Showing posts with label sharon carter. Show all posts
Showing posts with label sharon carter. Show all posts

Friday, March 21, 2014

Winter Soldier Blogathon, Day 4: My Pet Theories


C'mon. Who did you THINK was going to be at the top of the conspiracy post?
Let's just dive right in, shall we? Here are the interesting, but not terribly well-supported, theories about this movie that appeal to me most.

THE LITTLE THEORIES

Let's start with Mr. Ominous View of the City.
1. Robert Redford is the Red Skull (or someone like him). All right, this isn’t so much my theory as the entire internet’s theory, which makes me a bit suspicious of it, but here it is. Alexander Pierce, played by Robert Redford, is apparently some kind of SHIELD mucketymuck. He seems to be more on the political and administrative end than Nick Fury, who’s more of a hands-on director. And he’s said some fairly innocuous-sounding things with fairly obvious double meanings—things like, “Are you ready for the world to see who you really are?” Now, SHIELD might be a bureaucracy, but the storytelling style in SHIELD stories is pretty anti-bureaucratic. I don’t think anyone’s counted the number of times Nick Fury has had to cut through red tape with a machete (or an M-16 … or a nuclear missile …), but it’s got to be big. So a SHIELD-connected bureaucrat is likely to be an enemy of Nick Fury’s, and even more of an enemy to Captain America.
Pictured: the Handshake of Evil.
So why do I, and the internet, think he’s the Red Skull? First, because the Skull absolutely loves impersonating people in power—senators, Cabinet secretaries, powerful CEOs, you name it. Second, there’s no conclusive evidence that the Skull is actually dead. Oh, sure, we saw him get apparently vaporized by the Tesseract in the first movie, but that means bupkes in comic-land. The Skull has placed his consciousness inside the Cosmic Cube at least three times that I know of, and we know SHIELD has that. Third, the Skull was pulling the Winter Soldier’s strings for quite some time while Bucky was under Lukin’s control and the Skull was living in Lukin’s head. He’d be a good candidate for the job in the movie, too. Nazis make perfect villains.
Look, he's even mean to Nick Fury. Classic Red Skull, right there.
Now, I’m not 100% sold on this. I’m pretty well convinced that Alexander Pierce is somebody big and bad, but I’m not dead certain it’s the Red Skull. It’s too obvious, not least because that’s just about how it went down in the comics. I’m not all that sure the filmmakers are interested in repeating a villain this early in a film series no matter how many times Cap fought the Skull in the funnybooks. But it’s sure fun to think about.
And now, a transition.
2. The nurse across the hall is Agent 13. Pure speculation on my part, I admit, but I’m a lot surer about this. Emily van Camp is listed in the cast of this movie as “Agent 13”, but she hasn’t been seen at all except for that extremely brief shot of her in the UK trailer. Considering the huge importance of Sharon Carter in the Winter Soldier comics storyline, her absence is conspicuous. So I’m calling it now—whatever Sharon’s doing in this movie, it’s supposed to be a surprise reveal. And I’m having some trouble believing that the writers would go to so much trouble to set up some random neighbor of Cap’s in an opening scene if she weren’t important somehow. So my current theory is that Sharon is a plant, keeping an eye on Steve Rogers from across the hall while pretending to be a civilian nurse.
Not pictured: nurse outfit.
Why would SHIELD do this? There are any number of reasons, but the first one that comes to my mind is that, aside from the Avengers, Steve has no friends in the twenty-first century, and doesn’t seem interested in making any. He apparently spends his free time alone in the gym. That kind of isolation is going to cause some real psychological trouble down the line, so I wouldn’t be surprised if SHIELD tried to set a valuable operative up with some “starter friends” to ease him into his new situation. The last thing SHIELD needs is a self-destructive superhero. Besides, why would Captain America have normal neighbors? Wouldn’t they at least need to be vetted by SHIELD just to live in the same building? I’m calling it now—that nurse is no nurse.
Still not buying it, Marvel.
