a5c7b9f00b As Steve Rogers struggles to embrace his role in the modern world, he teams up with a fellow Avenger and S.H.I.E.L.D agent, Black Widow, to battle a new threat from history: an assassin known as the Winter Soldier. Steve Rogers is coming to grips with living in modern America after being frozen in ice for 50 years. A new threat against S.H.I.E.L.D. arises called "The Winter Soldier". While the origins of the Winter Soldier are unknown, the threat against S.H.I.E.L.D. from the Hydra organization is. Especially after it compromises Nick Fury and Agent Romanoff, leaving them betrayed and left for dead, and their S.H.I.E.L.D. status revoked, marking them as traitors to the organization. Now racing against time with very little resources available at his disposal, Captain America launches an investigation into S.H.I.E.L.D.'s origins and that has him returning to the very Army base where he once underwent basic training nearly 100 years ago. What he and Romanoff discover there leads to a very startling development with S.H.I.E.L.D., a top secret project called "Operation Insight", and the launch of the next generation of Helicarrier. Can they stop it before it's too late? When I first saw the trailer, I thought the movie was going to suck even more than its predecessor. Well, I'm glad to say I was wrong, this one is actually pretty decent. It follows the Cap's adventures in the present day, where/when he finds himself on the run from SHIELD, which turns out to have been infiltrated by his old enemy, Hydra. This is a nice twist, and doubly so because this time Hydra is actually efficient for a change. They take over the very organization that was founded to counter threats like them, they have a solid plan for world domination, and Captain America actually has to break a sweat to bring them down. He is assisted by the Black Widow, but she mostly plays the part of the token woman, along with the token black guy, although she has her moments. The titular Winter Soldier feels tacked on; he turns out to be the Cap's old buddy, but, since he lacks his memory, or any personality to speak of, the revelation feels pointless. Essentially, he is a badass with a metal arm who acts as Hydra's unthinking enforcer, so his background is completely irrelevant and only serves as a distraction. Fortunately, this aspect of the story doesn't take up too much screen time. Most of that is taken up by action and good old butt-kicking, which is what a movie like this is supposed to be about, although one can't help thinking, "Where was Iron Man during all this?" There are also unobtrusive references to classics like Star Wars and Pulp Fiction that I enjoyed. I recommend this movie. Having found the first Captain America incredibly underwhelming and by far the weakest of the initial Marvel Avengers films I went into the film with low expectations… but WOW! I was blown away. <br/><br/>An outstanding film across the board!<br/><br/>The special effects were just as brilliant as they were for other Marvel films and added completely to the whole immersive feel of the film. <br/><br/>The Storyline was for me the best part of the film. A MASSIVE improvement on the first Captain America and really drew you in. A story that completely drew you in, taking you on an emotional roller coaster with some shocking twists and turns throughout. The plot wasn't just an explosive action thriller but quite a good political thriller too making you question who's the good guys and who's the bad ones.<br/><br/>The ending was superb too and the cast were brilliant! Excellent support cast.<br/><br/>An overall excellent film and one of the best stand alone Marvel films yet. 10/10 and I would definitely recommend. Arriving in the middle of Phase Two of the Marvel Cinematic Universe, The Winter Soldier is among the best of the nine films released so far—roughly on par with the first Iron Man and The Avengers—but if the film has one major flaw, it’s the obligation to serve a larger franchise that keeps taking on weight. The Falcon is a Marvel Comics character who premiered in Sept 1969 in Strange Tales #117 and created by Stan Lee and Gene Colan. He and Captain America eventually became close partners, especially in the 1970s when the comic was retitled Captain America and the Falcon from 1971 to 1977. His abilities include an uncanny ability to communicate with birds (An ability given by the Red Skull when he used the Cosmic Cube to reform Sam's personality for his own ends) and being in excellent physical condition. In addition, he wears a special harness supplied by King T'Challa, also known as Black Panther of Wakanda, that enables him to fly. In the movie, the Falcon has no biological super powers. Instead, he is a U.S. military veteran who is well-trained in hand-to-hand-combat and the use of a special winged flight suit giving him the ability to fly. Not much is revealed about his past in the movie, but his military background is considerably different from his comic origin in the mainstream comics as a conflicted urban youth who turns to crime for a while before turning to good after meeting Captain America. In the film, his flight suit is implied to have come from Stark Industries instead of from the Black Panther in the mainstream comics. His name in the movie comes from the government code-name for the flight suit he uses, instead of being his self-given superhero name as in the comics. His military background, lack of super powers, and the appearance of his flight suit are actually based around the version of the