Kang the Conqueror will save the Marvel Cinematic Universe

Jonathan Majors is undoubtedly the bright spot in the new Ant-Man movie. Can he carry the MCU forward?

This weekend, Marvel Studios kicked off the FIFTH phase of their ongoing cinematic universe with Ant-Man and The Wasp: Quantumania. The box office results were perfectly fine. Audiences seemed to enjoy themselves. Critics were pretty unimpressed. Such has been the case for just about every film from Marvel Studios since they reached the pop cultural summit of Avengers: Endgame.

This MCU malaise has prompted countless discussions about what’s wrong with Marvel and what they can do to fix it, and as a devoted fan of this franchise I’ve participated in plenty of these discussions, on both sides of the issue. Am I still enjoying these movies? Sure! Do I also think they’ve lost their way? It’s hard to argue otherwise.

In the months leading up to Quantumania, however, a glimmer of hope has appeared, a beacon of light in the darkness that the MCU has been wandering through for the past three years. Marvel announced that Jonathan Majors, the unbelievably charismatic actor who burst onto the scene in 2020 with Da 5 Bloods and Lovecraft Country, would be playing the time-traveling Kang the Conqueror, the MCU’s next major villain. Perhaps this would give the MCU the urgency and the high stakes it’s been missing since the days of Thanos.

I saw Quantumania this weekend and while I like Paul Rudd as much as the next guy, I was really there to see Majors in his first major appearance as Kang (he showed up briefly in 2021’s Loki series). While the movie around him was mostly more of the same from the MCU, I think it’s clear that Majors is every bit the superstar Marvel was hoping he would be. He’s the kind of star that these movies have to be built around.

Ultimately, the MCU became the Goliath of Hollywood not through groundbreaking special effects or visual artistry, but through good old fashioned star power and great actors playing memorable characters. Quantumania gives us a glimpse not only at Majors’ menacing, verging-on-campy interpretation of Kang, but also a sneak peek at the enormous range he’s going to be allowed to explore with this character in the years to come.

Perhaps most interesting of all is what Kang represents as a villain. With Thanos, Marvel explored the idea of how terrifying someone can be when they believe they’re doing horrible things for a noble goal, an idea that I think resonated with a lot of Americans in the 2010s. Kang’s threat is very different and might sound pretty familiar to fans of Marvel and of pop culture in general. Kang’s goal is ultimately to remove any possibilities from the universe that don’t fit his preferred narrative. Ironically, this may remind you of Marvel Studios itself, declaring TV shows and movies fans once loved as “non-canon” and irrelevant now that they don’t fit neatly in to the MCU.

But the threat represented by Kang certainly applies more broadly to American culture as a whole right now. Don’t like a movie or TV show because it doesn’t specifically cater to you? Review-bomb it online or start a social campaign against it. Don’t agree with some of the books your kids are reading in school? Have them pulled from the library shelves. Silencing other viewpoints, particularly those that do not actively threaten harm against anyone, has become the tactic of choice for those whose ideas lose out, those who can’t control the narrative of the universe we happen to live in.

Will Kang finally give the MCU a unifying idea to build around again? That falls to Majors, Marvel Studios chief Kevin Feige and the team writing and directing the roughly eleventy-billion movies and TV shows coming out between now and Avengers: Kang Dynasty. I’m rooting for them.

All signs are pointing toward ‘Loki’ introducing this supervillain in the finale

Who is running the TVA? We think we have a clear idea.

This article contains spoilers from episode five of Marvel’s show, Loki. The Disney+ series has one episode left. We will reveal plot points from the first five episodes while speculating on what’s to come in the finale. If you don’t want to see that information, please exit this article.

No one thrives in chaos like Loki. And that’s why the scene in episode five when Loki (Tom Hiddelston) dances through a crowd of his fellow Loki Variants — one of which has dreads for horns and one of which is an alligator — was absolutely perfect. It should be too absurd and preposterous. And, well, it was. But it was also silly in all the right ways, including and especially Alligator Loki eating President Loki’s hand. Outrageous.

It was one of the just-the-right-amount-of-weird moments from an episode that united Loki and Sylvie (Sophia Di Martino) in The Void, where they got one step closer to finding the person behind the TVA (Time Variance Authority).

Though Loki on Disney+ has been one episode of chaos after the next, the show seems to be organized in setting up one particular villain. All the signs point toward an appearance from Kang the Conqueror in the finale.

Who is Kang? Imagine if Genghis Khan had access to 1) a suit of armor that made him super powerful and 2) a time traveling device. Kang is, of course, a conqueror. But what makes him special is that he conquerors multiple points of time. The ambitious villain moves between time and space — because conquering in one place and one space is too easy.

Played by Jonathan Majors, Kang will appear in Ant-Man and the Wasp: Quantumania, a movie set to release in February 2023. But could he make an appearance in Loki first? Could he be in charge of the TVA?

Here are the easter eggs that Marvel fans have found — and there are many.