Psychology of a Hero: CAPTAIN AMERICA

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  • čas přidán 5. 07. 2021
  • Steve Rogers' Captain America is the moral compass of the MCU. He learns and grows, but never changes the things that make him the OG Cap. (We see you Sam Wilson)
    Licensed therapist Jonathan Decker and filmmaker Alan Seawright talk about what it means to be a hero, to have integrity, to stay loyal to your principles and the people that matter to you. They look at Steve Rogers' journey from pure altruism to enlightened self interest (all while still staying true to himself and keeping his integrity), and how his journey is in some ways the opposite of Tony Stark's (see what we have to say about Iron Man here: • TONY STARK & PTSD: Psy... )
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    Written by: Megan Seawright, Jonathan Decker and Alan Seawright
    Produced by: Jonathan Decker, Megan Seawright & Alan Seawright
    Edited by: Trevor Horton (Except for that flash-frame in the intro where you can see our set behind Cap for about 6 frames, that's on Alan guys, he screwed up Trevor's immaculate work!)
    tzhediting.com
    Director of Photography: Bradley Olsen
    English Transcription by: Anna Preis
  • Krátké a kreslené filmy

Komentáře • 6K

  • @theworldasiseeit9496
    @theworldasiseeit9496 Před 2 lety +6651

    Nationalism says, "My country, right or wrong!" Patriotism says, " I love my country enough to expect us to do better."

    • @nsbeast1468
      @nsbeast1468 Před 2 lety +233

      And i like how captain america tries to represent that he's the counter balance for the curruption in his country

    • @SobaOfPulaski
      @SobaOfPulaski Před 2 lety +366

      Patriotism = criticizing your leaders and country to help it while still loving it.
      Something Democrats and Republicans are both incapable of doing.

    • @lianyu3854
      @lianyu3854 Před 2 lety +11

      💯

    • @devenscience8894
      @devenscience8894 Před 2 lety +90

      "Tell me who's the real patriots, the Archie Bunker slobs waving flags? Or the people with the guts to work for some real change?" -Jello Biafra.

    • @lynansheng
      @lynansheng Před 2 lety +143

      People too often forget the line that follows that: "My country, right or wrong. If it be wrong, let it be set aright again."

  • @stevemayne24
    @stevemayne24 Před 2 lety +16805

    The thing I realized while watching Falcon and Winter Soldier that really spoke to me about the character is that no one respects Steve because he's Captain America they respect Captain America because he's Steve.

    • @susanbones3381
      @susanbones3381 Před 2 lety +2572

      That's even adressed in Cap's first solo movie. When he talks to Bucky at the bar he asks him something along the lines of "You ready to follow Captain America into battle?" And Bucky says "No. But I'm ready to follow the boy from Brooklyn."

    • @roxanne_
      @roxanne_ Před 2 lety +508

      @@susanbones3381 that shit hits hard man 😩👌

    • @karri17
      @karri17 Před 2 lety +181

      That's one of the things I love about him

    • @kenkakuknight
      @kenkakuknight Před 2 lety +101

      I’m curious how you mean. Are you supposing:
      1) that people’s respect of Cap is due to Steve’s integrity as a person,
      or
      2) that people’s respect of Cap is due to Steve’s whiteness?

    • @fredericdamour5648
      @fredericdamour5648 Před 2 lety +425

      @@kenkakuknight aaaawww come on don't do that lol

  • @TJSaw
    @TJSaw Před rokem +1740

    “I don’t wanna kill anyone. I don’t like bullies. I don’t care where they’re from.”
    These three lines are the reason Cap is loved and respected AROUND THE WORLD by everyone irrespective of their nationalities. Steve Rogers is the man we all want to emulate.

    • @glennhouston5686
      @glennhouston5686 Před 11 měsíci +40

      Steve Roger's and Bruce Wayne are two comic entities that I find that their values make the most of who they are, being respected by beings much more powerful than themselves. 👍🏿🍻

    • @viewfromthehighchair9391
      @viewfromthehighchair9391 Před 9 měsíci +26

      If you want to show me that you are a "real man", show me how you lift people up and not how you can beat them down.

    • @marxel4444
      @marxel4444 Před 5 měsíci +11

      I developed a similar mindset. There assholes and there are non assholes. Includes every gender, ethnicity and disability.

    • @Rixoli
      @Rixoli Před 5 měsíci +16

      I think the scene that truly told me everything I needed to know about Steve Rogers in the film (Mind i knew a good deal from comic fans among my friends) was the scene of him throwing himself on a grenade. Dud or not, and even though he didn't have his powers yet. These were people that hated him, mocked him and thought he had no business being in their number but he was still willing to give his life for them.

    • @DiveWatcher
      @DiveWatcher Před 2 měsíci +4

      Incredibly well said! To just be a good man and which at the end of the day Cap is just a human also. Another huge reason people are able to relate to his character. In today's society it is not at all difficult to actually be a good man with pure intent but rather by holding true to that, the world today will literally eat you alive and you end up being let down and finishing last. Cap is the man!

  • @crazyhorsecavdoc4916
    @crazyhorsecavdoc4916 Před rokem +1684

    He’s ALWAYS introduced himself as Steve Rogers. It’s another subtle difference between him and John Walker who only introduces himself as Captain America.

    • @Leto617
      @Leto617 Před rokem +95

      No, when rescuing the soldiers from Hydra he introduces himself only as Captain America, to which the Frenchmen replies "I beg your pardon"
      almost always uses Steve after that tho

    • @Payne1971
      @Payne1971 Před rokem +31

      That's surely because John Walker was selected to play/be that role. Like Tom Cruise introducing himself as Ethan Hunt when playing that role.

    • @Whiteythereaper
      @Whiteythereaper Před rokem +29

      @Leto617 I take that as him embracing the role he's been in on the USO shows, hoping maybe that some of the captured soldiers know of the character either through the comics, the serials or the propaganda. When they obviously are oblivious and once he shakes that initial superiority mindset that comes from his newfound confidence in his increased strength and truly sees himself as an equal to the other soldiers, he allows for a personal connection and takes pride in just being Steve Rogers, outside of holding the rank of Captain and being a famous face back home in the war effort.

    • @concept5631
      @concept5631 Před 7 měsíci +8

      John Walker was the best part of TFAWS

    • @madelinegarber7860
      @madelinegarber7860 Před 6 měsíci +2

      Very true.

  • @Houkuko
    @Houkuko Před 2 lety +6209

    It's always felt so appropriate to me that Cap's item is a shield. Not a gun or sword, not a weapon. A shield. An item specifically designed and used to protect and keep safe from harm. THAT'S what he's supposed to be, that's what it means to be a Good Man. Be there when people need help, take care of them, keep them safe, give them hope.
    Edit: I'm not saying that he never used/uses a gun in any of the current or classic media he's appeared in or that a shield can't be used as a weapon. I AM saying that I like the symbolism in how his signature item is a shield. You can all stop with the needless pedantic corrections now.

    • @LP-mi6cr
      @LP-mi6cr Před 2 lety +264

      Isn't it hilarious that this symbol, when given to the wrong people, is immediately turned into a deadly weapon?

    • @LP-mi6cr
      @LP-mi6cr Před 2 lety +159

      @@mysticwizard2696 I know, but it's not nearly as deadly as a blade or gun, nor as "threatening". Indeed, every object can be turned into a weapon (yes I see you, fidget spinner 👀)

    • @emeraldjolteon1472
      @emeraldjolteon1472 Před 2 lety +93

      thats the point. cap is about protecting and standing up for the little ones not using force to do so.he is not like batman or daredevil who protect people with violence,
      hes about shielding and being a wall/rock to people to hold on to.hence why a weapon meant to protect,not to harm

    • @3Rayfire
      @3Rayfire Před 2 lety +73

      The thing about the Shield as a weapon is, especially as Steve used it, it's turning a defensive implement into a weapon using ingenuity. It's not a brute force kind of weapon. Everyone who has used that Shield had to train with it, to utilize it as he did.

    • @ethanhoerr2924
      @ethanhoerr2924 Před 2 lety +8

      Well said.

  • @captivatingheir
    @captivatingheir Před 2 lety +3882

    “I do not love the bright sword for its sharpness, nor the arrow for its swiftness, nor the warrior for his glory. I love only that which they defend.” Faramir - LOTR

    • @LusiaEyre
      @LusiaEyre Před 2 lety +105

      I was going to comment the same thing. If Cap had a motto, this would be it.

    • @captivatingheir
      @captivatingheir Před 2 lety +71

      @@LusiaEyre it’s my favorite quote from my favorite character.

    • @Laurelin70
      @Laurelin70 Před 2 lety +8

      You took the words from my mouth.

    • @bj.bruner
      @bj.bruner Před 2 lety +6

      Faramir*

    • @me20ntime_ff
      @me20ntime_ff Před 2 lety +10

      best comment right here. two of the best series

  • @ciaranobrien8709
    @ciaranobrien8709 Před rokem +1021

    The tech guy refusing to launch the carriers is where most of us might find our inner hero, I loved that scene. He was afraid, out manned with no way out, but still refused to follow blindly, great scene.

    • @justalpha9138
      @justalpha9138 Před rokem +65

      He became a hero right then and there

    • @ciaranobrien8709
      @ciaranobrien8709 Před rokem +25

      @JustAlpha not a super hero but a regular one, great scene

    • @sophiaboyd-uo2vz
      @sophiaboyd-uo2vz Před 11 měsíci +87

      I also absolutely adore the way he brushes their orders off with "captain's orders". He told them straight up that the reason he wouldn't launch the carriers was because they were not the highest authority in the building. Captain America was. No mattter how many people they planted in high up positions, they would never actually be in control of anything.

    • @CyarSkirata
      @CyarSkirata Před 8 měsíci +44

      I think more even than his courage to stand up for what was right in the face of extremely likely death, the thing I love most about it is that Nick Fury, or his associates, took note.
      This guy is so trusted after this that he's on the bridge crew of the refurbished helicarrier in Age of Ultron, and if you take Agents of Shield to be canon to the movie timeline - which I do up until the point at which the movies stopped sharing notes with the shows, or more practically I figure it diverges around the end of season 4 - then ya know from season 2 just how little of *Shield* knew about that project.
      That guy's integrity really took him places.

    • @danielm.2377
      @danielm.2377 Před 6 měsíci +22

      Most people just do what they're told. Especially when they are experiencing coercive power against them. It takes real courage and integrity to stand against it. That tech, though brief, became a hero in the truest sense of the word. Following what he knew what was right and placed that above his own life. Also, amazing acting from a background character!

  • @brittanybarthel1410
    @brittanybarthel1410 Před rokem +553

    In a way Cap embodies Odin’s saying about war, “A King must not look for war but always be ready for it.” Basically with Cap he always looks for ways to avoid fighting and only fights as a last resort.

