Posted in Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D., Blade

Will We Be Seeing Blade in the MCU Any Time Soon?

For years now, fans have been waiting with bated breath for the arrival of Marvel’s master vampire slayer to make his debut in the MCU. Rumors have been bountiful, with former Blade actor Wesley Snipes fanning the flames with cryptic tweets, as well as more overt displays where he outright confirms Marvel has spoken to him about the possibility. Likelihood is though, Snipes won’t be returning to the character, but that sure as hell doesn’t mean we won’t be seeing him in the MCU. In fact, Lorraine Cink, a presenter and journalist who covers Marvel stories on their YouTube channel, recently tweeted the following:

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The main question her tweet brought to mind for me was whether or not Blade would be featured on Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D., or if he’d be receiving a show of his own. Well, after the most recent episode of Agents, I figure we’ll be seeing the Daywalker pretty soon. In the episode, Fitz informs Mack and Yo-Yo that he’s hidden a bag of weapons and supplies on level three of the Kree compound. That level is home to the Vrellnexians, or what the locals affectionately call “Roaches”. These things are essentially big bug-like beings and they just so happen to be fans of vampirism. I don’t think that they’ll  be the vampires we see Blade hunting, but I do think we’ll see them in present day Earth. Season 4 of AoS jumped from a Ghost Rider plot, to an LMD plot, to a HYDRA plot, while all of them maintained some sort of a link; I think it’s  entirely plausible that a similar thing will happen in the  current season. I reckon we’ll go from this time travel plot, to seeing a vampire plot set in the present day upon the team’s return from the dystopian future.

Blade02But, I think one of two scenarios will then play out. One, they accidentally bring Vrellnexians back to the present and an existing sect of vampires take them as a kind of pet. Two, the Vrellnexians are launched way back into the past, and evolve into vampires over time. Of the two, I’m not sure which one I would consider to be the more likely, but if the means of returning to the present involves returning to a fixed point in time, then the second option becomes impossible. The first option becomes possible, but seems a bit lazy. So, there;s probably a much smarter way of doing it, and perhaps it involves not bringing Vrellnexians back to the present at all. Either way, I don’t think the team’s return will be the cause of the emergence of vampirism. Blade has to have been an active agent and also has to be skilled in the art of vampire hunting by the time he’s introduced. It would seem the only options available are time travel and the previously unknown existence of vampires. Either way, I’d be psyched to see Marvel’s Midnight Son kicking ass and taking names, regardless of the form his return takes.

Posted in Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D.

Quake’s Totally Not the Destroyer of Worlds, Right?

If you’re watching the current season of Marvel’s Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D. (which you should be), then you’re probably as doubtful of the show’s current narrative as I am. If the title of this piece isn’t spoiler-y enough, then avert your gaze now, because things are about to get spoiler-y. So, the Earth has been destroyed, and the team are stuck in a Kree-ruled compound embedded within the floating debris that used to be our little blue jewel of a world. What’s worse than that? Apparently Quake is responsible. I don’t believe that one bit, and the most recent episode served to confirm a possible alternative to the “Quake did it” idea. While the agents are on the run from a murderous Kree warrior, they discover that the artificial gravity generated within the compound is being provided by a device that utilizes Gravitonium. This material has been present in the show since its first season, and a fairly big plot point has been linked to it that entire time.

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Doctor Franklin Hall was introduced and snubbed out over the course of one episode, and he hasn’t been heard from since. We last saw him being drawn into a mass of Gravitonium, supposedly dying, only for his hand to then be seen clamoring for freedom in the episode’s final stinger. To put it simply, the guy’s alive, but he’s trapped in a big clump of Gravitonium. Now here we are in Season 5, and that rarest of elements is rearing its head once again. This season has been shaping up to pay off a lot of plot threads from earlier seasons, what wit it being set in the future and all, but this  above all others seems the most prominent. I believe, as I think a lot of people probably do, that Franklin Hall is the one that’s really responsible for destroying the planet.

