The 4 major takeaways from The Marvels trailer, including Iman Vellani’s big screen debut

Nick Fury! Flerken kittens!

Buckle up, The Marvels is coming. Marvel Studios gave us our first glimpse of the trio of Captain Marvel (Brie Larson), Monica Rambeau (Teyonah Parris) and Kamala Khan (Iman Vellani) in November’s new entry in the Marvel Cinematic Universe (MCU).

MORE: Secret Invasion trailer shows Nick Fury is ready for “one last fight”

In just under two minutes, the teaser trailer shows us a LOT and sets the stage for what could be an epic adventure. Slated in Phase 5 after May’s Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 3 and the Secret Invasion series on Disney+, The Marvels will tie together several storylines while moving things forward.

Here are four big takeaways from the trailer.

Secret Invasion trailer shows Nick Fury is ready for “one last fight”

Nick Fury is back and he’s ready to get to the bottom of some alien espionage!

After a flood of shows and movies over the past couple of years, Marvel Studios is taking things a little easier in 2023, with just one new piece of content between May’s Guardians of the Galaxy, Vol. 3 and November’s The Marvels. That one piece would be Disney+ series Secret Invasion, featuring Samuel L. Jackson as superspy and former S.H.I.E.L.D. director Nick Fury.

The last time we saw Fury in the MCU he was in outer space, working with a group of shape-shifting aliens called the Skrulls. Now Fury is back on Earth and sporting some pretty serious looking scars on his face as he attempts to deal with some Skrulls who seem a little less interested in being friends.

Joining Jackson in Secret Invasion are returning members of the MCU Cobie Smulders as former S.H.I.E.L.D. agent Maria Hill, Martin Freeman as CIA agent Everett Ross, and Ben Mendelsohn as Skrull leader Talos. Don Cheadle also makes an appearance as Avenger’s member James “Rhodey” Rhodes a.k.a. War Machine.

Also appearing in Secret Invasion and making their MCU debuts are Oscar-winner Olivia Colman, Game of Thrones star Emilia Clarke, as well as Kingsley Ben-Adir, best known for his performances in The OA and One Night in Miami.

Not many details as to the story are offered in this trailer but it’s clear there’s a mix of espionage, military action, and plenty of impostering. The Marvel Comics story on which this series is based blew comic readers’ minds back in 2008 when it revealed that many important Marvel characters had in fact been replaced by Skrull imposters for years. Will the MCU deliver similarly stunning revelations this summer?

We’ll find out when the series premieres on Disney+ on June21st.

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Everything we know about Captain America: New World Order so far

We’re here to give you the rundown on what we know about Captain America: New World Order.

When Marvel Studios chief Kevin Feige announced the lineup for Phases 4, 5, and 6 of the Marvel Cinematic Universe, a fourth Captain America film wasn’t the biggest headline of the day for most fans. While many fans have enjoyed seeing Anthony Mackie’s Sam Wilson take on the mantle of the Captain America, the departure of Chris Evans’ Steve Rogers from the MCU has been a loss that many feel the franchise has yet to recover from.

As the months have passed since that big announcement, little by little we’ve learned more about Marvel’s plans for a fourth Cap movie and with each new tidbit, the excitement around the film has grown. For many Marvel fans, Captain America: New World Order (as we now know the title to be) is quickly becoming the most anticipated MCU project outside of the upcoming Avengers movies.

So what exactly do we know about this movie so far? We’re here to give you the rundown and get you caught up on why many fans are now expecting Captain America: New World Order to be as big an event as Captain America: Civil War was back in 2016.

Oscars 2023: How many Oscars have Marvel movies won?

The MCU doesn’t have the greatest history when it comes to the Oscars

Over the last decade and a half or so, Marvel has evolved from a company that produces comic books and storylines to an absolute cinematic powerhouse. It’s the most popular movie franchise in the world at this point, with four of the top 10 highest-grossing movies of all time.

So it’d be reasonable for someone to think that, with Marvel being this enormous, the franchise would have to have at least a handful of academy awards from the Oscars at this point.

However, that actually isn’t the case. The MCU hasn’t won many Oscars awards at all. In fact, the only wins the MCU does have from the Academy have come in the last few years and none of them have to do with on-screen performances.

In total, the MCU has been nominated for academy awards 26 different times, including 5 for this upcoming Oscars.

However, the franchise only has a total of three wins from those nominations, all coming from 2018’s Black Panther. The movie took home awards for best production design, best costume design and best original score at the 2019 Oscars.

Things could change this year. Ryan Coogler’s Black Panther 2 has Angela Bassett up for Best Supporting Actress after her performance as Ramonda in the film. Her dazzling performance is the MCU’s best hope for an on-screen Academy Award.

We’ll see how things go, though.

The 7 Marvel films that deserved best picture nominations from the Oscars when they released

With all due respect to the Academy, let’s give superhero movies more respect

The Oscars are nearly upon us. It’s the biggest night of the year in Hollywood.

