But you know how the internet is. It doesn't matter how popular the character is in the comic but how well received the character was in the movie. In the movie you go most of the movie thinking it's a man, because the role is mostly played by a man up until the reveal. For some older nerds this plays as a insult because they gender switched a popular character they loved, where as others it comes off as a cheap gimmick for a twist ending. So lots of the usual suspects will make lots of loud noises because of culture war issues and nerd war issues.
Without question, we will hear the idiotic cries of "gender swapping" about the character. If
they are still screaming about a black Captain America (this from the "source" advocates who conveniently forget a certain history of the Cap character), they will most certainly rant and predict the fall of Western society for one character's gender swapping in a movie.
In the past the MCU was not damaged by most of this noise but these days it is slightly different. We are no longer in the pre-Endgame MCU world. Between MCU fatigue brought on by some lack luster movies and shows and a major cultural real world shift with Trump winning with a mandate then the noise isn't quite as easy to ignore as in the past.
Disney/Marvel Studios' plans for future projects do not appear to have been run through the approval meter of the screaming zealots who see anything other than their fantasies about themselves on screen
and Kennedy is terrified at making another movie because they still have lived down the Sequel mistakes
Terrified? I'm not certain about that, since the Rey movie is still going forward, and that character was
one of the central sources of criticism hurled at the Sequel trilogy.
I mean just look at how quickly they had Mackie make a statement after the Captain America doesn't represent America commotion. In the past I am not even sure they would have responded at all but now they feel they have to, at least to some degree.
In the past, they did not respond to this degree, so its astoundingly wrongheaded and
telling PR if Disney/Marvel Studios pushed the
Black Male Actor cast as the Black Captain America to clarify a statement similar to one Chris Evans made during the release of
Captain America: The First Avenger, yet Evans did not not receive mass hatred or calls to apologize. Yeah, no one has to wonder why.
Nearly 60 years old, and the
Marvel Superheroes Cap cartoons are among the best adaptations of Marvel characters.