Posts Tagged ‘Captain America’
New York Avengers Set Pics: The Archer, The Assassin, and The Super Soldier
Comingsoon.net has a ton more pics to look at. Here Captain America, Hawkeye and the Black Widow team up.Hawkeye’s suit is is totally on point. Ultimates style. Very nice. Take a peek.
Disney D23 Expo: Avengers
Things are really heating up over Marvel’s Avengers. I’m trying not to have spoiler overload on FHTI. But some things just can’t be avoided. I have a video and pics introducing the cast at the D23 Expo. And also a few pics. Chris Evans, Samuel L. Jackson, Mark Ruffalo, and Director Joss Whedon were not in attendance. I guess we’ll be hearing about that scene soon. Below is an excerpt from Comingsoon.net about the footage shown at the expo.
Feige revealed writer-director Joss Whedon is, at the time of this writing, two weeks out from wrapping The Avengers and he had cobbled together a special preview for D23. The lights dimmed and the following played out…
Loki (Tom Hiddleston) takes his place in a prison of glass and metal. We presume he’s on the S.H.I.E.L.D. Hellicarrier. Loki assesses his surroundings, but doesn’t appear impressed. More amused. Nick Fury types away on a keypad nearby, threatening that if Loki even touches the glass, he’ll meet a certain doom. But again, Loki isn’t deterred by this. He’s confident this prison won’t hold him. Fury begs to differ, saying it was built to hold something powerful.
“You threaten my world with war. Steal a force you can’t control. You have made me desperate,” Fury says. Hinting, of course, to the Tesseract (the Cosmic Cube) seen in Captain America. Loki and Fury continue their tête-à-tête and we find that the Avengers have been assembled in another room and they’re listening in. Elsewhere on the Helicarrier, we get a glimpse of Maria Hill (Cobie Smulders), also monitoring the Fury/Loki encounter.
This extended scene flows well; the dialogue has a tight rhythm as these two large personalities, separated by glass, face one another. The intensity palpable. One gets the sense if Loki wants out… he’ll get the hell out. But there’s something else simmering in his motivations and, of course, we don’t know what it is, because this scene gives way to a second teaser trailer, of sorts.
Enticing imagery that flies by furiously: A S.H.I.E.L.D. jet soars towards a city. Thor raises his hammer to the sky. Hawkeye taking aim with his bow and arrow. Loki standing on the back of a military vehicle (at least that’s what it looked like, it flew by). Steve Rogers stands before a hi-tech closet. The doors pull away to reveal his revamped costume. Thor slams his hammer down on the shield of a crouching Captain America (training perhaps?). This is all inter-cut with Tony Stark, standing behind a bar making a drink, as he makes an Avengers “roll call”: Two highly trained assassins, a “Demigod,” a “living legend who actually lives up to the legend”… “Somehow you managed to piss them all off,” Stark adds. We find he’s talking to Loki, who is standing in the room with him.
Loki responds to this with, “I have an army.”
Stark quickly shoots back, “We have a Hulk.”
The presentation ends with a close-up shot of Mark Ruffalo’s Hulk snarling at the camera, then, The Avengers logo slams onto the screen.
Avengers: On Set Captain America, Thor Battle
I really wasn’t going to continue putting spoiler footage but why not right!?!? With only two weeks of principle photography left to shoot the fans should get all that’s out there. And Marvel and Disney not really blocking any footage on YouTube we might as well go for it. So here you go.
Avengers Set Pics and Video
It seems some big deal went down on one of the Avengers sets. An explosion. Rubble. And people running all over the place. Pretty cool. But really no sign of the heroes. I suspect that it’s Loki destroying things. Or the rampaging Hulk.
First Look Captain America Super Soldier Video Game
Here we have our first look at Sega and Next Level Games Captain America game. A few screen shots and some concept designs for villians.
