Discussion: Falcon and The Winter Soldier UPDATE: Captain America 4 Brave New World NEW TRAILER!!!

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Stephen Colbert shows Anthony Mackie his new Captain America action figure for the first time: 'That's dope!'

Watch Mackie react to his seeing his new Falcon and the Winter Soldier toy.
By Nick Romano
April 27, 2021 at 11:55 AM EDT


One of the the perks of being the new Captain America is you get your own toy line.

Anthony Mackie basked in the glory of his new Falcon and the Winter Soldier action figure, which Stephen Colbert showed him for the very first time during an interview on The Late Show that aired Monday night.

"I've got something I'm told you have not seen yet, but it's pretty awesome," Colbert told his guest.

"No! Shut up! ... Where'd you get that?!" Mackie exclaimed upon seeing his character, Sam Wilson, in toy form donning the new Cap suit. "From this distance he looks more like Jamie Foxx than me," the actor joked.

As Colbert showed off the toy's foldable wing function, Mackie agreed, "That's dope! That's amazing."

I want that Cap shirt. It doesn't actually SAY Captain America on it as depicted, just Sam's portrait and the shield price has increased to $120 from $99. Supply and demand, I'll tell ya. :hmm:
 

tallblacknyc

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I rarely watch Colbert's interviews but I happened to watch this one this morning. How TF did they NOT send Anthony one while they were sending them out to the Networks? Anthony could be promoting it as well on HIS platforms. :dunno:
Cause it still proves he’s just a Blackman at the end of the day.. he works for Disney yet a cac that had nothing to do with the show got the merch b4 he did.. sounds about white
 

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The Falcon and the Winter Soldier gets a new title with season 2 implications

Will Anthony Mackie and Sebastian Stan ride again?
By Nick Romano
Updated April 23, 2021 at 05:15 PM EDT


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Warning: Spoilers from The Falcon and the Winter Soldier season 1 finale are discussed in this article.
It appears The Falcon and the Winter Soldier is no more. Introducing Captain America and the Winter Soldier.
The show's new title and logo treatment were revealed in the finale episode of the first season. This followed the climactic battle against Karli (Erin Kellyman) and the Flag-Smashers that revealed Sam Wilson (Anthony Mackie) donning a brand-new Wakandan flight suit and claiming the title of Captain America.
Now that the cat's out of the bag officially — previous leaks and comic book knowledge of Sam Wilson already tipped us off — series director Kari Skogland can finally tell EW, "It's a story about the first Black Captain America. How great is that?"

While a second season for The Falcon… excuse us… Captain America and the Winter Soldier hasn't been announced yet, the new title and the big reveals that came this week appear to tee up another round for Mackie and Sebastian Stan.
Reps for Disney and Marvel didn't immediately respond to EW's request for comment.
Anthony Mackie as the new Captain America.
| CREDIT: MARVEL STUDIOS
A second season of some kind seems inevitable. Marvel Studios president Kevin Feige previously stated that some, not all of the Disney+ shows were being primed for multiple seasons. Malcolm Spellman, the lead writer on The Falcon and the Winter Soldier, then told EW the show would be setting up multiple MCU projects — at least three he could think of at the time but couldn't discuss.
On top of that, we have a post-credits scene. Sam comes through with his promise to Sharon Carter (Emily VanCamp) and gets the U.S. government to grant her a full pardon. Not only that, but she's offered a position in her "old division." That would be S.H.I.E.L.D., presumably. What Sam doesn't know is that she's the elusive Power Broker. In the post-credits scene, Sharon makes a call and tells someone that, while the super-soldier serum is caput, they will now have "full access to government secrets," "prototype weapons," and the like to sell to the highest bidders.

