Yeah, those weren't '70s cars or music.
So he's returned to the postwar period and retired there.
Moderator: Steve
Yeah, those weren't '70s cars or music.
I figured that was left open for the potential Loki series.
Problem with that is they only had enough for each character to make two trips- one each way. And those were for individuals- they would have needed a fuckton of Pym particles to transport Thanos' city-sized monstrosity.Vendetta wrote: ↑2019-04-26 05:52pmSame way they took their ships to the past. Shrank it with the Pym Particles.EnterpriseSovereign wrote: ↑2019-04-26 01:53pm Something one of my friends pointed out is, how did past!Nebula manage to use the Time Machine to bring Thanos and his army to the present? The sheer size of the ship is one problem, the lack of a "temporal GPS" is another. The latter could be explained by the bad guys managing to pull Nebula's memory to find out how the device worked and building their own, the former though I have no idea.
I think part of the reason is to address the diversity issue of phrase 1-3 heroes being mostly dominated by white, male heroes? The fear of being seen as not diverse enough for phrase 4 might be the the key motivation.EnterpriseSovereign wrote: ↑2019-04-27 10:28am Why Cap decided to give the shield to Falcon instead of Bucky, an actual super soldier who could throw it properly?
In the Ant-Man movies they've reasonably consistently used the same dose to shrink and grow anything. There is an effect whilst Thanos' ship is doing its time jump of it growing using the same effect they use in the Ant-Man movies.EnterpriseSovereign wrote: ↑2019-04-27 10:28amProblem with that is they only had enough for each character to make two trips- one each way. And those were for individuals- they would have needed a fuckton of Pym particles to transport Thanos' city-sized monstrosity.Vendetta wrote: ↑2019-04-26 05:52pmSame way they took their ships to the past. Shrank it with the Pym Particles.EnterpriseSovereign wrote: ↑2019-04-26 01:53pm Something one of my friends pointed out is, how did past!Nebula manage to use the Time Machine to bring Thanos and his army to the present? The sheer size of the ship is one problem, the lack of a "temporal GPS" is another. The latter could be explained by the bad guys managing to pull Nebula's memory to find out how the device worked and building their own, the former though I have no idea.
Because Sam took over as Captain America more recently in the comics. And in the MCU has an actual personality, whereas Bucky can about manage "lost puppy".Why Cap decided to give the shield to Falcon instead of Bucky, an actual super soldier who could throw it properly?
I expect Guardians 3 will involve a quest to recover her from the Soul Stone. Given that they're introducing the character who is most intimately tied to it.I feel sorry for Quill, as far as Gamora is concerned they were never an item, being past!Gamora who hadn't met him yet.
To be fair, I hoped they'd give it to Bucky so they would have to give him more to do and more personality...Vendetta wrote: ↑2019-04-27 12:47pmBecause Sam took over as Captain America more recently in the comics. And in the MCU has an actual personality, whereas Bucky can about manage "lost puppy".Why Cap decided to give the shield to Falcon instead of Bucky, an actual super soldier who could throw it properly?
As with the stones, Steve returns the hammer to it's rightful time at the end, quick enough for it's breif absence not to matter.PREDATOR490 wrote: ↑2019-04-27 02:59pm
That said, another issue I have with this time travel shit - Did he seriously just steal his hammer from another universe ?
If they are worried about messing with futures and timelines. I feel that stealing Thor's hammer would cause a massive issue.
Especially since he is apparently stealing it during the Dark World movie.
I assume not for exactly that reason. Each time heist team's changes splits of it's own new time line.Additionally, were they all going to the same timeline ?
Thor goes to Asgard during the Dark World movie - We see Loki in the prison which only can occur if he was captured during Avengers Assemble.
However, we see Avengers Assemble, Loki is seen stealing the Tesseract and zipping off.
Even in Dr Strange's own movie she could see the future up until her death. So yeah she know's who Strange is and what he becomes. She locks him out for a bit because either she's seen the future that what she does. (which is interesting for lack of free will) or like Strange in IW can see possibilities and knows Strange needs that kick up the arse to humble him some more.I am also going to say that I feel like the massive elephant in the room that was over-looked was the Time Stone shenanigans.
Did the Ancient One always know Steven Strange was going to join them ?
If so, that who shtick where she had to be convinced to let him in to join in Doctor Strange because he might become a new bad guy comes across as a bit... stupid.
I also found it a bit jarring that she goes through this whole argument about not handing the stone over only for a name drop of Strange to change her mind. They do not really explain or justify why such a name drop would get that reaction when she has not even met Strange yet.
Old Steve reappearing against the rules is the only thing that bothers me excessively about the time travel and that they end the film with a working time machine they will probably never use or acknowledge again.Overall,
I am left thinking that the Time Travel aspect was a predictable way of pushing the reset, although I will give credit that it was a quasi reset that did not undo everything. However, this Time Travel mixed with alternate universes and the obvious hazy area of the shenanigans they pulled make a mess for creating a stable story continuity.
