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‘Falcon and the Winter Soldier’: Who will be the new Captain America?

Sam Wilson? Bucky? It is quite clear who is going to be, the problem is that it is not going to be easy or going to become the new Captain America first. In addition to action in abundance, a story as important as Black Panther awaits us . As with WandaVision , Falcon and Winter Soldier is not just any series. Oh yeah, and they’re going to put a straw man on us first, but that’s not the new Cap. Now here near.

Better than asking: who is going to be the new Captain America ?, the answer is simply Sam Wilson (Anthony Mackie), after they want us to believe that he is John Walker (Wyatt Russell), a guy with good intentions , a severe case of post-traumatic stress disorder and an unhealthy obsession with following orders without question, we really should be wondering:

What can we expect from Marvel Studios’ new series Falcon and Winter Soldier (premieres March 19 on Disney +) beyond what we have seen in the official trailer? There the answer is an action series with a dimension similar to Black Panther. Thanks to the WandaVision series has become clear to us that the Sokovia Accords are still in force (it is a small detail with the importance that was dropped as who does want it in the SWORD camp in the puzzling episode 6), which means that being a superhero, or, At least, being a certain type of superhero, is not easier neither since the snap, nor since the return five years later from the missing, nor after the battle against Thanos. The Sokovia Accords, remember, destabilized the superheroes to such an extent that they separated Iron Man and Captain America, two camps were created, many heroes withdrew, others became persecuted … and both left a gap that came in handy with Thanos’ plans.

Captain America (Chris Evans) made it clear at the end of Avengers: Endgame that he wanted Sam Wilson (Anthony Mackie) to be his successor. But now what is not clear is that the Government wants Sam Wilson, a hero who was clearly against the Sokovia Accords, to be the new Captain America. If we add to this what happened in his day when Sam Wilson became Captain America in the comics (the characters are not exactly the same, since in the MCU Wilson has been a soldier and, in addition, he has obtained his wings and his Government training and has not trained for years with Captain America; in the comics, he was a social worker by day and here he is a war veteran helping other veterans with SPTD):

in a veiled way, the Government did not want him to an African-American citizen became Captain America, we can get an idea of ​​what awaits us in general lines. Black Panther was a metaphor for traditional responses to racism and colonialism (radicalism versus political activism) in an imaginary nation. Captain America is going to pose the same thing in a real nation (although, obviously, it is a representation of the United States and not the United States). But above all we are going to see a story about and against racial prejudice. 

This is what Rick Remender offered us in his day and it is what Nick Spencer offered us later, and that is why the conservative sectors of the United States criticized them, which goes to show that, well, they were not wrong in their decisions. (In fact, Nick Spencer is still haunted by the wrath of conservative haters.) Captain America is going to pose the same thing in a real nation (although, obviously, it is a representation of the United States and not the United States). 

But above all, we are going to see a story about and against racial prejudice. This is what Rick Remender offered us in his day and it is what Nick Spencer offered us later, and that is why the conservative sectors of the United States criticized them, which goes to show that, well, they were not wrong in their decisions. (In fact, Nick Spencer is still haunted by the wrath of conservative haters.) Captain America is going to pose the same thing in a real nation (although, obviously, it is a representation of the United States and not the United States). But above all we are going to see a story about and against racial prejudice. 

This is what Rick Remender offered us in his day and it is what Nick Spencer offered us later, and that is why the conservative sectors of the United States criticized them, which goes to show that, well, they were not wrong in their decisions. (In fact, Nick Spencer is still haunted by the wrath of conservative haters.) This is what Rick Remender offered us in his day and it is what Nick Spencer offered us later, and that is why the conservative sectors of the United States criticized them, which goes to show that, well, they were not wrong in their decisions. (In fact, Nick Spencer is still haunted by the wrath of conservative haters.) This is what Rick Remender offered us in his day and it is what Nick Spencer offered us later, and that is why the conservative sectors of the United States criticized them, which goes to show that, well, they were not wrong in their decisions. (In fact, Nick Spencer is still haunted by the wrath of conservative haters.)

Sam Wilson’s fight has always been in the comics the fight against racism and the decision to make him the new Captain America was not once a tokenism – it was not a symbolic inclusion – and it will not be now: the series of Marvel is not going to overlook it. 

It is true that Bucky Barnes was also Captain America in the comics, but that he becomes the new Cap does not add anything. Bucky, as they have left the character in the Marvel Cinematic Universe, has to fight his own demons, has to rebuild himself and prove that he is a hero. And that’s not a six episode process. Also, the story of Captain America has always been a story of overcoming, not a story of redemption. So let’s find Sam Wilson’s path to Captain America’s shield and Bucky’s path to sanity. 

And in the process we are going to see a representation of real dangers of the world (from the American prism, that this, in the end, is Captain America) on a global scale: the rise of fascist movements, the prevailing racism (immigration policies of the former President Trump are a good example of this), and international terrorism.

Like Steve Rogers, Sam Wilson always makes the right decision, not the decision the government wants. So we will first see the version of Captain America that the Government wants, John Walker, a soldier in the purest sense of the word, who only follows orders, whether or not they make obvious sense, meanwhile they will put rejection in front of our noses. From the Government to Wilson, we will see Wilson probably trying to fit the job by taking on all kinds of villains / threats, then we will find that there is a reason not to give it to him that has nothing to do with Sokovia (one thing is that Nick Fury it was the SHIELD mask, always in the shadows), then they will want to give it to him, then Wilson will not want to and in the end another African-American hero will have to come to convince him. Everything indicates that it will be Rhodey James,

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