"The audience will know exactly what doors just got opened to an expanded universe," Spellman tells EW of the post-credit scene — yet another clue of a possible season 2 with this new Captain America and the Winter Soldier title.
'Captain America and the Winter Soldier' title card revealed at the end of 'Falcon and the Winter Soldier.'
Adding to intrigue, The Hollywood Reporter reports that Spellman is quietly at work writing a fourth Captain America movie with Dalan Musson, a member of show's writers room. No casting has been reported at this time, but it's safe to say it's being done with Mackie's Sam in mind for the titular role.
Val, a.k.a. Julia Louis-Dreyfus as Contessa Valentina Allegra de la Fontaine, also makes a return appearance in a non-post-credits-scene capacity to update John Walker's (Wyatt Russell) look. It may seem like his previous Captain America suit now in black, but it's an accurate replication of the character's comic-book suit as U.S. Agent, which is also the new title Val gives him.
"I'm back!" he declares.
Daniel Bruhl's Helmut Zemo may be locked away in the Raft prison, but he too is still dangerous. Suffice it to say, there are a lot of directions Marvel can pursue from here.
After WandaVision and The Falcon and the Winter Soldier, Disney+ will now debut Loki, a series focusing on Tom Hiddleston's trickster god right after the alt-timeline version of the character made off with the Tesseract in Avengers: Endgame. Other MCU shows on the docket include What If…?, Ms. Marvel, Hawkeye, Moon Knight, She-Hulk, and Secret Invasion.
 

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The Falcon and the Winter Soldier team teases Julia Louis-Dreyfus role as 'a darker Nick Fury'

"I think she'll be making more waves sooner rather than later," says producer Nate Moore.
By Nick Romano
April 19, 2021 at 01:29 PM EDT



Warning: This article contains spoilers for the fifth episode of The Falcon and the Winter Soldier.

Marvel is opening up about the bombshell cameo that arrived in the penultimate episode of The Falcon and the Winter Soldier.

Comedy great Julia Louis-Dreyfus made her Marvel Cinematic Universe debut in the Disney+ series as Contessa Valentina Allegra de la Fontaine — or just Val, as she told Wyatt Russell's John Walker. But also, don't call her Val. Just keep it in your head, as the joke goes.

According to Marvel Studios producer Nate Moore, who spoke with Marvel.com about the big unveiling, Val is like the anti-Nick Fury, who's played by Samuel L. Jackson.

"Whenever we talked about Valentina, even in the writer's room, she was sort of a more acerbic, funnier, but darker Nick Fury," he said. "Someone who knows her secrets, who's not afraid to operate in the moral gray area, but maybe who isn't as inherently altruistic."

While it's currently unclear what the extent of her role in the larger MCU is, Moore further teased that this isn't the last we've seen of her.
"Having a character like Valentina in the show, and actually in the MCU, is really interesting because I think she'll be making more waves sooner rather than later," he added.

Julia Louis-Dreyfus as Contessa Valentina Allegra de la Fontaine.


Val arrived on the scene to speak with John after the government stripped him of his Captain America rank and gave him an "other than honorable discharge" for publicly killing a member of the Flag-Smashers. With a purple streak in her hair, she tells him that, because he took the super-soldier serum, he's now someone of importance to "certain people." She implores him, in her own way, to pick up the phone when she calls him in the future and hands him a seemingly blank card — one side is black, one side is white.

On Monday, days after the episode dropped on Disney+, Dreyfus tweeted a photo of herself holding the card, only this time it has her character name on it.
"Yup," she wrote.



Zoie Nagelhout, another executive producer who was instrumental in shaping The Falcon and the Winter Soldier with Moore, said that meeting between Val and John was "the beginning of something."


"John is really excited because he is someone who needs to have a purpose," she said. "He needs to feel like he has a place in the world. He needs to feel like he has direction and ambition. There's a catharsis to that [meeting] for him."

In terms of casting Dreyfus for the role, Nagelhout said the Veep and Seinfeld Emmy winner "was just excited by the idea of joining this world and what it could mean to play a new quirky, weird, mysterious character. And she loved that there was this comedy to it as well because that's, of course, one of her great strengths. She was the perfect character to bring into John Walker's world to complicate what he's going through and give him a weird almost ominous light at the end of the tunnel."

The Falcon and the Winter Soldier will debut its season finale on Disney+ this Friday.
 

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Marvel comics eBay sales get a major bump after surprise The Falcon and the Winter Soldier cameo
Nick Romano
April 19, 2021·2 min read


Warning: Spoilers from The Falcon and the Winter Soldier season 1, episode 5 are discussed in this article.
It seems the mega cameo that featured in the latest episode of The Falcon and the Winter Soldier has brought new attention to the character's Marvel comics debut.


Since Friday, which was when the Disney+ series dropped its fifth episode and revealed Julia Louis-Dreyfus as Contessa Valentina Allegra de la Fontaine, eBay sales of the character's first appearance in the comics have surged.




