Chris Evans may not be Captain America in the Marvel Cinematic Universe!
Steve Rogers had a difficult time in Captain America Civil War — from choosing Winter Soldier over Iron Man even after learning that Bucky killed Tony Stark’s parents.
By the end of the movie Chris Evans’s character puts down his shield and walks away from his heroic mantle. When the American hero reappears at the end of the movie, to help his allies break out from The Raft — the superhero prison in the middle of the ocean — he is seen without Captain America’s iconic stars and stripes suit. Marvel fans are still wondering if Steve Rogers dropping his shield is a hint that he is going to quit being Captain America, and we finally have an answer.
The character put down his shield at the end of Captain America: Civil War and directors Joe and Anthony Russo confirm that he is going to be a different kind of Cap. “I think him dropping that shield is him letting go of that identity,” Joe told Huffington Post. “[It’s] him admitting that certainly the identity of Captain America was in conflict with the very personal choice that he was making.”
In the comic books, Steve Rogers takes on the name of The Nomad when he loses faith in the government, so it’s possible that this happens in the movies!
By the end of the movie Chris Evans’s character puts down his shield and walks away from his heroic mantle. When the American hero reappears at the end of the movie, to help his allies break out from The Raft — the superhero prison in the middle of the ocean — he is seen without Captain America’s iconic stars and stripes suit. Marvel fans are still wondering if Steve Rogers dropping his shield is a hint that he is going to quit being Captain America, and we finally have an answer.
The character put down his shield at the end of Captain America: Civil War and directors Joe and Anthony Russo confirm that he is going to be a different kind of Cap. “I think him dropping that shield is him letting go of that identity,” Joe told Huffington Post. “[It’s] him admitting that certainly the identity of Captain America was in conflict with the very personal choice that he was making.”
In the comic books, Steve Rogers takes on the name of The Nomad when he loses faith in the government, so it’s possible that this happens in the movies!