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Here's Everyone On Iron Man's Team In "Captain America: Civil War"

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Nothing is OK.

Yesterday we were gifted with the character posters for Captain America's team in the upcoming Captain America: Civil War.

Yesterday we were gifted with the character posters for Captain America's team in the upcoming Captain America: Civil War.

Falcon, Hawkeye, Scarlet Witch, Bucky and Ant-Man are fighting on Cap's team, who want to remain free to defend humanity without government interference.

Marvel

"But what of Tony Stark's team?" many of us wondered. "What of that hot purple guy born with a cape, otherwise known as Vision? What of BLACK PANTHER?"

"But what of Tony Stark's team?" many of us wondered. "What of that hot purple guy born with a cape, otherwise known as Vision? What of BLACK PANTHER?"

Tony's team supports government oversight and accountability.

Marvel

Well, wonder no more. The Team Tony posters are here. Tony looks, well, really mad.

Well, wonder no more. The Team Tony posters are here. Tony looks, well, really mad.

Marvel

Rhodey's also looking none-too-pleased.

Rhodey's also looking none-too-pleased.

Marvel


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The New Trailer For "Captain America: Civil War" Will Destroy You

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“Hey, everyone.”

Today, friends, is a blessed day. Today we were given a NEW TRAILER for Captain America: Civil War. And it was worth the wait.

youtube.com

Just in case you hadn't heard, Civil War is coming to break your heart into a million pieces. The Avengers are fighting EACH OTHER based on their beliefs on government regulation.

Just in case you hadn't heard, Civil War is coming to break your heart into a million pieces. The Avengers are fighting EACH OTHER based on their beliefs on government regulation.

Captain America, aka Steve Rogers, and his team want to remain free to defend humanity without government interference. Iron Man, aka Tony Stark, and his team support government oversight and accountability.

Marvel

And there's the small matter of Bucky, aka the former Winter Soldier and Cap's BFFL, returning to the good side maybe?

And there's the small matter of Bucky, aka the former Winter Soldier and Cap's BFFL, returning to the good side maybe?

Despite him TRYING TO SHOOT TONY IN THE FACE.

Marvel

Meanwhile, things are not looking good for Tony's BFFL, Rhodey aka War Machine.

Meanwhile, things are not looking good for Tony's BFFL, Rhodey aka War Machine.

Marvel


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The Cast Of "Captain America: Civil War" Dominated Tumblr With An Epic Q&A

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The most amazing Answer Time in superhero history.

I'm not on any team, so what are you going to offer me to choose a side? —thequeenofgood

I'm not on any team, so what are you going to offer me to choose a side? —thequeenofgood

SS/CE: All your wildest dreams will come true.

Jenna Williams / BuzzFeed

RDJ: Last chance. Join #TeamIronMan and Chris Evans will take you to Disneyland. He's there 3x a week, anyway.

Macey J. Foronda / BuzzFeed

How will Bucky celebrate his 99th birthday? Which is today BTW. —bisexualhorrorstory

How will Bucky celebrate his 99th birthday? Which is today BTW. —bisexualhorrorstory

SS: Happy Birthday Buck Barnes. 99!!

Jenna Williams / BuzzFeed


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Is It Marvel Or DC Who Owns Your Soul?

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Let’s do this.

Warner Bros.

Marvel Studios

But this is bigger than them. There is a larger war here between DC and Marvel, and it's been raging for decades.

But this is bigger than them. There is a larger war here between DC and Marvel, and it's been raging for decades.

20th Century Fox


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The Ultimate "Captain America: Civil War" Poll

Chris Evans Memorized All The Lyrics In "The Little Mermaid"

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Of course.

Some of the Captain America: Civil War guys stopped by Kimmel, and they played a rousing game of "Personal Trivia" to test just how well they know each other.

youtube.com

They made some pretty great faces.

They made some pretty great faces.

ABC

Like, some greeeeeat faces.

Like, some greeeeeat faces.

ABC

We learned a couple cool things about the guys, but the coolest thing by far was that Chris Evans is a big Disney fan and he knows ALL THE LYRICS to one classic Disney musical in particular.

We learned a couple cool things about the guys, but the coolest thing by far was that Chris Evans is a big Disney fan and he knows ALL THE LYRICS to one classic Disney musical in particular.

ABC


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We Need To Talk About Captain America’s Biceps in “Civil War”

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A totally spoiler-free discussion entirely about biceps.