At least 10 copies of Strange Tales #159, written by Jim Steranko and Roy Thomas and drawn by Marie Severin and Steranko, were sold by various vendors on Friday alone with elevated price points. One copy with a Certified Guaranty Company (CGC) grade of 9.2, noting its condition, sold for $1,600. Another, with a 9.4 CGC, racked up a $1,800 price tag. Another, with an even higher CGC of 9.6, sold for nearly $4,000.
This is compared to a copy with a 9.0 CGC sold days earlier on April 12 for $259.99, and one sold on April 7 with a 9.6 CGC for $565.
A representative for eBay didn't immediately respond to EW's request for comment.
Marvel Comics 'Strange Tales #159.'



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Published in 1967, the Strange Tales issue sees the Contessa arriving as a secret agent who hops in to help S.H.I.E.L.D.'s Nick Fury before they exchange words and blows. In Marvel lore, Contessa is eventually revealed to be a Russian sleeper agent for the terrorist group Leviathan, and she becomes known by the alias Madame Hydra.


Dreyfus arrived in the Marvel Cinematic Universe to speak with John Walker (Wyatt Russell) after he's stripped of his Captain America title. Even though he lost the shield, she says that by taking the super-soldier serum, he has become a hot commodity to "certain people." She then advises he pick up the phone when she calls him in the future.

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Chuck Zlotnick/Marvel Studios Julia Louis-Dreyfus as Contessa Valentina Allegra de la Fontaine.
It's unclear what role "Val" has to play in the MCU, but it seems she has big plans brewing behind the scenes.
The season finale of The Falcon and the Winter Soldier will premiere on Disney+ this Friday.
 

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The Falcon and the Winter Soldier director on what it means for Sam to finally pick up the shield
Nick Romano
April 16, 2021·5 min read











Warning: Spoilers from The Falcon and the Winter Soldier season 1, episode 5 are discussed in this article.
All season long on The Falcon and the Winter Soldier, Anthony Mackie's Sam Wilson has had to face the realities of what picking up Captain America's shield would mean. At first, the righthand man of Steve Rogers (Chris Evans) opted to let it rest in the Smithsonian, feeling as though it didn't belong to him despite Steve naming him as its successor. But since the government took it upon themselves to bestow the shield to John Walker (Wyatt Russell), thereby dubbing him the next Cap, Sam grappled with his decision and the complicated legacy that comes with the shield.
Now, in the penultimate episode of the first season, Sam finally takes over as its new owner.
After John, enhanced by the super-soldier serum, used the shield to kill a member of the Flag-Smashers in broad daylight out of rage and vengeance, Sam and Bucky (Sebastian Stan) decided to take the weapon from him. And, of course, Cap wouldn't give it up without a fight. The battle left John shieldless, but also Sam wingless; John breaks his suit during the battle.
John is later stripped of his rank as Captain America by the government for his actions, and Sam heads to his Louisiana home to train with the shield. Does this mean Sam will now declare himself the next Captain America? It seems likely. Falcon assumes the role in the comics, after all, and the final moments (mid-credits scene aside) sees Sam opening a case containing what seems to be a new uniform for himself. For now, Kari Skogland, who directed all six episodes of The Falcon and the Winter Soldier, explains the impact of Sam picking up the shield even without the Captain America moniker.
"We wanted Sam to engage in both a public and private conversation of what it means for a Black man to pick up such an iconic historically white symbol," she tells EW. "By starting off with his acknowledgement of how important it is as a symbol, and that it is connected to a bygone era, Sam opens the door to the idea that what defines a hero today is not the same ideal as it was when Steve first picked up the shield."
By the same token, Skogland felt it was important for the viewer to go on this journey with Sam "because the shield means different things to different people."
"It is important that we explore all sides to its future as a symbol, given it represents the American flag and the deep history that comes with something that represents equality and freedom," she continues. "It needs to be an ongoing discussion because those very coveted ideas that are the core to the American Dream are actually fragile and need to be protected from those that go down a slippery slope, no matter how well intentioned, that actually puts freedom and equality in the crosshairs."
Marvel Studios Anthony Mackie in 'The Falcon and the Winter Soldier.'
What a slippery slope it has been, and not just for John. Karli Morgenthau (Erin Kellyman) and the Flag-Smashers' mission to create a world without borders and support those people displaced by the Blip escalated to killing. Karli intentionally killed guards at a GRC supply depot in Lithuania with a bomb, and then she inadvertently took the life of John's friend and comrade-in-arms Lemar (Clé Bennett) during a fight.
The revelation of Isaiah Bradley (Carl Lumbly), a Black soldier who was made into a super soldier through secret, horrible experiments, further complicated any thought Sam had of carrying the shield.
"The legacy of that shield is complicated to say the least," Sam tells Bucky.
"When Steve told me what he was planning I don't think either of us really understood what it felt like for a Black man to be handed the shield. How could we?" he replied.
"I wanted the show to explore the redefinition of a hero who has traditionally been seen as a warrior/soldier to being a first responder and front line worker," Skogland says, considering Sam to be a first responder. "To see a hero who has a strong moral fiber and yet is not rigid so is able to conciliate, include and discuss with the opposition with an eye to solving global issues because they are ultimately interconnected to our universal quality of life."
Malcolm Spellman, the lead writer on the show, says he fought to work on The Falcon and the Winter Soldier because of what it would mean to chronicle the journey of a Black superhero.
"I always say this: my nephew, Kingston, dresses every single Halloween as Black Panther because he grew up having that hero," he says. "The idea of exploring a decidedly Black, decidedly American hero in the current climate of things, it's why I got up every day and it's why I fought so hard to get the gig. Marvel was really generous. As long as you don't show up with an agenda, as long as you make the storytelling great and open, they don't put restraints on you."
The Falcon and the Winter Soldier season finale will premiere next Friday on Disney+.
 

