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NOBODY Writer Derek Kolstad On Scripting The Best Action Movie Of The Year, Sequel Hopes, & More (Exclusive)

NOBODY Writer Derek Kolstad On Scripting The Best Action Movie Of The Year, Sequel Hopes, & More (Exclusive)
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Why The Falcon And The Winter Soldier Used A CGI Captain America Shield For That Bloody John Walker Scene

CinemaBlend One of the most striking images in the Disney+ series The Falcon and the Winter Soldier, if not the entire Marvel Cinematic Universe, happened at the end of the fourth episode, “The Whole World Is Watching.” Having just brutally beaten a Flag Smasher to death because he incorrectly believed the man had killed Lemar Hoskins, John Walker stood solemnly holding the bloodied Captain America shield as people nearby recorded what he’d done. The blood was still stuck on the shield when Walker faced off against Sam Wilson and Bucky Barnes in the following episode, “Truth,” but it turns out that the weapon and its tainted appearance during those moments were completely CGI.

John Walker s redemption reveals the cowardice of The Falcon and the Winter Soldier

“The Whole World Is Watching,” the fourth episode of Disney+’s “The Falcon and the Winter Soldier,” culminates in some of the Marvel Cinematic Universe’s most arresting imagery ever: John Walker’s (Wyatt Russell) Captain America, vengefully bludgeoning a man to death with a bloodied, stars and stripes-adorned shield. It’s a scene that, for a show that repeatedly purports to be about reevaluating nationalistic symbols, could have kicked off a searing critique along those lines. Witness America’s unstable, entitled mascot, juiced up on contraband super soldier serum, murdering someone on foreign soil.  By the finale, Walker is saving a truck full of civilians and breezily quoting Abraham Lincoln. “Mercy bears richer fruits than strict justice,” he says, letting us know that he’s learned his lesson. The abrupt pivot is not only narratively and thematically dissonant it’s symptomatic of the series’ craven unwillingness to address the sociopolitical questio

The Falcon And The Winter Soldier s Head Writer Tries To Explain One Of The Show s Worst Decisions

Sponsored Articles The Falcon And The Winter Soldier’s Head Writer Tries To Explain One Of The Show’s Worst Decisions Share Filed to:falcon and the winter soldier Wyatt Russell as John Walker and Clé Bennett as Lemar Hoskins. (Image: Disney+/Marvel) To sign up for our daily newsletter covering the latest news, features and reviews, head HERE. For a running feed of all our stories, follow us on Twitter HERE. Or you can bookmark the Kotaku Australia homepage to visit whenever you need a news fix. In The Falcon and the Winter Soldier’s fourth episode, the titular pair of former Avengers are on a mission to stop Karli Morgenthau (Erin Kellyman) and her fellow Flag-Smashers. The group’s ill-defined plan puts them at odds with John Walker (Wyatt Russell), the U.S. government’s newly christened Captain America, and his fellow soldier, Lemar Hoskins (Clé Bennett). Head writer Malcolm Spellman recently discussed the implications of their big fight.

Falcon and Winter Soldier Showrunner Explains Death of [Spoiler]

… Lemar. When Lemar Hoskins/Battlestar was introduced alongside his bestie John Walker, I already was a little … concerned. Lemar was the latest installment in the Black Best Friend MCU division, and that was already a pretty cringe development even if Sam Wilson was one of the titular stars of the show. Of them all, only Sam has been allowed to really shine as his own person outside the “sidekick” label. Even Rhodey doesn’t get to do that. Lemar is introduced as supportive to John. They served together in war, and Lemar clearly sees a noble version of John that we as the audience cannot compute. They fight together and, in many ways, Lemar is the voice of reason in their personal dynamic duo. This, of course, makes it even more difficult when Lemar is accidentally killed in “The Whole World Is Watching.”

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