They probably don't have much confidence with this new Cap and so they are adding Hulk to it.
Harrison Ford as well
They probably don't have much confidence with this new Cap and so they are adding Hulk to it.
Harrison Ford as well
Not really. They were just logical choices since Cap was working for SHIELD. Plus Widow had a part in the Winter Soldier story in the comic.You mean like how there was no confidence in Winter Soldier so that's why they added Black Widow and Nick Fury to it?
Not really. They were just logical choices since Cap was working for SHIELD. Plus Widow had a part in the Winter Soldier story in the comic.
Not really. They were just logical choices since Cap was working for SHIELD. Plus Widow had a part in the Winter Soldier story in the comic.
Liv Tyler returns as Betty Ross in Captain America 4: New World Order? Interesting, and yeah, the Leader is one of the villains, but the film--with Spellman as head writer & coming off of the momentum from The Falcon and the Winter Soldier--should not feel like Best MCU Hulk Outing 2.0 (unless Feige, et al., pull strings to take it in that direction). No matter how many years this takes place after TFATWS, Sam--and the world should still have some settling in with his earned role. That, and I want to see him mature into a far stronger leader (as a nod to the next Avengers film) by this time in his super-hero-ing.
Far stronger leader? Sam is a trained and experienced former military officer.
Vox's Aja Romano has written an excellent article that goes into the complicated details of the Jonathan Majors allegations and his possible abusive past and present, which also covers how “deny, attack, and reverse victim/offender" (DARVO) and race factor into the reporting of these allegations.
Of particular note:
The whole article is worth spending a few minutes to read.Shortly after the news of Majors’s arrest broke, social media began buzzing with anecdotal reports that Majors, who received a master’s in drama from Yale, had a long and well-known history of abusive behavior in both the Yale and New York theater scenes. Social media users recalled a since-deleted tweet made in February by filmmaker and director’s assistant A.B. Allen. “There’s a particular actor, relatively new on the scene, who Twitter has violently fallen head over heels for,” Allen wrote, “who, in actuality, is a vicious, cruel, abusive human being, both professionally and in his personal life, and every new viral thirst tweet about him drives me insane.”
After the news about Majors broke, Allen appeared to confirm (again in a since-deleted tweet) that the earlier tweet referred to Majors. Allen then clarified that they had known Majors to be “emotionally violent/professionally abusive” but not physically violent.
In addition to Allen, actor and stage director Tim Nicolai was even more pointed, alleging in a since-deleted tweet that “folks at Yale and the broader NYC community have known about [Majors] for years.”
“He’s a sociopath and abuser and that is how virtually everyone speaks about him,” Nicolai stated. “It’s a shame it took this long for him to be reported.”
Neither Allen nor Nicolai provided specific allegations of things Majors had done. When asked by multiple social media users why neither of them came forward before this to warn the public about him, both Allen and Nicolai pointed toward their unwillingness to name and involve the people they say Majors harmed. Both have since made their Twitter accounts private.
Would it really be possible for a pattern of disturbing, “sociopathic” behavior to go unaddressed for years while Majors rose through the ranks of Hollywood?
Good riddance.Disney Lays Off Ike Perlmutter, Chairman of Marvel Entertainment
https://www.nytimes.com/2023/03/29/business/media/disney-marvel-ike-perlmutter.html?smid=tw-share
Yeah, that bit surprised me, too, especially considering people like Harvey Weinstein, Kevin Spacey, and Johnny Depp. Granted, they were all old mainstays and Majors is a recent rising star, but the climate has always been there for such behavior to fester.That was an interesting and even handed read. It'll be interesting to see what comes out of this. The only thing that did make me go WTF was this line:
I mean this has happened way too often.
With the same caveat of how this effects the MCU is small potatoes to the larger issues at play here, the way they've set up Kang (along with Loki) allows recasting more easily. Not that recasting has been an issue before.If this did escalate you have to wonder what effect this will have on the MCU given Kang seems pretty pivotal to Phase 5.
I appreciate there's more important things at stake here than the MCU obviously!
If the social media anecdotes are to believed, his behavior has been an open a secret for a long time, much like other predators in Hollywood.Really, I'm surprised the MCU doesn't vet its actors more carefully before signing them to multi-year contracts. You'd think they'd run background checks as thorough as the CIA's, given the money at stake.
That's a looooooong time coming! Just wish it happened 20 years ago. Alas.Disney Lays Off Ike Perlmutter, Chairman of Marvel Entertainment
https://www.nytimes.com/2023/03/29/business/media/disney-marvel-ike-perlmutter.html?smid=tw-share
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