

When Spock died in Wrath of Khan, it was Kirk's reaction to Spock's death that created the biggest emotional impact, because at that point these characters had been friends for decades, had saved each others lives for years and were damn near inseparable. Another example I can think of to illustrate my point is Kirk and Spock. And it was stressed that neither of them particularly enjoyed fighting each other, it's just that their friendship did not supersede their philosophical beliefs. Not to give the original Civil War any credit, but Stark and Steve fighting each other was given weight by their decades of friendship. And, in writing, the best way to get an audience to empathize with a character is with a character's reaction to and with other characters. Flaws are great, they make characters more relatable, gives them that human element, I accept Steve's flaws, they make him dynamic, but AvX was missing the two essential elements of a good story: 1) a good story needs to revolve around the characters first, plot second, because at this point most of Marvel's characters are decades old IPs and cultural juggernauts and they are what draw the readers. What would possess Marvel to do that to their characters, when, at that point, sales were already showing signs of falling, I'll never understand. It was a poorly written event wherein all the characters were out-of-character and made to look horrible, Steve included.

Trust me, no one on this planet shares your disdain of AvX more than I. Would never claim that Steve, once he gets worked up, doesn't have a temper. The fight with Stark at the end, before Steve stopped and surrendered, did take things too far. In Civil War once he realized innocent people were getting hurt or being put in danger, Cap immediately surrendered, in AvX once innocent civilians were getting killed all he thought about was being proven right, geeze even now that AvX line leaves a bad taste in my mouth.Yeah, okay, you do have a point there. Which makes that line in AvX I mentioned even worse. But the one part where his stubbornness was a flaw and not a strength, IMO, was at the end, where Cap and Iron Man are fighting and it gets to the point where the civilians had to jump in and attempt to restrain Cap and help him see the damage and danger he was putting the civilians in. 2 (2017) and Ant-Man and the Wasp (2018), but only for flashback scenes.Concerning Civil War, Cap was and is right about it. They previously used this tactic in Ant-Man (2015), Captain America: Civil War (2016), Guardians of the Galaxy: Vol. This is the first time Marvel has done de-aging for characters for an entire movie.
CAPTAIN AMERICA CIVIL WAR 2 2019 MOVIE
Jackson (Nick Fury) and Clark Gregg (Phil Coulson) will be digitally de-aged in order for their characters to look like their younger selves, since the movie is set in the 1990s. It's not about trying to understand everything. "He talked a little bit about how making a Marvel Cinematic Universe movie is fitting this one piece into a bigger picture, and giving yourself over to that.