    • @thejaded
      @thejaded Před 11 měsíci +10

      A true patriot. ❤

    • @notchhero11
      @notchhero11 Před 7 měsíci +42

      Which is part of the reason the hammer deems him worthy. Just food for thought.

    • @brittanybarthel1410
      @brittanybarthel1410 Před 7 měsíci +9

      @@notchhero11 that’s definitely true as well.

    • @vordt4139
      @vordt4139 Před měsícem +2

      Which is the reason why he is Worthy of wielding Mjolnir

    • @brittanybarthel1410
      @brittanybarthel1410 Před měsícem

      @@vordt4139 exactly

  • @emorag
    @emorag Před 2 lety +2252

    I appreciate the Two Rogers Rule: if neither Fred Rogers nor Steve Rogers would do something, it's probably not a good thing to do.

    • @corgiw7281
      @corgiw7281 Před 2 lety +127

      This should be on billboards.

    • @facescomix
      @facescomix Před 2 lety +145

      As a Rogers, I approve of this message.

    • @rkstevenson5448
      @rkstevenson5448 Před 2 lety +87

      @@facescomix I'm Captain Rogers, and this is my favorite motto on the Citadel.

    • @EB1493
      @EB1493 Před 2 lety +12

      Brilliant examples! Billboard worthy indeed!

    • @pentiagocity2140
      @pentiagocity2140 Před 2 lety +2

      @@facescomix Lmaoo

  • @SidRo1113
    @SidRo1113 Před 2 lety +4576

    I appreciate you guys acknowledge that Captain America isn't a character saying 'See, this is America, we're the best' but represents what people should aspire to be and aspire to do what's right (at least the MCU version does). I see too many people put a nationalistic view on Captain America when that doesn't really suit him

    • @itilosi9929
      @itilosi9929 Před 2 lety +76

      That applies to steve rogers completely (and sam wilson) but not so much to the new cap from falcon and winter soldier

    • @tehdipstick
      @tehdipstick Před 2 lety +310

      Cap has said himself in the comic books that he's not loyal to the American flag or the US government. He's loyal to his own morals, integrity and principles. He admits that his view on what America/the world should be like is idealistic at best, but that doesn't stop him from going out there to try changing hearts and minds by just being a good person.

    • @BlargeMan
      @BlargeMan Před 2 lety +179

      He represents America's founding ideals, personified. Truth, justice, individual liberty, valuing what's right over what's easy. And our founding fathers never claimed that these were exclusive to America. They simply sought out to create a place where these values would be allowed to grow and thrive. They said that these are universal values that all of humanity can and should aspire to. That's why Captain America has such universal appeal.

    • @edkwon
      @edkwon Před 2 lety +75

      Yep, Steve Rogers represents what America should aspire TO BE

    • @edkwon
      @edkwon Před 2 lety +59

      @@itilosi9929 which was one of the major points of that show, John Walker represents the opposites of the ideals that Rogers stands for

  • @Dubnoreix
    @Dubnoreix Před rokem +927

    I just noticed that Cap says: “They shot Nick Fury.” He doesn’t say: “They killed Nick Fury.” Because he knows Fury isn’t dead and has already said to Natasha earlier in the movie that he’s always honest. It are small things like that that makes these movies excellent.

    • @alexisvandom8037
      @alexisvandom8037 Před rokem +5

      He deviated from that with the Hydra ruse in Endgame tbf

    • @xfireflarex
      @xfireflarex Před rokem +30

      @@alexisvandom8037 Not really! He was just telling them that he knew their secret and hoped they would infer that he's on their side. "Hail Hydra" is a little different from "I'm Hydra" after all

    • @alexisvandom8037
      @alexisvandom8037 Před rokem +7

      @@xfireflarex Except "Hail Hydra" is an affirmation that he's Hydra. He was right to lie, but he still did it.

    • @xfireflarex
      @xfireflarex Před rokem +29

      @@alexisvandom8037 Nope it's not a lie. He allowed them to misunderstand by revealing a secret. Cap is canonically a horrible liar.
      If I bought someone a gift and other people assumed I was in love with that person, that's on them. I did nothing to affirm that action.

    • @michaelgillespie9112
      @michaelgillespie9112 Před 7 měsíci +25

      ​@@alexisvandom8037I've brought it up in real life, but I'll say it here. There is a difference between lying and deceiving. All lying is deceiving, but not all deceiving is lying. You can say the truth in such a way to deceive others.

  • @MikeScott55
    @MikeScott55 Před rokem +262

    I met Stanley Tucci, Dominic Cooper, and Haley Atwell for a photo op at a comic con a few years ago. I was in love with Atwell (GORGEOUS in real life and on the screen) and a bit intimidated by Cooper to the point that I almost missed Stanley. When I was walking to take the photo, he was the only one who held out his hand, shook mine, looked me in the eyes and said “thank you for being here today. I really appreciate it.” The most genuine smile and handshake was given to me and I will never forget that level of kindness. Stanley Tucci is the real deal.

    • @kimkhoitruong5991
      @kimkhoitruong5991 Před 5 dny +2

      damn i remember stantley before he got into big blockbuster film like transformer he was doing small gig back in the 80-90 and 2000s era

  • @GergC0521
    @GergC0521 Před 2 lety +2729

    "Captain America stands for everything America SHOULD stand for." Amen to that...

    • @redpanda4613
      @redpanda4613 Před rokem +82

      honestly i like that even more because he openly says its what america SHOULD stand for, meaning this is what we should be doing, and even announces that america ISNT doing this. its basically calling america out on its bullshit without being too directly political and digressing the topic from what its supposed to be about. it throws out a hint even an idiot could understand without digressing into a topic that they werent really here to address.

    • @zhooka
      @zhooka Před rokem +85

      America needs a therapy. Actually every country needs a therapy these days.

    • @bobjohnson1633
      @bobjohnson1633 Před rokem +17

      Steve stands for the constitution.

    • @whatisahandle221
      @whatisahandle221 Před rokem +7

      @@zhooka - That said, I think almost everybody-myself included- could use healthier training in handling emotions, communicating more respectfully*, arguing more respectfully & more productively, … and being more wary of what they read and say on the internet.😆🙄

    • @whatisahandle221
      @whatisahandle221 Před rokem

      *The one exception I might suggest would be that I think that manners-or at least, the current ideal for the highest manners-has declined. I know
      I don’t practice half the manners, etiquette, and general hospitality & neighborliness of my parents.
      But, whether I fully practice it or not, the real tragedy is that I haven’t even given the example of very good manners to my kids: I struggle with how to improve their common manners when the modern world & myself are so “casual,” “open” with every attitude, and blunt-but not necessarily conscientious-with communications.
      (Checkout the thesis of “Coming Apart: The State of White America, 1960-2010 is a 2012 book about class stratification of white Americans by Charles Murray, a political scientist and W.H. Brady Scholar at the American Enterprise Institute”

      “Additionally, Murray writes of several differences he sees forming between and causing two emerging classes-the New Upper Class and the New Lower class-among which are differences in or lack thereof in regard to religiosity, work ethic, industriousness, family, etc. Murray goes on to provide evidence that religiosity, work ethic, industriousness, family, etc., have either remained strong or have weakened minimally in the New Upper Class, whereas these same attributes have either weakened substantially or have become almost nonexistent in the New Lower Class.”
      - en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Coming_Apart_(book)

  • @kerimcgoldrick2273
    @kerimcgoldrick2273 Před 2 lety +1478

    Captain America reminds me of this saying I’ve heard, so sorry I can’t remember the source, but the saying goes, “I don’t fight because I hate what’s in front of me, I fight because I love what’s behind me.”

    • @Eris_Norregard
      @Eris_Norregard Před 2 lety +64

      That's just beautiful.

    • @DiegoMartinezCoria
      @DiegoMartinezCoria Před 2 lety +58

      My only regret is that I only have 1 like to give.

    • @Laurelin70
      @Laurelin70 Před 2 lety +110

      “I do not love the bright sword for its sharpness, nor the arrow for its swiftness, nor the warrior for his glory. I love only that which they defend.” Faramir in "The lord of the rings"

    • @johnnieriot13
      @johnnieriot13 Před 2 lety +26

      G.K. Chesterson I believe said this. It’s a great quote.

    • @ShadowSonic2
      @ShadowSonic2 Před 2 lety +9

      It's weird that so many hated it when Last Jedi used that quote.

  • @noahjester8471
    @noahjester8471 Před rokem +328

    I love the "Hulk smash" line because Hulk is totally on board with Cap. That smile screams, 'my time has come!'

    • @yourpalbryan1442
      @yourpalbryan1442 Před rokem +20

      I see it as both that and "f*cking FINALLY"

    • @thejaded
      @thejaded Před 11 měsíci +14

      Bro was like "Ay you know me bro" 😂

    • @erikbjelke4411
      @erikbjelke4411 Před 7 měsíci +20

      Well, and really plays to Steve's strength as a leader, knowing the strengths of his team. Hulk HATES being controlled or feared or hated, so Cap just gives him carte blanche to go nuts on the bad guys. I feel it's really telling that when Steve says "Hulk?" Hulk looks at Steve aggravated and annoyed, like "You DARE order me, puny human!?" But then Steve says "Smash," and Hulk grins, like "Okay, yeah, THAT I can do!"

    • @TheeOnlyDjinn
      @TheeOnlyDjinn Před 6 měsíci +4

      Afte that they killed Hulk, hurt my soul.

    • @CosmicAnchor
      @CosmicAnchor Před 5 měsíci +8

      Also its a brilliant example of a leader speaking the language of their follower.
      Steve is empathetic enough to know anything more than "Smash" might go over the Hulks head. This line communicates "We are on the same team, and I know you and I hear you".

  • @icywinterof88
    @icywinterof88 Před 5 měsíci +122

    When cap picked up the hammer, I nearly hugged a stranger next to me in the theater. And I believe he was ready to do the same. That moment made me feel sooo soo much.

    • @vordt4139
      @vordt4139 Před měsícem

      I would have hugged you back.

  • @Charolette21
    @Charolette21 Před 2 lety +1146

    One moment I’ll always appreciate is in Endgame, wherein The shield is cut in half, Thanos’s forces are arriving in force, and Rogers is standing alone. When he tightened the strap on his shield, even though he never said it, he was basically saying “I could do this all day”.

    • @edkwon
      @edkwon Před 2 lety +115

      Therein lies the true strength of Steve Rogers character, because compared to Thanos & his forces, Steve might as well be his pre-Cap scrawny self

    • @Techydad
      @Techydad Před 2 lety +152

      That scene where he's standing by himself against Thanos' entire army was beautiful. I'd love to have a big version of that framed as a painting on my wall.
      I agree with the "I can do this all day," but I think there was more. He saw that it was hopeless. There was no way he was winning that fight. A lesser man would have run, but not Cap. He knew this would result in his death, but he was going to still give everything he had (and, somehow, a little bit more) to stop as many of Thanos' forces as he could.
      Of course, then we got "on your left" and the relief that he wasn't in it alone.