3. The Steve-Natasha romance ain’t happening (but the Bucky-Natasha romance might). Yeah, I know there are set photos of Steve and Natasha making out (like that’s not the world’s oldest way to hide your face from security cameras and/or passersby). And there’s a shot in the UK trailer that shows Natasha sitting on the bed of what appears to be a shared motel room. But while all that’s a pretty good indicator that Steve and Natasha go on the run together in this movie, and it might even lead to the beginnings of a romance between them, I’m calling the ball now—that relationship is going nowhere. For one thing, if my theory about Agent 13 is correct, Natasha’s actively trying to set Steve up with somebody else. For another, I think Natasha’s past with the Winter Soldier is too good a twist for the filmmakers to pass up. I mean, is there a better way to ratchet up the drama than to find out that the guy who’s been trying to kill you all movie is a) your former best friend and b) the former lover of your current whatever-Natasha-is? No. No, there is not.
I can't tell whether Cap is looking at the Widow, the body, or the middle distance. It's quite distracting.
Plus there’s that body-under-the-sheet scene. Natasha’s touching the face like it’s someone who matters to her, and Steve’s right there, so it’s not him. Open speculation is that it’s either Fury or Bucky, and my money’s on the latter. Which brings me to:
Does Maria Hill never change her clothes?
4. Fake death(s). Fury gets visibly bashed up and possibly killed in those videos. Bucky’s always been high on the casualty list. Neither character is actually someone whom the writers would want to throw away, and both characters are known for faking their deaths on multiple occasions in the comics. You heard it here first—that’s a fake body under the sheet. And it might not be the only one in the movie. Didn’t The Avengers mention Life Model Decoys?

*************
And now, the big theories. I apologize in advance if I spoil something for you—I have no advance knowledge of this movie that the rest of the internet doesn’t have, so if I end up calling it right, just assume I’m psychic. Or psychotic. One of the two. But if you’re interested, here are the primary ravings of my mad, fannish brain.

OF COURSE my big theories are about this guy.
BIG THEORY ONE: Bucky is a super-soldier. I’m not just talking about the mechanical arm here. My personal pet theory—and the one I most hope to see on the big screen on April 4—is that James Buchanan Barnes was already a kind of super-soldier, sort of a B-list Captain America, before his apparent death in The First Avenger. Why do I think this? Well, let’s start with my (admittedly speculative) evidence, and then deal with the major objections to the theory.
Seriously, what drugs is he on here?
First, we know from The First Avenger that Bucky was a victim of some kind of Hydra medical experimentation. When Cap comes to break him out, he finds a bunch of prisoners (the future Howling Commandos) being used as a slave labor force … and he mysteriously finds Bucky in a separate medical wing, from which no prisoner has ever returned. When Cap enters the right room—from which mad scientist Arnim Zola has just conveniently removed a bunch of papers—he finds Bucky strapped down on a table, apparently drugged and deliriously babbling his name, rank, and serial number. It’s not likely he was just being tortured—the setup is too elaborate, and Bucky’s not likely to know anything the Skull wants to find out. But what kind of experimentation would Hydra be performing? What makes me think Hydra was trying to make Bucky into a super-soldier, in particular?
Aside from the fact that he was dating Clara Oswald from Doctor Who.
First of all, we know the Red Skull was obsessed with the super-soldier formula. That makes the formula, or a version of it, the most likely prospect for any human trials Hydra might be conducting. And no altered humans appear in Hydra’s forces in the movie aside from the Red Skull himself. That suggests that whatever the Skull was doing didn’t work, or (perhaps) that he couldn’t replicate the process—possibly because Zola took his notes and the primary test subject busted out and rejoined the U.S. Army before the Skull could dissect him. Again, Bucky as super-soldier looks good.
Okay, how are you walking and focusing your eyes now? Seriously, how?
Then there’s Bucky’s own behavior immediately after being released. He recovers insanely fast—goes from delirious and staggering to walking and asking pertinent questions inside a few minutes. (Kind of like how Steve came out of his procedure woozy, but quickly recovered enough to chase a taxicab. Of course, this might just be Movie Concussion Syndrome.) And what are the questions he asks? They’re all about Steve’s transformation. “What happened to you?” “Did it hurt?” “Is it permanent?” “You don’t have one of those [a Red Skull face], do you?” Never anything like, “How are we gonna get out of here?” or “Did you bring a division with you?” or “Where can I get a gun around this place?”
