The whole point of the Steve Rogers character is that he's the guy who points stuff like that out and fights for "the dream," not the reality. This is the guy who saw Nixon shoot himself and got so disillusioned he quit being Cap for a while.
The whole point of the Steve Rogers character is that he's the guy who points stuff like that out and fights for "the dream," not the reality. This is the guy who saw Nixon shoot himself and got so disillusioned he quit being Cap for a while.
They also show Warpath int here, and he never really showed up as a villain in the series either; I think it's some kind of Easter Egg character, but the only possibilities I can think of are Alpha the Ultimate Mutant or maybe the Gremlin from the Hulk comics. This is the show that gave us a flashback to the 1960s…
Nope; Isaiah is the subject of experiments in 1942, a year after Cap was created, and they're stated to be attempts to recreate the serum that was lost when Erskine was assassinated.
It was pitched that way in early publicity, but when the story was published it was set in 1942; we even see Isaiah reading some Captain America comics before he's subjected to the serum.
Yes, he was. Eve The Truth miniseries shows that Isaiah Bradley post-dates Steve Rogers.
Nah. Brainchild has black hair, a mustache, and a goatee, and way less of a shirt on.
Forget that…in the 3/4 perspective of the running animation, there's a bald guy in green with a giant head running alongside the other villains.
Hell, it's not as if Donald Trump will win New York, either.
Unfortunately, those writers will be E.L. James and Dan Brown.
I am as far beyond mutants as they are beyond humans!
Some Hairballs Are Bigger Than Others
The Fresh Prince Is Dead
Billy Drago is best known for the role of Frank Nitti!
Unfortunately, Movie Hawkeye is based on the tedious Ultimate version of the character, and with his wife and kids and farm you're not getting Pizza Dog and the tracksuit Draculas anytime soon.
Technically the second arc is that stupid stuff with the serial killer in New York City.
Though he absolutely loves the SAS.
I can't believe no one TWIGGED to this before.
That's kind of it, though: Marvel's villains are generally superstrong people, expert fighters, vague mental abilities, or folks who shoot energy beams.
It's a perfectly good Bond movie with a fatal Denise Richards-sized tumor.
An amicus brief has been filed by people.