    • @JM-vj2sx
      @JM-vj2sx Před 2 lety +10

      @@Techydad so well said!

    • @Grizabeebles
      @Grizabeebles Před 2 lety +65

      Weird quirk of human psychology - we pick hills to die on.
      Holding true to your ideals in the face of certain death is actually easier than holding true to your ideals knowing that you're going to have to live with the consequences. I firmly believe that Steve living in hiding for years as a criminal was harder than facing down Thanos's army.

    • @hikaruchan16
      @hikaruchan16 Před 2 lety +11

      This is it. This is the moment right here. This description is spot on. My absolute favorite Cap moment right here. 🤘🏽 What a powerful image! Gives me chills every time!

  • @cheesus7672
    @cheesus7672 Před 2 lety +2360

    It fits that Captain America doesn't feel like he fits in the modern world and america

  • @nocursewm2938
    @nocursewm2938 Před rokem +113

    I think Thor’s “I knew it!” expressed what a lot of us thought. It’s just not Cap to go, “Yeah, I’m awesome.” So he kept it to himself.

  • @meganmacdonnell8829
    @meganmacdonnell8829 Před měsícem +77

    I was sad when I realized Caps story was over, but I loved that he got to LIVE.

  • @jameslightfoot1872
    @jameslightfoot1872 Před 2 lety +3192

    Cap dropping the shield, I think that Steve still values his friendship with Tony, and if Tony is willing to hold a grudge over the shield, Cap gives it up without a second thought. He bears Tony no hatred, but Tony isn't ready to let it go. That is cap saying that nothing stands between us but you. When you're ready, I'm still your friend.

    • @brooklynnenoe8371
      @brooklynnenoe8371 Před 2 lety +82

      I love this

    • @rowanwax
      @rowanwax Před 2 lety +203

      Steve also writes him a letter Tony reads later saying the exact thing in case ppl didn’t catch the symbolism of the shield being left.

    • @Langley_Ackerman19
      @Langley_Ackerman19 Před 2 lety +17

      Awwwww man tears!!!!!

    • @KS-xk2so
      @KS-xk2so Před 2 lety +223

      I think part of it too is that Steve respects his friend Howard Stark. In his mind, it's not his shield, its the one his friend Howard gave him. If his son says he shouldn't have it anymore, then he doesn't want to keep it.

    • @mangaanimefan3089
      @mangaanimefan3089 Před 2 lety +49

      @@KS-xk2so That's what I was getting from him leaving it behind.

  • @TheNerdDynasty
    @TheNerdDynasty Před 2 lety +2115

    I hate it when people call cap boring, he's always been my favorite of the mcu. And that absolutely goes to both caps

    • @MasterCrumble
      @MasterCrumble Před 2 lety +88

      He for sure evolved over the movies. I can understand people calling him boring before he went against the grain (like in civil war, or in winter soldier). Still, I love the man, and the actor plays him so perfectly.

    • @separate_entity001
      @separate_entity001 Před 2 lety +20

      @Luke Garvey I actually do really enjoy U.S Agent as a character.

    • @dozer11
      @dozer11 Před 2 lety +12

      Agreed. I would actually say that Cyclops is painfully boring in comics, movies, and cartoons. Both Caps have a lot of depth.

    • @smileytlj23
      @smileytlj23 Před 2 lety +8

      @@dozer11 comic cyclops is leagues better than what he is portrayed as on film. And the most radically different from his initial appearance to what he is now, more so than other comic book character

    • @edkwon
      @edkwon Před 2 lety +15

      @@separate_entity001 great character, terrible Capt America

  • @michaeljwalters01
    @michaeljwalters01 Před 11 měsíci +179

    This channel is a hidden gem. You guys are, I believe, helping so many people. For me, this is a modern take on the daily show with mental health issues. Thank you!

  • @user-ne4pm8cg3t
    @user-ne4pm8cg3t Před rokem +86

    Something I realized throughout every film Cap is featured in is that anytime there’s foundational doubt or uncertainty (2/3s of winter soldier and civil war especially), the colors of his uniform are muted and darkened, but when the hope and the good start to prevail, his colors become more vibrant again. (Last third of winter soldier)

  • @emilyniedbala
    @emilyniedbala Před 2 lety +2128

    James Buchanan Barnes needs his time in the Psychology of a Hero chair next, please!

    • @nonelikekyu
      @nonelikekyu Před 2 lety +25

      Yes!!!!

    • @sherenespeaks4731
      @sherenespeaks4731 Před 2 lety +33

      Bucky! Bucky! 🤩😍

    • @yoknom
      @yoknom Před 2 lety +46

      Yes! And Loki after that pretty please :3
      edit: I've seen the villain one they did, but I want a hero one as well after the end of the Loki series ;)

    • @ajexists1214
      @ajexists1214 Před 2 lety +8

      Bucky!!!!

    • @MrMshufflepuff
      @MrMshufflepuff Před 2 lety +62

      Yes, and eventually Sam Wilson. 😊 Though for Sam they'll have to bring someone in for the race related stuff if they dive into Falcon and the Winter Soldier for that.😊

  • @Juggtacula
    @Juggtacula Před 2 lety +3497

    Introducing himself to Groot as "Steve Rogers" wasn't because he no longer considered himself Captain America, he has NEVER introduced himself as or called himself "Captain America" in any movie. Other people call him that, and it's his superhero code name, but he has only ever called himself Steve in conversations. That's what sets him so far apart from Walker who threw around the title willy nily to anyone who would listen. He doesn't need to announce who he is to be who he is, Steve Rogers and Captain America are one in the same as they embody the same ideals in the same body.

    • @philip8498
      @philip8498 Před 2 lety +128

      i think he introduces himself as "i am captain america" in his first movie once.

    • @benwillems8584
      @benwillems8584 Před 2 lety +183

      @@philip8498 I think that was with the POW's, who would have heard of this dude called Captain America, not cpt Steve Rogers.
      It juxtaposed nicely with the dude who takes the mantle who introduces himself as C A everywhere, and keeps mentioning it, showing it's an ego thing.

    • @hannahchitty-finch7738
      @hannahchitty-finch7738 Před 2 lety +91

      I don't think he sees himself as Captain America at all, it's a symbol for him, that he donned. Hence why he passed it on to Falcon. If he was Captain America it couldn't be passed on same as Iron Man

    • @jasonmgrady
      @jasonmgrady Před 2 lety +95

      He says it jokingly in the first one as he's breaking the future Howling Commandos out of Hydra's cells.
      "Who are you supposed to be?"
      "I'm... Captain America."

    • @GiovanniV69
      @GiovanniV69 Před 2 lety +74

      "Any man who must say, I am the king, is no true king." -Tywin Lannister

  • @Harvey_Mod
    @Harvey_Mod Před 6 měsíci +22

    “Compromise where you can. Where you can't, don't. Even if everyone is telling you that something wrong is something right. Even if the whole world is telling you to move, it is your duty to plant yourself like a tree, look them in the eye, and say, 'No, you move."
    This is actually a Cap quote from the Civil War comics so hearing you saying it is Cap's mission statement felt like a full circle moment and put a smile to my face

    • @LoganNagol
      @LoganNagol Před 2 měsíci +4

      dang that might be the best quote to represent what Cap stands for in the mcu. That was basically what separated Cap and Tony in civil war, Tony was willing to compromise on things he didn't believe in, Cap was not.

    • @thombrannan2589
      @thombrannan2589 Před 23 dny

      This quote was borrowed from Mark Twain, through the comics.

  • @giyuutomioka6974
    @giyuutomioka6974 Před rokem +163

    I wish more people around the world were more like captain America. The world would be happier and safer. He's my favorite hero, I admire him.

  • @terry-o-brian4333
    @terry-o-brian4333 Před 2 lety +2678

    Honestly, i feel like Steve’s friendship with Bucky deserves an entire video of it’s own.

    • @inalusa9011
      @inalusa9011 Před 2 lety +51

      A series even.

    • @dragonheart6179
      @dragonheart6179 Před 2 lety +12

      Yesss!!!❤️

    • @neepers22
      @neepers22 Před 2 lety +88

      Oh please, yes. They have a story arc that in any other context would be romantic as hell. It really made me wonder what the hell they were thinking when Steve chose to go back to Peggy in Endgame.

    • @miarue5322
      @miarue5322 Před 2 lety +103

      @@neepers22 I personally think that that's what's great about their relationship, that it's deep, complex, and it's a friendship. And I'm glad they made it that way in the end. Because nowadays there is this forced idea that having a deep and complex relationship with someone must, unfailingly, result in a romantic relationship, and that is not how it should always be. Since pure, deep and complex friendships exist, even if those are less popular than romantic relationships

    • @Fifi-jb3yx
      @Fifi-jb3yx Před 2 lety +52

      @@miarue5322 yes, and i find it sad that people seek to do this with every close bond between men in popular fiction. aren’tvwe trying to encourage men to be openly loving? and yet we are instantly labelling that as gay?

  • @johnnieriot13
    @johnnieriot13 Před 2 lety +845

    The “no, you move” speech at Peggy Carter’s funeral is originally from the comic event civil war. It’s Cap’s speech to Spider-Man.

    • @KS-xk2so
      @KS-xk2so Před 2 lety +29

      The quote was actually originally from Mark Twain.

    • @johnnieriot13
      @johnnieriot13 Před 2 lety +15

      @@KS-xk2so well jMS just stole the plant yourself like a tree beside the river of truth and you say no you move part the rest is original but that’s not the point.

    • @KS-xk2so
      @KS-xk2so Před 2 lety +3

      @@johnnieriot13 yeah lol it would be pretty odd if Mark Twain wrote the entire quote word for word.

    • @grimlock1471
      @grimlock1471 Před 2 lety +14

      @@KS-xk2so Twain's a darn good source from which to crib.

    • @KS-xk2so
      @KS-xk2so Před 2 lety +5

      @@grimlock1471 Hell yeah. Guys got literally dozens of quotes that are S-class man.

  • @DisturbedFlyer7
    @DisturbedFlyer7 Před rokem +11

    I love that he lightens up quite a lot. He went from calling other people out on cursing to saying "you gotta be shitting me" on having to fight himself. Being willing to say "that is America's ass", and not taking himself so seriously when his past self says he "can do this all day" and just like, yeah, yeah, I know. He's notices his own self-righteousness and is just like... ugh, let's take that down a few notches to a healthier place.
    Cap is a perfect representation of what we should be but probably never will be.

