“I couldn’t control you,”
“I couldn’t control you,”
While I am proud of her for defending herself, I cannot believe the other crew members and managers just stood there and watched her get attacked 🤨!!!! I worked at McDonald’s as a teenager, and was a manager too, and there is no way my 18 year old ass would have stood for that shit, and calmly spoken to a customer tha…
the Dora Milaje School for Wishing a Motherfucker Would.
Sis held him in place and went to work on his jaw. She was not playing.
Psst. Don’t tell anybody, bc it would ruin the joke, but he’s totally keeping the headphones and is actually truly grateful for them. But he couldn’t resist the joke about offering them up for trade.
The grenade scene. Where all the big macho men ducked for cover, and the only two people to even think of saving everyone else were Peggy and the shrimp.
I love how Tommy Lee Jones seems to have wandered in from a more traditional WWII movie and is vaguely irritated that all this superhero stuff is happening around him.
Dum-Dum Dugan was for sure my fav Howling Commando in the film and I’ll definitely liked them all. Though I’m not sure I’ve disliked Neil McDonough in anything I’ve seen him in.
You’re not wrong, but I always point to how Peggy Carter sees what kind of man he is before the serum. Which helps sell her felt betrayal when she misreads the situation with the Dormer character and Cap eventually earning her affectation again.
Peggy Carter! I keep hoping that the women who did war work saw themselves in Peggy.
Brad Bird has already made his Fantastic Four movies. He just called them The Incredibles.
Johnston was adamant that the entire story (minus the bookends) should take place in WWII. (Marvel wanted Cap in modern day by the end of the first act).
His feeling was, you have to have the audience care about Steve Rogers before they care about Captain America, so you gotta take time with the origin.
A few errors even about First Avenger: Sebastian Stan sells his admiration for Steve Rogers’ courage pre-transformation, which is essential. And the song and dance routine is wonderful, which is why it doesn’t derail the movie but impels the upbeat tone. Forgetting it is amazing. And most of all the big finale is…
To my ear the MCU has produced two great themes, both by Alan Silvestri: the Avengers theme and Captain America’s March. In fact, I go further: not only is Cap’s March worthy of standing with such as John Williams’ iconic Superman March, I’d even go so far as to call it the only music that’s more patriotic than The…
FWIW, Agents of Shield has plenty of lines where various Hydra members are called Nazis.
Sincerity doesn’t have to equal hokiness, and this movie understands the difference perfectly. Cap does the hard things knowing exactly what they might cost, and Chris Evans shows that in every scene. This movie turns me into a pile of goo every time I see it, and I’m not afraid to admit it.
Ha! Its funny cause its cancerous.
Captain America really is great at evoking that simpler, more innocent time when everyone could agree that punching Nazis was a Good Thing. Man, remember 2011?
For all its flaws, people still get emotional (well, online-emotional) over references to The First Avenger. That’s because the actors made them memorable and Johnston knew to respect that sincerity.