula knew that the stone was on Vormir and had been there for a very long time. The Avengers could have gone to Vormir at any time, so it made sense for Natasha and Clint to go with Nebula and Rhodey since they were already using the Benatar to get to Morag.

The Collector’s grip is tight.

Thor and Rocket went to Asgard in 2013 to pull the Reality Stone (in the form of the Aether) from Jane Foster’s body. This is pretty obviously the most opportune time since the only other real opportunity would have been to steal it from The Collector. Surely Thor and Rocket could have done that, but tricking Jane with Thor himself (albeit a Thor with a beer belly) would be way easier than dealing with someone who knew what he had and would do anything to keep it. Of course, Rocket’s plan didn’t go smoothly, but he still managed to get the job done on his own while Thor spent some much-needed quality time with his mother.

 

The plan to go to New York in 2012 to pick up the Time, Space, and Mind Stones is where it starts to get tricky. Black Widow pointed out that there would be three stones in New York at one time (though that was an assumption that wasn’t guaranteed to be accurate), so sending a larger group of Avengers to that time made the most sense.

There were very few good times to try to get the Mind Stone. The Avengers knew for certain that it was in Loki’s scepter and would be changing hands after the battle of New York, so that was their best chance to get it with as little resistance as possible. And that’s exactly what they did. Knowing that the scepter would be much more difficult to obtain once it was in Hydra’s hands (because they took it away from Hydra at the beginning of Age of Ultron), Steve Rogers used his knowledge of Hydra’s infiltration of S.H.I.E.L.D. to cause enough confusion to easily slip away with the Mind Stone.

The Space Stone is probably the stone that the Avengers have had the most contact with, and therefore they had the most options as far as times to try to grab it. The Space Stone first appeared on-screen housed in the Tesseract in Captain America: The First Avenger. However, the first mention of the Tesseract was in Howard Stark’s journals all the way back in Iron Man 2. Since the start of the MCU, the Soul Stone has appeared in one form or another in nine movies. That’s a lot of times to pick from.

Like the Mind Stone though, the handoff after the Battle of New York seems like the safest and most logical time to try to take it for the Avengers. For one thing, all of the original six Avengers knew exactly where the Tesseract would be after taking it from Loki and before it was taken to Asgard. Tony and Thor also knew firsthand about the struggle with Alexander Pierce in the lobby of Stark Tower. This was as perfect a time as any to steal the Tesseract with minimal interference. Unfortunately Tony and Scott failed, so they had to come up with something else.

They could have tried to find Loki in 2012 after he stole the thing Tony and Scott were trying to steal, but that search could have taken years. They might have never found him. But why didn’t they just go to another time in the first place? The writer of the article suggests that going to Asgard in 2013 with Thor and Rocket would have been easier and should have been their plan from the start. The Tesseract was in Odin’s Vault at the time, but there’s a big problem with this plan. Odin’s Vault was heavily guarded.

Loki was only able to steal the Tesseract because the guards were dead or otherwise occupied.

The Einherjar warriors protected Odin’s Vault. Anyone trying to take anything from the vault would have to get past them. Even if they had Thor go try to take the Tesseract from the vault, the guards and Odin himself would likely have many questions. Since Thor wasn’t exactly acting like his past self in Endgame, it’s doubtful that he would have succeeded in convincing his father to let him take the Tesseract. Beyond the fact that Thor already had a job to do which he failed to even attempt (distracting Jane Foster), the rest of the Avengers clearly didn’t trust Thor in his current state in Endgame. They said as much when he offered to use the Infinity Stones to snap everyone back. Also, it’s unlikely that Odin would trust that the out-of-shape version of Thor was his real son. So no, going to Asgard for the Tesseract wasn’t a good idea.

