![]() ![]() “It dives into trying to understand that question better because that's a big question we're all asking.” No one’s spilling details about who might be wielding that shield at the end of “The Falcon and the Winter Soldier.” However, the examination of whether or not Captain America is still important as a symbol is what Stan, 38, says he “loved” about the series. “What does it mean if he succeeds? What does it mean if he fails?” “The thing I most wanted to explore was the conflict of a Black man becoming Captain America or not,” Spellman says. ![]() “One of them doesn't really have a home, but they both have different life issues waiting for them.”Īs the post-“Endgame” landscape has thrown the world into geopolitical turmoil, Sam and Bucky have reason to team up again, and the American government decides to get involved when the country needs “new heroes." Yet as much as Spellman liked the bantering duo, he also wanted to dig deeper into Sam’s backstory and mindset. “They're both trying to make the best of it,” Stan says. The new series finds Sam, an Air Force veteran, working with the military on missions while Bucky, Steve’s childhood best friend and fellow World War II soldier, is having an existential crisis and making amends for decades of subterfuge and murder as a brainwashed assassin. View Gallery: Marvel movie binge: Best order to watch all 32 films (so far) Need a superhero binge?: Here's the best viewing order of all 23 Marvel movies 'WandaVision': How that magical 'WandaVision' finale sets the stage for the next round of Marvel movies Instead, the show shines the spotlight on his old pals Sam Wilson (Anthony Mackie), aka Falcon, and Bucky Barnes (Sebastian Stan), the Winter Soldier, in the style of a buddy action film, even as it tackles timely themes of patriotism and race. Like the recent hit “ WandaVision,” “Falcon” catches up with members of the Marvel Cinematic Universe after the events of “ Avengers: Endgame.” But instead of a sitcom vibe, the new six-episode series (premiering Friday, then weekly) shares the global adventure feel of the “Captain America” movies, although Cap – Chris Evans’ earnest do-gooder Steve Rogers – is gone. “It's the main character, my man,” says creator and head writer Malcolm Spellman. Watch Video: Sebastian Stan, Anthony Mackie talk Captain America's futureĭisney+’s new Marvel TV series “The Falcon and the Winter Soldier” features two of its three primary personalities right there in the title.
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