Captain America: Civil War is opening in cinemas across the globe. With two of the founding Avengers, Captain America and Iron Man, facing off against each other, the world is divided.

Captain America: Civil War is opening in cinemas across the globe. With two of the founding Avengers, Captain America and Iron Man, facing off against each other, the world is divided.

Marvel

BUT LISTEN, all that messy ~politics schmolitics~ aside, there's one BIG, bulging reason that you should be #TeamCap.

BUT LISTEN, all that messy ~politics schmolitics~ aside, there's one BIG, bulging reason that you should be #TeamCap.

Grab some water, this gonna be thirsty work.

Marvel

In the past, Cap has shown us some of his many talents.

In the past, Cap has shown us some of his many talents.

Marvel

The first Avenger is a natural leader, a kindhearted and trusting hero whose real power is his hot, hot abs. I MEAN his ability to fight for goodness or something.

The first Avenger is a natural leader, a kindhearted and trusting hero whose real power is his hot, hot abs. I MEAN his ability to fight for goodness or something.

Marvel


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These Two Idiots Tried To Watch Every Movie In The Marvel Universe In A 25 Hour Marathon

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Caution: The end of this post contains light spoilers for Civil War.

Hi, we're Ryan (in the mask) and Luke (in the man bun), and we recently sat down and watched all 12 of the Marvel Cinematic Universe movies in one 25-hour marathon. And we didn't die! Then a few hours later, we went to a midnight screening of Captain America: Civil War.

Hi, we're Ryan (in the mask) and Luke (in the man bun), and we recently sat down and watched all 12 of the Marvel Cinematic Universe movies in one 25-hour marathon. And we didn't die! Then a few hours later, we went to a midnight screening of Captain America: Civil War.

Ryan Broderick / BuzzFeed

We decided not to watch the 13 movies included in Marvel's interconnected universe in the order they were released in, but, instead, chronologically. Marvel has released an official chronology of all the movies, which actually puts Captain America: The First Avenger first. A few movies happen almost simultaneously, so for those, we went with the order that made the after-credits scenes make the most sense. You can follow our whole harrowing journey over on the #25HoursOfMarvel hashtag.

The question we hoped to answer: Does the Marvel franchise actually make sense as one big story?

The question we hoped to answer: Does the Marvel franchise actually make sense as one big story?

Twitter: @imbadatlife

Captain America: The First Avenger

Captain America: The First Avenger

Ryan Broderick / BuzzFeed and MARVEL


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In "Civil War," A Superhero's Toughest Challenge Is Accountability

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Anthony Mackie, Paul Rudd, Jeremy Renner, Chris Evans, Elizabeth Olsen, and Sebastian Stan make up Team Cap in Captain America: Civil War.

Marvel Studios

2016 is the year that superhero movies confront their collateral damage.

It’s an idea that’s already crept into Netflix’s expanding suite of Marvel series, all of them taking place in a battered New York still in recovery after the first Avengers film, where superhero worship exists alongside distrust over how Manhattan was made to serve as a battleground. That was also the point of the best scene in the grim jumble that was Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice, which presented a street-level view of Superman and General Zod’s brawl through Metropolis from Man of Steel. One of those two godlike beings means well, but from there on the ground, they look the same — indifferent to the humans scurrying for their lives far below.

Captain America: Civil War features its own script-flipping depiction of innocents dying as a side effect of its characters’ actions. The movie, which was directed by Winter Soldier’s Anthony and Joe Russo, picks up in Lagos, where Steve Rogers (Chris Evans), Natasha Romanoff (Scarlett Johansson), Sam Wilson (Anthony Mackie), and a still-in-training Wanda Maximoff (Elizabeth Olsen) are trying to stop the theft of a biological weapon.

Johansson

Marvel Studios

It’s all going smoothly, with chases through busy byways and some bruisingly satisfying Black Widow fight sequences, until it isn’t: A last-ditch bomb gets set off in the middle of a crowded marketplace. In her efforts to contain the explosion, Wanda ends up letting it take out a floor of a nearby building instead — and the record scratches, all the high-impact heroics ending in a flinch. The superheroes leave a scene in which bodies are being pulled out on stretchers, day saved at an unexpected and unwanted cost.

