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The Avengers

  • 1998
  • PG-13
  • 1h 29m
IMDb RATING
3.8/10
46K
YOUR RATING
The Avengers (1998)
Home Video Trailer from Warner Home Video
Play trailer0:29
2 Videos
77 Photos
SuperheroActionAdventureSci-FiThriller

Two British Agents team up to stop Sir August de Wynter from destroying the world with a weather-changing machine.Two British Agents team up to stop Sir August de Wynter from destroying the world with a weather-changing machine.Two British Agents team up to stop Sir August de Wynter from destroying the world with a weather-changing machine.

  • Director
    • Jeremiah S. Chechik
  • Writers
    • Sydney Newman
    • Don MacPherson
  • Stars
    • Ralph Fiennes
    • Uma Thurman
    • Sean Connery
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    3.8/10
    46K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Jeremiah S. Chechik
    • Writers
      • Sydney Newman
      • Don MacPherson
    • Stars
      • Ralph Fiennes
      • Uma Thurman
      • Sean Connery
    • 497User reviews
    • 58Critic reviews
    • 12Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 4 wins & 17 nominations total

    Videos2

    The Avengers (1998)
    Trailer 0:29
    The Avengers (1998)
    The Avengers (1998)
    Trailer 1:51
    The Avengers (1998)
    The Avengers (1998)
    Trailer 1:51
    The Avengers (1998)

    Photos77

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    Top cast24

    Edit
    Ralph Fiennes
    Ralph Fiennes
    • John Steed
    Uma Thurman
    Uma Thurman
    • Dr. Emma Peel
    Sean Connery
    Sean Connery
    • Sir August de Wynter
    Patrick Macnee
    Patrick Macnee
    • Invisible Jones
    • (voice)
    Jim Broadbent
    Jim Broadbent
    • Mother
    Fiona Shaw
    Fiona Shaw
    • Father
    Eddie Izzard
    Eddie Izzard
    • Bailey
    Eileen Atkins
    Eileen Atkins
    • Alice
    John Wood
    John Wood
    • Trubshaw
    Carmen Ejogo
    Carmen Ejogo
    • Brenda
    Keeley Hawes
    Keeley Hawes
    • Tamara
    Shaun Ryder
    Shaun Ryder
    • Donavan
    Nicholas Woodeson
    Nicholas Woodeson
    • Dr. Darling
    Michael Godley
    • Butler
    Richard Lumsden
    Richard Lumsden
    • Boodle's Porter
    Daniel Crowder
    • Messenger
    Nadim Sawalha
    Nadim Sawalha
    • World Council of Ministers
    Christopher Godwin
    Christopher Godwin
    • World Council of Ministers
    • Director
      • Jeremiah S. Chechik
    • Writers
      • Sydney Newman
      • Don MacPherson
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews497

    3.846.4K
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    Featured reviews

    3claudio_carvalho

    Waste of Cast and Budget

    In London, the agent of the Ministry John Steed (Ralph Fiennes) and Dr. Emma Peel (Uma Thurman) are summoned by the Mother (Jim Broadbent), who shows a footage where the Prospero Project that controls the weather is damaged by Dr. Peel. They head to meet Sir August de Wynter (Sean Connery), who is a weather specialist, but soon they discover that he wants to rule the world, using his machine that controls the weather.

    I saw "The Avengers" in the 90's and did not like this movie. Today I have just seen it again on DVD and I found again a silly and boring movie that wastes cast and budget. It is hard to believe that Sean Connery accepted to work in this turkey. My vote is three.

    Title (Brazil): "Os Vingadores" ("The Avengers")
    possum-3

    Not great, but not the horror everyone else describes

    Frankly, when THE AVENGERS was released, I wanted it to bomb--I wanted Hollywood to finally get the idea that ripping off old TV shows is IMBECILIC and almost never successful. Thus, I was happy that the movie did poorly and closed quickly. (I also took a trip to London just as the movie was released, and if you think it was ill-received here, the British took it times TEN.)

    Ironically, though, it isn't that bad a movie. Not great, but certainly not the despicable mess that most others seem to think.

    It's been called ridiculous, slow, talky, surreal. Well, what a shock, so was the original series. I've recently viewed the entire 1967 season (bought all four boxed sets), and the show is all those things at times. It is slow, generally, at a very langorous pace throughout most stories. It is talky, since most of the charm of the original was in the dialogue between characters. It was surreal, even ridiculous (The Winged Avenger, anyone? Eeee-urp.)