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The Falcon and the Winter Soldier team teases Julia Louis-Dreyfus role as 'a darker Nick Fury'

"I think she'll be making more waves sooner rather than later," says producer Nate Moore.
By Nick Romano
April 19, 2021 at 01:29 PM EDT



Warning: This article contains spoilers for the fifth episode of The Falcon and the Winter Soldier.

Marvel is opening up about the bombshell cameo that arrived in the penultimate episode of The Falcon and the Winter Soldier.

Comedy great Julia Louis-Dreyfus made her Marvel Cinematic Universe debut in the Disney+ series as Contessa Valentina Allegra de la Fontaine — or just Val, as she told Wyatt Russell's John Walker. But also, don't call her Val. Just keep it in your head, as the joke goes.

According to Marvel Studios producer Nate Moore, who spoke with Marvel.com about the big unveiling, Val is like the anti-Nick Fury, who's played by Samuel L. Jackson.

"Whenever we talked about Valentina, even in the writer's room, she was sort of a more acerbic, funnier, but darker Nick Fury," he said. "Someone who knows her secrets, who's not afraid to operate in the moral gray area, but maybe who isn't as inherently altruistic."

While it's currently unclear what the extent of her role in the larger MCU is, Moore further teased that this isn't the last we've seen of her.
"Having a character like Valentina in the show, and actually in the MCU, is really interesting because I think she'll be making more waves sooner rather than later," he added.

Julia Louis-Dreyfus as Contessa Valentina Allegra de la Fontaine.


Val arrived on the scene to speak with John after the government stripped him of his Captain America rank and gave him an "other than honorable discharge" for publicly killing a member of the Flag-Smashers. With a purple streak in her hair, she tells him that, because he took the super-soldier serum, he's now someone of importance to "certain people." She implores him, in her own way, to pick up the phone when she calls him in the future and hands him a seemingly blank card — one side is black, one side is white.

On Monday, days after the episode dropped on Disney+, Dreyfus tweeted a photo of herself holding the card, only this time it has her character name on it.
"Yup," she wrote.



Zoie Nagelhout, another executive producer who was instrumental in shaping The Falcon and the Winter Soldier with Moore, said that meeting between Val and John was "the beginning of something."


"John is really excited because he is someone who needs to have a purpose," she said. "He needs to feel like he has a place in the world. He needs to feel like he has direction and ambition. There's a catharsis to that [meeting] for him."

In terms of casting Dreyfus for the role, Nagelhout said the Veep and Seinfeld Emmy winner "was just excited by the idea of joining this world and what it could mean to play a new quirky, weird, mysterious character. And she loved that there was this comedy to it as well because that's, of course, one of her great strengths. She was the perfect character to bring into John Walker's world to complicate what he's going through and give him a weird almost ominous light at the end of the tunnel."

