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100% agree.I think part of the problem is that Game of Thrones has generally used this style very effectively but its only been so because the deaths were both setup and payoff well plus of course fit into the brutal setting. That doesn't hold that killing off characters for good is the only way to build serious drama and in this case as I said before I think the deaths at the end aren't actually about the characters who die so much as those who do not. Its about putting a weight of loss and even guilt on the survivors(and though them the audience) which I would imagine is going to be addressed before we ultimately see things reversed in the sequel.
Indeed I think you could argue the most interesting thing with the sequel is not how do they end it but how do they start it? how much of a reaction do you show?
I didn't think the deaths were meant as a cheap way to get tears or shock. This is the story in the comic. Half of the people were going.
And we knew going into it that this is part 1 of a 2 part movie, so obviously, with a power like the gauntlet, things can be undone.
So yea, it isn't about who died or disappeared, it's about the people who are left, and how the hell do they fix it.
The last shot of the scene of the heroes, they are completely devastated . Cap should be on suicide watch. They lost the fight, half the people, and then the guy they need to stop just leaves. And Thanos is just chilling on his porch with a smile and pleasant music in the background.
The last shot is Thanos. It was a happy ending as far as he's concerned.