No other time besides New York in 2012 was a solid enough plan for the Avengers. Steve and Tony went back to a S.H.I.E.L.D. facility in 1970 to eventually obtain the Space Stone, but even that was somewhat of a gamble. Tony only knew the stone was ever there because of his father’s journals, but he obviously could not have been absolutely sure it was there at that precise time. Plus, we know from Captain Marvel that the Tesseract wasn’t always held at a S.H.I.E.L.D. facility even when it was in their possession, so that’s why Steve was reluctant to go. Any time besides the Battle of New York was a bigger gamble than they were willing to take. At least initially.

And finally, there’s the Time Stone. With all of the Avengers’ planning they actually got this one wrong, at least partially. Tony, Bruce, and Thor had all visited Dr. Strange in the New York Sanctum, and they all knew he was in possession of the Time Stone when they met him. They all met Strange well after the Battle of New York though. It can be assumed that they all thought Stephen Strange had been at his sanctum for years, but as Bruce found out when he traveled back to 2012, that was not the case.

The retrieval of the Time Stone could have gone very wrong very easily. As the Sorcerer Supreme in 2012, the Ancient One guarded the Eye of Agamotto within which the Time Stone was contained. The Ancient One didn’t live in New York though, she lived in Kamar-Taj. She was only in New York at that specific time in 2012 because of the Chitauri invasion led by Loki. Knowing that the New York Sanctum was in danger, the Ancient One was there to protect it. Her presence was hardly a guarantee, and without a little luck, the Avengers would likely have never found the Time Stone in 2012. Of course, the Avengers couldn’t have known any of this, but it’s interesting that they made such a big assumption about the whereabouts of the Time Stone when they played it safe with most of their other plans.

I think that about covers it. I’m sure people can come up with other times they think might have been better for the time heist, but the point stands that for the Avengers, the times they chose made the most sense to them with the knowledge they had. So no, there is no plot hole here. Join me in my next article as I take a look at some suggestions that the rules of the quantum realm and the stones themselves have changed from movie to movie!

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The Stretched (yet stable) Reality of Avengers: Endgame Part one of a series of plot hole rebuttals.

Avengers: Endgame has happened, and it has certainly been a monumental happening. The culmination of eleven years of storytelling and the 22nd film in a string of crowd-pleasing blockbusters, Endgame is snapping box office records at a pace that is leaving most other films in the dust.

The journey to Endgame hasn’t always been perfect though. The quality of the many entries in the Marvel Cinematic Universe has varied somewhat over the years. There have also been a few instances of questionable continuity and plot threads that went nowhere, but even so, it’s hard to argue against the fact that the MCU is a staggeringly impressive feat of long-term story development at the highest level. Individual tastes will vary, but even if you’re not a fan of what the MCU has to offer, how can you not be impressed by the amount of work, planning, and oversight it took to create so many stories with so many people and still make it feel like one cohesive universe?

Well, it seems that some people aren’t impressed. As with any creative or commercial endeavor that is massively popular, there will always be those who are eager to try to poke holes in the successes of others. Now that the spoiler ban has officially been lifted by the directors of Endgame, more people are openly talking about the film’s plot. And with talk about plot comes the deluge of people talking about plot holes.

Plot holes bug me. Or rather, talking about plot holes bugs me. Or to be even more precise, people talking about plot holes online generally bugs me because, for the most part, I think most of the plot holes people try to point out aren’t plot holes at all. I’ve discussed this idea before (go read my reaction to The Last Jedi for more insight on how I see plot holes), and now I’d like to take a look at some of the supposed plot holes I’ve seen people bring up so far for Avengers: Endgame.

To simplify things a bit, I will be looking at the ten points raised in one specific article. My ruminations tend to get lengthy, so I’ll be looking at the article’s ten main points in a series of posts. I stumbled upon this click-baity article while browsing other things about the MCU, and I couldn’t help but take a look. Here’s the link, but feel free not to click on this ad-laden page since I’ll be explaining all the points in my reactions below: 10 Things That Made Absolutely No Sense in Avengers: Endgame

One final note before I dive in. There are spoilers below for Endgame, obviously. Also, while the title of the article I’m looking at doesn’t specify that these are plot holes, the URL for the article clearly does. Alright, let’s get to it.

