By Staff Writer (media@latinospost.com) | First Posted: Apr 08, 2015 05:47 AM EDT

A new featurette highlighting some of the best scenes of previous trailers of "Avengers: Age of Ultron" has been released. It also included interviews with the globe-trotting cast and crew about the film, which was shot in "exotic locales like Italy, South Korea, South Africa, and The United Kingdom," as well as New York, as noted by ComicBook.

The featurette, however, "contains only a scant few frames of new footage and no real revelations or spoilers," ScreenRant observed. "But it does show the kind of very public destruction that will be wrought by the fight between the Avengers and Ultron's robot army."

This new clip is just one of a few that Marvel has released in anticipation of the sequel's May 1 release. Previous ones revealed behind-the-scenes footage that showed the cast's goofy side, with Chris Evans, who plays Captain America, saying that working on the "Avengers" franchise felt like "summer camp," as noted by Yahoo! Movies.

"It's tough to wrangle 10 crazy actors that love each other," commented Jeremy Renner, who takes on Hawkeye, on director Joss Whedon's dilemma of having to referee the wisecracking group of actors every now and then.

Speaking of Whedon, the director recently revealed that there won't be a post-credits scene in the upcoming blockbuster, unlike its predecessor, because "he felt there was no way to top the post-battle shawarma scene from the last one," Entertainment Weekly said.

"That was a jewel and a weird little quirk," Whedon pointed out.

However, Kevin Feige, Marvel Studios president, clarified that there would be a "short, epilogue-like scene that pops up shortly after the credits start," which is called a tag.

"But there's not a post-post-credit scene," Feige emphasized.

"There is nothing at the very end. And that's not a fake-out," Whedon explained. "We want people to know so they don't sit there for 10 minutes and then go: 'Son of a bitch! I'll kill them!'"

Whedon then shared that they did try and make one, but "it didn't seem to lend itself in the same way, and we wanted to be true to what felt right."

"The first rule of making a sequel is take the best moments and do something else. Don't do the Indiana Jones gun trick again differently. Just go somewhere else. Don't try to hit the same highs, because people will sense it," he concluded.

Perhaps he could've had collected suggestions from fans to help him brainstorm.

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