Falcon from the Ultimate comics, where he wore military clothes with his flight suit instead of his traditional red- and white-colored Falcon-themed costume. The World Security Council is an international organization whose stated aims are facilitating cooperation in international law, international security, economic development, social progress, human rights, and achievement of world peace. They run S.H.I.E.L.D.'s operations. Five of them appear in the film: Jenny Agutter reprising her role as a World Security Council member from The Avengers (2012), along with Robert Redford's Alexander Pierce serving as a World Security Council member and senior leader within S.H.I.E.L.D., Chin Han as World Security Councilman Yen, with Bernard White and Alan Dale as the two remaining World Security Council members to appear. One other World Security Council member or former member, Powers Boothe's character, who appears in The Avengers, is missing this time around; the third season of Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D. (2013–), wherein he resurfaces, providing some insight as to the reason for the absence. In general, it would seem that only five person serve on the council at a time. In the aftermath of The Winter Soldier, the council is disbanded. As of mid-2017, the whereabouts/fates of World Security Councilwoman Hawley (Agutter) and the two never-identified World Security Councilmen (played by Arthur Darbinyan and Donald Li) from The Avengers are unrevealed. Sharon Carter, alias Agent 13, is a secret agent in the Marvel Comics universe. She is an ex-field agent of S.H.I.E.L.D. under Nick Fury and occasionally the girlfriend of Captain America. In original continuity, Sharon was said to be the younger sister of Peggy Carter, the wartime love interest of Captain America, but she was later reconnected as Peggy's niece because of the unaging nature of comic book characters. At first she is known as "Kate", but Black Widow identifies her simply as "Sharon". While the film makes no definite connection between the two, Sharon does mention an aunt after Steve visits the elderly Peggy. Brock Rumlow a.k.a. "Crossbones" is a super villain in the Marvel Comics universe. He is a world-class hand-to-hand fighter with extensive experience in street-fighting and various martial arts and military combat techniques. Crossbones usually appears as a henchman of the Red Skull, and has a super villain costume of black combat gear and a black and white skull mask. In the film, he is a S.H.I.E.L.D operative, without a costume, who is revealed to be a double agent working for the villain. Near the end of the film, he can be seen in a bed with two straps crossing over his chest, resembling his logo. Batroc the Leaper, real name Georges Batroc, is Marvel villain who lacks superpowers and is a highly trained French martial artist whose most powerful attribute are his legs (hence the nickname). In the comics he has battled many different heroes but is primarily an adversary of Captain America. In the film he is still a powerful martial artist and battles Steve Rogers aboard a pirated ship. While he demonstrates that his legs are powerful, the "Leaper" part of the name has been removed from the movie. Stan Lee appears as a guard at the Smithsonian, saying, "I'm so fired", after Steve Rogers steals his original Captain America uniform. In the finale of the first season of Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D., it is revealed that Coulson would take over as director of S.H.I.E.L.D. and rebuild it from the beginning. While this does ultimately become the case at some point relatively quickly, the organization overseen by Coulson experiences struggles with its authenticity; plus, for years, the general public and others outside the web of secrecy are largely unable to distinguish between SHIELD and HYDRA. There are two end credit sequences, one mid-credits and one at the very end. The mid-credit scene introduces Baron von Strucker, one of villains in <a href="/title/tt2395427/">Avengers: Age of Ultron (2015)</a> (2015), who is overseeing a secret HYDRA research facility which is experimenting on Loki's staff. He then looks into a cell at "the twins", who are Quicksilver and Scarlet Witch, who appear in Avengers: Age of Ultron. In the comics, Baron von Strucker is a HYDRA villain from World War II who often fought internally with Red Skull over control of the evil organization. How he differs in the Marvel Cinematic Universe is not yet completely known. Quicksilver and Scarlet Witch are the children of Magneto from the X-Men comics. They start as villains like their father, but later look to become heroes and are taken in as Avengers. This is different in the Marvel Cinematic Universe because Marvel Studios does not have the rights to Magneto and therefore cannot reference them as mutants or even offspring of Magneto, but von Strucker still implies in the movie that they were born with their powers, hence him saying "the age of miracles". The second end credit sequence shows Bucky the Winter Soldier visiting the Captain America exhibit at the National Air and Space Museum, in order to discover his own identity. Also, the United States flag can be seen behind him. This may allude to the fact that Winter Soldier learns to become a hero in the comics and even becomes Captain America when Steve Rogers is believed dead. There are several references to Tony Stark/Iron Man, Stark Industries, and Bruce Banner in dialog throughout the film. 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