Three Points, No Holes

So, the first point raised in the article is actually three points. Let’s look at each one in turn.

First, the writer wonders how Captain Marvel located Tony Stark and Nebula in the Benatar (Quill’s/Rocket’s ship). While it’s never explicitly stated how Carol knew where to go, I think there are a few simple explanations. The post-credits scene in the Captain Marvel movie shows us how Carol met the surviving Avengers on Earth. We also know that Pepper Potts survived Thanos’s snap and at some point arrived at the Avengers facility. So at least two things could have happened.

Could Pepper be getting his messages?
Could Pepper be getting his messages?

One option is that the messages that Tony is shown recording near the beginning of Endgame were actually being received on Earth. Tony doesn’t know if they are getting there because he has no way of receiving a response, but the possibility is there. Whether Pepper received the messages (possibly in the suit that Tony created for her or in any of the tech she had lying around the house), or the Avengers received them at the base, it’s not a stretch to think that the Avengers knew at least the direction the messages were being sent from.

Another option is that Rocket simply knows how to find his own ship. It is shown in Endgame that the Avengers have the ability to scan for emissions and transmissions in deep space when Rocket explains how they know where to find Thanos. It’s entirely possible that Rocket scanned for the Benatar and knew at least approximately where it was. Even though the ship lost the power to jump through space, it still had enough power to support life for a few weeks. Surely Nebula would have initiated a distress beacon (kind of like how the Guardians were answering a distress beacon in Infinity War), and surely Rocket would have known how to locate it.

Now, I know the realities of sending and receiving messages that far across space is unrealistic, but clearly the laws of physics don’t work the same way in the MCU as they do in our reality. That has been established. So no, Captain Marvel finding Tony and Nebula is not a plot hole.

The second opening point in the article questions how all the Avengers survived the destruction of the Avengers facility towards the end of Endgame. After Hulk snaps and brings back everyone Thanos dusted in Infinity War, the Thanos from 2014 obliterates Avengers headquarters. Everything is reduced to rubble, but all of the people inside the building survive. How?

Avengers facility, pre-Thanos.

Well, most of the people inside the building were protected in some way. Everyone had suited up or otherwise took precautions prior to Hulk snapping because they weren’t sure how much damage the power released by the Infinity Gauntlet would make. So, Iron Man and War Machine were protected by their suits. Thor has god-like powers. Captain America has his shield and has an almost inhuman resistance to injury. Hulk is the strongest there is, and Ant-Man got real small. Nebula helped initiate the attack, so she took precautions. So that really just leaves Hawkeye and Rocket.

Rocket nearly did die. If not for Rhodey’s quick actions, Rocket would have drowned if he didn’t suffocate first. And Clint must’ve just gotten lucky. So really, that’s one lucky break. I don’t think that’s too far outside the realm of believability. Also, it’s not a plot hole.

And the third opening point is about the rat that brings Scott Lang out of the quantum realm. This isn’t even posited as a plot hole in the article, it’s just made to seem like a silly way to initiate the whole time heist scenario. It is silly? Sure, but it’s not so unbelievable. Think about it. In the post-credits scene from Ant-Man and the Wasp, the device in the van was already set to bring Scott back. Hope, Janet, and Hank were dusted just moments before they would have thrown the switch (so to speak). The rat in Endgame just threw the switch for them. Any number of coincidences could have made this happen. It didn’t even need to be the rat, and it didn’t need to be at that precise time. Really, Scott coming back almost seems like an inevitability given how easy it was to do it. What’s surprising is that it took five years.

That’s the end of the article’s first main point, and it’s about all the explanation necessary for this entry in my look at some of the supposed “plot holes” in Avengers: Endgame. Join me next time as I attempt to refute the assertion that the times the Avengers chose to go to during their time heist were terrible, plot-hole-filled decisions!

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