  • @brittanybarthel1410
    @brittanybarthel1410 Před rokem +73

    He does a great speech on Endgame as well. He always gives great speeches.

  • @roryfire4163
    @roryfire4163 Před 2 lety +1511

    The biggest difference between Cap and Tony, is the Tony is a boss but Cap is a leader

    • @taytay1030
      @taytay1030 Před 2 lety +10

      🙌

    • @ValGOPLock
      @ValGOPLock Před 2 lety +56

      That's actually a very good way of putting it

    • @deviles
      @deviles Před 2 lety +124

      I disagree. Tony is never really a "Boss". He does not delegate, and he does not see himself as in charge of the other avengers. He is much more of a loner, who just does what needs to be done, and often he sees himself as the only one who is intelligent enough to do it. And if other happen to be there and willing to help, he uses them and their skills as recource because he is a smart tactition. But he doesnt demand respect or obedience from anyone.
      If someone has examples that contradict this statement, id like to hear.

    • @firstnamelastname6016
      @firstnamelastname6016 Před 2 lety +102

      @@deviles I interpreted it as Tony is a Boss, like the “slang” term.
      Like a boss.
      So more of just a cool and intelligent dude and less like a manager of a mid-large range law firm.

    • @lotsofuwuenergy3983
      @lotsofuwuenergy3983 Před 2 lety +50

      @@deviles I'd say the scene in Infinity War just prior to their fight with Thanos on his home planet is an example of Tony attempting to take charge and delegate roles to each of the characters present (and taking a more disciplinary role upon yelling, "Are you _yawning?_ In the middle of this, while I'm breaking it down?") Until Quill takes charge instead, ofc.
      I think the OP is generally referring to the "vibe" of someone who naturally attracts people to following them vs one that has to explicitly tell others to follow their lead, because Steve doesn't really have any scene like this after the first Avengers movie; it seems as though people just _are_ on his wavelength naturally.

  • @nathangerowitz2246
    @nathangerowitz2246 Před 2 lety +2425

    I think the moment that broke Cap’s heart is during his fight with Tony at the end of Civil War. He’s ripped off Tonys helmet and raises his shield to destroy the suits arc reactor. Tony raises his arms to protect his head. In that moment Tony thought Cap was going to kill him.

    • @themuzzy5092
      @themuzzy5092 Před 2 lety +299

      To be fair, a lot of that is just survival instinct. Would you do any differently in the heat of the moment?

    • @Gyrfalcon312
      @Gyrfalcon312 Před 2 lety +149

      I thought he was going to kill him, too. 😲

    • @whtwolf100
      @whtwolf100 Před rokem +109

      There was no reason to rip of the faceplate.
      You can see in the pause before he brings it down on the reactor, he WAS going to go for the head.

    • @shanerayborn8133
      @shanerayborn8133 Před rokem +144

      Kind of scary what happens when cap doesn't hold back. In most of his actions he is holding back quite a bit I believe. Only when he's fighting beings of equal or superior physical ability do we see him using all his ability and in those cases it seems less impressive because he's fighting an equal or a more powerful enemy. But against someone who isn't on his level.....really scary if you think about what a man like cap can do if he wasn't Steve rogers

    • @crolex7537
      @crolex7537 Před rokem +109

      @@whtwolf100 he ripped off the faceplate so Tony could breathe with the suit off

  • @ladylucario7958
    @ladylucario7958 Před rokem +92

    I would love to see them do a series on the Avatar the Last Airbender series. Studying the character progression of each character, starting with the man of tea himself, Iroh.

    • @oiPuReNaDeZzo
      @oiPuReNaDeZzo Před 11 měsíci +7

      Absolutely yesssssssss

    • @barbara_LL
      @barbara_LL Před 7 měsíci +4

      omg tell me about it!!! I can see Alan sobbing with zuko's and iroh's reunion, that would be so great

    • @GabbySinclair-iz4wv
      @GabbySinclair-iz4wv Před 4 měsíci

      Some other youtubers make videos about them. This one is really good czcams.com/video/gi992jWsYTo/video.htmlsi=XPjOlsFE4LuNawSO

  • @krystalissoojung5114
    @krystalissoojung5114 Před rokem +100

    14:10 and also the entire Winter Soldier's movie like a callback toward the 1st movie, where doctor Erskine and Steve met the first where he asked "is it a test?", he says he don't want to kill, he doesn't like bullies.. he it's amazing how he stays true to it... when he realized that the government/SHIELD which he worked for (I kinda believe that part of the reason capt worked there because Peggy was one of thr founder) is the BULLIES, he quickly turn his back and fight for the innocents

  • @lordshadow19
    @lordshadow19 Před 2 lety +1517

    That scene where the analyst refuses to launch the carriers is one of the best scenes in the entire MCU. This guy, he's not a particularly tough guy from what we've seen, especially compared to Grillo who's proven to be one of the toughest people in SHIELD, yet even though he knows he will almost certainly die from his refusal to do what Grillo is telling him, that mere speech from Captain America gave him the resolve to stand up for what was right. That scene really sells you on just how much of an influence Captain America has on the people around him, he's such a symbol of morality and so selfless that people are willing to literally die for him because they believe in him that much. Winter Soldier is easily the best of the MCU films.

    • @rsterbin
      @rsterbin Před 2 lety +84

      Honestly one of my favorite scenes of all time. I remember reading somewhere that about half of military coup attempts fail, and when they do, it's almost always because the ordinary civil service people in those unglamorous roles refuse to work. There's a great story of a coup attempt ending with the wannabe dictator wandering through the halls, unable to find a secretary to type up his proclamations.

    • @manuelschneider1105
      @manuelschneider1105 Před 2 lety +114

      What gets me, Cameron Klein (the analyst), has no idea how many people in this room will be on his side. It could be everyone, it could be no one. I still think, given his lack of strength or training, that he may have been the bravest character in the entire MCU.
      There was a declared bad guy behind him, everyone in the room knew he was a bad guy, yet no one acted. Klein had every reason to believe he would get killed if he didn't do as he was asked to. And it wasn't even for a great sacrifice. Releasing those carriers could have been done by someone else in his place. His refusal to do so, in a room full of Hydra bad guys, would change absolutely nothing except for one dead guy on the ground.
      And despite all that, Cameron Klein sided with Cap. Not because it was heroic. Not because the sacrifice would have made a difference. But because it was the right thing to do.

    • @julesmasseffectmusic
      @julesmasseffectmusic Před 2 lety +14

      @@manuelschneider1105 If the organisation is one with an alleged moral standing you will find that the guys in Admin are very bloody dedicated to the cause. Know why? if your good at admin and work for govt or charity you can get way more money in the private sector.

    • @dawnmcauley6411
      @dawnmcauley6411 Před 2 lety +18

      That's really what Cap's power is, inspiring others to their best.

    • @TimesFM4532
      @TimesFM4532 Před 2 lety +6

      Courage is infectious

  • @moonyollie6977
    @moonyollie6977 Před 2 lety +883

    I appreciate that you talk about Cap as an aspiration of a humanist ideal and not, as he's sometimes been (wrongly) written, an american nationalistic ideal. I think people forget way too much that Steve Rogers was created by two Jewish men, who were being sent death threats at the time, because they saw what was happening in Europe and denounced that.

    • @raindownonme21
      @raindownonme21 Před 2 lety +53

      I second this, my journey into getting into marvel and MCU generally was very rocky and started with First Avenger. When I first saw it in theaters (having no clue what was going on, I even fell asleep at one point and bc of it for the longest time was afraid to give the other Captain America movies a shot [I did during the pandemic finally, they're high on the list now]) then a second time a few weeks ago when doing a proper chronological order marathon all I could see was the American nationalistic angle, and being a Canadian whose tired of the BS coming out from down there in recent years found it grating. this video actually gave me a new understanding and appreciation for Cap as a human character instead of an American caricature. that "I am Steve Rogers" line now hits harder, before it was just funny but now it has so much depth, thank you cinema therapy for giving me the Cap therapy I clearly needed

    • @atiqahdiyana5665
      @atiqahdiyana5665 Před 2 lety +64

      I will never get over when 3 nazis went over to the building Kirby worked at and made threats, saying they’ll show what nazis would do to captain America
      So _Jack fucking Kirby_ proceeds to roll up his sleeves and make his way down like a boss. But they were gone by the time he got to the lobby

    • @Anonymous-zd1ow
      @Anonymous-zd1ow Před 2 lety +8

      @@atiqahdiyana5665 bro WHAT

    • @Betito1171
      @Betito1171 Před 2 lety +5

      @@atiqahdiyana5665 gimme a source for that please

    • @atiqahdiyana5665
      @atiqahdiyana5665 Před 2 lety +19

      @@Betito1171 it’s from his biography “Kirby: King of Comics” by Mark Evanier

  • @howlinmad4208
    @howlinmad4208 Před 4 měsíci +18

    A friend and I were talking about which superhero we most resembled. He told me I resembled Captain America to him, I was very happy with this. I hope I never let him down.

    • @N0URii
      @N0URii Před 21 dnem +1

      Wow what a praise

  • @MrShowwoff
    @MrShowwoff Před 5 měsíci +8

    I like the lines in the gym punching bag scene where Cap says, "I'm too old fashioned." and Fury responds, "I think we need some old fashion ways." (something like that)

    • @magnusprime962
      @magnusprime962 Před 2 měsíci

      That’s actually later when he’s in the plane with Coulson. Coulson mentions he modified Cap’s uniform, and Cap asks if the Stars and Stripes are too old-fashioned. Coulson answers that these days people just might need old-fashioned.
      Fury does use the phrase old-fashioned later though. He tells Cap and Tony that Coulson died believing in heroes. Tony walks away and then Fury says “Well, it’s an old-fashioned notion”.

  • @MrManlify
    @MrManlify Před 2 lety +432

    I saw a line I liked which was, "John Walker was a good soldier, Steve Rogers was a good man."

    • @l.tc.5032
      @l.tc.5032 Před 2 lety +37

      I don't think John was even a bad person but to quote Zemo, there will never be another Steve Rogers.

    • @thatonedog819
      @thatonedog819 Před 2 lety +9

      @@l.tc.5032 Yeah, I think the majority of the reason why I didn't like him was because he wasn't Steve

    • @mr.stuffdoer8483
      @mr.stuffdoer8483 Před 2 lety +4

      And TBF, a good soldier should be, in part, a good person.

    • @thatonedog819
      @thatonedog819 Před 2 lety +2

      @@mr.stuffdoer8483 should be, yes.