Or even, "Nice hat".
Now, I’m sure that if my suddenly superpowered best friend rescued me from an evil mad-science lab, I’d be interested in his well-being and ask about the superpowers thing. But I’d be way more interested in how we were going to get the hell out of Dodge. I would save my questions about long-term side effects for later … unless, of course, I thought I might be in for said side effects myself because I’d just been on Arnim Zola’s table. 
Bucky denies my theory with his closed captioning.
This would also explain (though it doesn’t necessarily need explaining) why Bucky drinks alone in the bar scene—if, like Cap, he can’t get drunk, he may not want his buddies noticing. And it explains why the last thing Bucky does before he gets blown out of the train car in his final scene is pick up Cap’s shield. Yeah, it’s great cover and he’s being shot at—but is he also trying the shield on for size? The comics have made a big deal out of how Captain America’s shield is nearly impossible to handle it correctly unless you’re a super-soldier. I can picture Cap letting the other Howlers try out the shield in camp some night, and everyone laughing when someone accidentally knocked over a tree with it … and I can just imagine Bucky lurking in the background, biding his time to try the thing in private, just in case he turned out not to suck.
And look! He doesn't!
But now we come to the primary objection. If Bucky did have some super-soldier-lite characteristics, why weren’t they covered in the first movie? Why wouldn’t Bucky tell his best friend what was going on with him?
Maybe not right now, but there had to be some downtime.
Well, the first question’s an easy answer—time. If you’re going to compress two or three years of war into a two-hour movie, you’re going to lose a lot of stuff. And it was Steve’s movie, not Bucky’s. And if we’re explaining, as of the second movie, why Bucky didn’t tell Steve about his burgeoning superpowers before, there are a hundred different potential explanations.
Like the fact that the talk would have given him this awkward face.
Maybe Bucky didn’t know, or didn’t know at first, that anything was different. Maybe he didn’t want to bring it up when it wasn’t interfering with the effectiveness of his unit. Maybe he didn’t want to admit weakness. Maybe he didn’t want to be packed off to a stateside lab. Maybe he was keeping his powers in reserve, as a surprise; he was always a hell of a poker player in the comics.
Bucky wins Nick Fury's Hershey bars. There are a LOT of Bucky-winning-at-poker panels I could've used.
He won a hundred euros off the Falcon one night, and Hawkeye still owes him $50. The moral of this story?
NEVER PLAY POKER WITH BUCKY BARNES.
Or perhaps the reason’s even simpler: maybe Bucky just wanted to kill or capture Arnim Zola and/or the Red Skull to avenge his treatment at their hands … and he knew his best chance of doing that was being the guy who went in right behind Captain America.
Hey, look where he is.
Perhaps the strongest possible explanation for Bucky’s silence is what Erskine says about the serum—that it exaggerates physical and psychological attributes. (“Good becomes great, bad becomes worse.”) Before the war, Bucky obviously had a darker temperament than Steve, but was strongly loyal to his weaker friend. After his escape, he becomes even grimmer, except when he’s kidding Captain America, but openly says that he’ll follow Steve anywhere. If that loyalty has been dialed up to eleven, did he keep the details of his ordeal quiet in order to avoid burdening his friend?
And so people wouldn't stop giving him guns?
But now we have that second objection. Does Bucky need to be a super-soldier, in order for Winter Soldier to work? Nope. The comics made it work with a biologically normal 19-year-old, and the movie could do that, too. But the Marvel movieverse seems to have a slightly different approach to death that might make this solution necessary.
Pictured: Tuesday at the X-mansion
While comic-book death is an established concept, and comic writers can bring a character back from the dead with little more than a wave of the hand (really, what made Bucky’s resurrection so unusual was that it involved so little hand-waving), the movies so far have reserved resurrection only for very special, usually superhuman characters like Thor and Iron Man. The only mere mortal I can think of who got the Lazarus treatment is Phil Coulson, and the rather squicky details of that have taken most of a season of Agents of SHIELD to uncover. This more serious approach to death means the writers of Winter Soldier must jump a higher bar in order to bring Bucky back. We saw him get blasted with a Hydra weapon and dropped from a great height, at high speed, into a frozen river. That’s usually pretty fatal in movieland.
