In Vol 3, the Guardians are finally free of Mommy and Daddy issues. But without our parents' guidance, who are we? The Guardians, individually and collectively discover that they have to find out on their own.
This adventure mainly focuses on Rocket's (Bradley Cooper) backstory. Making a statement against the cruelty of animal testing, this movie takes us into the labs of the High Evolutionary (Chukwudi Iwuji), a being who believes his manifest destiny is to evolve all life to its maximum potential, making him the ultimate out-of-control control freak of a parent who is constantly dissatisfied with the monsters he makes out of his 'children'.
In his experiments on Rocket, which Nebula (Karen Gillan) describes as 'worse that what Thanos did' to her, the High Evolutionary creates some true horrors, including some who eventually become Rocket's friends whom he had to tragically leave behind to escape HE's intended fate for 'Batch 89'. All this exposition is told in flashback, as having sustained a life-threatening injury when Adam Warlock (Will Poulter) attacks Knowhere early in the movie, Rocket's life literally flashes before our eyes.
The Guardians spring into action to save the life of their friend, which means having to infiltrate HE's base of operations to obtain Rocket's tech specs without which any attempt to operate on him would prove immediately fatal. Of course, parent terrible HE takes not too kindly with corporate espionage on his most prize creation, Rocket, and enacts his own counter-plan to retrieve what he considers to be stolen property.
Hope that recap wasn't too spoiler-y. In between, as always, are glorious action sequences punctuated with internal squabbling among the Guardians, including a massive hallway set-piece that sets the bar way up high if you like Netflix's 'Daredevil' hallway punch-ups. I'll need to watch it again to see if it was all done in a single take, but if it was... wow!
Amidst the fighting and the relentlessly escalating crisis that they face, some Guardians really come into their own, while others feel the need to go find themselves, or reforge long-lost connections of their own. As parents, we really should learn to let go and let the children develop into their own beings, rather than force them into some predetermined blueprint of perfection, which will ultimately disappoint you, and screw them up for life. Either that, or die.
Anyway, the Guardians group, as put together by Director, James Gunn, go their separate ways, ending the three-story arc that turned a bunch of largely unknown Marvel properties into some of its best-loved characters today.