is dead? Marvel has decided to kill of Captain America, the long-lasting hero from WWII, if I remember correctly is getting offed. This month is when it's supposed to happen, if I remember correctly. Who knows if he'll be back for more, but wait and see?
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Re: Captain America...
Tue, March 13, 2007 - 7:18 AMI'm confused by this. I read the Civil War: The Initiative, and Spider-Woman argued with Ms. Marvel about how Cap is dead but Ms. Marvel said he was still alive and being kept in the Raft. And then I was told that Cap got shot like three times or something like that in his own book (The Initiative has a preview of Cap #25, and he gets shot at least once in it).
I don't have straight facts, but I'm still calling bullshit on this. -
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Re: Captain America...
Tue, March 13, 2007 - 8:26 AM
Even if he is temporarily 'dead' Marvel has NEVER known how to make a characters death permanent.............
Thats the bullshyt........ -
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Re: Captain America...
Tue, March 13, 2007 - 8:58 AMMaybe they could have like 4 new Captain Americas show up... A Cyborg, A teenage clone, Batroc the Leaper in disguise and a thinly veiled token minority character. -
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Re: Captain America...
Wed, March 14, 2007 - 6:20 AM -
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Re: Captain America...
Wed, March 14, 2007 - 9:24 AMNot sure how great the idea is, but that drawing is fanFRICKINGtastic!
But I think it's a sin and a shame they killed Cap, even if it is fake. I guess it's officially the end of the Marvel era. -
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Re: Captain America...
Wed, March 14, 2007 - 1:19 PMI betcha Fury did it to bring him back on the inside, so he and Bucky can do covert ops for ol' Nick.
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Re: Captain America...
Wed, March 14, 2007 - 8:09 PMsmart money says he'll roar back to life - count on it. -
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Re: Captain America...
Wed, March 14, 2007 - 7:15 PMOr maybe... *gulp* Elektra and the Hand are gonna bring him back! -
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Re: Captain America...
Fri, March 16, 2007 - 7:24 PMOh yean, he's a goner for sure. Are you not aware of the revolving door of death?
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Comic_book_death
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Re: Captain America...
Mon, March 19, 2007 - 2:07 PMThere were several articles about it online in the mainstream media. They have seriously done this, and with no plans to bring him back, from what they said. Probably some attention getting to their sales, or perhaps following the reasoning of Kevin Smith, who suggested just such a thing awhile back, tho he mentioned Spider Man as an example.
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Re: Captain America...
Mon, March 19, 2007 - 4:32 PMthat doesn't diminish the reality, that ineveitibly; Steve Rogers will return.
He's just one of those characters who are defined by who they are, more than what they are. Its the same reason you can't really kill superman. Because nobody else is Clark Kent. A hero like Flash, no problem, they can pass that torch forever (nice pun no?); but Captain America is a person, not an Identity. Steve Rogers IS Captain America, plain and simple.
so eventually, he will be back. Far less than he have done so for no reason all all. -
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Re: Captain America...
Wed, March 21, 2007 - 12:06 PMThey couldn't even manage to keep Hal Jordan dead. And I hear they're bringing back Barry Allen. I guess it's true what they say, only Bucky stays de-- whoops! -
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Re: Captain America...
Sun, March 25, 2007 - 5:57 PMI was rereading some of the teaser stuff that they released before the news got out. When they were hyping Captain america #25 (the issue in which he was shot) & #26 (next month's issue) they bill it as "something that will have reprecussions throughout the marvel universe for the next year"; which leads me to believe that he'll be back next year.
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Re: Captain America...
Sun, April 29, 2007 - 10:50 AMThe whole Civil War series just made me want to never read Marvel comics again. -
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Re: Captain America...
Sun, July 1, 2007 - 10:54 AMMarvel Comics buries Captain America
By COLLEEN LONG, Associated Press WriterSun Jul 1, 6:30 AM ET
It's a funeral fit for a superhero. In the drizzling rain at Arlington National Cemetery, thousands of grieving patriots solemnly watch as the pallbearers — Iron Man, the Black Panther, Ben Grimm and Ms. Marvel — carry a casket draped with an American flag.
Yes, folks, Captain America is dead and buried in the latest issue of Marvel Comics' "Fallen Son," due on newsstands the morning after Independence Day. After 66 years of battling villains from Adolf Hitler to the Red Skull, the red, white and blue leader of the Avengers was felled by an assassin's bullet on the steps of a New York federal courthouse.
He was headed to court after refusing to sign the government's Superhero Registration Act, a move that would have revealed his true identity. A sniper who fired from a rooftop was captured as police and Captain America's military escort were left to cope with chaos in the streets.
But the sniper didn't act alone, and didn't even fire the shot that killed the captain.
Writer Jeph Loeb has been busy working through the stages of grief in his most recent titles. A book centered on Wolverine dealt with denial; one with the Avengers covered anger; and Spider-Man battled depression.
With the story line so relevant to present-day politics, and the timing of the latest issue so precise, it's hard not to think the whole thing is one big slam on the government.
"Part of it grew out of the fact that we are a country that's at war, we are being perceived differently in the world," Loeb said. "He wears the flag and he is assassinated — it's impossible not to have it at least be a metaphor for the complications of present day."
But Loeb says he was working with more personal material: the death of his 17-year-old son from cancer.
"So many people have lost their sons and daughters over the years, for the greater good or to cancer or other horrible things," said Loeb, an executive producer for NBC's "Heroes." "I wanted this to be something people would identify with."
In the final frames of the book, the Falcon delivers a eulogy asking superheros old and young to stand up and honor Captain America. Loeb did a similar thing at his son's funeral.
"It was this moment where I realized that we were all different, but this boy, my son, made us all connected," he said. "It was powerful."
Captain America, whose secret identity was Steve Rogers, was an early member of the pantheon of comic book heroes that began with Superman in the 1930s.
He landed on newsstands in March 1941, nine months before Pearl Harbor — delivering a punch to Hitler on the cover of his first issue, a sock-in-the-jaw reminder that there was a war on and the United States was not involved.
Since then, Marvel Entertainment Inc., has sold more than 200 million copies of Captain America magazine in 75 countries.
In the most recent story line, he became involved in a superhero "civil war," taking up sides against Iron Man in the registration controversy, climaxed by his arrest and assassination.
Marvel says you never know what will happen. He may make it back from the dead after all, although Loeb says that question isn't really important right now.
"The question is, how does the world continue without this hero?" he said. "If that story of his return gets told further down the line, great. But everyone's still been dealing with his loss.
"They aren't going to wake up and it's a dream, like it's some episode of 'Dallas.'"
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Re: Captain America...
Tue, August 14, 2007 - 12:55 PM