OH, WAIT.
Unless, of course, you’ve already seen someone get dropped from a great height, at high speed, into an Arctic ice field … and survive. The only difference here is that Captain America is a super-soldier, and his survival might be attributed to the biological differences between super-soldiers and the rest of us. But Bucky isn’t a super-soldier. Unless he is.
Deep freeze in five ... four ... three ...
And even if we’re going to argue basic logistics—who pulled him out of the river and revived him? Who even knew where to look? Why would they care?—we’ve got a candidate with this theory. The mission where Bucky died was the mission that captured Arnim Zola, the one person who would have known the most about whatever was done to Bucky and the man who saw Captain America come running in personally to rescue this random test subject. And General Philips told Zola during his interrogation that his capture cost the life of “Captain Rogers’ closest friend.” Zola’s not dumb. He probably knew who Bucky was. And if something in those experiments made Bucky valuable, then Zola had motivation to retrieve Bucky’s body—or at least sell its location to the film’s bad guys.
Told you we'd see him again.
And the mention of those ultimate bad guys—who still haven’t been revealed in any of those trailers, remember—brings me to my absolute favorite batshit-crazy conspiracy-theory never-gonna-happen-but-wouldn’t-it-be-awesome-if-it-did hypothesis …
BIG THEORY TWO: The Winter Soldier is working for SHIELD. Not just the bad guys secretly running one of the SHIELD factions. SHIELD itself. The people pulling Bucky’s strings are the nominal good guys—and that makes everything worse for everyone.
Pictured: Nazis and the (possible) Nazi who sent Armstrong to the moon.
This theory begins with a bit of real-life history. After World War II, the various Cold War players rushed to recruit as many German scientists as they could. One of the best-known of these efforts was Operation Paperclip, which whitewashed many scientists’ Nazi pasts in order to bring them to the United States. (The most famous beneficiary of this was rocket scientist Wernher von Braun, who went from designing V-2 rockets for the Nazis to building spacecraft engines for NASA.) So it’s not unreasonable that the Marvel Universe version of the U.S., and possibly even SHIELD itself, would end up with former Hydra scientists in its ranks—like Arnim Zola.
And his fedora.
As I mentioned above, Zola knew what (if anything) was done to Bucky in that medical ward, and knew approximately where and when he fell from the train. He knew the value of an abandoned asset and where to look for it. That’s something that might interest SHIELD. After the war, they were in a prime position to recover Bucky and turn him into the Winter Soldier.
And they didn't even give him a haircut.
But wait, I hear you saying. SHIELD is the good guys, started by the good guys after they beat the bad guys. And that’s true. Marvel’s “Agent Carter” short film shows the founders of SHIELD as Peggy Carter, Howard Stark, and possibly Dum-Dum Dugan. Surely they’d never be a party to brainwashing Bucky Barnes into doing their dirty work for them. They’d never do that to Steve Rogers’ best friend. Not to their comrade-in-arms.
From left to right: Bucky's best friend and his two other friends. Except maybe not.
But as it turns out, they might. Even in the comics, Bucky’s transformation happened over several years, as technology became available and the needs of his captors changed. Why wouldn’t it be the same here? All that’s needed for this theory to work is to get SHIELD involved in the recovery of the remains and start the ball rolling. If Zola offered up a dead super-soldier, Howard Stark (who, according to his son Tony in The Avengers, “never shut up about” Captain America in later life) might well jump at the chance to preserve tissue samples. Peggy Carter might see the recovery as a chance to bury Bucky, as Steve would have wanted—particularly since she never got to bury Steve. Dugan, if he were involved, would likely be on board with bringing a brother soldier’s bones home.
"Oh, look, new toys to play with!"
And then … well … whatever happened, happened. Maybe somebody took a chance on reviving Bucky, and it worked, albeit without his memories. Again, I could see Peggy and Howard putting Bucky back on ice until they could figure out how to bring him all the way back. I could even see Howard building Bucky’s metal arm for when he woke up—hell, it looks like the kind of design that might have inspired Iron Man a generation or two later.
