sorry not sorry
every appearance of Steve Rogers in the MCU
Captain America: The First Avenger

The Avengers

Captain America: The Winter Soldier

Avengers: Age of Ultron

Captain America: Civil War
Spider-Man: Homecoming

Avengers: Infinity War

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#civil war #stony #captain america #iron manmy take
Captain America: The First Avenger

The Avengers

Captain America: The Winter Soldier

Avengers: Age of Ultron

Captain America: Civil War
Spider-Man: Homecoming

Avengers: Infinity War

Oh my GOD this is a Holy Post™️
But where is the lie?
Study Group, Assemble!
And then there was that time I stayed at a hotel and discovered a freebie Avengers promotional comic that was all about Tony Stark shilling the Wyndham Rewards club. (Oddly enough, I was not actually staying at a Wyndham.) Love that panel at the end.
Story by Fred van Lente, art by Brad Walker. Part 1 of 2.
One of the sketches I got at San Diego Comic-Con this year. David Willis of Shortpacked! fame did this while I gushed to him about how much I love Amber and how Ethan’s toy collecting/hoarding hits too close to home sometimes. He ended up using my Captain America hoodie as reference for Cap’s costume.
So here’s a snapshot of an unusual and short-lived trend in animated adaptions. You had these villainous characters across three franchises who were inspired by the original “insidious Oriental,” pulp villain Dr. Fu Manchu: Ming the Merciless in Flash Gordon, Dr. Julius No in James Bond, and the Mandarin in Marvel Comics’ Iron Man. All were fairly major antagonists - two were essentially the heroes’ arch-villains. You couldn’t leave them out of an animated adaption, but their original portrayals were maybe not so audience-friendly in more enlightened times. What do you do?
Apparently, you make them green.
Of the three cases before us, Ming’s hue-shifting in 1986’s Defenders of the Earth makes the most internal sense; he was an alien emperor from Mongo, after all, so there’s no reason his pigmentation had to be like those of us puny earth-men. However, it would seem the Hearst Corporation didn’t feel like this alteration was enough to move Ming away from his roots - the 1996 Flash Gordon cartoon would take the idea one step further and make him into a straight-up lizardman.
The Mandarin, meanwhile, was given an in-story explanation for his greenness in 1994’s Iron Man cartoon: the alien gems that gave him power changed his skin color, turned his ears pointy, and buffed up his physique. The logic behind this explanation is given a strange twist, though, by other information in the very episode that depicts it… everything in “The Origin of the Mandarin” points to the Mandarin not being of Asian descent before his transformation. He was archaeologist Arnold Brock, whose character design and portrayal compared to his companion Yinsen implicitly point to him being a white American before going green. It results in his ensuing choice of supervillain name being at best an extension of his stated desire in the episode “to find his destiny” in central Asia, and at worst utter nonsense. “Yes! With this green skin, my elf ears, and the gems I stole from a spaceship belonging to an alien dragon, the world shall fear me as… a bureaucrat of Imperial China!”
Dr. No, though… I have no idea what 1991’s James Bond Jr. was thinking. Compared to the Nehru jacket and clean-shaven look he sported in the film, his animation model actually ramps up the stereotypical elements, which is not helped by his newfound tendency to employ ninjas. Because… half-Chinese/half-Germans hire ninjas all the time? There was no explanation as to why Dr. No became green, but considering he was supposed to have died in his eponymous film, maybe he was actually undead…
Were these character alterations related? Defenders of the Earth and Iron Man were both by Marvel Productions, but produced almost ten years apart - and James Bond Jr. was by a different studio entirely, Murakami-Wolf-Swenson. No, at best, it seems to have been a very strange series of coincidences: to avoid propagating Yellow Peril stereotypes, these three villains instead became part of the Mean Green Machine.
Which is probably still better than being on the Green Team, all things considered.
400th post!
this’d better pan out