    • @3Rayfire
      @3Rayfire Před 2 lety +25

      John Walker's issue isn't that he isn't a good man because he is, but rather he's a perfect soldier first. He scored off the charts on every test the Army gave him. Even before the serum, he led with his power first, not his empathy, or ethics.
      Col. Chester Phillips: Then throw me a bone. Hodge passed every test we gave him. He’s big, he’s fast, he obeys orders. He’s a soldier.
      Dr. Abraham Erskine: He’s a bully.
      None of the people who selected Walker to be Captain America ever met Steve Rogers, let alone served alongside him or actually knew him. He became a fugitive just four years after he got out of the ice, and none of those people ever really understood why he was Captain America.
      Dr. Abraham Erskine: The serum amplifies everything that is inside. So, good becomes great. Bad becomes worse. This is why you were chosen. Because a strong man, who has known power all his life, will lose respect for that power. But a weak man knows the value of strength, and knows compassion.

  • @pleasehelp2446
    @pleasehelp2446 Před 2 lety +3049

    My take on the hammer scene in Ultron has always been that the second Steve realized he could lift the hammer he stopped because of his humility. He realized he could but that he shouldn't, because 1 it would hurt his friend Thor if he thought he wasn't needed 2 it would demoralize the rest of the group that had gone before him because he was the last one to try and 3 he wouldn't gain anything by showing off so once he realized that he could move it he stopped.

    • @tabby25hope
      @tabby25hope Před 2 lety +108

      I think the same.

    • @ClokworkGremlin
      @ClokworkGremlin Před 2 lety +345

      I much prefer the idea that we all had when watching Ultron. That Cap could *budge* the hammer, but he couldn't move it, because he had some stuff he needed to work through. He wasn't worthy. Yet.

    • @endosym5023
      @endosym5023 Před 2 lety +87

      That's the in universe explanation. The Russo brothers explained this in their wired interview about Endgame

    • @TAOBIAF
      @TAOBIAF Před 2 lety +197

      @@ClokworkGremlin I never understood that line of thinking. You're either worthy or you're not. if he had shit to go through then he wasn't worthy, just like Thor wasn't worthy before the end of Thor 1.
      There's no such thing as almost worthy.

    • @stewartsmalls2024
      @stewartsmalls2024 Před 2 lety +63

      @@TAOBIAF But it is like Bastian in Never Ending Story and Willow in Willow. Accepting his worth is that final hurdle. He is worthy, everyone sees it…except him.

  • @StabbyTaco2486
    @StabbyTaco2486 Před 4 měsíci +10

    I've always related to Captain America. He became my favorite super hero growing, and when First Avenger came out, it just...I related so much to his ideologies and went through similar life struggles (not to his extend but ya know.) He will forever be my model for what it means to be a good person with integrity and loyalty.

  • @williamj.dovejr.8613
    @williamj.dovejr.8613 Před 2 lety +813

    Cap could lift the hammer, but Thor's ego mattered more to him than proving something..Cap respects Thor and that's why he chose to act as if he couldn't do it.

    • @briandaaranda9735
      @briandaaranda9735 Před 2 lety +113

      I think that Steve started lifting the hammer and then his own "no, wait, how is this possible? I'm just a kid from Brooklyn" attitude came in. He has insecurities, just like the rest of us, and in here he was finding out things that were not necessarily good about his previous work/employers, like Jonathan and Adam said.

    • @williamj.dovejr.8613
      @williamj.dovejr.8613 Před 2 lety +16

      @@briandaaranda9735 Good points.

    • @VerryJerry90
      @VerryJerry90 Před 2 lety +28

      I think He didnt just respect Thor but he also cared for him like a friend and thats why he could lift it

    • @MiguelCruz-zj9rh
      @MiguelCruz-zj9rh Před 2 lety +34

      Actually I read somewhere that at that moment he’s keeping the secret of Bucky killing Tony’s parents. And that small dark thing is what kept him from lifting it. I don’t remember where I read it. That’s why he was almost able to lift it.

    • @VerryJerry90
      @VerryJerry90 Před 2 lety +13

      @@MiguelCruz-zj9rh but he didn’t know that for sure until civil war. When he first heard that info from Zola he didn’t know the winter soldier was Bucky and neither was he sure it was the winter soldier who orchestrated starks assassinations. Ther were a lot of variables at play. It was only when he saw the video it all confirmed him for sure but by then in technicality that was information he knew in advance, because of he heard from Zola. It’s a tight situation and unfortunately a catch 22

  • @MylesKillis
    @MylesKillis Před 2 lety +351

    My pastor once said to us freedom is not the ability to do what you want but the responsibility to do what is right. Cap perfectly embodies this. He’s a free man if there ever was one.

  • @ThatCyndi
    @ThatCyndi Před rokem +40

    Everything about Steve’s guardedness and general grief in Avengers 1 is so much more enhanced when you find out that Avengers 1 only takes place 2 WEEKS after he wakes up from the ice.
    Imagine being a 25 year old veteran with an entire 70-year legacy on your shoulders and you lost everything and everyone you knew overnight (plus his best friend died last week from his POV)
    …. And then you’re expected to lead a bunch of superpowered people who constantly make fun of you for not getting things immediately against an alien invasion?

  • @bluesdjben
    @bluesdjben Před rokem +22

    Great video. I love Captain America in the MCU so much. My favorite Captain America moment is in Winter Soldier, in the lull right before they move on Shield Headquarters. Steve is standing on the dam, and Sam comes up to him and says, "Whoever he used to be, the guy he is now, I don't think he's the kind you save, he's the kind you stop...He doesn't know you." And Steve just says, "He will."

  • @woodrobin
    @woodrobin Před 2 lety +837

    Mjolnir is a 100% all-or-nothing thing. It either moves if you're worthy, or might as well be bolted to the fabric of the Universe if you're not. Thor knew in that second that Steve was worthy to wield it, and you could tell Steve decided not to show Thor up. I believe that was confirmed by the directors and writers, too.

    • @apuji7555
      @apuji7555 Před 2 lety +28

      yeah, it was confirmed as well

    • @Pbness
      @Pbness Před 2 lety +50

      I forget which Avengers movie it is, I believe it's Ultron, but someone says something to Cap which is why I believe he couldn't lift the hammer. But someone says that Cap couldn't live without war. I assumed that was why he couldn't lift the hammer completely, he was a good person all around but he needed to be in combat for him to feel like he has a purpose, a use.
      And after the war against Thanos, after the nap Snap, after 5 years, he's done. He doesn't want to fight anymore, he's tired. He development went from someone who needs some sort of conflict to feel like he has a purpose to a man who just wants a dance, and who knows he doesn't need a war to feel like he has a place in the world.
      But now that I know it was because he didn't want to show Thor up, I'm kinda disappointed.

    • @Erisonii
      @Erisonii Před 2 lety +57

      It was actually confirmed that his hiding about Bucky's involvement in Tony's parents' death was what stopped him from lifting it. Once that came to light, the burden was gone and he was judged worthy.

    • @Erisonii
      @Erisonii Před 2 lety +47

      @Dawud Suleiman After some digging around because I couldn't remember, I've now realized the directors and the writers from Age of Ultron said conflicting reasons. The directors say it was out of deference to Thor, while the writers say it was because Steve was keeping the secret. I guess it's whichever you prefer until some MCU material decides to make one version or the other canon.

    • @fortunatus1
      @fortunatus1 Před 2 lety +10

      @@Erisonii Cap was able to wield Mjolnir going way back into The First Avenger before he became a Super Soldier. It was when he jumped onto the grenade to save his squad. Willingness to sacrifice oneself for others is what makes one worthy.

  • @eamontdmas
    @eamontdmas Před rokem +2005

    Can we just take a moment to admire Chris Evans for playing the goodliest of good guys so well. It can't have been easy.

    • @stevenscott2136
      @stevenscott2136 Před rokem +93

      From what I've read, he says his actual personality is Johnny Storm in "Fantastic Four". So yeah, that would be very hard to do.

    • @kappadarwin9476
      @kappadarwin9476 Před rokem +45

      Yeah he came a long way from Not another teen movie.

    • @erikwilliams1562
      @erikwilliams1562 Před rokem +24

      @@stevenscott2136 oh he at least was an absolute joke IRL.
      Tells you how damn good he was as Cap

    • @45sticky
      @45sticky Před rokem +19

      I will admit, Chris Evans played the role of Captain America very well. However, in real life, he is the polar opposite. He is extremely liberal and believes on limiting free speech. As well as Anti-second amendment as well as other liberal causes.

    • @Kevin-cx7ln
      @Kevin-cx7ln Před rokem +93

      @@45sticky my guy what about captain america makes you think he's conservative? I mean in the slightest?

  • @passiveaggressive6175
    @passiveaggressive6175 Před rokem +13

    We need more channels like this, there is so much toxicity on social media.🙏🏾

  • @evcass69
    @evcass69 Před rokem +15

    Loyalty to principle is more important than loyalty to a group. 💯

  • @_The_Traveler_
    @_The_Traveler_ Před 2 lety +1941

    I really appreciate how you handled the nature of Captain "America" as a somewhat politicized figurehead for a nation that doesn't exactly mirror what the hero is meant to be emblematic of. I love Cap, as a little black kid with Asthma, I was among the many that saw Captain America in pamphlets at the doctors office and various other American institutions in the 80s-90s. Cap literally inspired me to defy my diagnosis, the doctors said I would never be able to keep up with the other kids. It ended up being the other way around, and it started with things like finding out that Cap had Asthma too. Of course, he also had a super serum lol, but I understood even as a child that what he represented was the will to try when there _isn't_ some super serum or short cut available. When it gets hard, and the stress is cranked beyond what you've experienced before, who you really are shines through serum or not. And in that way, I made a pact with myself that day at that Pulmonologists office in Illinois, on a damp overcast Thursday.
    "If he can push and endure, so can I." It's been 32 years and I'm still pushing. If I can push...so can you!

    • @vapx0075
      @vapx0075 Před 2 lety +42

    • @KumeOzoro
      @KumeOzoro Před 2 lety +42

      The Traveler, you also have become an inspiration.

    • @kate2create738
      @kate2create738 Před 2 lety +35

      I recommend you also look at Teddy Roosevelt, he too had asthma as a kid and was very sickly, but he never allowed that to stop him from achieving all he did. Politics aside, that man is inspirational with what he accomplished. Glad to hear Captain America inspired you to defy the odds, sounds like you've managed a healthy perspective.

    • @RoseDragoness
      @RoseDragoness Před 2 lety +7

      Glad to hear capt bring a shine in your heart and spirit!

    • @nateward7120
      @nateward7120 Před 2 lety +11

      That was amazing. Well done. I’ve been reading about stoicism lately, and Cap reminds me of a stoic. Check out Ryan Holiday on CZcams if you haven’t heard of him yet.

  • @mccabber24
    @mccabber24 Před 2 lety +684

    "Steve is no longer Captain America. He's fighting for the World now" so... you could say, he's Captain Planet?