    Uma Thurman does a passable job as Emma--she's no Diana Rigg, but who is? She plays the character smart enough, although she doesn't quite capture Rigg's regal command of situation. Ralph Fiennes, however, misses the character of Steed quite a bit, playing him as reserved, without any of Steed's charisma. Steed always had a quality about him that made you feel as if he woke up every morning feeling absolutely smashing--Fiennes seems to miss that.

    The problem the film faces is twofold: Those of us who have seen the original will always compare the two, and a copy can't hope to compare. Those who haven't seen the series have no grounds to assess it on--(see some of the above user comments which begin 'I never saw the original series...')and since I think this series is not exactly vividly-remembered by the majority of the population (particularly the 18 and under movie-goers, who don't have much grasp of the nuances The Avengers operated on). Frankly, The Avengers was probably just a bad choice to try to remake

    (--LIKE ALL OLD TV SHOWS. Tell me one old-TV remake that has ever spawned a sequel (which Hollywood is always sure to do when something is a success)-- only THE BRADY BUNCH...point proven?)
    1maltcavet

    Please!

    I love the Avengers. Emma Peel was a hero of my childhood. I was ridiculously excited for the arrival of this film and had nauseated all my friends when the project was first announced about who was to be our two spies. I was thrilled with the selection of Fiennes -- but Thurman? I was hesitant. Then Diana Rigg passed on being in the film. Another bad sign. Then, the television trailers, yet a third omen but I told myself the movie could not possibly be that bad. IT was worse than my wildest nightmares -- and I have an excellent imagination. Thurman was as bad as I thought, Fiennes had nothing to play to. Macnee, oh, how it could have improved if we'd seen him. I think this movie is terrible because they didn't get the joke. The Avengers is cheeky, campy, fun, and never without some form of the double entendre somewhere. Apparently, the script writes never actually saw the series and didn't get the joke. I beg, some British filmmaker somewhere give it a chance. Make your own version. Give some dignity back.
    4Xophianic

    Ugh...

    I wasn't all that interested in watching this movie, but I decided to anyway since it was one of the only ones that week there that I hadn't seen yet. I should've saw one of the others. I don't even remember what they are now, but it doesn't matter. I am pretty sure that THE AVENGERS is the worst movie of the decade and one of my least favorite movies of all time.

    John Steed (Ralph Fiennes) and Emma Peel (Uma Thurman) team up to stop Sir August de Wynter (Sean Connery) from destroying the planet with a weather-changing machine. I won't go into the plot too deeply, because it's just plain stupid.

    The acting in this movie was not very good. Ralph Fiennes and Fiona Shaw (Father) play two of the most annoying characters in any movies that I have ever seen. The constant unwitty one-liners between Fiennes and Thurman is very annoying. Sean Connery is at his worst here. I was disappointed in him, because he is a great actor who doesn't belong in this movie. Sir August de Wynter? Just the name of the character alone should tell you much.

    There was, however, one thing that was good about this movie. That would be Uma Thurman in her tight leather. I am absolutely in love with Uma Thurman, and I don't think she belonged in this film, but I am pretty sure seeing her wearing those catsuits were the only thing that kept me from having to eat my own legs and drink my own urine to survive this movie.

    Maybe you'll think I'm exaggerating a bit, but I found this movie to be boring and annoying. I recommend that it be avoided at all costs.
    3MartinK75