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In the comics, Franklin’s interactions with Gravitonium turn him into the super-villain known as Graviton. Those familiar with the Avengers: Earth’s Mightiest Heroes animated series will know him well enough, as he’s the first villain the team fight together. Graviton has control over the force of gravity, and can increase or decrease its effect on any object or person. With a thought, he could send you whizzing off into space or crush you down into the core of the Earth. I believe that at some point in the past, Graviton escaped from his globular silver prison and decided to wreak a bit of havoc. Consequently, his meddling with gravity tore the planet apart. The survivors, not knowing of Graviton’s existence, attribute the atrocity to Daisy Johnson, whose earthquake-inducing capabilities fit the bill for destroying planets. I just don’t think Daisy is ever going to be powerful enough to perform an act as destructive as that. Bringing down skyscrapers and city blocks, maybe. But obliterating an entire planet? Seems a bit much. The throwaway mention of Gravitonium, and the prominence with which gravity storms have been spoken of in regards to the Earth’s surface, suggests to me that there’s something more at play. Graviton is that something more.

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Posted in Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D., Daredevil, Inhumans, Iron Fist, Jessica Jones, Luke Cage, Punisher, The Defenders

Movies Vs. TV Shows: Crossovers That Just Aren’t Meant to Be?

Marvel Studios head Kevin Feige seems fairly dead set on keeping Marvel’s television properties as separate from the movies as humanly possible. Several actors have also made comments in regards to potential crossovers between the two platforms being next to, or entirely, impossible. As much as we’d all love to see Iron Fist pal about with Ghost Rider and Doctor Strange, that sort of interaction may well remain a pipe dream for the entirety of the MCU’s lifespan. The reasons that tend to be given revolve around the difference in tone between the shows and movies, the level on which the characters operate and of course, the fact that Marvel Television works separately to Marvel Studios. Although all these stories are being told in the same universe, they seem to be entirely independent of one another. With the number of shows and movies being produced and released growing by the year, might we see a point where these platforms simply have to start spilling over into each other’s worlds, purely for continuity’s sake?

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Personally, I think the answer is yes. However I don’t believe it will be in the way of fully-fledged crossovers. We see the films referenced far more in Agents of SHIELD than we do in any of the Netflix shows, with whole story arcs having revolved around the fallout from particular movies. Certain characters are made mention of or alluded to, but no plot points are made to seem relevant to the Netflix world. Having finished watching Iron Fist just today (and thoroughly enjoying it), I was surprised there was no mention of the events of Captain America: Civil War, or even Doctor Strange. However, there were still references to the alien invasion of New York that took place during The Avengers. Slightly more interestingly to me though, was the sheer abundance of references to the other Netflix shows. Its predecessors were quite light on Easter eggs and references, but this latest installment into the Defenders saga seems to have upped the ante in that regard. The likelihood here is tat these shows are now trying to distance themselves from the movies, being as independent as possible, perhaps to show that these properties don’t need the crutch of a tie-in or a crossover to maintain people’s interest. With that in mind it would be easy to say that the possibility of a crossover is either dead or rapidly dying. However, with Inhumans being Marvel’s next television endeavour, I think we may be about to see a turning of the tables. Maybe not a big one, but at least a significant one.