Among the dead and wounded are some visitors from Wakanda, which allows for the introduction of the royal T'Challa (Chadwick Boseman), also known as the Black Panther, but also ignites an international debate over whether the Avengers need to be regulated, whether those casualties were a fuck-up that could have been avoided, why they don’t care about international borders and sovereignty, and whether it was their business being there in Nigeria the first place. The Avengers are fresh off kinda-sorta being responsible for the creation of an artificial intelligence that tried to cause the extinction of mankind by dropping a chunk of the Sokovian capital from the sky, so they weren’t in the best standing to begin with. A reel of their recent exploits is played back to them as they cringe, all those de rigueur building-crushing big finales repositioned not as hard-won triumphs but as incidents of mass destruction.

Chadwick Boseman, Paul Bettany, Robert Downey Jr., Johansson, and Don Cheadle as Team Iron Man in Captain America: Civil War.

Marvel Studios

Sinister shadow organizations, malevolent masterminds, figures from the past intent on revenge, and power-hungry siblings — turns out there’s no foe as quietly formidable as accountability. Accountability isn’t a theme that screams “escapist fun,” but it is a nagging issue underlying almost every story about superheroes who’ve taken it upon themselves to fight crime and evil, and it's the source of the conflict in the improbably good Civil War. It’s easier to deal with the sacrifices that heroes might have to make to save the city and/or the world than to suggest that not everyone they leave behind is tearily grateful. But as the genre has expanded and matured and demanded to be taken seriously on screen, it’s a theme that becomes unavoidable, especially in a series that’s made a point of having consequences carry over after each fade to black and credits roll.

Tom Holland.

Marvel Studios

Spider-Man, who is reintroduced in Civil War as a squeaky-voiced teenage chatterbox played by Tom Holland, paraphrases a version of his “With great power comes great responsibility" motto. But believing that because you can help, you should doesn't make you immune from the question of who gave you the right to play savior, especially when you're a red, white, and blue–clad patriotic symbol who's decided to go global. And then there’s the point Vision (Paul Bettany) raises, which is that by demonstrating their power, the Avengers seem to be luring more antagonists out than ever before: “Our very strength incites challenge.”

Captain America: Civil War isn’t the best film in the Marvel Cinematic Universe, the world’s largest-scale, slowest-released television show masquerading as a series of films; I’d still give the edge to the unfettered, geeky joy of Guardians of the Galaxy and the tense paranoia of Winter Soldier (and who would have guessed that sad, square Steve Rogers would be at the center of two of the franchise’s most interesting movies?).

But Civil War is the MCU's most thematically ambitious installment, setting up the decision of whether the Avengers are going to allow themselves to be governed by a U.N. panel seriously and allowing the accrued history of the 12 previous films to weigh on it. On one side you’ve got Captain America, who’s got a post-Hydra libertarianish distrust of large organizations, but a greater faith in individuals, including poor brainwashed Bucky Barnes (Sebastian Stan), who’s once again made into a pawn of the unfolding plot. And on the other side you’ve got Iron Man (Robert Downey Jr.), whose life story has basically been that of a nose-thumbing capitalist longing for regulations to bump up against, forever going too far and then being confronted, as he is in the movie, with the ramifications of what he’s done.

Downey Jr. and Evans.

Marvel Studios

It’s a disagreement the movie treats with regretful inevitability, like a family dinner that’s about to dissolve into a fight because no one can keep the conversation from veering toward politics. There’s a villain in Civil War, an undramatic but highly motivated man named Zemo (Daniel Brühl), but all he really does is force confrontations that were brewing or bound to happen eventually. He prods at the right cracks, and the superhero supergroup ends up splitting right down the middle, with newcomers and recent additions like the aforementioned Black Panther (to whom Boseman brings gravitas and welcome frankness about looking out for his own), Ant-Man (Paul Rudd), and Spider-Man getting divvied up over the two teams.

It all escalates into a group showdown that’s gloriously fun (despite some of the characters feeling spliced in from a much more chipper movie) and genuinely sad, because if you’ve made it through eight years of Marvel features, you care about these quippy oddballs and their imperfect alliance. Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice had its costumed duo try to punch each other to death over their ideological differences before declaring themselves inexplicable friends. Civil War is all about friends coming to blows over fundamental disagreements they don’t really settle (though the movie tilts sympathy to one side), with all sorts of personal resentments and loyalties and surfacing secrets mixed in. For once, fittingly, the fallout isn’t on a large scale, with a city to be half-demolished and civilians to be sheltered, but that doesn’t make it feel any less potent. It’s like watching a breakup in which both parties land punches, only most of them are literal.

The "Captain America: Civil War" Cast In 2006 Compared With Now

Which "Captain America: Civil War" Character Are You?

