From a brooklyn kid to the man who held mjolnir, steve rogers has always been the hero we needed - scoopwhoop

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Captain America has played the second fiddle to Tony Stark throughout the course the Marvel Cinematic Universe. Of course, Tony Stark had started it all. He was the genius playboy


billionaire.  But when you make your children watch these movies, as you will someday, who would rather have them become? Because, unless you have a few billion dollars hidden away


somewhere, the best you can hope for is Steve Rogers. Mind you, I said Steve Rogers, not Captain America. That’s because Steve was a hero even before he even took steroids super-soldier


serum. He was a malnourished kid from 40s’ Brooklyn with a plethora of health issues, who got beaten up more times than he had food in a day.  But every damn time, he fought back. He would


get knocked right into the dirt and every time he would get up and fight back.  I can do this all day.  _-Steve Rogers_ And it was as simple as that. HE MIGHT HAVE DRAPED HIMSELF IN A


STAR-SPANGLED BANNER FOR MOST OF HIS LIFE BUT GOD DAMN, THE ONLY THING HE WAS EVER LOYAL TO WAS HIS OWN MORALS.  Now some might say that it’s moral certainty that makes him a boring


character. But as if you’ve watched the Captain America trilogy, you know that’s untrue. The trilogy not only finds a way to compete with the Batman trilogy as best superhero trilogy of all


time but does so will less material at hand. _Captain America_ worked despite him fighting characters that one might call complicated as all human beings are, motivated by their history,


guilt, anger, vengeance but they were not twisted. They were just humans.  ADVERTISEMENT Marvel Studios had to work within the realistic (Hollywood standard) boundaries of these human


possibilities and manage to develop a character that was supposedly so blonde that one could literally taste steak and beer with white America written all over it.  But that was not the


case. The best thing, that _Captain America: The First Avenger_ does is that it removes nationalism from Rogers’ motivations and firmly bases it on his experiences, his morals and his sense


of brotherhood with Bucky Barnes and most importantly, with his fellow humans.  There is obviously a prickly nationalistic flavour to his name, but right before his conception as a superhero


he promises his creator, Dr Erskine that he would always stay what he was – not a perfect soldier, but a good man.  _Winter Soldier _drives this point home when it makes Steve face an


impossible choice about who to trust. Rogers character moves like a freight train in the face of moral chaos. Furthermore, the movie introduces us to characters like Falcon and the Winter


Soldier.  THE MOVIE OFFERS SIGNIFICANT CHARACTER DEVELOPMENT FOR STEVE AND STILL STANDS TALL AS THE BEST MOVIE IN THE MCU FOR THE MATURITY AND COMPLEXITY OF ITS CONTENT.  ADVERTISEMENT IT


ALSO GIVES BRILLIANT CHARACTERS LIKE BLACK WIDOW AND NICK FURY TO ACTUALLY BE A SIGNIFICANT PART OF AN EXCEPTIONALLY WELL-DIRECTED ACTION THRILLER.  That being said, when _Civil War_ was


announced with the amount cast and characters it had, there was a high chance that all that development would fizzle out amidst the glamour of what seemed like a B-Team _Avengers _film.  It


didn’t seem like that there would be enough screen time for Steve and Bucky to drive their character arcs forward.  But instead, it was a street fight with everything on the line. The


writers and directors made sure that we got an emotionally satisfying film with Steve and Bucky at the heart of it, while not pushing away important characters like Tony Stark to the


sidelines.  IN FACT, TONY STARK’S CHARACTER SHONE BRIGHTER IN THIS_ CAPTAIN AMERICA_ FILM THAT IT HAD SINCE _IRON-MAN_ IN 2008.  ADVERTISEMENT The scale of the film meant that it could not


possibly have the objectivity of _Winter Soldier; _it even looks flat in comparison to the action sequences in its predecessor. But it brings the major characters to the MCU to a standoff,


not driven to fight against an army of aliens, but against who they truly are as people who stand in different corners of the same ship, unsure of where to sail.  The Captain America films


have the strongest narratives of any of the MCU films. They are driven by strong characters who can be recognised as individuals even amongst Gods and Titans.  Chris Evans does a beautiful,


yet underrated job at recreating an ancient character on screen who just wants to do what’s right and has to manoeuvre through the tripwires of the world to achieve that.  IN THE END, THE


TRILOGY MANIFESTS ITSELF AS THE PAINTING OF A TRUE HERO, TELLING US THE STORY OF THE CHAOS IN THOSE BEAUTIFUL COLOURS AND THE PRICE THAT NEEDED TO BE PAID.