The Falcon and the Winter Soldier will debut its season finale on Disney+ this Friday.

Makeup is a muhfucka Julia. You look like an eggroll without it. :lol:
 

tallblacknyc

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It handled race and Falcon becoming Captain America well

but the villain was shaky and could have been more developed

and why did they kill Karli...why even make her a sympathetic villain.
Because cte captain used his superpowers and caused it.. he told his friends family that the person that killed their family member was dead and that he took them out.. cte used his power and jumped into powerbroker mind and said this is for my fallen comrade.. cte forced that to happen.. cte got mind control and ya didn’t even know it.. cte cte cte.. ya said he lied to the family wronggg cte knew what he was talking about..he said ya see in the next episode..cte cte cte
 

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Anthony Mackie responds to Captain America 4 news: 'I'm excited to see what happens'

All signs appear to point to Mackie as the star of the next movie.
By Nick Romano
April 27, 2021 at 03:35 PM EDT

image


Anthony Mackie is just as in the dark about Captain America 4 as the rest of us. At least, that's what he's saying.

In an interview with EW on Tuesday, the actor responded to the news that Marvel Studios is developing a fourth Cap movie with Malcolm Spellman, the lead writer on The Falcon and the Winter Soldier.

"I literally found out yesterday in a grocery store," Mackie says. "The checkout guy named Dwayne, a cool cat, he's like, 'Yo, man. Is this real?!" [holds up a cellphone] "I'm like, 'I haven't heard anything.' That's what I love about working for Marvel. They call you, they're like, 'Come to L.A. We wanna tell you what's going on.' So, I'm excited to see what happens, but I haven't heard anything."


All signs seem to be pointing to Mackie as the new lead of this movie. The finale of The Falcon and the Winter Soldier revealed that his character, Sam Wilson (the titular Falcon), finally picked up the shield and declared himself to be Captain America, sporting a freshly designed Wakandan flight suit.

"What would be really bad is if the movie [Captain America 4] starts and I get blown out of the sky," Mackie jokes.
The actor also says he hasn't "heard anything about season 2" of the Disney+ series. "It's always great to go to work with Sebastian [Stan]. And Kari [Skogland], our director, was amazing. It would be fun as hell to do."
Anthony Mackie' Sam Wilson as the new Captain America.




"I don't know what I expected, but it's definitely not what I thought it would be," he says of the finale reveal last Friday. "I guess I foresaw something that was much more celebratory than just being 'Anthony with a new Twitter account.'"

He jokes that he wants a Captain America parade in his home of New Orleans, complete with beads and oysters. But he settled for a cake the crew made for him, one of a small Cap figure on top of a golf course.

"It's the same people I've been working with on these movies for eight years now," he says. "So to go from my first day to now becoming Cap with the same people was really special. Everybody shared in it, from the props team to wardrobe, from the camera department to the people in the office. It was really a collective effort."

Mackie was fully prepared for the Cap suit, consisting of "10 or 12 pieces" — sans the CGI vibranium wings — to leak through a civilian's cellphone camera or paparazzi. He was more shocked that it didn't.

"We were in downtown Atlanta, in the middle of Atlantic Station, surrounded by apartment buildings and condos and doing a huge fight ,sequence and nobody took pictures," he recalls. "It was crazy."

We've now seen Steve Rogers (Chris Evans) and John Walker (Wyatt Russell) assume the role of Captain America, but Sam will be different kind of Cap. Mackie points to how the character handled Karli (Erin Kellyman) and the Flag-Smashers.

"It was more so about him talking them down and trying to communicate with them what they were doing was right, but they way they were doing it was wrong," the actor says. "Remember, he's a counselor and he's a regular guy who just happened to become an Avenger. There's no superpowers, there's no super-suit, there's no super-serum. He's just a guy. I love the idea of him moving through life as Captain America, as someone who brings peace and change instead of destruction and physical force."

Perhaps, Mackie quips, when someone recognizes him in a restaurant and declares, "His tab's on me," then this whole experience will sink in. For now, he's still got "Anthony with a new Twitter account."
 