The Cast Of "Captain America: Civil War" Plays A Game Of Superhero Would You Rather

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“I have great thighs, so I would rather wear tights.”

Macey J. Foronda / BuzzFeed

Macey J. Foronda / BuzzFeed

Macey J. Foronda / BuzzFeed


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Marvel Is Dropping Some Mighty Tantalizing Hints At A Black Widow Movie

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*Battle cries into the night* NATASHAAAAAA.

The internet's been clamoring for a Black Widow solo movie since, well, pretty much the second Natasha Romanoff appeared onscreen in Iron Man 2.

The internet's been clamoring for a Black Widow solo movie since, well, pretty much the second Natasha Romanoff appeared onscreen in Iron Man 2.

Natasha's been heavily featured in every Avengers movie. She's been practically a co-lead in both Captain America sequels, including the newly released Civil War. But she has yet to be the main character, or the center of her own story.

Marvel Studios

With the Marvel slate scheduled through 2019, many had lost hope that we'd get to see Nat in a movie with her name on it. AND THEN...

With the Marvel slate scheduled through 2019, many had lost hope that we'd get to see Nat in a movie with her name on it. AND THEN...

Marvel Studios

Deadline: You've got a bunch of characters in this movie from Falcon and War Machine and Black Widow and Hawkeye, who have so far guest starred in movies with another characters title above the fold. Is there one destined to get a solo movie down the line?

Feige: We've announced the next nine movies, ten counting Civil War, through the end of 2019. Where we go beyond that are ongoing discussions that we'll focus on in the next few years because we have a lot to do before then. Of the characters that you've just mentioned I would say certainly the one creatively and emotionally that we are most committing to doing is Black Widow.

Let's rewind and read that again: "Of the characters that you’ve just mentioned I would say certainly the one creatively and emotionally that we are most committing to doing is Black Widow."

Let's rewind and read that again: "Of the characters that you’ve just mentioned I would say certainly the one creatively and emotionally that we are most committing to doing is Black Widow."

Marvel Studios


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Which "Civil War" Character Are You?

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Are you Tony or Steve? Spidey or T’challa? Time to find out.

99 Thoughts I Had While Watching "Captain America: Civil War"

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This post contains spoilers so if you haven’t seen Captain America: Civil War, you may want to avoid reading beyond this point.

Marvel Studios

1. This theater is so packed. I pray the baby behind me doesn't cry.
2. OMG. OMG. OMG. It's starting!!
3. Bucky!! Those long, luscious locks look good on ya.
4. Stop torturing my precious Bucky!
5. OK, that car scene was weird. What's happening?!
6. I see Elizabeth Olsen's accent is still very bad.
7. But I adore Scarlett Witch, so I guess I'll deal with it.
8. I love how they're all just casually having coffee. Superheroes, they're just like us!

Marvel Studios

9. OK, this shit just got so real so fast.
10. Wanda and Falcon make a GREAT fucking team! Yaaass!
11. Yessss, create this gaseous-looking tornado Wanda! I live!
12. Oh fuck, Black Widow is kicking ass.
13. OMG, did he just throw her into a HOLE?!
14. If Black Widow Dies I will die RIGHT in this damn theater.
15. Oh thank goodness. Whew.
16. There is so much happening. My heart can't take it.


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The "Captain America: Civil War" Directors Reveal How It Was Assembled

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Warning: This story contains MAJOR SPOILERS for Captain America: Civil War.

Warning: This story contains MAJOR SPOILERS for Captain America: Civil War.

Elizabeth Olsen, Chris Evans, and Sebastian Stan in Captain America: Civil War.

Marvel Studios

Captain America: Civil War features one of the largest principal casts ever assembled for a Marvel Studios film, especially one centered around a single titular superhero. And, unlike every other movie in the Marvel Cinematic Universe to date, these superheroes are not battling with an external enemy, but among themselves. On top of that, two significant new superheroes to the MCU set to launch their own movie franchises in the coming years — Black Panther and Spider-Man — are introduced in Civil War, the latter after an unprecedented and frankly miraculous negotiation between two rival movie studios.

Which is to say that making Captain America: Civil War was a Hulkulean task for directors Joe and Anthony Russo. In late April, BuzzFeed News sat down with the brothers — who came up in the industry directing comedies like 2002's Welcome to Collinwood and 2006's You, Me and Dupree, and TV shows like Arrested Development and Community — to understand how they pulled together one of the largest and most challenging superhero movies yet. (Warning: This story contains MAJOR SPOILERS.)

