When Anthony Mackie got the call that the executives at Marvel
Studios wanted to meet with him shortly after the release of the 2019 superhero
blockbuster “Avengers: Endgame,” he figured he was either getting a new gig or
getting fired.
اضافة اعلان
But after several years and multiple Marvel films in which he
had played Sam Wilson, that airborne ally of Captain America who is also known
as the Falcon, Mackie was feeling optimistic.
“I’m walking in with the assumption that the next ‘Captain
America’ movie is going to be me,” he said.
So Mackie traveled to the Marvel offices in Burbank, California.
“I put on a suit,” he said. “I sit there like they’re about to tell me the best
news I could ever get.” His ebullient voice receded ever-so-slightly as he
continued: “Then they’re like, ‘We’re going to do a TV show,’” he said.
Beyond the fleeting dismay that he wasn’t being offered another
film, Mackie said he was fearful that he wouldn’t be able to translate the
Marvel brand to TV.
“I was taken aback,” he said, “mostly because I didn’t want to
tarnish the Marvel moniker.”
This was how Mackie first learned of “The Falcon and the Winter
Soldier,” the new Disney+ series that will make its debut Friday and continue
the adventures of those two reluctant allies, played by him and Sebastian Stan.
Arriving two weeks after the finale of “WandaVision,” “The
Falcon and the Winter Soldier” is Marvel’s second show that seeks to extend the
characters and momentum of its cinematic universe into streaming television.
Its narrative mission is straightforward: to tell the next chapter in the story
of its title characters, last seen in “Endgame,” after an aged Steve Rogers
(Chris Evans) has retired as Captain America and given his shield to Sam
Wilson.
In both its story and its subtext, this show asks, how can the
Marvel franchise continue without one of its most prominent figures?
As Stan explained: “We’re going to explore where these two guys
left off, with one big character missing — the prominent figure that brought
them into each other’s lives. Where are they, and how are they coping with the
world?”
“The Falcon and the Winter Soldier,” consisting of six
45-to-55-minute episodes to be rolled out weekly, offers timely explorations
into the nature of patriotism and extremism and the values of inclusivity,
diversity and representation, set in a world striving for stability after a
global catastrophe.
It is also a series freighted with implications for the Wilson
character and for Mackie the actor, who, in a universe with precious few Black
heroes, now have the chance to become full-fledged lead characters after long
careers as sidekicks.
“I’ve gotten used to being the guy overlooked,” Mackie said. “It’s
become part of my brand.”
The stage was set for “The Falcon and the Winter Soldier” about
two years ago, when Disney introduced its Disney+ streaming service and turned
to its subsidiary studios for original content.
At the same time, the Marvel Cinematic Universe was arriving at
a narrative turning point with “Endgame,” which said farewell to beloved characters
like Steve Rogers while creating opportunities for new champions to rise.
Stan has rolled with Marvel’s twists and turns for a decade. He
joined the movie franchise as Steve Rogers’ loyal pal Bucky Barnes in “Captain
America: The First Avenger” (2011) and his character was upgraded to become a
fearsome assassin in the sequel “Captain America: The Winter Soldier” (2014).
When Marvel initially told him about its idea for a TV series,
Stan said, “It was straightforward and sort of ambiguous at the same time.”
There was an inherent logic in pairing him with Mackie and
letting them play off each other, Stan said: “I was like, yeah, that sounds
awesome — that also sounds like it could be a million different things.”
A few months later, Stan said, the studio came back with a more
detailed plan for a six-hour storyline that would offer “enough time to build
scenes and go into their personal lives — a day in the life of Bucky Barnes, a
day in the life of Sam Wilson — as you haven’t seen it before.”
The TV project was also carefully weighed by Mackie, who said he
has begrudgingly embraced a kind of team-player status he has gained from his
roles in films like “The Hurt Locker” and “Half Nelson.”
“I always joke with everybody, if you’re a white actor and you
want to be nominated for an Oscar, you need to get me to star opposite you,” he
said.
Most of all, Mackie, who has spoken openly about his desire to
see more representation in Marvel projects, said he hoped for a narrative that
embraced the complexity of his final scene in “Endgame.”
In that sequence, when Rogers asks his character how it feels to
hold the Captain America shield, Wilson replies, “Like it’s someone else’s.”
From Wilson’s perspective, Mackie said that moment “wasn’t an
opportunity — it was a major burden.”
“It wasn’t a thing of him sitting back and waiting for the
shield,” he continued. “He wasn’t looking for a promotion at work.”
For the Marvel faithful, the series revisits characters from the
“Captain America” movies like the intelligence agent Sharon Carter (Emily
VanCamp) and the villainous Helmut Zemo (Daniel Brühl). It also introduces a
new potential antagonist, John Walker (played by Wyatt Russell), who in the
comics was an adventurer and potential successor to Captain America. He
believes he is a better embodiment of American values than Steve Rogers.
As it has with other projects, Marvel is being coy about plot
specifics. But the makers of “The Falcon and the Winter Soldier” said the
series would confront the same questions that the country has been asking
itself in recent, turbulent months: Who is an American, and who gets to decide
what principles the country stands for? What compels people to take extreme
actions in the name of what they believe is patriotism?
Kari Skogland, who directed all six episodes, said that the
series continued to embrace the same contentious themes — “not just topical issues
but hard-to-talk about issues” — that Captain America pioneered as a comic-book
character. On his first cover, in 1941, the hero was depicted punching Hitler
in the face, and he evolved over decades to reflect Americans’ ambivalence
about their leadership and the actions taken in the name of their nation.
The comics that Marvel published in its formative era “were born
of a time where the world was healing from a very particular series of events,”
said Skogland, who has also directed shows like “The Handmaid’s Tale,” “The
Americans” and “The Walking Dead.”
“They came from a postwar, anti-fascist space and were talking
about the morals and ethics that were prevalent at the time,” she said. “They’ve
never shied away from that.”
Stan said it was inevitable that viewers would see parallels to
recent crises like the January 6 Capitol attack in the series — not because its
creators specifically anticipated or copied these events, but because they
sought to tell a story about a country at a perilous crossroads with itself.
“Watching the things that were happening to the Capitol were
incredibly disturbing,” he said, “and they were also particularly disturbing
for us because in some way they mirrored things that are happening in the show.
You can’t do a show like this and not talk about those things.”