They'll likely show up and investigate what happened to their Sentry in a future game update. MODOK's fate is left hanging. It might not be the last we'll hear from Tarleton. Since he was controlling the Sentry during the fight, it's possible he was the one who triggered it to send that green capsule into space. As the newly elected Supreme Scientist, she will continue her work and expand into new avenues like cloning and time travel.
She even created several clones of herself as seen in the post-credits scene. Plus, during the campaign, Tarleton injected her with her own regenerative formula, meaning she's more potent than ever. The first post-launch stories centered around Kate Bishop and Hawkeye will show more of Monica after the events of the campaign, so stay tuned for those in the months to come. In truth, Kamala saves the world by believing in herself. She embiggens both literally and emotionally, finally realizes her full potential, and most importantly, embraces who she is.
Years later, Kamala and the Avengers are back fighting off the bad guys in San Francisco, and there are a couple of reasons for this. Get the best of Den of Geek delivered right to your inbox! The more likely scenario is that finding Gamora will be part of the third Guardians of the Galaxy movie, which is in development after the rehiring of director James Gunn.
When Gamora died in Infinity War, it left her Guardians status in doubt, but in , Saldana signed a letter along with the rest of the Guardians cast and crew to reinstate Gunn as the director of Vol. At the end of Endgame , Steve Rogers is tasked with returning each of the Infinity Stones to their respective timelines. The Ancient One, who bestows the Hulk with the Time Stone in , explains that putting back the Stones is necessary to keep the timeline from branching off into an alternate future, a world that would be vulnerable without the protection of the Infinity Stones.
Rogers goes back and returns all the stones, a trip that should only take seconds. But the team spearheading the expedition — Hulk, Sam Wilson a. Falcon, and Bucky Barnes — has trouble calling him back.
Rogers informs his closest confidant Sam that he decided to have a life, which Tony Stark always poked at him about, insinuating that he went back in time and lived his life with Peggy Carter instead of coming back to the present.
But this opens up more questions, like: What happened to the Steve Rogers who exists in the past timeline? Did the time-traveling Rogers just decide to live in secret, hiding from the parallel Captain America? Did he spawn a new timeline? If so, how did he get back to his original timeline? The specifics are unclear, but it seems as though Rogers went back, lived a seemingly normal life with Peggy Carter, aged into an old man super soldier serum be damned , and seemingly met Sam, Bucky, and the Hulk at the place they were sending him back in time.
But the point here is that Rogers got his happy ending, a chance to go back to the world he missed so much, even if it meant ignoring some of the time-travel logistics. But wait a second: How does the above explanation square with everything else in this movie and the broader MCU? The answer to that would seem to be yes, but that leads one to wonder just how he made it to the park bench where he has his conversation with his good pal Sam.
An obvious rebuttal is that he returned to that point in time using the quantum realm time-travel device as an old man to show everybody his life had been a happy one, but then he would have popped back into the middle of the time machine.
The trickier possibility — and the one that makes more sense — is that when Cap returns to the past and decides to stay, he accidentally reveals that the MCU reality has always had two Steves, who somehow exist simultaneously and never bump into each other.
Or, put another way, for Steve to stay in our reality without causing a parallel universe split, he has to have always been here twice without anybody finding out. The Avengers received rave reviews, earning a certified fresh rating of 91 percent on Rotten Tomatoes to solidify the fact that even critics love a good superhero flick.
The movie is so much more than Captain America Chris Evans and the gang smashing in some Chitauri skulls and saving New York City from total annihilation, though. It's also a major setup for everything that happens in Phase 2 and 3 of the MCU. MCU fans had already seen one version of the Hulk played by Edward Norton in 's The Incredible Hulk , but there was an Aunt-Viv-level casting shift and Ruffalo was brought in to take on the big green mantle thereafter.
While The Avengers is its own movie with a solid beginning-to-end story, it also manages to lay the groundwork for many things that happen in subsequent films. It develops themes that unravel out through Phase 3, and essentially sets the stage for all superhero team-up movies going forward, no matter the studio. The Avengers marks the first time fans see Steve Rogers Evans and Tony Stark meet on the big screen, and it isn't love at first sight — or second sight, for that matter.
The movie establishes the duo's frenemy relationship, which is cemented in the laboratory scene just before the Helicarrier is ambushed. Steve and Tony go toe-to-toe with insults — which really are just accurate observations — and it's a back-and-forth we'd later see repeated in Avengers: Age of Ultron and Captain America: Civil War.
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