Friday, 27 May 2016

Captain America - agent of Hydra? ?? May 27

Now that AoS S3 is over, AC has been cancelled, and ‘Most Wanted’ has been cancelled pre-production once more, Marvel must have been bored, or something, since it came up with the idea of Captain America/Steve Rogers being an agent of Hydra all along. To paraquote the Old Testament book of Leviticus, the Hell?

Let us start again. In ‘Civil War’ the movie, captain America came off the screen as a right arsehole at times, especially when it came to Tony and his family. Tony himself can be a big-mouthed jackass from time to time, but he tries, he really tries, and the entire ‘Civil War’ movie is actually based on this. Steve has ideas of what a heroic life should be life, and so does Tony, and neither of them like each other’s idea, and then along comes colonel Zemo with his own grievances against the Avengers, and it all goes to Hell, and Stark and Rogers aren’t talking to each other anymore, and the Avengers are outlawed, and -

Okay, ‘Civil War’ was a very impressive piece of mass media, let us be honest here. The characters were well rounded and real people, the background and its details was awesome too, and Black Panther and Spider-Man were introduced (and will be getting their own movies in the future), and the Ant-Man kicked ass too.

Of course, this being the MCU, there was at least one sticky point – Ant-Man the movie. In the credits scene, the audience saw Cap and Falcon actually capture Bucky and working on de-brainwashing him; the Accords are mentioned too. Then comes ‘Civil War’, which seems to be ignoring this scene, as Barnes is out at large once more, and not really de-brainwashed too. Tough break, Ant-Man the movie.

Otherwise, however, ‘Civil War’ fits well enough with the rest of the MCU continuity; in many ways, it seems to be a direct continuation of the previous Captain film, ‘The Winter Soldier’. Now what?
Let us start with an important point – Hydra is gone in MCU. The Avengers, the agents of S.H.I.E.L.D., had finished it off between the ‘Age of Ultron’ film and now. Crossbones/Brock Rumlow, who is an important Hydra-related villain in the comics, (and ‘Winter Soldier’ movie) is killed in the first half-hour of the film and is forgotten almost immediately in all the fallout that follows. Hydra as such is gone in MCU, general Talbot in AoS has destroyed it with S.H.I.E.L.D.’s help, so that’s it, the odds of Hydra returning to MCU is possible, but until the next MCU movie or series features it coming back, (and Werner von Strucker, for example, is still alive in AoS) it is gone. Case in point – Helmut Zemo. In the comics, he is an important figure in Hydra hierarchy; in MCU, he was a native of Sokovia, a colonel of its’ secret service, who had an axe to grind with the Avengers because of the ‘Age of Ultron’ events: his family got killed. He was not Hydra, he helped the Avengers to fall apart all the same – so it is quite likely that any villains that the Avengers, (or the agents of S.H.I.E.L.D.) will face in the future, will not be Hydra. Fair enough. So-

So now, Marvel comics release a new Steve Rogers series, where Captain America is an agent of Hydra. The Hell?

Yes, Marvel comics and MCU tend to be treated as separate entities, but they (especially the comics) seem to be blurring the lines, especially with the comics’ AoS story lines. S.H.I.E.L.D., by now, has become established in comics, and it seems to be reflecting the MCU, as Avengers and agents (and an occasional X-Man or so) interacting openly with each other in the universe. Now what?

Into the mix comes Grant Ward, who, in the MCU, was a Hydra agent, who eventually became a host for Hive, an InHuman villain in the last part of AoS S3, who almost turned a large part of the world’s human population into InHumans or Primitives – take your pick. Grant was a controversial character – odds are, that at first the writers planned to redeem him…and then changed their mind; but frankly, AoS the TV series constantly suffered from continuity gaps, canon controversies, some nasty characters who were supposed to be ‘White Hats’, and etc.; the point is that some people hate him, a lot, and others are solidly behind him, precisely because of this controversy, which is why, one suspects, the show had him finally killed in mid-S3 finale, and Hive became an independent character instead.

And also? AoS S3 finale was reminiscent of the first captain America film finale, where Steve and Peggy say good-bye and Steve vanishes, until Fury and S.H.I.E.L.D. discover him in the Arctic. That is fine, except that here it was director Coulson, rather than Lincoln Campbell, who was supposed to perish alongside Hive.

To elaborate: ever since the mid-season S3 finale Coulson was growing increasingly haunted by him killing Ward on Maveth and needed repentance/closure/whatever for his actions. On the other hand, the first episode of S3 showed Daisy and Lincoln working their powers in perfect tandem to defeat Andrew/Lash; it was one of the worst episodes of the entire series, but still it was canon.