Producer Nate Moore, screenwriter Stephen McFeely, director Anthony Russo, screenwriter Christopher Markus, and director Joe Russo on the set of Captain America: Civil War.

Zade Rosenthal / Marvel Studios

Creating the central conflict

The Russos’ first Marvel Studios movie was 2014's Captain America: The Winter Soldier, which is widely considered to be among the very best of Marvel Studios' movies (if not the best). Months before it opened in April of that year, Marvel Studios chief Kevin Feige was so confident in The Winter Soldier that he began preliminary meetings with the Russos — along with producer Nate Moore, and screenwriters Christopher Markus and Stephen McFeely — to discuss a third Captain America movie.

"[It was] a very soft conversation of us sitting down and just discussing generally what we could do with the character moving forward," said Joe Russo. "We batted around a bunch of different big ideas. He's a tricky character, because he's very stoic and moral. However, we felt like if we kept pushing him, and deconstructing him, we could end up in a place that was very interesting."

"We had to behave in such a manner as if there were no other options for the movie than to have Spider-Man in the film."

The team circled the idea of basing their story on Civil War, a 2006 Marvel comic series by Mark Millar that pits Cap (Chris Evans) against Tony Stark (Robert Downey Jr.) as ideological opposites after the government attempts to place superheroes under its expressed control. The dilemma for the Marvel Studios brain trust was whether Civil War — in which a vast number of superheroes align either with Cap or Tony — was more of an Avengers movie than a Captain America movie.

"The way we answered the question was, of course it could be made into Captain America film if the story is told from his point of view, and if the plot is incredibly resonant with his world," said Joe. "What's interesting about Cap is that he had two family units, one from the past, and one in the present. What would happen, we thought, if you took those two family units and we smashed them into each other, and he was forced, on a very elemental level, to choose?"

For Cap's original family from the 1940s, there was only one choice: his best friend and surrogate brother, Bucky Barnes. Bucky's transformation into the brainwashed Hydra assassin the Winter Soldier made him a wanted man across the globe, but by the end The Winter Soldier, Cap had dedicated himself to finding Bucky and helping him to reform.

Sebastian Stan in Captain America: The Winter Soldier.

Marvel Studios

"Cap's devoted to the idea that there is still a human being inside the Winter Soldier that he knows and loves," said Anthony. "And he's going to find that human being in there, no matter what it costs him. How do you put an equally compelling idea up against that?"

The answer: What if Bucky, under orders from Hydra as the Winter Soldier, had secretly killed Tony Stark's parents, Maria and Howard Stark, who was one of Steve's closest allies during World War II? "You wind up with a very combustible situation," said Joe. "In fact, that's why we decided to do Civil War, because of that idea."

By setting two of the MCU's biggest heroes against each other in a third-act battle about a deeply personal conflict — rather than averting yet another global cataclysm — the Russos saw the potential to shake the movie free of an all-too familiar superhero movie trope. "As filmmakers, you have to look to how crowded the marketplace is becoming," said Joe. "As a fan, there are the things that I'm growing weary of about the [superhero] genre. We knew that we had to surprise the audience in some way, and to subvert the standard structure, which was tiring us."

There was just one catch. "Kevin [Feige] was like, 'OK, you guys gotta get Downey!'" said Anthony with a laugh.

Robert Downey Jr. and Chris Evans in Captain America: Civil War.

Zade Rosenthal / Marvel Studios

Wooing Robert Downey Jr.

Making a Captain America movie was not part of Robert Downey Jr.'s overall contract with Marvel Studios, so the Russos were tasked — with Feige's support — with persuading the actor to sign on to the project. The stakes were high: Without Stark, Civil War was a no-go.

According to the Russos, it turned out that what had so excited them creatively about Civil War excited Downey, too. "I think he loved the fact that we were going to deconstruct the genre by having a third act where the two heroes are having in essence a life-or-death battle with each other," said Joe. "He was really attracted to the fact that we were going to make his character much darker in this than he had been in any other film up to this point."

Indeed, while Downey's face is as prominent as Evans' in the Civil War posters, the fact that this was a Captain America movie afforded Downey an unusual opportunity, one the Russos first experienced at the onset of their career. "[George] Clooney had a small role in Welcome to Collinwood, and he kind of helped the movie get greenlit by doing that," said Anthony. "We said to him, 'Oh, thanks so much for doing this role, sorry it's so small.' And he goes, 'Look, guys: This is the most fun for me. Playing the lead kind of sucks, because your job as a leading man is to show up and let everybody else steal the scene. Now I get to steal the scene. That's really fun for me.' I think Downey had a bit of that. Because Chris was the titular lead of the film, he had license to go off the rails a little more than he would as a typical lead."