I think the rules are simple: Taking the stones/changing the timeline creates a parallel universe, but the time travel method anchors you to your original timeline. That means you can return to your future, unaltered.it allows you to retrieve things from your past, but not change your past. Here’s the thing: doing this for just this one mission created at least half a dozen new possible futures where the avengers will still have to deal with Thanos. In fact, the only one where everyone doesn’t get dusted by Thanos is probably one where Quill dies from handling the power stone or manages to successfully fence it then go on being a minor space scumbag for the foreseeable future until Ego gets the juice to become the whole universe and everyone dies that way.PREDATOR490 wrote: ↑2019-04-27 11:45am Just watched it and I will probably need to rewatch it because it felt really busy to the point some stuff might have not been processed to properly get a good judge of the film in proper context.
For the most part - This film felt like it was breaking under the amount of strain it was under to cover so much ground with 10 years of history.
My biggest gripe is that the time travel rules were overtly hammered then shit went everywhere without even a nod.
I.e Loki stole the tesseract then they go back and steal it from the 70s.
My only conclusion is that Steve must have put the stone back in the 70s so Loki can steal it later.
Follow that up by Steve going back to this alternate reality to live his fantasy life with Carter.
So are we to conclude that Steve going back did nothing to that Timeline ?
Did Steve Rogers seriously sit back and allow that timeline to develop along the same path as the original even with the knowledge to prevent it ?
I thought they were creating another universe but somehow Steve is sitting on a bench in theirs...
Frankly, it feels like this was a great concept that was brought about as a means to further future Marvel franchise projects and ensure that backdoors were left.
Unfortunately, the concept falls apart really quickly when your film laid out the rules so adamantly before.
I was wondering that as well, so I looked it up afterwards. The actor is Ty Simpkins, who played the kid who helps Tony repair the Mark 42 suit in Iron Man 3. They really do callbacks to just about everything.
Close. Based on what The Ancient said it is the Infinity stones specifically which govern the realities. Take the stone and you create a new branch giving between 3 and 6 new branches since some of the stones were taken from the same time period thatmay have resulted in only 1 branch.FireNexus wrote: ↑2019-04-27 11:53pm
I think the rules are simple: Taking the stones/changing the timeline creates a parallel universe, but the time travel method anchors you to your original timeline. That means you can return to your future, unaltered.it allows you to retrieve things from your past, but not change your past. Here’s the thing: doing this for just this one mission created at least half a dozen new possible futures where the avengers will still have to deal with Thanos. In fact, the only one where everyone doesn’t get dusted by Thanos is probably one where Quill dies from handling the power stone or manages to successfully fence it then go on being a minor space scumbag for the foreseeable future until Ego gets the juice to become the whole universe and everyone dies that way.
So, essentially, this whole situation created its own little multiverse with an infinite number of avengers teams infinitely trying to unfuck things. And the variations from each are likely to be relatively subtle to the time travelers, because they’re going to places in their recentish pasts to start with.
So, I think the time travel rules are fully consistent and old man Steve is not “our” Steve but a close enough (maybe practically identical, because infinite alternates infinitely fucking with infinity stones) Steve who settles down in our past. Which means our Steve is doing basically the same thing in an alt universe that is probably more or less identical, and that’s why he didn’t show.
It was clear that you can’t change the past during time travel, which means alt-Steve was around all along. And he couldn’t have come from this universe without having been a time traveler who changed the past. And the only people who seemed fully clear on that were Rocket, Banner, and Tilda Swindon.
But how would that explain away stuff like the impact of stuff like say, what happened to Peter Quill when Warmachine and nebula knocked him out and took the stone, and the ripple effet that would have on that timeline?Lost Soal wrote: ↑2019-04-28 04:52amClose. Based on what The Ancient said it is the Infinity stones specifically which govern the realities. Take the stone and you create a new branch giving between 3 and 6 new branches since some of the stones were taken from the same time period thatmay have resulted in only 1 branch.FireNexus wrote: ↑2019-04-27 11:53pm
I think the rules are simple: Taking the stones/changing the timeline creates a parallel universe, but the time travel method anchors you to your original timeline. That means you can return to your future, unaltered.it allows you to retrieve things from your past, but not change your past. Here’s the thing: doing this for just this one mission created at least half a dozen new possible futures where the avengers will still have to deal with Thanos. In fact, the only one where everyone doesn’t get dusted by Thanos is probably one where Quill dies from handling the power stone or manages to successfully fence it then go on being a minor space scumbag for the foreseeable future until Ego gets the juice to become the whole universe and everyone dies that way.
So, essentially, this whole situation created its own little multiverse with an infinite number of avengers teams infinitely trying to unfuck things. And the variations from each are likely to be relatively subtle to the time travelers, because they’re going to places in their recentish pasts to start with.
So, I think the time travel rules are fully consistent and old man Steve is not “our” Steve but a close enough (maybe practically identical, because infinite alternates infinitely fucking with infinity stones) Steve who settles down in our past. Which means our Steve is doing basically the same thing in an alt universe that is probably more or less identical, and that’s why he didn’t show.
It was clear that you can’t change the past during time travel, which means alt-Steve was around all along. And he couldn’t have come from this universe without having been a time traveler who changed the past. And the only people who seemed fully clear on that were Rocket, Banner, and Tilda Swindon.
As you say they return to the Prime reality. Because of this the Nebula & Thanos from 2014 were no longer their past so they could kill them without consequence.
When the stones are returned the branches were cut off so potentially don't even happen. Once Rogers returned the last stone there was now only the Prime reality and him going back doesn't create a new branch so long as he doesn't alter any events involving Infinity stones.
Thats how I see it anyway's.