  • @cosmichal9548
    @cosmichal9548 Před rokem +20

    I was so proud of myself for making it through Infinity War and Endgame without shedding a tear and then the Cap/Peggy scene as the final shot of Endgame destroyed me

  • @nickeldan
    @nickeldan Před rokem +29

    I remember hearing something profound about Captain America: It means something that his weapon is a shield.

  • @nopsinops7547
    @nopsinops7547 Před 2 lety +1801

    It may seem natural for me to say this as a German, but the fact that the MCU Cap didn't had any hate for The German Soldiers themself but rather the actual Human Monsters from Hydra actual meant much to me. We were the main cause of World War 2, but seing our ordinary people who litterally lived under a Dictator in that time portrayed as pure evil Monsters always broke my heart. I love Cap despite being from another Country because he litterally is the most Pure hero out the together with Spidey and Flash

    • @KingMuncheez
      @KingMuncheez Před rokem +48

      Amen brother.

    • @radicalgremlin6440
      @radicalgremlin6440 Před rokem +67

      Amen, Cap does not want to hurt anyone. He just wants to help everyone no matter who they are. Why he is my favorite hero. As he symbolizes everything that is good.

    • @stephan2807
      @stephan2807 Před rokem +53

      Amen that's why spider man, cap and the flash are my favorites. They want to help everyone even if they're bad. Heck that was the plot of no way home which is why it's my favorite spider man movie not cause of the cameos and all of that but because something all spiderman films miss is him helping villains too they hint at it but not actually do much and it causes loss but he still helps them even after. Homecoming did that too with vulture, him saving vulture is what I loved so much and why he became my favorite movie spider man and no way home continues that to a lot more. Same with the flash and captain america

    • @amandasnider2644
      @amandasnider2644 Před rokem +18

      I really like the film War Horse because it shows there's people on both sides

    • @justmayhem771
      @justmayhem771 Před rokem +17

      im from Denmark and i feel you, a lot of people assume we still hate germany for what happened during the war, but most people i know have a lot of sympathy for what the germans went through as well and most movies surrounding the subject nowadays portray how horrible it was for all parts involved. It`s refreshing to see american television finally share the same take

  • @freixas18
    @freixas18 Před 2 lety +380

    As a non American I never saw Cap' as a patriot. He stands for moral values and what he believes, but never fights for the country itself. And in the late movies he saves the whole world, not just for his country, but to follow his heart. He's never done a speech for America, and that's why I love him.

    • @daulahiftitah6461
      @daulahiftitah6461 Před 2 lety +15

      Same. This is also the reason why I respect Sam more than John walker

    • @karri17
      @karri17 Před 2 lety +7

      @@daulahiftitah6461 I respect anyone more than John Walker

    • @daulahiftitah6461
      @daulahiftitah6461 Před 2 lety

      @@karri17 even Karli?

    • @jacobhargiss3839
      @jacobhargiss3839 Před 2 lety +25

      he is, in the truest sense, a patriot. he wants his country to be the best version of itself. Not obeying the government or fighting for more than just your own country doesn't make someone not patriotic. The revolutionaries of 1700's fought their ruling government, they were still patriots. WWII was basically a war to liberate Europe, but we still call the veterans of that war patriots.

    • @iche9373
      @iche9373 Před 2 lety

      @@karri17 John Walker is USAgent, he is a patriot dedicated to protect America. And after all, he is human.

  • @richardchisenhall387
    @richardchisenhall387 Před rokem +19

    Just a little piece I noticed, it's even more meaningful that cap tells hulk to smash, yes it's a funny line and it shows hulk listening to cap, but it also shows cap respecting hulk as an equal member of the team. Steve could've just let him be and hulk would've done that anyways, but symbolically it shows hulk is a respected member by the defacto leader (both leaders as stark is a big fan of banner as well) and this is one of the moments I believe build up Bruce's self image and eventually helps him integrate into smart hulk

  • @TheContrarian09
    @TheContrarian09 Před rokem +14

    Y’all skipped the best scene in endgame of him standing back up despite despite him losing the hammer and his shield becomes shattered. The hammer scene is hype, yes, but the real best scene was after the army arrived.

  • @therussianprincess7036
    @therussianprincess7036 Před 2 lety +637

    The Teletubies were the biggest jumpscare of the episode, ngl.

  • @shennyyys
    @shennyyys Před 2 lety +2547

    I have a bachelor's degree in Psychology and you don't know how much your series makes me happy because I don't really get to discuss some of the things I like together (in this case, Marvel heroes and Psychology) on a regular basis so having you guys make this series, along with the villains, makes me really excited and giddy. Thank you so much!! ♥♥

    • @matthewmorrisdon6906
      @matthewmorrisdon6906 Před 2 lety +2

      Are you the Harry Quinn type?

    • @Hello_Gorgeous
      @Hello_Gorgeous Před 2 lety +6

      Same ❤

    • @mariposavioleta9007
      @mariposavioleta9007 Před 2 lety +16

      I never took any education in this and seen the majority of what they said in the video in my talks with friends over the years of watching Cap. I've always had a strong sense of being able to see these things and approaching it with compassion being able to explain that in discussions. It's amazing how well written and acted it is to show these traits so well. I both sit and enjoy the movie while there and talk about this type of stuff after and explain the psychology behind things to my friends because they always ask why did they do this or that and don't understand it. I have said these things which were mentioned in the video and they're like oh ok I guess I can see what you're saying or they still didn't understand but after the storyline went further they seen and said ok you said that would happen. I kinda think it makes the movies that much more fun to see whether you're right as the series continues.

    • @mauritious1
      @mauritious1 Před 2 lety +4

      Yeah sameee!

    • @charmedlife1990
      @charmedlife1990 Před 2 lety +18

      Same here! This show has definitely helped as I love looking at the psychology behind shows and movie characters and my family and friends are just like "be quiet and watch".

  • @Orifiel666
    @Orifiel666 Před 11 měsíci +3

    That speech that Sharon had was actually Steve's in the Civil War run of Marvel Comics.
    It was so epic, and only spoken to Peter Parker.

    • @Orifiel666
      @Orifiel666 Před 11 měsíci

      I loathed that ending. Not gonna lie.

  • @vicmartinoofficial331
    @vicmartinoofficial331 Před 7 měsíci +7

    As a long time fan of Captain America really enjoyed watching this "Cinema Therapy" discussion of one of my favorite of all masked avenger's Captain America.

  • @EvonneSol
    @EvonneSol Před 2 lety +794

    Steve is basically the epitome of 'be the best of humanity'.

    • @JoshSweetvale
      @JoshSweetvale Před 2 lety +22

      Just like he's a protector and thus has a shield;
      He has _the best of humanity_ *biologically.*

    • @bobjohnson1633
      @bobjohnson1633 Před rokem +8

      He embodies the ideals of the Scottish enlightenment, which is what the US constitution and the country are based on.

    • @andrewmendez8322
      @andrewmendez8322 Před rokem +2

      I don't think it's be the best of humanity I think it's be the best for humanity.

    • @krystalissoojung5114
      @krystalissoojung5114 Před rokem

      just like doctor Erskine said the night before the injection, the serum emphasize something that already there. Since he always a good man, then the serum help him became the great man

    • @human3213
      @human3213 Před rokem

      The worst is a better word.
      He's a hypocrite asshole.
      Nothing more.

  • @michaelajames99
    @michaelajames99 Před 2 lety +314

    I think that Steve never believed the shield belonged to him. It’s just a way to protect his friends

    • @redvinesron
      @redvinesron Před 2 lety +27

      I agree. It's like it was made for him to use, as the one in care-giving or safe-guarding people. But once his time was done, he wasn't afraid of passing it on. And good for him. 😊

    • @AngelaReyeroMartinez
      @AngelaReyeroMartinez Před 2 lety +8

      for me, more than his friends, the people.

    • @Grizabeebles
      @Grizabeebles Před 2 lety +37

      The sigh and nod he makes before dropping the shield in Civil War tells me that he takes a moment to think about what Tony is saying and agrees.
      Meanwhile, the hasty way Tony says it is a sign he's improvising. Going after Cap's identity is the last weapon he has at his disposal. It's also a call-back to the exchange in Avengers "everything special about you came out of a bottle".
      If you watch Tony's reaction shot to seeing how easily Steve gives up his identity - he can't believe it. Tony's attempt to wound Steve emotionally backfires.

    • @JeffKelly03
      @JeffKelly03 Před 2 lety +19

      I think you're right. I think that's why he was able to give it to Sam and when Sam says it feels like it somebody else's, Steve says "It isn't." The shield doesn't belong to one person. It represents an ideal and it represents integrity and it belongs to whoever can best represent it. First it was Steve, and when he says it belongs to Sam, he's saying Sam is the one who will best represent it.

    • @melissaharris3389
      @melissaharris3389 Před 2 lety +8

      @@JeffKelly03you hit on the nail. The shield represents an integrety. That's why Sam feels it's weight so strongly and is conflicted and Bucky is so attached to it in FATWS.

  • @TimRHillard
    @TimRHillard Před 3 měsíci +4

    People have always told me I have allot of integrity. And I am very proud of that. When I was a kid, I had just a few heroes: my dad, grand pa and uncle. Then, captain America. I was fortunate to own dirt bikes. I had made a cap shield with a garbage can lid. I went everywhere in the mountains of Boone NC on my dirt bike, with that shield.
    Thank you to everyone who made these movies. 100% they got cap right and Chris Evans was stellar.

  • @toastyboi8737
    @toastyboi8737 Před měsícem +2

    The part where Steve completely runs down the plan with the team in the first avengers will forever be my favorite captain america moment in the entire mcu
    A boss is only known well by his men, while a true leader knows his team well.

  • @sayotlittler
    @sayotlittler Před 2 lety +637

    Part of the "language" bit is that officers are held to a higher standard, including not gambling, swearing, et cetra. I mean, he's an Irish-American that grew up in 1930s Brooklyn, of course he knew how to swear like a dirty sailor. The thing is, once he became an officer and the "face of America," he couldn't be himself 100%. So the whole "language" bit is the habit of being an officer in charge of a rather unruly bunch.

    • @melodie-allynbenezra8956
      @melodie-allynbenezra8956 Před 2 lety +39

      Good call.

    • @CatGold5047
      @CatGold5047 Před rokem +26

      It's possible. I always thought of it as a stick in the mud goody two shoes thing. My mom knows so many swear words it's silly, she knows their definitions and has heard how they are used, but I have never heard her use them once. In her mind, it's not right, so she's never used those words (and actually cried when I used one around her). I always thought of it as the same thing (probably because I have a mom like that lol). And she's never had a job where it would be inappropriate more than normal - she held herself to that standard, no one else did.