But that did not mean that Downey was content to coast through the making of Civil War. The actor's involvement was officially announced at a Marvel Studios media event in October 2014, and right up through production, Downey met regularly with the Russos and screenwriters Markus and McFeely — none of whom had worked on a film involving Tony Stark — to develop the character of Iron Man in Civil War. "There's a process you go through with Robert where you work on the scenes the week leading up to shooting them," said Joe. "Whatever scenes are coming up, we'd go over to his house on a Sunday, we'd all have lunch together, and work on the scenes. We would rewrite them based on ideas that Robert had about the character, because he knows the character better than any of us ever will."

Black Panther

Marvel Studios

Introducing Black Panther

As the Russos were busy nailing down Downey in mid-2014, they were also developing the Civil War script with Markus and McFeely, and they soon realized that while pitting Captain America and Iron Man against each other was creatively exciting, it also came with its own set of complications. "We knew the movie was going to get binary," said Anthony. "It's Cap versus Iron Man, and the two sides versus each other."

"We wanted to avoid getting in a rut," added Joe.

"We thought a nice way to shake up that dynamic as the movie progress is if we had this, like, third-party radical, who was tied into the plot in a very propulsive way, but didn't give a shit about either side of the argument," continued Anthony.

Marvel Studios / Via youtube.com

Enter T'Challa, aka Black Panther, Marvel's first black lead superhero. "At that point, Black Panther was a movie that Marvel probably wanted to do, and we were like, 'Well, if you are going to do it, here's why Black Panther would be really valuable in this movie [too],'" said Anthony. For Civil War, the filmmakers decided that T'Challa would initially believe that Bucky is responsible for the death of his father, and cautiously side with Tony, but his methods — and mere presence — would disrupt the dynamic among the established Avengers. "We loved how he could mess everything up as the story progresses," said Anthony.

Casting Chadwick Boseman — known for his terrific performances as Jackie Robinson in 42 and James Brown in Get on Up — in the role was something of a no-brainer. "He has that great combination that you always look for: He has leading man looks and presence, but with character actor chops," said Anthony. At that October 2014 press event — at which Feige also announced a Black Panther movie — Boseman stood between Evans and Downey, a visual cue representing his ambiguous role in Civil War.

In the comics, a different character finds his loyalties torn between Cap and Iron Man. But getting him in their film at all plunged the Russos into a most tangled web.

Spider-Man

Marvel Studios

Capturing Spider-Man

Even with Black Panther playing the free radical in Civil War, the filmmakers still felt their movie needed to avoid getting too weighed down by the personal baggage Cap and Tony were bringing to it. "Especially when you're making movies this expensive, you have to hold a large audience," said Anthony. "You've got to make stories that are well-rounded. We knew how dark we wanted to take the storyline between Cap and Tony, but how do we balance this movie so that it's not, like, just a brutal experience? We needed some people in this movie who are not invested in the conflict that is tearing this family called the Avengers apart. And we needed one on each side. That's how we circled Ant-Man and Spider-Man."

Ant-Man, of course, was already a part of the MCU; Paul Rudd debuted as the character in the eponymous Marvel Studios film in July 2015. The movie rights to Spider-Man, however, were held by a completely different film studio, Sony Pictures — and in the spring of 2014, Sony was gearing up to release The Amazing Spider-Man 2 in the first weekend of May. And yet, according to the Russos, that was also around the time they first floated the idea to Feige of somehow getting Spider-Man into Civil War.

"He was like, 'Uhhhh, I don't know? Maybe there's something there,'" recalled Anthony with a chuckle. "It was like the smallest door was opened to a road forward potentially."

Director Joe Russo.

Zade Rosenthal / Marvel Studios

Thus began a nearly yearlong creative process for the Civil War filmmakers, in which they had to craft their film on the (at first) faint promise that two rival corporations might somehow figure out how to share an enormously popular and lucrative superhero character in a deal unheard of in Hollywood since Mickey Mouse and Bugs Bunny shared a scene in 1988's Who Framed Roger Rabbit? And yet, by the summer of 2014 — after The Amazing Spider-Man 2 opened to tepid reviews and less-than-stellar box office — the Russos said they were given enough of a sense that including Spider-Man in Civil War was genuinely possible. So, they forged ahead as if it was a fait accompli.

