Out of the closet pops not Ms. Marvel, but Captain Marvel, who stares at her gloved hands with confusion. From the shards of the closet, Danvers picks up one of Kamala’s posters and stares at a cartoon rendering of her own face. Glancing around the room, Danvers realizes that she’s not only in the bedroom of her biggest fan, but she’s on Earth. “No, no, no, no,” she mutters and runs out of view, just as the screen cuts to black. “Ms. Marvel Will Return in The Marvels,” reads the white text that follows.
Why Is Captain Marvel So Upset?
Well, no one would be happy to suddenly find themselves in New Jersey. But beyond that, we really don’t know. As Captain Marvel made clear in Avengers: Endgame, she’s responsible for patrolling much of the universe and can’t come to Earth to deal with anything less than a Thanos-level threat. If she’s in a teenager’s bedroom in New Jersey, then she’s not fighting off the Kree or any other galactic invaders.
That said, Captain Marvel is the most powerful superhero in the Marvel Universe, and she’s probably able to fly back to wherever she needs to be pretty quickly. So when she says “No, no,” she recognizes some other type of issue, one much more pressing than simple temporary displacement. We likely won’t learn more until The Marvels releases next year. Directed by Candyman’s Nia DaCosta, The Marvels brings together Captain Marvel, Ms. Marvel, and Monica Rambeau (who has used the codename Captain Marvel in the comics). Presumably, Danvers’ urgency relates to the threat to be faced by the combined Marvels.
Where Did Kamala Go?
That question is a bit more difficult to answer. If you’ve been listening to/watching Marvel Standom, then you know that body swaps have long been part of Captain Marvel comics. In a cheeky reference to the Fawcett/DC Comics character Captain Marvel (now usually known as Shazam), Marvel’s first Captain Marvel, the Kree Mar-Vell (a version of which showed up in Captain Marvel, played by Annette Benning) and his children Genis-Vell and Phyla-Vell gained their powers from Nega-Bands, golden bracelets that they wore around their wrists. However, Mar-Vell and Genis-Vell could only leave the Negative Zone for a short period of time. When he clanged together the Nega-Bands, Mar-Vell would swap places with Rick Jones, a human who paired up with Captain America or the Hulk.
Where the Ms. Marvel of the comics gets her powers from her Inhuman DNA, the MCU version wears a bangle that recalls the Nega-Bands. So when Kamala disappears and is replaced by Carol Danvers, we may be seeing that body swap in action. While it seems unlikely that Kamala and Carol will be bonded like Rick Jones and Mar-Vell, the end-credit sequence seems to be gesturing in that direction.
But Captain Marvel Fights the Kree. What Does Ms. Marvel Have to do With the Kree?
Potentially a lot. The comic book version of Kamala is an Inhuman, which means her powers come from Kree experiments on human DNA. That part has been ignored for the MCU version, but the Kree are still involved. Back in episode three, a flashback showed how the Clandestine found Kamala’s bangle – on the severed arm of a blue alien, presumably Kree.
"Scene" - Google News
July 14, 2022 at 06:26AM
https://ift.tt/vIgP8Cj
Ms. Marvel End Credit Scene Features a Deep Cut Comics Callback - Den of Geek
"Scene" - Google News
https://ift.tt/xj7Egiy
Shoes Man Tutorial
Pos News Update
Meme Update
Korean Entertainment News
Japan News Update
No comments:
Post a Comment