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This show’s first two episodes will be airing in IMAX cinemas before moving to ABC for the remainder of its run. Not that long ago, Inhumans was slated for a 2018 release date as a movie. And not just any movie, but Kevin Feige’s pet project. It seems to me that this show is going to mark a point where the shows and movies start to be relevant both ways; with aspects from the small screen leaving a genuine impression on the MCU as a whole. The first two episodes being available to watch in IMAX seems to be a consolation for the hype surrounding the idea of an Inhumans movie, and with a likely two hour run-time, those two episodes could well make u the plot of a film all on their own. On top of that, these aren’t the kinds of characters that can exist comfortably within the MCU’s television world. They’re as powerful, or even more-so, than several of the Avengers. With Inhumans featuring prominently in Agents of SHIELD, and that show having spun out of the events of The Avengers, it seems only logical that a show revolving around the Inhuman royal family could bridge the gap between those two worlds. Not only that, but Feige’s claims that the MCU will be going more cosmic in future Phases just serves to reinforce the need  for powerhouses like Black Bolt and Medusa to make their presence more widely felt. However that still leaves the Netflix shows by the wayside. As much as it pains me to say it, I doubt those properties could ever crossover with the films, even though, once again, their protagonists could probably beat the living snot out of a few of the Avengers. And I think that not because of issues within the two company’s at work, but because of the drastic difference in tone. At least for the moment, the likes of Daredevil, Luke Cage and Jessica Jones just couldn’t mesh tonally with the established status quo of the movies. Maybe if Marvel can worm them into future Spider-Man movies, or perhaps even the newly announced Venom movie, if it is in fact part of the MCU. Only time will tell if our dreams of an acrobatic tour of NYC alongside ol’ Hornhead and the Wall-Crawler will ever come to pass.

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Posted in Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D., Avengers, Captain America, Doctor Strange, Hulk, Iron Man, Man-Thing, Thor

Man-Thing In The MCU: Putting the Pieces Together

Be sure to check out my latest on Man-Thing in the MCU!

In 2005, three years before the MCU had its cinematic debut with Iron Man, the straight to TV movie Man-Thing made its presence known; much to the dismay of Marvel Horror fans. The film was a far cry from the mad machinations of the comic book upon which it was based and took plenty of liberties with the source material. Make no mistake, the film is awful. Thankfully, there’s a strong case to suggest that the MCU has set the pieces in motion for its own version of the walking swamp to exist, and I’m going to try and put them together.

First off, the rights are indefinitely at Marvel Studios. Man Thing’s been referenced by name on Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D., as well as the Nexus of All Realities making an Easter egg appearance in Thor: The Dark World and then there’s the fact that Ellen Brandt, Man-Thing’s traitorous ex-wife, was one of the Extremis soldiers in Iron Man 3.  Brandt however is used simply as an A.I.M. lackey rather than a character worthy of multiple appearances. We don’t get a lot of her back story either. However, she bares a scar on her face, despite Extremis’s regenerative capabilities, she still has a scar.

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When we see her being interviewed by Aldrich Killian and when she’s administered the Extremis virus, Ellen is missing an arm and she has the scar too. We know that A.I.M. was recruiting injured veterans to test Extremis out on, so it’s obvious that Brandt was injured while in active duty. That would explain the scarring as well as the loss of limb. However, once she’s given Extremis, though her arm regrows, her flesh remains scarred. Maya Hansen says at the start of the film that Extremis is capable of instantly repairing damaged tissue. Skin is multiple layers of ectodermal tissue according to Google. So why isn’t Ellen’s scarring fixed by Extremis? Well, it could be the case that Ellen received the scar through supernatural means. In the comics, Man-Thing gives Ellen the scar after she betrayed his alter ego, Ted Sallis. He did this because she had attempted to steal a super soldier formula he’d been working on for the U.S. government. Ellen tried to steal it for A.I.M. Now, given what we know about the MCU at this point, there’s actually a case to be made for Man-Thing’s genuine origin having actually happened at some point in the past.

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Attempts to recreate the super soldier serum were quite common in the MCU it seems, or at least attempts to find ways of creating super soldiers. Hank Pym’s shrinking formula, the serum used on the other Winter Soldiers, the serum used on Emil Blonsky as well as the experiment that turned Bruce Banner into the Hulk, were all attempts at recreating a kind of super soldier akin to Captain America. Given this, it’s not unreasonable to think that Ted Sallis may have developed a super soldier formula just like in the comics. We don’t know exactly when Maya Hansen started working with Aldrich Killian, but it’s safe to assume it was some time in the early 2000s. Bruce Banner became the Hulk in 2005. Thus it can be drawn that the development of super soldier serums was still an endeavour being undertaken in the mid-2000s.