Paint it red and gold and put it over an actual arm ...
And a few years after that … we know Peggy didn’t stay with SHIELD forever. We know Howard ended up in the private sector. We don’t know what happened to Dugan, but all in all it seems possible that one frozen semi-super-soldier got lost in the shuffle. Lost, and then found by someone who didn’t know him, didn’t care about him, but looked at him and thought: What a wonderful opportunity …
Obviously, his shirt had gone AWOL by then.
By this point, we’re getting into the 1970s, let’s say. An era of dirty tricks, in fact and fiction, and the decade that produced some of the spy movies that made Robert Redford famous. The oeuvre matches. Now Bucky comes out of the ice, perhaps under the control of a younger Alexander Pierce, and begins building his legend. Most people in the intelligence community don’t know about him. Most people in SHIELD don’t know about him, though the Black Widow hears about him somehow. And when the Cold War ends, Bucky’s put back into storage …
This is only here because it's awesome. Carry on.
And he stays there right up until Steve Rogers comes out of the ice, and Nick Fury catches a mild case of idealism in The Avengers. Then Pierce, or whoever is working through him, needs to consolidate his own power, and that means knocking Fury off his perch. The best way to do that is to make Fury fail, and publicly. And what better way to do that than with a big, splashy terrorist attack that nearly kills Fury himself? The Winter Soldier would make a good false-flag operative. The pieces all fit. Maybe Pierce (or whoever) knows that this move forces Captain America to fight, and possibly kill, his closest friend. If Pierce is the Red Skull, he’d enjoy that; anybody else might just find it amusing. Either way, it ratchets up the tension.
Everybody run. Bucky's got a gun.
Because the one big advantage to this batshit-crazy theory is that it actually ups the ante. If you thought the comics were emotionally excruciating, with Bucky working for the bad guys, I can guarantee it’ll be even harder with him working for the wrong good guys. This theory is actually harder on Captain America than the original books, because this time he has to save Bucky, and the world, with no SHIELD squad to back him up, no brilliant scientists or huge resources to fix what’s been done to Bucky’s mind, no friends he can trust. He’s alone in an unfamiliar world, with his past about to eat him alive … and if that’s not the man out of time, I don’t know what is.
But at least he knows that if they're shooting at you, they're bad.
Either way, I’ve got tickets to a pre-midnight premiere screening on April 3. And you’ll probably hear the squealing a long way off.
One last angsty face. The angstiest of them all. Eeeeee!
MONDAY: THE READING LIST

Wednesday, March 19, 2014

Winter Soldier Blogathon, Day 3: Stuff That's NOT in the Videos (But Probably in the Movie)

And now, a brief rundown of stuff that’s not in the videos (or only briefly in the videos) but probably in the movie.
Pictured: OUR ONLY IMAGE OF THIS CHARACTER.
Agent 13/Sharon Carter. C’mon, she’s in the cast list, but so far her appearance has been confined to a single shot in the U.K. trailer. Yet much was made of Emily van Camp’s casting as the mysterious Agent 13, and there’s no way she’s not going to play a major role in events.
Sharon wants Steve to PLEASE STOP DOING ACROBATICS
WHILE SHE'S TALKING.
In the comics, Sharon was usually Steve Rogers’ primary love interest—and she was always a bit weird. Steve first met her after he thawed out in the 1960s and mistook her for her older sister, Peggy—his girlfriend from World War II. (Peggy was later retconned into being Sharon’s aunt, and I think she’s been promoted to great-aunt now. She was killed off, after a long battle with Alzheimer’s, in 2011.) And very few people seemed to be weirded out by the fact that Captain America was dating the little sister of his World War II flame, perhaps because Sharon was also following in her relative’s footsteps as a badass SHIELD agent. Over the decades, Sharon stood out as one of the most competent girlfriends in comics, frequently saving Cap’s butt when his idealism (or lack of future-savvy) got him into trouble. She was apparently killed off in the 1970s and brought back in the 1990s, claiming she’d been in deep cover for years and bitter that Steve hadn’t gone looking for her. Things eventually warmed again between them, and Sharon played a major role in the Winter Soldier storyline, which included a reconciliation with Steve.