    • @sayotlittler
      @sayotlittler Před rokem +2

      @@CatGold5047 Honestly, it's probably a combination. He swore like crazy, but once he was in a position where that was not acceptable, he held himself and others to a higher standard.

  • @katsasgeorge
    @katsasgeorge Před 2 lety +980

    Age Of Ultron has to be the most underrated movie of the Infinity saga. The glimpses into each and every character's psychologies are there and most people didn't catch them.
    In his witch sequence, Steve is seen dancing with Peggy but once she goes 'we can go home now, imagine it', the room becomes empty with only steve standing in it. Because he literally can't imagine it at that point.
    Heavy.

    • @swanpride
      @swanpride Před 2 lety +16

      @kshamwhizzle I disagree...AoU especially got Cap completely wrong. He was a soldier, you can bet that he was swearing in the past and doesn't care a damn about the properity of it. That is not the kind of thing Cap is bothered about as long as nobody gets hurt. But in general, AoU is a really messy movie which was improved in hindsight by Civil War and other later outings taking the "good" aspects of it and building on it. Doesn't change the fact that in the movie itself those pieced didn't quite fit together.

    • @MissPopuri
      @MissPopuri Před 2 lety +1

      The only thing about Age of Ultron I remember is the meme age thing occurring on tumblr at the time. Haven’t seen the movies really past The Winter Soldier because they came at such an inconvenient time in my life.

    • @lalonly123
      @lalonly123 Před 2 lety +8

      If Ultron wasn't a god-awful villain the movie would've been phenomenal.

    • @katsasgeorge
      @katsasgeorge Před 2 lety +3

      @@lalonly123 A lot of people didn't get neither the movie nor the villain.

    • @cjkalandek996
      @cjkalandek996 Před 2 lety +12

      @@katsasgeorge a part of me agrees with that statement; another part of me feels that _Age of Ultron_ could've left way more of an impact if they hadn't played things too safe with Ultron and his threat/opposition to our heroes.

  • @cristagalli96
    @cristagalli96 Před rokem +14

    I didn't leave Endgame thinking Steve didn't earn his happy ending with Peggy, but I thought that the character had moved beyond that. He even met Peggy when she was already happily married with children and then he decided to go back and nullify all of that. He had moved past wanting a cookie cutter happy ending with the girl, he fought so hard to get Bucky back and then he just...left. I really don't think Steve would actually do that. His character was on a path and the writers/directors/whoever decided to do a sharp left on us at the last second. And I'm still unhappy with it.

    • @rufusgoldstein2655
      @rufusgoldstein2655 Před měsícem

      Peggy was single. She married later in life

    • @addyvalencia
      @addyvalencia Před měsícem +1

      Agreed, I always thought it was out of character. Definitely a deserved ending, but an out of character one. They could’ve had him be more selfish in a way that didn’t require him to take a complete 180 and ditch his best buds behind.

    • @blazequakes
      @blazequakes Před 2 dny

      i know this comment was a long time ago but my take on this is pretty much the same as the directors wanted him gone because Chris Even's wanted to stop so they gave him an ending thats nice but not in his character.
      Steve Rogers as a character always comes back because he knows he's needed and that he can still hel. he as person always wants to help till he can't, he's not the type of character to stand by and watch the world burn. its shown in the very first Captain America movie where he gets beat up he isn't trying to stop the men from being loud because he worked on the cartoon (his original job was a cartoonist) or because he himself couldn't hear it but because it was disturbing others.
      He as a character never stops you cannot stop him really when he wants to achieve something as he never gives up. He should've been given a "warriors death" because of how his character is coded and has done in the comics.

  • @Bamfism
    @Bamfism Před 6 měsíci +4

    For ALL of the reasons that you guys laid out and MORE Steve Rogers/Captain America is my FAVORITE MCU character and Captain America: The Winter Soldier is not just hands-down my favorite Marvel movie of ANY era but in my TOP 5 greatest movie of all-time PERIOD.
    P.S. For your commentary I wish that you guys would've included the scene from Captain America: The First Avenger where pre-Super Soldier Serum Steve Rogers jumped on the grenade. To this day I still get choked up watching that scene because that is the CORE of who Cap is as a human being....

  • @vwardia
    @vwardia Před 2 lety +412

    I like that: "you will be respected when you walk the walk."

    • @mariposavioleta9007
      @mariposavioleta9007 Před 2 lety +9

      With a comment like that I kinda wish there was a love reaction not just a thumbs up. I 100% agree!

  • @StewdioYT
    @StewdioYT Před 2 lety +325

    The fact that when Cap and Peggy are dancing there's a shot of the door not fully closed, it makes me think that Cap really did just storm into the house, throw on a vinyl and give Peggy that dance he promised her and that makes me very happy.

    • @owenmaleski2203
      @owenmaleski2203 Před 2 lety +36

      I remember my whole college was waiting for Endgame and all of us making theories. I thought for sure Cap would die, end the journey of doing nothing but fight wars. And right as he was dying, he'd see Peggy and she'd say, "Come on Steve, it's time for that dance." But this ending was better.

    • @1D4ever
      @1D4ever Před 2 lety +6

      @@owenmaleski2203 Much better it was perfect

    • @LizRealGirlBeauty
      @LizRealGirlBeauty Před 2 lety +11

      I always imagined he showed up at the club for their "date," where she was sitting alone and watching couples dance, and then she sees Steve waking up to her. He asks if she'd like to dance, then he finally gets his date.

    • @1D4ever
      @1D4ever Před 2 lety +3

      @@LizRealGirlBeauty Yes that could have been it exactly

  • @salihtaysi
    @salihtaysi Před rokem +3

    The New York cop scene “why the hell should I take orders from you” is so on character for captain America, because he never answers verbally, like most hero’s would in a scene like that (some witty one liner), instead he speaks with his actions.

  • @jasonholman1011
    @jasonholman1011 Před 6 měsíci +3

    I think Steve, Captain, Roger’s, America, proves the line “I don’t want to kill anyone” every time he fights someone. With his super strength he could not only cripple them, but kill them and yet he only uses the force necessary.

  • @KingMalaxis
    @KingMalaxis Před 2 lety +494

    The fact that the Punisher and Venom admire Captain America really displays how amazing of a hero he is.

    • @caldeandrade69
      @caldeandrade69 Před rokem +78

      Cap is the reason why Punisher joined the Marines. There is even a comic where Frank is being sacked by Captain America when Frank was training to become a Marine. Frank didn't care if he was being sacked because of how much respect he has for Cap.

    • @clash5j
      @clash5j Před rokem +83

      @@caldeandrade69 In the comic book Civil War, The Punisher is on Cap's side. However, when The Punisher murders some people, Cap beats the hell out of him and the Punisher will not fight back. Cap says: "Fight, you coward!" and The Punisher answers: "Not against you"

    • @Ccm2019
      @Ccm2019 Před rokem +5

      Well Frank idol is Capt..

    • @WittyUsernamehere
      @WittyUsernamehere Před rokem +4

      Serious question. Where do we see that Venom admires Captain America? Is it in the comics or a movie or elsewhere? I do read comic books but I don't remember anything about that. Thank you.

    • @meligoth
      @meligoth Před rokem +11

      Even before the insane marketing of the Punisher that started in the 90s, he wanted no one to follow him. Even Garth Ennis covered that after the Welcome Back Frank story. Unfortunately the Punisher skull is everywhere that one would think it should be the Captain America shield for those who feel patriotic, but no. That would require integrity.

  • @grahamrichardson9620
    @grahamrichardson9620 Před 2 lety +302

    (watches a Cinema Therapy video)
    "I can do this all day."

  • @SteveSpikes
    @SteveSpikes Před 6 měsíci +3

    After finding the video, "Psychology of a Hero: Captain America," albeit two years later, I wanted more.
    I absolutely love Steve Rogers/Captain America as a comic book character and in the MCU - especially THE WINTER SOLDIER. You guys nailed when you mentioned the political thrillers of the 1970s. I could watch THE WINTER SOLDIER again and again, as I could watch Alan Pakula's ALL THE PRESIDENT'S MEN over and over.
    You have a new subscriber in me.

  • @ItsChevnotJeff
    @ItsChevnotJeff Před 5 měsíci +11

    I still loved the elevator scene in Winter Soldier, especially the buildup
    A bunch of guys surround Cap in an enclosed space, with three buff men blocking the entrance(who, if you missed it, selected their destination to RECORDS, like, three burly bodyguards want to go to the archives for some reason)
    Cap notices immediately that it's an ambush from this and the fact that everyone is nervous, with a guy visibly sweating
    Then he takes a sigh, and says his line
    "Before we get started, does anybody wanna get out?"

  • @autisticfantastic5045
    @autisticfantastic5045 Před 2 lety +482

    My take on Cap's shield in Civil War is that dropping the shield is the only thing he can do to show he still cares for Tony. Then, when he takes it up again in Endgame, after Tony says "he made it for you," that is Tony effectively giving Steve the permission he feels he needs to have it again.

    • @BraveryBeyond
      @BraveryBeyond Před 2 lety +58

      This is an interesting take, but I definitely saw the scene in a different light. Tony had told Steve that shield was made by his father in Civil War. This was then recontextualuzed by Tony in Infinity War by saying "but he made it for you!" Tony's a very proud man and I legitimately can't remember him outright saying he's sorry to anyone in the MCU (I'm sure there is, but it's that rare). This is Tony's apology to Steve, to let him know that what was said was in anger and grief. And Steve, ever the nice guy, doesn't chastise Tony for not being upfront, push for more, or demand recompense and greater forgiveness. He just takes the shield, accepting Tony's apology, and gets his friend back. Steve sees through all the pageantry, to the effort Tony is putting into making amends, and accepts it for what it truly means despite all its flaws.

    • @lilscenechick1995
      @lilscenechick1995 Před 2 lety +10

      I had similar thoughts. I always interpreted it as Cap showing respect/empathy for Tony by dropping the shield, and acknowledging that he's not entitled to wield it. Why Cap dropped it (his character motivations) can be entirely different than what it's meant to symbolize for the story.

  • @rhybre
    @rhybre Před 2 lety +298

    I think the 'language' line was really a nod the some of his comic runners with Bucky. Bucky is known to have one of the worst bad mouths in terms of cursing and Cap was always the one to tell him not to curse. The line 'language' does come up many times within those series runners. It also ties in with his 'It slipped out' comment later on in the film sequence.

    • @swanpride
      @swanpride Před 2 lety +30

      The language line says more about Whedon than about Cap. Cap was a soldier. It is completely unrealistic that he doesn't curse at all, or that he has a particular problem with it. Or, to put it differently, this is something that stereotypical Cap would do, but not something Steve would do. The best handwave to the stupid line is that he repeated something maybe his mum kept saying.