"We had to behave in such a manner as if there were no other options for the movie than to have Spider-Man in the film," said Joe.

"[We] worked Spider-Man into the story in a way that is inexcisable, or else the house falls down and you've got to rebuild it again," added Anthony. "We were very exposed on a creative level of needing him. … Even after the preliminary agreement was made to share Spider-Man, there were tons of deal points that still needed to be worked out. So even though we got permission to keep proceeding as if Spider-Man was in the movie, it was always like, don't talk about it, keep quiet about it, because it was still very sensitive."

The Russos give full credit to Feige for hammering out the Spider-Man deal with Sony, which was officially announced in February 2015 and includes a new Spidey film, Spider-Man: Homecoming, produced by Feige and Marvel Studios and released by Sony on July 7, 2017. "Kevin loves Spider-Man, and he's always been looking for a way to [use] him," said Anthony. But the brothers were not above exercising their own leverage to keep the deal alive. "Certainly there's a lot of pain in executing a deal like that, and when people feel pain, they go, 'Ah, is there a way to relieve this pain by just not doing this deal?'" said Joe. "They would come to us and say, 'Are you sure we can't make this movie without Spider-Man?' We would say, 'You absolutely can't do it without him.' And then we would cite the tone."

Marvel Studios

"'The whole movie falls apart!'" added Anthony. "But it was true."

"It was absolutely true," said Joe. "The movie, I think, does become a much more dour affair without the addition of Spider-Man."

In Civil War, Tony Stark visits Peter Parker (played by Tom Holland following an exhaustive casting search) after catching YouTube videos of the teenager exercising his powers for the first time. "It made sense to us that Tony wanted to recruit this kid because he's incredibly strong," said Joe. "But he always has an amazing nonlethal way of stopping people, which is he webs them up. So in Tony's mind, he's like the perfect nonlethal weapon to bring to a fight."

"The other thing we loved about Spider-Man is that he's a kid," added Anthony. "Everybody else was so experienced; they'd been through adventure after adventure. So we were like, let's take the greenest version of Spider-Man — the kind of kid who's just starting to use his powers, but he wasn't the whole package yet. So that let Tony really become a mentor for him. We loved that relationship."

Subverting expectations and preparing for Infinity War

The actual villain in Civil War, Zemo (Daniel Brühl), drew his name from the Marvel comics, but was otherwise radically transformed into a grieving Sokovian soldier who holds the Avengers responsible for his family's death during the events of 2015's Avengers: Age of Ultron.

"Zemo is not necessarily anything other than a conduit in the movie. He's an allegorical villain. He doesn't really do anything, other than, at a very crucial moment, open a can of worms in front of them when tensions are high," Joe said, referring to Zemo’s reveal to Tony that Bucky killed his parents, sparking the wrenching climactic fight between Cap and Iron Man. By keeping the antagonist in Civil War so comparatively mortal and low key, the filmmakers hoped to further upend what audiences have come to expect from a superhero movie.

"We knew that we could give people a movie that is like, oh, Captain America, who's the lead of the movie, isn't going to fight the bad guy in the end of the movie," said Anthony. "Even Iron Man, who's the second lead, isn't going to fight the villain. In fact, the guy who's going to fight the villain, Black Panther, isn't even going to fight the villain — he's just going to keep the villain from killing himself." (As for the obvious narrative parallels between Civil War and the recent Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice, the Russos pled ignorance. "We knew nothing about the project," said Anthony. "I think it was dangerous to our process to try to guess about what they might do.")

"We knew that we had to surprise the audience in some way, and to subvert the standard structure, which was tiring us."

By the end of Civil War, even though Cap ultimately sends a letter to Tony apologizing for keeping the truth about how his parents died from him, "something is broken," said Joe. "I think moving forward the question will be should they forgive each other?"

The Russos will soon get to answer that question; they're already developing the script for the massive, two-part Avengers: Infinity War, set to open in May 2018 and 2019, in which the ultimate MCU Big Bad, Thanos (Josh Brolin), sets his sights on Earth. Making Civil War proved to be a kind of dry run for the brothers for Infinity War — "It exposed us to the idea of dealing with the entire MCU, as opposed to a specific thread," said Anthony — and was a way to make their next project as gripping as possible.

"Looking at the overarching story that's going to be played out from Captain America: The Winter Soldier to the end of Infinity War, we needed a down beat," said Joe. "We needed to take the characters somewhere which is the farthest place from where they should be from having to engage Thanos. When the worst threat to the universe shows up, the Avengers couldn't be more dysfunctional. That seems like a very compelling place to start a story."

