'Avengers: Age of Ultron' Spoilers News: How will Quicksilver's Speed will be Shot in the Film?

Adapting super speed in a movie can't be easy, but in today's modern age, digital effects have gotten the closest they've ever been to making it look as eye pleasing and realistic as possible.

With the upcoming release of 'Avengers: Age of Ultron', fans are all wondering how Quicksilver's super speed will look on screen. With a budget as bug as 'The Avengers' viewers will be expecting nothing less than amazing. It's been previously described as something we've not yet seen, and taking into consideration the portrayal of Quicksilver in 'X-Men: Days of Future Past', that may be a lot to live up to.

Courtesy of Buzzfeed, we now have a better idea on how the movie plans to go about the character's unmatched speed. They state:

"Joss Whedon filmed Elizabeth Olsen dispatching Ultrons from several angles, including one using an ultra-high-speed camera. That shot would later be combined with one of Aaron Taylor-Johnson running through the same frame at regular speed, to re-create how the world looks to Quicksilver when he's operating at his top velocity. The filming strategy proved especially taxing for Olsen, who had to maintain Wanda's stable bearing even amid utter bedlam - every quiver in her face was amplified enormously in slow motion."

"There's live cars on fire and gunshots and all those things', Olsen said, 'I have such a bad nervous system that ... I have to know exactly when there's gonna be a loud noise or a spark or else I'll jump or twitch or something."

"For his part, Taylor-Johnson also struggled at first to nail the deceptively simple act of how Quicksilver would look while running on camera. The obvious option - shooting Taylor-Johnson running on a treadmill in front of a green screen - proved to be a non-starter. 'There was no real life to it'," said Taylor-Johnson. "It looked really dull."

"Instead, the production started shooting Taylor-Johnson outdoors, as he sprinted over natural terrain. 'The more dynamic or the messier my arms were or the wider my legs were, [and] the more I changed up the wave and the rhythm of the running, the better'," he said. "'It feels more emotional and expressive. It's a lot more fun that way'."

At least it sounds like they put a whole lot of effort in Taylor-Johnson's scenes to make them look authentic.

On that note, 'Avengers: Age of Ultron' drops into theaters next month, May 1st.