It looked kinda like this. I'm sure Peggy would approve.
And then it turned out Sharon was the second shooter at Steve’s assassination. She’d had some deep mind-control programming implanted by the bad guys. And she was pregnant with Steve’s child (probably a daughter, but its sex was never officially confirmed) at the time, though she later miscarried. Oh, and she once saved Bucky’s life by throwing him out of an airplane (yes, really). With all of those options in her character—sweet romantic interest, badass spy, angry ex, unwitting murderer, and mother-to-be—there’s no way to predict which way Agent 13 will turn in the Winter Soldier movie. But it’ll be important. And you’ll get to hear my theory on her character tomorrow.
"Who, me? I'm just an affable, average SHIELD agent.
And maybe a psychopathic killer."
Brock Rumlow/Crossbones. This one is weird. Go watch that “secure the ship” clip again. See the SHIELD agent doing most of the talking? His name is Rumlow. And while advance materials for the movie have portrayed him as a loyal friend and a bit of a Captain America fanboy, the name “Rumlow” means something else to fans of the comics.
That's not even his bike back there. Hello, traffic hazard.
Brock Rumlow is better known as Crossbones, a former street-gang leader who became a key henchman of the Red Skull. He was never a SHIELD agent, but he was a neo-Nazi and the boyfriend of the Skull’s psychopathic daughter, Synthia Schmidt (a.k.a. Sin). He was the first of the two shooters in the assassination of Captain America (Sharon fired the close-up shots). Obviously he’s got a different background in the movie, but you heard it here first—don’t trust Agent Rumlow.
Zut alors! (Okay, I'm done with the terrible French now.)
Batroc. Another strange choice. Also in the “secure the ship” clip, there’s a mercenary named Georges Batroc (pronounced “BAT-rock” in the movie, though most comics geeks say it “Bah-TROCK”—and no, I don’t know how you’d say it in French). Batroc, better known as Batroc the Leaper, is … well, here’s a picture, okay?
WHAT IS THIS I CAN'T EVEN.
Yup, he’s a goofball. Supposedly a badass mercenary and a master of savate, Batroc is mostly a punchline in the comics, although there have been recent attempts to make him less pathetic. There’s something fundamentally humorous, though, about a guy in an orange and purple costume, bouncing around like a ping-pong ball and talking like Pepe Le Pew. About the only person who consistently takes Batroc seriously (and appears justified in doing so) is Bucky-Cap, who has his reasons:
Okay, not THAT seriously. But hey, concussion!
So maybe Batroc’s not such a joke anymore. And with MMA champion Georges St-Pierre playing him, he’ll probably get some serious fight scenes. One thing to remember about Batroc, though—while he’ll do just about anything for money, he has an unpredictable sense of honor that will sometimes cause him to switch sides, or quit, in the middle of a fight. And he respects Captain America as a worthy opponent, so he’s even been known to help Cap out (usually by slipping him information or sabotaging an evil plan) when the bad guys cross one of Batroc’s moral lines. Don’t expect him to wear a lot of orange and purple in this movie.
Okay, I lied about that last part.
Someday they're gonna do that salute with power tools or drinks in their hands
and we're all going to be very sorry.
Hydra (again, in some form). For “Hydra” in this case, read “some secret organization of bad guys, and Hydra is the best option.” While the trailers have played up SHIELD infighting, there’s probably a legitimate Big Bad behind one of those squabbling factions. And since there’s a party of bad guys using a brainwashed Bucky Barnes as their weapon of choice, and the list of people who know or care what happened to Bucky in the war pretty much boils down to a) Cap and company and b) Hydra and company (remember, movie-Bucky was a Hydra test subject before Steve rescued him, and he died on a mission to stop a Hydra train and kidnap a Hydra scientist), the odds are good that we’ll see or hear from Hydra in this movie, if only in the form of an ex-Hydra scientist or black-market Hydra tech. This is especially useful when one remembers that the Winter Soldier in the comics was a puppet of the Soviets, but the Winter Soldier movie has to play overseas. Russian bad guys don’t play so well in Russia. Or China. Hydra is a good candidate to swap in for that.