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They had to change the plot cause the original version they were going to use a virus to kill people or something like that.

Also, the newer version of comic book and comic movie fans hate villains who are evil for evil's sake. They want to sympathize with them. You can make a well-rounded character who is evil just because he/she is. That's my favorite type of fictional villain/criminal.
 

Lou_Kayge

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And that's fine.

People can like whatever they want

I support both.

I was actually DC growing up

I think Suicide Squad gonna be the big hit

I still haven't seen Snyder cut

But I appreciate what he did, it wasn't my favorite it just got too dark and muddled at times. But that man is brilliant with colors design etc. And he genuinely loves these comics and characters.

Can't ask for more


I grew up lking both Marvel and DC, but always thouht DC villains were more ruthless and would kill at the drop of a hat. Been reading Marvel for almost 50 years and the only villains I ever found scary were Ultron, Kingpin(especially in Daredevil), Red Skull and The Brood. They don't give a fuck.
 

Shaka54

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Also, the newer version of comic book and comic movie fans hate villains who are evil for evil's sake. They want to sympathize with them. You can make a well-rounded character who is evil just because he/she is. That's my favorite type of fictional villain/criminal.
:eek: I swear this comment feels like deja vu...like I've read it in several threads before.:lol:
 

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The making of a hero: The Falcon and the Winter Soldier team deconstruct Marvel's new Captain America

Marvel producers unpack big moments from the show, Thunderbolts rumors, and Anthony Mackie as the next star-spangled Avenger.
By Nick Romano
April 29, 2021 at 01:54 PM EDT



Warning: Spoilers from The Falcon and the Winter Soldier are discussed in this article.

Two years, almost to the exact day, after Avengers: Endgame hit theaters and concluded a chapter of the Marvel Cinematic Universe, another one began with the introduction of a new Captain America.

The Falcon and the Winter Soldier, Marvel Studios' second live-action event series for Disney+ after WandaVision, revealed itself to be an origin story for Sam Wilson (Anthony Mackie) picking up the star-spangled mantle after Steve Rogers (Chris Evans). The finale episode capped off the season by seeing the man previously known as Falcon suiting up in a new vibranium-clad uniform, courtesy of Wakanda, and declaring, "I'm Captain America."

"We unintentionally came full circle which is pretty sweet," says Marvel executive producer Nate Moore as he reflects on the journey that started with Endgame, which saw Steve first gift the shield to Sam.

But there was so much more to The Falcon and the Winter Soldier beyond this formative moment. The series expanded the MCU even wider with the introduction of John Walker (Wyatt Russell) first as the government's Captain America pick and then as U.S. Agent, Sharon Carter (Emily VanCamp) as the shady Power Broker of the criminal underworld in Madripoor, Julia Louis-Dreyfus as comic book character Contessa Valentina Allegra de Fontaine (a.k.a. Madame Hydra), and Carl Lumbly as super-soldier-in-hiding Isaiah Bradley.

EW sat down (virtually) with The Falcon and the Winter Soldier's director Kari Skogland, lead writer Malcolm Spellman, and executive producing duo Moore and Zoie Nagelhout to unpack the series.

A Marvel star is born

Anthony Mackie as Captain America on 'The Falcon and the Winter Soldier'

image


| CREDIT: CHUCK ZLOTNICK/MARVEL STUDIOS

From the very beginning, even before Moore and Nagelhout spearheaded a search to find a writer and director to lead the show that would become The Falcon and the Winter Soldier, Marvel wanted to tell a story about Sam Wilson becoming Captain America.


Moore looks back on Avengers: Endgame when Steve hands the shield to Sam and his comrade in arms says it feels like it belongs to someone else. "That moment is so big," he says. "But even I, as a fan, went like, 'Wait, how is Falcon going to be Cap all of a sudden?' You realize there was so much territory. You could talk about what it meant to be Cap. As a Black man, myself, what [does] it mean to wear the stars and stripes. That was always going to be the focal point of the series from the very get go."

Spellman pressed so hard to get the job because of this main premise. "It was hugely important to me, and I feel lucky to have gotten the chance to do that, to make a Black man Captain America," he says.

Through the pitching process, Moore found Spellman was the "perfect cross section of having a reverence for the character but also being able to anchor that reverence in a real-world context." "Frankly, I think just the life experience that Malcolm had made him the right guy," he adds.

