christoast
Christoast
christoast

Look. I like Jalopnik, and most of the authors. But none of you are pilots, as far as I can tell, and it really shows.

You know how many times I’ve seen people cross the active when they’re not supposed to, especially at municipal airports? How many times I’ve misheard ATC and been corrected by my co-pilot, or vice

A Lynchian hellscape for you!

Cap is by far the best realized character in the entire franchise, and I think a big reason why is that the same 2 writers have written all his movies, plus this newest Avengers movie (and the next one.) There’s a consistency to how he’s portrayed that the others don’t have.

See I’m not sure you can make the argument that he has grown the most when he makes the same mistakes again and again.

Cap and Tony’s arcs have been complimentary and opposite in the larger story of the MCU—I think each one of them informs the other and makes it better than it would’ve been on its own. Tony goes from War Profiteer to Privatizing World Peace to, ultimately, Good Soldier who embraces government control of his superhero

It really is the only fully fleshed out arc. And embodies EVERYTHING the MCU is all about.

Here for this. Steve’s arc from idealistic hero trying to do the best good for the world to paranoid loner who has watched everything get taken from him by people who thought they knew better is the core of the MCU for me.

I don’t know, isn’t every movie just: Tony Stark is a shallow jerkoff, leading a life most of us only dream of, but then he gets a case of the sads, which he invariably gets over by knocking out whoever the villain happens to be.

Haven’t seen Infinity War yet (so maybe my opinion will change after this evening)- but completely disagree. Maybe this comes down to a Team Tony Vs Team Cap preference, but the things Marvel has done with Captain America / Steve Rogers are by far the highlights of the entire MCU. Tony started it all, but I think he