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Chad Davis, the first Extremis soldier to give his life as part of the Mandarin terror attacks, blew up in Rosehill in 2009. Aldrich Killian says he spent five years in the hands of physical therapists when Pepper Potts asks him how he’s in such good shape. If he started this physical recovery in 1999, he would’ve been fully functioning in 2004. I’m inclined to believe he was telling the truth with that line and do not believe Extremis is wholly the reason for his recovery. I believe he did those five years and then started to take Extremis. When Maya Hansen first tells Tony about Extremis she notes that there’s a glitch that needs fixing because it essentially kills the host, and seemingly it still has this glitch to a lesser degree in Iron Man 3. So Extremis would have been unsafe to take in 1999, but in 2004, there would have been at least a few advancements with the help of A.I.M. So when were the recruits brought in?

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It’s possible, given the time frame in which Chad Davis underwent his ordeal, that Aldrich Killian started recruitment in response to Tony Stark revealing himself as Iron Man in 2008. This puts it at four years after his full recovery, and at this point, conflicts in the Middle East would have produced plenty of amputee recruits such as Ellen Brandt. This means that in order for Ellen Brandt’s injury to have occurred during her service in the army, she would have had to have received it between 2003 and 2008 (2003 being the start of the Iraq War). Let’s say Brandt spends a year in Iraq, the usual tour of duty, meaning she leaves the army in 2004. In that year, she loses her left arm, but her face isn’t scarred by whatever causes the limb loss. Her scarring isn’t consistent with usual explosion scarring. If it were, the whole left side of her face would be disfigured, especially so if the explosion caused her to lose a limb.

Given that Ellen eventually joins A.I.M. it can be seen that she wants to regain her former life. This desire leads her to Ted Sallis, in the Florida Everglades, who is developing a super soldier serum around the same time as Bruce Banner is developing his. Let’s say she creates a false relationship with him while he perfects his formula, hoping to use it to restore her to her former self. 2005 rolls around and Bruce Banner’s attempt at recreating the super soldier formula fails, turning him into the Hulk. Ted loses faith in his formula, believing there would be no way that he could possibly sell it after what happened to Banner. Angered, Ellen steals the formula and attempts to make a getaway, hoping to find someone else who’d be willing to work on the formula. Ted pursues her and manages to retrieve it but in the chase, ends up falling into a swamp. The swamp just so happens to be the site of the Nexus of All Realities, and the mystic energies mix with the formula turning Ted into the Man-Thing. As he emerges from the swamp, he discovers Ellen, who’s reasonably terrified at the sight of Man-Thing. The creature tries to reassure her everything’s okay with a gentle gesture of affection, but instead burns part of her face. Horrified at what he’s capable of, Man-Thing retreats into the swamp and Ellen departs, joining A.I.M. three years later. She regrows her arm thanks to Extremis, but the mystic mark of the Man-Thing remains on her face.

So why do S.H.I.E.L.D. know about Man-Thing? We know they kept some sort of a file on him because Maria Hill mentions that a senate committee had asked her “Who or what is a ‘Man-Thing’?”. This suggests that S.H.I.E.L.D. do not know Ted Sallis is Man-Thing nor do they know anything about Man-Thing beyond that he exists. Is that entirely true though? After all, this is S.H.I.E.L.D. we’re talking about. Surely they were keeping tabs on Ted because of the work he involved himself with. If that were the case then they’d know that Ted went missing in 2005, and around that time, reports of the Man-Thing may well have started to crop up. Or perhaps they got muddled up with other reports of a giant green monster that would’ve been parading around the United States at the time? The Hulk would’ve been a far more public issue, and so reports that deviated from what was obvious to S.H.I.E.L.D. may well have been shrugged off as false sightings born out of paranoia. Given what Thaddeus Ross says in The Incredible Hulk, it can be assumed that Bruce Banner went across the northern half of America before getting into Canada and from there going to Brazil, possibly due to the incident we’re informed of at the start of the movie with the “Days without incident” counter.