Concept Art: First Look At Marvel Paramounts Thor
On the heels of concept art for Captain America, come Chris Hemsworth as Thor. I truly have to say that Marvel is putting their money where their mouth is. They are a studio that is on fire. If they put forth the intensity of these conceptualized pictures on to the big screen “nothing will stop the juggernaut”. No pun intended. It all looks great to me. Cape, armor, breastplate, pants, boots, and the hammer. All I an say is Make Mine Marvel. lol
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Marvel’s Seige: Review and Musings
The long-lost FH2I contributor is back, and all it took was the latest Marvel “company-wide” crossover event to rein me in. I’m talking about Seige by Brian Michael Bendis and Oliver Coipel, the 4-issue mini-series dealing with the “problem” of Asgard, homeland to Thor and his fellow gods, floating above the rural town of Broxton, OK. SPOILERS AHEAD…
Now remember, in the few posts I have made, I’ve shared my dislike for these big events that claim huge ramifications as a result. I often feel like the best stories are told within a single title, based around a single character or team – not told in nearly every comic a publisher puts out and involving nearly every known (or unknown) character in the brand. You may also recall that I am not a weekly comic shop goer. Since January I’ve only been to the shop 3-4 times and have probably only picked up 15-20 comics in that time span. I’m nowhere near an authority on the matter. And picking up Seige was a bit intimidating as I was in the dark (no pun intended) about much of what had been happening in the Marvel U leading up to this event.
All that being said – Seige delivered, and may have just delivered Marvel a returning devout customer. The first I heard about Seige was that it was going to finally unite Marvel’s Big 3 heroes – Captain America, Iron Man, and Thor – who had been at odds for most of the last 4-5 years (more?). While fun titles such as New Avengers emerged during that time, the fans were not being treated to the classic Avengers team that revolved around the Big 3. And if you are like me, it got stale after a while. So, for that main reason Seige had piqued my interest.
Now I know the team-up of the Big 3 was short-lived – Steve Rogers will no longer be Captain America as he hands the shield over full-time to Bucky Barnes. But, that’s not going to last forever (I hope) and at least they are on the right track. The Avengers will finally feel like the Avengers again.
What I really loved about Seige was that it was so much more than this simple reunification that originally got me interested. In many ways it was a reclaiming of the true essence of the Marvel Universe. Much had change in that past few years, and for obsessive-compulsive traditionalists it became really hard to bear. But think about it – we found out that many of the heroes we loved in stories we loved were really aliens (see Secret Invasion), we watched as Earth’s Mightiest Heroes split up and we’re replaced by many heroes no one ever pictured as Avengers, we watched Norman Osborn (the once dead Spidey arch-nemesis Green Goblin) gain control of the top defense department in the government (see Dark Reign), flagship marvel hero Captain America was killed off, and, oh yeah, being a super-hero became illegal unless you became government toolie (see Civil War). And I imagine I’m leaving stuff out. Bottom line is a lot of stuff went down, and in many ways the landscape changed in the Marvel U (as they promised), many times not for better. I personally stopped reading comics because I just didn’t care about this all new Marvel world that was crafted.
So Seige brings the world’s greatest superheroes together again in an event I’d never imagined I’d care so much about – the defense of Asgard against Norman Osborn’s rogue Dark Avengers team of mostly villains disguised as heroes. As Asgard falls, the classic Avengers and heroes emerge, putting their differences aside to aid Thor, and once and for all set things straight in the world – the way it would have always been. Osborn is defeated, arrested, and his true (green) color is revealed. Captain America, Iron Man, Thor, and all the favorites show why they are the heroes, making Osborn’s teams look like the rag-tag wannabes they are. Finally, the Marvel U is beginning to look like, well… the Marvel U.
We also got some huge fights thanks mostly to the Sentry (who was really under the full-control of his evil side, the Void), and some long-overdue closure to the saga of the Golden Guardian of Good. His first big battle with Ares provided perhaps the most jaw-dropping moment of the series when he quite literally ripped the god of war into two pieces from head to toe – intestines and guts spilling everywhere. The battle with Thor took nearly everything out of the Son of Odin, and absolutely everything from the Sentry in what was really the only right way to kill him off. On paper, the only hero who matches up to Sentry is Thor (and I suppose the Hulk too, but he’s been just a bit preoccupied). Having tried the old loss of memory trick one too many times, in a very brief moment of clarity, Robert Reynolds asks the Thunder God to kill him to protect the world. Thor reluctantly but definitively obliges, sacrificing the Sentry and finally laying the Void to rest.