Nagelhout also praises Spellman's humor. "We knew that this story should feel like it's in the Cap world and that political-thriller kind of energy, but we wanted to make sure that Sam and Bucky brought their own tone. That always naturally felt like a buddy-cop dynamic."

Moore believes Marvel's audience would've embraced the idea of a Black Captain America if the show began right off the bat with Sam carrying the shield. "I don't know that it would have been as resonant," he adds, "because it might've just felt a little bit like a decision Marvel made without a ton of emotional backing."

He felt it was important for viewers to "understand why Sam was the right guy."

"I don't think Sam had to earn it in the audience's mind in the way that Steve had to," he explains. "A big question of the series was, can we make it feel like this [the shield] is Sam's? Not that it was given to Sam, but this is Sam's. In my mind, the notion that Sam would, if we're ever so lucky, be the head of the Avengers one day... if we hadn't had the series, I don't know that I would buy it. You think about all the Avengers from Thor to Captain Marvel. Why are they going to follow this guy? He has to earn the right to carry the shield, and part of that is really interrogating why he's the right guy."

Steve's legacy as Captain America loomed larger over the show, though Marvel fans also experienced what kind of Cap John became when he held the shield. For Nagelhout, Sam's Cap becomes more distinct from his predecessors through his unique ability as a non-enhanced hero to "see through the moral complexities of the world and ask us all to do better."

"It was a great line from Lemar [played by Clé Bennett] in show when he says power makes a person more of themself," she says. "I think that applies to any kind of position, or mentally taking on any amount of power, whether it's physical or emotional. What we've learned about Sam is that one of his super powers is his ability to connect to and relate to people. It's why he was a counselor for veterans after the war. It's why he's able to relate to Karli [Erin Kellyman] in the way that he did. We thought it was really special that we had a villain who had an understandable point of view. She had a cause. She was going about it the wrong way, but Sam could see through to the good in her."

Name change

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'Captain America and the Winter Soldier' title card revealed at the end of 'Falcon and the Winter Soldier.'

As the credits begin to roll on the finale episode, the show's logo and title treatment emerges on the screen. Then it starts to change. The word "Falcon" transforms into "Captain America," offering a new title to reflect the main character's evolution.

Spellman didn't know it was coming, but when he saw it in a cut of the episode, he almost started crying. "It was so perfect," he remarks.
"It's powerful to see that Captain America and the Winter Soldier [title]. We've reinvented what Captain America is, not only by his ethnicity and skin color but by what a hero represents," Skogland says. "Sam represents a new hero."

Moore sees it as "a punctuation to the end of this season, more than anything forward facing." He doesn't definitively say one way or the other whether a second season is in the works.

"Obviously there's opportunity to tell more stories with these guys and with John Walker, Sharon Carter, Joaquin Torres [Danny Ramirez], and Isaiah Bradley. They're all characters we have a ton of affection for. But we felt like this was a momentous step for [Sam] and we wanted the title card to reflect that step. It would have felt weird to have seen him transform and take on this mantle and then go to a credit that said Falcon and the Winter Soldier."

Crafting the suit


Anthony Mackie's Sam Wilson as the new Captain America in 'The Falcon and the Winter Soldier'

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| CREDIT: MARVEL STUDIOS

A new title also means new threads.

In the context of the show's arc, Bucky asks the Dora Milaje's Ayo (Florence Kasumba) if the Wakandans can craft a suit for Sam. That uniform is revealed in the finale, complete with his own unique Captain America design that's reminiscent of Paul Renaud's comic book art work for the Captain America: Sam Wilson series.

Behind the scenes, Mackie says there were about "10 or 12 pieces" just to get the suit on.

Nagelhout credits Marvel's Ryan Meinerding, head of visual development on the show, for finding "the best version of that suit that paid tribute to the comics."

"We also wanted to make sure that it felt grounded because that's the sensibility of our director, Kari Skogland, but also just the sensibility of the show in general — to take superheroes and make them people, make them human, put their feet on the ground."

The biggest debate arose around the cowl. The team worried it wouldn't look right. "It's one of those things that looks great in a comic book drawing, but maybe it doesn't look so great on a human's head," Nagelhout says. "It was something that we went back and forth on quite a bit, but our costume department did an amazing job of building it for us. You can test it out, and Anthony ended up kind of falling in love with it, partly because of how true it was to the comic book iteration."