    • @l.tc.5032
      @l.tc.5032 Před 2 lety +5

      @@swanpride not to mention I'm pretty sure he was the one who swore the most in Endgame.

    • @grimlock1471
      @grimlock1471 Před 2 lety +3

      Yeah, people did curse in the 40s but there was a taboo about doing it outside of certain "acceptable" settings. Which I'm guessing means any sufficiently disreputable group. Think about the sturm and drang from Gone With the Wind's "Frankly my dear, I don't give a damn."

    • @3Rayfire
      @3Rayfire Před 2 lety +4

      @@grimlock1471 Thing is a battlefield is an acceptable setting.

    • @dejajade6726
      @dejajade6726 Před 2 lety +10

      @@swanprideYeah there was a great disparity between how Whedon thought Steve would act and what type a character he actually was. Steve was a scrappy kid who grew up in Brooklyn during the Great Depression and constantly got into fights, not some butter couldn't melt in his mouth golden farm boy. Steve always had rebel elements from beginning that people just ignore to shove him into the boring all-american boyscout archetype.

  • @karenharbaugh4934
    @karenharbaugh4934 Před měsícem +1

    I just wish my dad (orphaned during the Great Depression, veteran of WWII, Korean War, Vietnam), had lived long enough to see these movies. He would have loved them. I think this character--in the comics especially--represented a lot of young people back in those days, who struggled and persevered.

  • @seza9240
    @seza9240 Před 6 měsíci +4

    This whole channel concept is beautiful.

  • @epiphany7189
    @epiphany7189 Před 2 lety +588

    I love Cap. And Chris Evans brought him to life magnificently. The casting for Marvel is sheer perfection.

    • @mayavp
      @mayavp Před 2 lety +8

      He really was. I honesly can't imagine any other casting for him at this point.

    • @ShadowSonic2
      @ShadowSonic2 Před 2 lety +6

      The hilarious thing is, people thought Evans would be a terrible Captain America when he was first cast.

  • @pleasehelp2446
    @pleasehelp2446 Před 2 lety +687

    The speech that Sharon gives at Peggy's funeral was actually taken from a captain America comic that takes place in WW2 so its possible that Steve actually gave that speech at some point during the montage from his first mission to his last and Peggy then told it to Sharon because Peggy based the rest of her life around Steve's sacrifice.

    • @mariavi33
      @mariavi33 Před 2 lety +8

      That is kind of weird, considering that Peggy was one of the people who enabled hydra for decades.

    • @thesaintzor625
      @thesaintzor625 Před 2 lety +20

      It's from the Civil War comics.

    • @lucidvibes8133
      @lucidvibes8133 Před rokem

      @@mariavi33 not peggy, when the us government decided to take in german scientists like zola and let them corrupt the system

    • @mariavi33
      @mariavi33 Před rokem +2

      @@lucidvibes8133 Zola was hired into Shield. Peggy was one of the founders of Shield (along with Howard Stark and colonel Phillips) and was Zola’s boss for years. She knew who he was and that he had tortured one of her former coworkers (Bucky). But she was either too incompetent to notice what he was doing (in which case she should never be allowed anywhere near a government agency), or she knew what was going on (and either ignored it or actively enabled it).
      No matter how you spin it, she did enable hydra for decades.

    • @lucidvibes8133
      @lucidvibes8133 Před rokem

      @@mariavi33 touche

  • @Paradise-on-Earth
    @Paradise-on-Earth Před rokem +6

    You certainly DO have fans!! Here is one from Germany. I just looooove love love what you are doing!! I love movie-making, and I love philosophy and I love therapy done well and I love understanding and healing. And I love watching how this whole world including the filmmakers and therapists growing wiser on and on, and I LOVE LAUGHING. You do it all in such an awesome, touching, hilarious, deeply good way. Thanks from my heart!

  • @TheNeoVid
    @TheNeoVid Před 8 měsíci +2

    I especially like takes on Captain America that remember what his formative years were like. "Were you this angrily opinionated before you were Captain America?" "In Brooklyn during the Depression? Yes."

  • @AlyssaK83
    @AlyssaK83 Před 2 lety +202

    So with psychology of a hero, we NEED to have a video talking about Bucky Barnes! Please please please?!!!

  • @jethrojacinto2798
    @jethrojacinto2798 Před 5 měsíci +2

    "Not a perfect soldier, but a GOOD MAN." My favorite quote that's still my daily reminder I've tried to live ever since I've seen this movie in 2011.
    Here's to my favorite MCU character of all time and the person I try to embody in my everyday with the same values he held. Thank you, Captain! 🫡

  • @christie8908
    @christie8908 Před 2 lety +312

    The scene that summed up Cap's entire character is when he stood up against Thanos entire army ALONE in endgame

    • @DaDunge
      @DaDunge Před 2 lety +11

      Stubbornly going forward with no plan, and only does not die because someone else saves his bacon, yeah it kind of does sum up cap.

    • @IggsHowlee
      @IggsHowlee Před 2 lety +26

      @@DaDunge guess you don't know what "I can do this all day" means or not giving up means and I think you never experienced standing up to something that is worth fighting for even with no plan you do it anyway. Do you even know who Cap is bruh?

    • @atiqahdiyana5665
      @atiqahdiyana5665 Před 2 lety +20

      @@DaDunge he is a a single person, standing alone, facing certain doom and still refuses to surrender and the fact that he is saved is a CREDIT to his character. Not a flaw.
      Also he has literally made almost every single plan in the movies he’s in?!!?!!

    • @DaDunge
      @DaDunge Před 2 lety +3

      @@atiqahdiyana5665 Are you kidding me? All he ever does is react Tony has plans and sure they sometimes backfire but he atleast has ideas.

    • @Pope_of_the_Church_of_Tea
      @Pope_of_the_Church_of_Tea Před 2 lety +13

      @@DaDunge Clearly the MCU movies you saw came from a universe parallel to the one the rest of us occupy...

  • @GrzReaper86
    @GrzReaper86 Před 3 měsíci +2

    This was such a beautiful video essay and is more relevant today than ever. With how corrupt the world has fallen it is so important to follow your core principle, follow what you in your heart know is true, and then proceed to do what needs to be done. Thank you for the inspiration and I pray that all is going well in your families 🍉🇵🇸❤️🤍💙

  • @Rheubie
    @Rheubie Před rokem +6

    I'd point out that he doesn't say "attention all SHIELD agents, this is Captain America." He's appealing to them as himself - not as the larger-than-life symbol he had become.

  • @ismaelvargas-osiris6108
    @ismaelvargas-osiris6108 Před 2 lety +500

    I love that when he says that speech to the SHIELD agents, he says "I'm Steve Rogers", not "This is Captain America", and it's the other guy who says "Cap's orders", like, he earned that title with his actions. I'm not sure if what I'm saying makes any sense. 🤔

  • @lenacalussi7202
    @lenacalussi7202 Před 2 lety +223

    Captain was never my favorite, but I've always respected him.

    • @yoknom
      @yoknom Před 2 lety +11

      Same for me, especially after Winter Soldier.

    • @edkwon
      @edkwon Před 2 lety +12

      @@yoknom The Winter Soldier was the perfect story how to make an anachronistic character like Steve Rogers relevant in our modern world

    • @shinigamiinochi
      @shinigamiinochi Před 2 lety +6

      big same. He was actually my least favorite going into the first Avenger film, but after Winter Soldier, he grew on me a lot.

    • @sadlobster1
      @sadlobster1 Před 2 lety +2

      What was it that you didn't like about him

    • @hauntedhouse7827
      @hauntedhouse7827 Před 2 lety

      Who's your favorite?

  • @oendj
    @oendj Před 10 měsíci +2

    What i love most about Caps character throughout the MCU is that for as much as he’s portrayed as this “perfect” person, a righteous man whose endeavors usually have success….he’s still human, and things don’t always go so well despite his best efforts. When he thought he lost Bucky in the first film only for him to become the Winter Soldier, unknowingly working for hydra in the 2nd, when he doesnt tell Tony about his parents in Civil War which in turn causes the team to be split instead of united in I.W, even in Endgame with how he tells ppl to try and move on in group therapy vs how how truly feels when he visits Nat. But despite all of that, he still does what he believes is right in the moment, and that’s whats so inspiring about him.

  • @sergioaccioly5219
    @sergioaccioly5219 Před rokem +6

    About John McClane (Die Hard), there's a caveat from the first movie. He might not lose sleep killing the bad guys, but wouldn't kill them needlesly. That's this moment in which one of the crooks is buying time by pretending to surrender, John was trying to arrest him until the bullets started flying again. Then it was businessas usual. But he tried.
    Also, if you pay attention, in every CA movie, he goes against the wishes of his superiors. In the first it was a short perior (going AWOL to rescue Bucky & co). But the other two were all about him going against the Powers that Be. He is NOT a "follow orders he doesn't agree with" type of man.

  • @mannholloway
    @mannholloway Před 2 lety +179

    "Cap could have lifted Mjolnir at the party but he didn't want to steal......... Thor's thunder"🤣🤣🤣🤣

  • @FulcanMal
    @FulcanMal Před 2 lety +355

    If you did Scarlet Witch, I think you'd need to call it "Psychology of a Hero..Villain...um we're not sure."

    • @misspriss2482
      @misspriss2482 Před 2 lety +45

      A human. All of us cycle between being a villain and a hero depending on the circumstances.

    • @hectorsanchez1377
      @hectorsanchez1377 Před 2 lety +9

      Psychology of the nose scrunch.

    • @chadzahirshah2588
      @chadzahirshah2588 Před 2 lety +9

      @@misspriss2482 Villain, in the comics she kills all the mutants and is extremely selfish despite working with the avengers at one point, Wanda is no different in the movies and is going down that path, starting with her enslaving the entire town of West Side for her little fantasies

    • @samuellanghus1455
      @samuellanghus1455 Před 2 lety +1

      @@misspriss2482 Under what video are you commenting under? Wanna run that by one more time?

    • @reflectcard6258
      @reflectcard6258 Před 2 lety +8

      she's basically a very stressed out human with creppy super powers. Her intentions are not evil, but she let's herself be blinded enough to manipulate people that was suposed to be saved. She will never be seeing as a hero anymore by that people, and now that she's fully into that dark magic book to bring her family, Dr. Strange is gonna have a bad time

  • @mattduncil
    @mattduncil Před rokem +2

    The Peggy carter funeral scene, I was going through a recent miscarriage and a few other things plus a divorce and I was standing by some ideals that even now I know was right. The line it is your duty to plant your self like a tree and say no you move gave me strength

  • @EpicDave
    @EpicDave Před 5 měsíci +2

    I love how in Age of Ultron Steve cries out "language"! Finally in End Game "Let's get the son of bitch". That comes right after the "I'm not looking for forgiveness" speech. I love Steve's arc.