How Bucky And Cap's "Amazing Relationship" Became The Center Of "Captain America: Civil War"

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Sebastian Stan and Chris Evans in Captain America: Civil War.

Marvel Studios

Over the course of 12 films, no relationship in the Marvel Cinematic Universe has lit up the internet quite like the one between Steve Rogers (Chris Evans) and Bucky Barnes (Sebastian Stan). The two started out as best friends in 2011's Captain America: The First Avenger, with Bucky looking after the skinny, sickly Steve; and then Steve, transformed into the strong, stalwart Captain America, rescued Bucky during World War II. Their bond seemingly ended in tragedy when Steve witnessed Bucky fall from a speeding train while on an anti-Hydra mission, but it wasn't until 2014's Captain America: The Winter Soldier — when Steve learned that Bucky was instead captured by Hydra and brainwashed into a lethal assassin called The Winter Soldier — that "Stucky" truly became a Tumblr-melting, slash-fiction-launching phenomenon.

Their powerful, steadfast relationship is now the catalyst that drives the central conflict in Marvel Studios' latest movie, Captain America: Civil War: Steve's loyalty to Bucky — whose crimes as the Winter Solider have made him an international fugitive — drives a wedge between Steve and his fellow Avenger Tony Stark (Robert Downey Jr.). The seeds of that arc, however, started way back in the editing rooms for The Winter Soldier, where directors Anthony and Joe Russo first began to grasp the impression Bucky and Cap’s relationship was having on a rather specific audience.

"It was very noticeable to us that the women involved in postproduction were mad for Bucky and the relationship [with Cap]," Anthony Russo told BuzzFeed News in late April in an interview alongside his brother and fellow director Joe. Test screenings with friends and family of Marvel Studios and Disney employees only further reinforced that reaction, and once The Winter Soldier opened in theaters to some of the strongest reviews to date for Marvel Studios, the internet confirmed it.

Chris Evans and Sebastian Stan in Captain America: The First Avenger.

Jay Maidment / Marvel Studios

In the 2000s, the Russo brothers established themselves directing episodes of Arrested Development and Community, where they learned to appreciate the internet as a formidable guide for their creative decision making. "There was a website called Television Without Pity, where there was a very sophisticated group of TV watchers who were like a real-time test audience responding to the content as it aired," Joe Russo said. "We've often used that to our advantage." So they were especially attuned to how "Stucky" had taken on a life of its own online, especially among those who saw their connection through a romantic and sexual lens.

"There's a profound emotionality to the relationship that allows for interpretation, and we're wide open to interpretation to that relationship," Joe said, choosing his words carefully. "It has created a very big, uh, um, you know, shipping component."

The Russos, however, see the kinship between Cap and Bucky as familial. "We're family. We're brother filmmakers," said Joe. "[It's] the concept of Bucky as his brother — two guys who were raised together and had nobody else other than each other, in very poor conditions, and then suffered through the war together."

As the duo worked with screenwriters Christopher Markus and Stephen McFeely through 2014 to develop Civil War, the third Captain America movie, they kept returning to that profound connection between Bucky and Steve — as surrogate brothers, and as war veterans.

"The idea of wanting to save someone who is basically the longest-suffering POW in history is a very emotional concept," said Joe. "So we knew that if we needed a real emotionality in Civil War, the place to go for that would be Cap and Bucky."

Sebastian Stan in Captain America: Civil War.

Marvel Studios

Another strong vein of internet Bucky-Cap fandom stands firm in the conviction that Bucky is an innocent, and that passionately — sometimes angrily — opposes the argument that his actions as the Winter Soldier make him a villain. That conflict also proved to be fertile ground for Civil War's filmmakers. "There's a part of [Bucky's] personality that has a lot of blood on his hands, without question," said Joe. "That in essence is what Civil War is about: Is he innocent, or is he not innocent? Is he Bucky Barnes? Is he the Winter Soldier? Or is he something in between? And if he's a thing in between, can he be held culpable for the crimes of the Winter Soldier, or is there a human being who exists in there who is not responsible for anything he did under Hydra's control?"

For Cap — and for Stucky fans across the internet — those questions have been answered. "Cap's devoted to the idea that there is still a human being inside the Winter Soldier that he knows and loves," said Anthony. "And he's going to find that human being in there, no matter what it costs him. It's just an amazing relationship."

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