Hello, again. That's an appropriately worried look you've got there.
Heyyyy, Arnim Zola survived the war, didn’t he? As far as we know? And I’ve got a theory about him that you’ll hear about tomorrow.
Hello, Mr. McGuffin.
The Zodiac. This is a bit more esoteric, but we’ve got a good reason to think that there’s a mysterious glowy vial of something called “the Zodiac” involved in this movie. Peggy Carter was seen getting her hands on it in the “Agent Carter” short that came with the Iron Man 3 DVD, and a prequel comic for the movie showed Cap, the Black Widow, and Agent Rumlow stopping a group of bad guys from unleashing the contents of that vial on an unsuspecting populace. Cap noted in that comic that SHIELD had previously claimed the Zodiac was destroyed, and the Widow replied that this was to keep anyone from looking for it. Obviously that didn’t work.
Pictured: Things not working.
In the comics, there were several Zodiac groups that opposed SHIELD or the Avengers in some way. The original Zodiac was basically a group of criminals in funny-looking astrology-themed outfits, but later versions picked up superpowers from various places. Could the vial be the source of those powers? Most notably, a new Zodiac appeared in the Avengers Assemble comic—highly superpowered, recruited and backed by Thanos. Are we going to be connecting the contents of that vial, and whatever it does, to the larger Marvel Cosmic movies? We’ve already seen Thanos at the end of The Avengers and heard mention of the Infinity Stones, one of Thanos’ favorite things to collect. Whatever “the Zodiac” is in the movies, watch out for purple dudes.
Pictured: Cause and effect.
Mind-control magic. I mean that “magic” part literally. Unless the writers of this movie decided to actually make Bucky evil, he’s being controlled somehow. The Super Bowl spot showed him in a room that looked like the Soviet memory-implantation chamber seen in the comics, but as I noted above, making the bad guys Soviets could seriously hurt this movie’s box-office numbers overseas. So we’re looking at a form of mind control practiced by some other bad guys … and if you’ve been paying attention, you’ve seen mind control in Marvel movies before.
Oh, hi. Nice eyes you got there.
Remember Hawkeye’s glowing eyeballs? The Avengers got a lot of mileage out of the Hawkeye-as-flying-monkey trope, and the Tesseract was powering all of that. While there’s nothing to suggest that Loki will play a role in Captain America: The Winter Soldier, there are plenty of terrestrial groups that have gotten their hands on Tesseract technology, including both Hydra and SHIELD. Using magic is a great way to get around the fact that, according to the best research out there, real-life brainwashing doesn’t work the way it’s usually portrayed in the movies. So all those American POWs in Korean War prison camps didn’t really become communists? That’s okay—we’ve got magical glowing blue stuff! We haven’t seen the Winter Soldier’s eyes glowing at any point, but that doesn’t mean Tesseract tech won’t be bound up in whatever makes him tick. (Or go boom, as the case may be.)
See what I did there?
And remember, if there’s a way to use magical mind control on people without giving them those telltale eyes, then any character can be acting under such control at any time. Including, say, Agent Rumlow. Or Sharon Carter. Or Robert Redford’s character. Or anydamnbody, really.
They always say this afterward. How often
do they expect the answer to be "yes"?
You know who else has a history with mind control?
Black Widow (again). I’m just going to drop this little reminder and leave it here. Remember in The Avengers, when Hawkeye was recovering from his flying-monkey phase and Black Widow was keeping an eye on him? Clint was babbling about having someone “pull you out, put someone else in”, and asked Natasha, “Do you know what it’s like to be unmade?”
I am actually not sure why he asks this question if he knows the answer.
To which she replied, “You know I do.”
"Duh."
Black Widow has a Winter Soldier-like history of being mind-controlled in the comics, including long deep-cover operations and elaborate backstories that she fully believed but that turned out to be totally fabricated. Was this line a reference to that history? If so, Winter Soldier is the logical place to explore it. It’s worth noting that she’s the one who seems to do most of the explaining where the Winter Soldier is concerned … and that there’s no reason she can’t be working an extraordinarily long deep-cover job on SHIELD itself.

TOMORROW: MY PET THEORIES