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FALCON AND THE WINTER SOLDIER EPISODE 1 REVIEW: “THE MOST GROUNDED MARVEL SERIES YET”
Via gamesradar.com
There’s a reason Kevin Feige originally wanted The Falcon and the Winter Soldier to kickstart the Marvel universe on Disney Plus. The premiere is action-packed, setting up a series that’s more strait-laced than WandaVision, taking a grounded approach to analyzing the struggles of superheroes.
Where WandaVision dealt with grief, the Falcon and the Winter Soldier looks at PTSD, monetary difficulties, racism, and the long-term effects of The Blip – the official name for the Thanos snap that left half the universe in dust. Marvel is getting heavy. There are a few comical moments throughout the first episode, sure, but mostly we’re witnessing two men finding their way in the aftermath of a great tragedy.
Sam Wilson, still battling bad-guys for the American armed forces, has been gone for five years and the world has changed. His sister’s no longer financially stable and she’s about to lose their family boat. Sam thinks that, because he’s an Avenger, he can persuade a bank to lend them money, but no such luck. Being the Falcon only gets you so far, the bank teller struggling to pinpoint where he knows Sam from – though that does not stop him wanting a selfie.
Meanwhile, Bucky Barnes is suffering from major bouts of PTSD and attending therapy sessions to discuss his nightmares – memories of his terrifying past life as the Winter Soldier. Bucky feels immense guilt, the hero spending his days trying to make amends and taking the father of a former victim out for lunch. The guilt weighs so heavily that, while on a date, Bucky dashes out midway through. Life will never be normal for Bucky.
Already, the Falcon and the Winter Soldier comes across as more intimate and relatable than the MCU has been for a while. Throughout the first 42 minutes, we get a closer look at these two characters, especially Sam, and that lays the foundation for the main pull of the series.
The overarching story looks set to center on the United States versus the Flag-Smashers, a terrorist group who believe the world was better off after the Blip and want to break down borders between countries. They are Thanos-sympathisers, basically the Reddit page “ThanosDidNothingWrong” brought to life (were the users activists rather than meme-makers). Indeed, as pointed out, a world without borders sounds attractive, but their methods are heinous, and no doubt the returning villain Baron Zemo will have some relation to these villains.
The episode ends with a bombshell: the government has gone ahead anyway and installed a new Captain America without informing Sam. Worst of all, and a sign of things to come, Cap happens to be a white man. There were already undercurrents of racist attitudes on-screen during the aforementioned bank scene, and this certainly seems a purposeful choice. That Sam’s vow to retire the Captain America name was completely ignored says more than any punch-up could.
Speaking of punching, there is action. The episode kickstarts with a movie-style chase. We were promised a series akin to a Marvel movie, and they are certainly delivering on that within the first episode. There’s certainly a lot of promise in this grounded series, and both Anthony Mackie and Sebastian Stan are great here. Should their chemistry hold when they inevitably team-up, this could certainly be one excellent addition to the MCU.
#falconandthewintersoldier #falconandwintersoldier #marvel
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I think he would have gotten the loan. Bank would have loved the publicity of helping an world saving Avenger. That’s the one scene I thought was forced and weird. Good show though. Nice follow up after watching Snyder Cut.
great recap
Great episode. I thought the acting was above average. Story jumped off great, and the action scenes, especially the aerial fight at the beginning was awesome.
I was more impressed with 10 minutes of the winter soldier then I was 4 hours of the Snyder cut. No bad cgi and slow motion scenes of every character walking around.
It was ok. A couple of scenes were 'eh what' like the bank scene and Bucky's date. Who the heck have battleships just laying around in their restaurant?
I'm waiting until all episodes are available to watch like as i did with WandaVision.I love Zemo,he's my favorite Captain America villain.
The boys are back! Reminds me of the Hox and Pox days!
At the core, this episode told a story about the real struggles of military veterans and those activitely serving. PTSD, regret, not being able to be there for your family. But also how much we need these heroes and how much the government abuses them. I hope the series will keep on with these pro-veteran themes, it's great stuff tackling real issues in respectful and non-partisan ways through the lense of superheroes.
Thanks for the review.
NEED that wes fatal jay snyder cut throw down extravaganza
I loved this episode. Between seeing sams personal life, bucky couping with his demons, that impact of seeing John Walker at the end and all those easter eggs like Joaquin Torres was great XD
As someone who didn't like WandaVision… this first episode was awesome, I loved it
it sucked. Bad. Clearly written, cast and directed by an unhinged SJW
This was a good character building episode and I found it intriguing overall. We get a good deep dive into Sam's family background and also have a moment to understand what Bucky has been dealing with since coming back. I'm definitely looking forward to seeing where this goes.