“He is also implicated in the deaths of two scientists, a military officer, an Idaho state trooper, and possibly two Canadian hunters.” – General Thaddeus “Thunderbolt” Ross, The Incredible Hulk

So when reports of a large green creature crop up in Florida, completely out-of-the-way of every other Hulk sighting or encounter, S.H.I.E.L.D. were likely intrigued. This led to S.H.I.E.L.D.’s discovery of the Man-Thing. A few years later, Erik Selvig would end up being influenced by the Tesseract, he himself stating that it showed him more than knowledge, but truth. He subsequently went a bit mad and in that state of mind, he produced some scribbles on a chalk board in Thor: The Dark World.

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So the Nexus of All Reality definitely exists in the MCU. Furthermore, given the fact that all of the Nine Realms orbit Midgard, it’s not a drastic leap to assume that it’s here on Earth. Selvig is now working for the Avengers as a consultant scientist, at least that’s where we saw him in Avengers: Age of Ultron, his role may have changed since Captain America: Civil War. Perhaps he’ll bring the Nexus to people’s attention and S.H.I.E.L.D. will finally discover more about the Man-Thing. It may be something we’ll see expanded on more in the next season of Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D. After all, if they’re introducing Ghost Rider as current rumours speculate, maybe we’ll see a few other mystical characters pop up in the show. Or there might be something about Man-Thing in the upcoming Doctor Strange movie. There’s plenty of potential for more mystic Marvel on the way, that’s for sure. So why rule out a staple of Marvel’s mystic tales like Man-Thing?

That’s my speculation on Man-Thing in the MCU. What d’you think of it? Be sure to chip in with your own ideas and point any flaws or plot holes!

And if you liked this theory, be sure to check out my latest, The Infinity Imbalance Theory!

Posted in Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D., Ghost Rider

Ghost Rider In AGENTS OF S.H.I.E.L.D. Season 4?

The last few days have seen a great deal of speculation about a particular Spirit of Vengeance appearing in the next season of Marvel’s relatively well-received spy / superhero drama. It was all sparked by a monorail cart bearing a burning chain advertising the next season of the show. With San Diego Comic-Con around the corner, might we be hearing the announcement of the Ghost Rider’s inclusion in the next season?

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A casting report suggests that the Ghost Rider will not be Johnny Blaze, but the latest incarnation of the character instead: Robbie Reyes. As long as he doesn’t drive a car, like he does in the comics, I see no issue with this being the case. In fact, the appearance of Ghost Rider in the next season of Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D. makes sense. The MCU is gearing up for all things mystical. Doctor Strange, Iron Fist and Ghost Rider are all characters whose backstories and mythologies are chock full of magic and devilry. Essentially, given the MCU’s current slate of movies and shows, with Cloak and Dagger about to come into the fray as well, it seems like Ghost Rider appearing on Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D. is more likely than some might think.

It’s probably for the best that Ghost Rider be kept to the small screen, given how terrible his last two movie outings have been. Also, if the rumour ends up being true and we do get Reyes instead of Blaze, then you can bet it’s because Nicolas Cage kinda tainted that identity. The one issue though is that another recent report suggests this season of Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D. will focus more on Life Model Decoys (LMDs), which is what was teased at the end of Season 3. Doesn’t Reyes’s mask remind you of the Watchdogs though?

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Another thing to take into account is that Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D. will be airing at 10 p.m. now rather than 9 p.m. That allows for a bit more in the way of horror, a genre Ghost Rider most definitely falls into. So there a re quite a few things that point to Robbie Reyes putting in an appearance than one would initially think.

Then again, all of this Ghost Rider stuff could be nonsense and it may just mean Hellfire’s gonna get a bigger role next season and we’ll see the actual Secret Warriors team rather than just a team of four people in black jackets and trousers.