    A wasted opportunity

    Is The Avengers a good film? No. Is it the worst film ever made? No. I first saw the movie at the cinema upon its release and, at that time, I did think that it was one of the worst films I'd seen up to that point. I've watched it 2 or 3 times since then and my opinion of it has improved, well, very slightly at any rate. Apart from a pervading incoherence, I think the film's major problem is its slightness; it's only an hour and a half long and the plot is very simplistic to say the least. It's not hard to imagine audiences feeling a bit short-changed when it first came out, especially as the film was a big-budget, would-be summer blockbuster. Another big problem is the casting of Uma Thurman as Emma Peel. Thurman has shown herself to be a fine actress in movies such as Pulp Fiction but she just looks out of her depth here (I never believed in her as a top-level scientist for a second) and her English accent doesn't sound natural. Nicole Kidman, to whom the role was first offered, would surely have been better, in particular, she's displayed flawless English accents in films such as The Others and The Hours. An English actress I also think would have made a great Peel is Joely Richardson but the studio would probably have vetoed such a choice on the grounds of her not being a big enough name. Ralph Fiennes was a real enigma in this film - there was nothing wrong in principle in casting him as Steed but he looks ill at ease throughout the movie as if he'd rather be elsewhere. I can only assume he'd already twigged that the film was going to be a turkey. What's worse, Fiennes and Thurman have absolutely no chemistry between them, which wastes the snappy dialogue they have with each other throughout the film. The supporting cast fare a bit better with seasoned pros such as Sean Connery, Jim Broadbent and Fiona Shaw making the most of their underdeveloped parts. The retro-chic world of the original TV series is nicely recreated and there's no shortage of nice cars, costumes and locations but what's good about the film is easily drowned out by what's bad; The Avengers is ultimately a shallow, rushed and messy affair, severely hampered by the performances of its two leads. Handled properly, the film could have been a wonderful success for all concerned, the first chapter of an entertaining and lucrative franchise, stretching well beyond the 1990s; instead it's one of the most embarrassing flops of that decade. The original cut of the film was apparently two and a half hours long but, following negative reactions from audiences at test screenings, the studio hacked the film down to its present one and a half hour length. This doesn't actually come as much of a surprise as there is a lack of proper narrative flow to the film suggestive of chunks of explanatory scenes having been cut out. Just one example: towards the end of the film, just before they enter Sir August's underwater lair, Steed and Peel enter a phone box and Peel says "how now brown cow?" down the phone. The phrase seems to be a password to enter the premises but how does Peel know it? There's been talk here and there of the possibility of Warners releasing a director's cut or special edition DVD, restoring the original two and a half hour version. I think this would be a good idea and I'd definitely be interested in watching the full version of the film. It's highly unlikely to be any kind of masterpiece but it's difficult to imagine that it wouldn't improve upon the movie as it stands. At the very least you'd have to assume that it would be more coherent. Sadly I don't think the chances of Warners going down this line are high; I have the feeling that this is a movie the studio would rather forget about than draw attention to.

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    Related interests

    Robert Downey Jr., Chris Evans, Scarlett Johansson, Jeremy Renner, Mark Ruffalo, and Chris Hemsworth
    Superhero
    Bruce Willis in Die Hard (1988)
    Action
    Still frame
    Adventure
    James Earl Jones and David Prowse in Star Wars: Episode V - The Empire Strikes Back (1980)
    Sci-Fi
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    Thriller

    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Ralph Fiennes said of this movie, "I think it's a badge of honor to have a real flop on your resumé."
    • Goofs
      During the scene in the boardroom with the teddy bears, De Wynter says that anyone who wishes to leave can do so, and a payment of one million dollars will await them. However, he clearly mouths the word "pounds" instead of "dollars."
    • Quotes

      John Steed: After all, according to your file, you're a psychopathic personality with schizophrenic delusions, suffering from recurring amnesia based on traumatic repression leading to outbursts of antisocial and violent behavior. Knight to king seven. Check.

      Emma Peel: Is that really what you think of me?

      John Steed: Well... just my type, Mrs. Peel.

    • Alternate versions
      UK DVD Z1 15873 does not feature Eddie Izzard opening his knife in his final fight - footage cut but present in other versions. The shot of the knife being opened is replaced by a reaction shot of Emma that is not featured in versions that have the knife opening. As a result the different versions do not have a different running time as the action goes back perfectly in sync after this moment.
    • Connections
      Featured in HBO First Look: The Avengers (1998)
    • Soundtracks
      Raindrops Keep Fallin' on My Head
      Written by Burt Bacharach, Hal David

    Top picks

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    FAQ23

    • How long is The Avengers?Powered by Alexa
    • Did Roger Lloyd Pack Appear in This Film?
    • Is there a plan to release a Director's Cut?
    • Who was the Evil Emma? Was she a clone or a robot?

    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • August 14, 1998 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Official site
      • Warner Bros.
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Месники
    • Filming locations
      • RAF Little Rissington, Gloucestershire, England, UK(disused RAF base for opening sequence)
    • Production companies
      • Warner Bros.
      • Jerry Weintraub Productions
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Budget
      • $60,000,000 (estimated)
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $23,384,939
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $10,305,957
      • Aug 16, 1998
    • Gross worldwide
      • $23,384,939
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 29m(89 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • DTS
      • Dolby Digital
      • SDDS
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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