Again, it could have been a very dramatic finale – Coulson sacrificing himself to stop Hive, to fix his mistakes and shortcomings, and to give his adopted daughter, Daisy, and her new boyfriend, Lincoln, a fresh chance to be themselves, their own people, free from the past influences of Hive and Grant Ward. If, six months later, Daisy and Lincoln were on the outs, it would still work and create a further dramatic conflict between the team members, not unlike to how it went on ‘Civil War’ between the various Avengers…but it did not happen. Instead, Lincoln is dead, Daisy is swinging in the wind, and Coulson was demoted from his directorial office in S.H.I.E.L.D. This, too, can work – after all, after the Avengers’ Civil War, we had an ‘age of Darkness’ – we had Stark as a director of S.H.I.E.L.D., we had Osborn (and hey, he is Spidey’s archnemesis, so maybe he will appear in MCU in time?), and we had all sort of nastiness afterwards. Maybe Coulson’s demotion will make sense in S4 when it comes to screen…but mostly, this is just another AoS clusterfuck. Ian Quinn is gone, the Koenigs are gone, Hunter & Morse are gone, Deathlok, Joey – they all just left the show without a reasonable explanation. At least Mitchell, who played Lincoln, had closure for his character, cough.

Back to the comics – now, the comic version of S.H.I.E.L.D, has Grant Ward in it – as S.H.I.E.L.D. spy in Hydra, at least for now, (building an army of Iron Man rip-offs, in a plot similar to Iron Man 3 movie), and Captain is Hydra. Already there are theories that the Red Skull has used a cosmic cube to accomplish this, but it does not matter. People are upset. People are pissed. Moreover, people are claiming that the writers for ‘Steve Rogers the Hydra agent’ have ripped-off this idea out of AoS S1 (Grant Ward). Now what?

Well, it is ‘just’ a comic – people will get over it…eventually, because it is captain America, so odds are that this idea will go down like a lead balloon especially at first (and later on too, if this trend picks up momentum). Comics themselves are a confusing medium of mass media, especially Marvel with their interactive and intertwining plotlines, so odds are that the shock of cap being Hydra will be buried, eventually.

However, an aftermath, an aftertaste will remain. People will not forget how their beloved character was turned into a ‘Nazi’ (something that MCU tried to distance itself from, especially on AoS, again), and since the Internet is a ‘global village’ of sorts, this controversy will cause problems, especially among Marvel fans, for a time at least.

However, wait! Cap’s predicament is supposed to reflect on real world’s issues! Donald Trump and the right wing! No, just no. Trump is a most unpleasant man, but he, currently, is executing one of the basic features of the American society: equal opportunity for everyone. He saw, for himself, a chance to become the president of the U.S., and he took it. On the other hand, an American citizen named Krystal Lake, (works in Home Depot), used the same opportunity not to enter politics, but to order a custom cap, with a pithy slogan: ‘America was never great’ or something along those lines. As a result, Trump may become president of the U.S., while Lake has a cap with a pithy slogan, the end. The moral?

Yes, Americans are a people with a freedom of speech and they use it, and they will keep it, and yes, the American president is elected by the people (and for the people…maybe). Guess what, there are plenty of people behind Trump, and no pithy message will be able to change this, not alone.
Do you know what happened in Russia, after their WWI misadventure? The Royal family was deposed, but not by the Communists, no. By the aristocracy and intelligentsia, by the people who would be later depicted, (sometimes), as monarchists. They were not, not really – they honestly intended to depose the monarch and create something between a democratic republic (the U.S.) and a constitutional monarchy (the U.K.), not the USSR. Only, while they discussed, debated and talked, Vladimir Lenin (look him up on the Wikipedia, if you don’t know him) and his communistic comrades got together, produced several simple and straight-to-the-point slogans, and won the hearts of the masses – workers and peasants, primarily, but the rest of the social strata of Russia of that time was present too. The result? The USSR. Was it built to last? Gorbachev broke it from the inside, and ta-dah, we have Perestroika, and then, 25 years later, the U.S. finally realized that one more victory like this one, and they will be undone, so they…got involved in Middle East, and northern Africa, and now they are much more undone than before, for Obama the democrat just continued what George Bush II the republican has started, and- Enter the Trump.

Trump is not a very good person. He already backed out of a debate with Sanders, for example. However, he is a man with concrete, specific ideas, and people appreciate it. The international democracy, the global village that the U.S. has been practicing since the Cold War and beyond isn’t for everyone – hence the rise of new right-wing practice, hence the growing insistence that the Middle Eastern refuges go home or wherever/whatever, just – out of Europe. If Trump wins the election, he might be the American version of Gorbachev – but pithy slogans on custom-ordered headwear will not prevent this – and neither will comics. How does Captain America, as well as the rest of Marvel relate to the ‘Trump situation’ directly? They do not. As a result, Marvel is stuck with Cap being Hydra, and – nothing more, at least for now. Maybe Tony is a member of the communistic Leviathan or something like that, who knows? It is not the point.

The point is that Marvel has overshot its’ mark completely. If Captain America being Hydra is some sort of a pithy statement, that is. Otherwise? It is just another plot twist to boost up the sales, in the worst traditions of AoS the TV series, and it will reverberate/backfire on the Marvel comic series as such as well.


End

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