I’ve always thought the Sentry was a cool concept, and the original mini-series by Paul Jenkins and Jae Lee ranks as one of my favorites. But, I always wondered how he fit in as a full-time character. The idea got more legs than I think anyone could have imagined and deservedly so. It was finally time to say goodbye though, and I think they did so in a most honorable way. The Sentry dies a lesser known character in the Marvel pantheon, and yet true fans still know that there are few as powerful as he was. I’m sure we will eventually see the Sentry again, hopefully outside of regular continuity for the foreseeable future. But this death felt like a big deal, at least to me, and that is pretty impressive considering the character started out as a hoax.
And so, the point is that much of the Marvel U has been restored to the way things were before all these big cross-over events shook the world to its very core. The Big 3 (at least to some extent) are working together again, the ridiculous Super Human Registration Act has been overturned, and all the mainstays are alive and kicking. And I’m very excited about collecting comics again. A restarted Avengers and the new Steve Rogers-led Secret Avengers sound like a very promising jumping on point to me. Marvel is calling it the Heroic Age, and maybe Marvel is starting to realize that change is only good for time. After a while, we want our heroes back. Seige, in my opinion, has accomplished that.
Joss Whedon Helming ‘The Avengers’
Sources have reported that Marvel Studios has given the blessing for the creator of Buffy The Vampire Slayer, Angel, Firefly, Serenity, and Dollhouse (who has also wrote or co-wrote screenplays for Toy Story, Atlantis: The Lost Empire, Alien Resurrection and Titan A.E.) to take the big job; director of the much anticipated Avengers movie. Joss Whedon, a long time comic fan who not only continues to pen his own creations in that medium, is no stranger to the Marvel universe, writing Astonishing X-Men for a little while before handing it over to Warren Ellis. All of this being said, the choice to assign him is only a step in the right direction for the comic-to-movie business. Whether or not you agree or disagree with things he did during his run of X-Men, the man is a fan who knows his stuff, and has created, or aided in the creation of, plenty of memorable pop culture phenomena plain and simple. It should also be adressed that with how they are setting up quite a few movies to lead into this one(Iron Man 2, Thor, Captain America…Ant-Man?), Whedon has a lot riding on his shoulders. In short, though, I believe Marvel Studios, amidst their few folleys along the way, has been doing the right thing. DC could take a page out of Their book. If Whedon directed Green Lantern maybe we would have gotten Nathan Fillion as Hal Jordan instead of Ryan Reynolds (I won’t give up the ghost until the lights go down on openning day). The Avengers is slated for a May 4th, 2012 release. Cheers.
—ExSleepyInk
Chris Evans Is Captain America
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Captain America. The Sentinel of Liberty. The superhero icon of the United States. And arguably one of the greatest characters ever to grace the pages of a comic. Today he has been given to us in the guise of an actor. Many people may look down at who was chosen. Some of you are frowning as you read this. The title of my article was enough to do just that. But no one ever thinks just how bad this film could have been if the wrong actor was given the job to be Cap.
Chris Evans has accepted the role to play Captain America. A bit shocked, but not at all disappointed. I find myself very releaved that someone such as he was picked. I myself never saw that coming. Hey you cant blame me. We’re talking about the “Human Torch”. Evans wasn’t my pick. Although I believe he will be a solid Steve Rogers/Captain America. Now he will have to flex his acting muscles. Not only will he be trading dialogue with the extremely talented Hugo Weaving/The Red Skull. He will also have to stand with Robert Downy/Iron Man Jr, Chris Hemsworth/Thor. He’ll have to share screen time with Samuel Jackson/Nick Fury. To many people this is a scary thought. To me, it’s just just another day in Hollywood. Then again. I think Chris Evans is cool. He’s young enough. Built like Cap already. And he’s also been a superhero before.
The movie deal calls for three Captain America films and also to star in the Avengers. The First Avenger: Captain America is set to hit theaters in July 22,2011. You can catch Evans in the upcoming comic film The Losers in April.
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