"It for sure started with the [comic] books and then 15,000 man hours go into deciding every micro detail of it," Spellman says. "They are beyond attentive to every detail, every shade of color. Just meticulous."

U.S. Agent

Wyatt Russell's John Walker in 'The Falcon and the Winter Soldier.'

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| CREDIT: CHUCK ZLOTNICK/MARVEL STUDIOS

Moore recognizes that the character of John Walker can come across as a "caricature" sometimes in Marvel comics. "As we were writing the character and, frankly, as Wyatt was performing the character, you realize there's a soul to him."

If power amplified the heroism and empathy in Sam, the Captain America title, accompanied by a dose of the super-soldier serum, made John more volatile. For killing a member of the Flag-Smashers in broad daylight, he was stripped of his title and rank. Consumed with vengeance against Karli for the death of Lemar, he crafted his own knockoff Captain America shield and hunted down the terrorist group.

Skogland says she toyed with where to place the episode 5 mid-credits scene, showing John build his own shield with his medal of honor melded onto it.

"That medal of honor was a very important moment," she says. "Lemar said something about the medal of honor when they're talking. [John] says it was the worst day of my life, suggesting there's some history there. As a soldier in particular, he nods to the fact that you have to live in the life of the gray, sometimes what feels wrong is right. When he puts it on the back of the fake shield, it's indicative of his dilemma. He's hanging onto a falsehood, which he's living."

Moore says they could've made John more of a villain in the finale, but instead the story sees him throwing away his fake shield and going to save the members of the Global Repatriation Council from the Flag-Smashers.

"It actually would have been selling the character short just to go full heel," he explains. "Frankly, I don't think that he's fully redeemed by the end, by any stretch. I don't even think he thinks he's fully redeemed. There's a moment after Sam's speech where they see each other and it's not like, 'Hey, bro. We're good.' It's, 'We have more to talk about. This is not over. You are not completely on the side of the angels.'"
The ending further revealed that Val has bigger plans for John. She gives him a new uniform and dubs him U.S. Agent. "Things are about to get weird," she tells him. "So, when they do, we're not gonna need a Captain America. We're gonna need a U.S. Agent."
Moore doesn't believe John is a villain by the end of all this. "That character starts as somebody who the institutions would tell you is the best of the best. And having him come to an actual moral dark night of the soul and come out the other side a different person is actually really interesting," he says.
Thunderbolts?
Daniel Bruhl as Baron Zemo in 'The Falcon and the Winter Soldier.'
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| CREDIT: CHUCK ZLOTNICK/MARVEL STUDIOS

One of the biggest theories among fans over the course of the series involved the Thunderbolts, a super-group from Marvel comics formed by Helmut Zemo and consisting entirely of reformed criminals. The theory picked up steam as the stories of John, Val, and Zemo (Daniel Bruhl) unfurled. Might Zemo form his own super-group? Or maybe Val, who was described by Moore previously as a "darker Nick Fury," is recruiting her own enhanced individuals as an anti-Avengers team?

The Thunderbolts ultimately did not have a presence on the show. Moore says "the honest truth is, no," they were not even considered for the season 1 story.

"Not because we don't think they're cool because they are, but because we already felt like there was so much on the table in this series that we didn't also then want to introduce a group of characters, or reintroduce people that we've seen in the past, and cloud the story," he says.
"The more characters you produce, then you have to service them," he adds. "And then we wouldn't have had time to maybe go home with Sam and Bucky to Louisiana, or do some of those things. That, on a character level, got us interested in doing this [show] in the first place."
Now, that doesn't mean the Thunderbolts aren't coming up in the MCU down the line. Spellman, who's become more tight-lipped these days after joining the Marvel machine, says, "I don't know. I just know there seems to be a lot of chatter around that. I don't know if fans are crazy or not."
 

LordSinister

One Punch Mayne
Super Moderator
Also, the newer version of comic book and comic movie fans hate villains who are evil for evil's sake. They want to sympathize with them. You can make a well-rounded character who is evil just because he/she is. That's my favorite type of fictional villain/criminal.
You think people loved Thanos, wait until Dr. Doom hits the screen. Vladimir Putin with armor and magic.
 
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