All of the stars gather together to honor some of the best work from that year in film — the highlight of which is usually the award for best picture. This is essentially the movie of the year in Hollywood. This year, it looks like Everything, Everywhere, All At Once will completely run the show, but we’ll see soon.

What’s a bit odd about the best picture award, and just the Academy Awards in general is that the blockbuster films that we see almost never get shine at these sorts of things. We’ve particularly seen that with Marvel properties over the years.

Despite absolute dominance from the Marvel Cinematic Universe in Hollywood and some pretty great performances from other Marvel films done by Sony and FOX, a Marvel movie has never actually won — or been nominated for — a best picture award.

But there have been more than a fair share of Marvel films that should absolutely have been considered. Now, would these movies win? No idea. And we’re also not going to play the game of, “Movie X didn’t deserve the award” because that’s unfair and totally untrue.

But what we are going to do here is highlight some Marvel films that could’ve won it. Let’s dig in.

Jonathan Majors is the most fascinating man in Hollywood (and it’s not close)

Majors has stormed onto the scene, and that’s good news for everyone.

Jonathan Majors is no longer having a moment. He is the moment.

Majors, whose slow-burn rise in Hollywood first spiked with his Marvel Cinematic Universe debut in Loki (2021), already had an impressive portfolio with critically acclaimed roles in The Last Black Man in San Francisco (2019), Da 5 Bloods (2020) and HBO’s Lovecraft Country (2020) and the incredibly underrated 2022 film, Devotion.

But it wasn’t until 2023 that Majors’ simmering stardom boiled over into full-blown celebrity with highly praised roles as Killian Maddox in the Sundance hit, Magazine Dreams; Kang The Conquerer in Ant-Man and the Wasp: Quantumania and Dame Anderson in his latest box-office success, Creed III.

And it’s only March.

It’s not exaggeration to say Majors is everywhere right now, regularly breaking the internet with a new photo shoot or interview.

Even the United States Army got him.

But it’s not just because of his recent critical and commercial success. Majors is easily most fascinating man (and published poet!) in Hollywood right now and certainly among the most thoughtful when it comes to…just about everything. He’s not afraid to get deep in interviews or explain the thought process behind how he approaches his characters.

“The beautiful thing about what [Majors] does is we spent a lot of time talking about the heart, the feeling, what he’s after, the sort of subtext of his goals … all of those things,” Devotion director J.D. Dillard said of Majors’ process to embody Ensign Jesse Brown, the first Black aviator to complete the Navy’s basic flight training program.

When it came to playing Creed III‘s Dame Anderson, a man seeking a fresh start in the boxing ring after getting out of prison, Majors channeled personal experience. Growing up, Majors ran into his own trouble with shoplifting, school suspensions and even living in his car after getting kicked out of the house.

“I know Dame,” Majors told For the Win. “I could have been Dame, a highly emotional, highly intelligent youth that had some problems.” That familiarity with the character was also built into the physical depiction, showing Anderson as hunched over and covering himself, head on a swivel (as a boxer would).

He’s certainly not the first actor to make for an interesting interview, but in an industry where introspection and emotional intelligence often seem as performative as the movies themselves, it adds to Majors’ allure as someone who doesn’t seem nearly as impressed with himself as the rest of the world is right now. He’s not on social media and won’t watch his own movies, but he’s surprisingly open about what makes him tick, recently telling The Cut he cries often, falls in love daily and has uncomfortably specific tips for executing a flawless breakup.

Perhaps this is why every new detail we learn about Majors makes us want to know more, like the fact that he always carries around a mug after being told by his mother to protect himself growing up. “Now it means mind your cup,” Majors explained on The Late Show with Stephen Colbert. “You’re a vessel. Nobody can fill you up. Nobody can pour you out. You do that yourself.”

He always walks around with a portable speaker, a move that inspired Michael B. Jordan to use two Nipsey Hussle songs as his character’s walk-in music in Creed III.

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One thing’s for sure: Majors isn’t going anywhere. He’s already locked in for at least two more Marvel movies as Kang and is slated to play Dennis Rodman in an upcoming film about the notorious NBA star.

He’s going to be a star for a very long time. And the world will be watching.

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.

Everything you need to know before going to see Ant-Man and the Wasp: Quantumania

If you haven’t seen Ant-Man or just need a refresher, we have you covered.

The first film of Phase 5 in the Marvel Cinematic Universe (MCU) launches on February 17 as Ant-Man and the Wasp: Quantumania hits theaters nationwide. It is the third installment in the Paul Rudd-led Ant-Man series, and comes with high expectations as Jonathan Majors reprises his role as “He Who Remains” from Loki as new big baddie Kang the Conquerer.

We haven’t seen our pal Scott Lang since the adventures of Avengers: Endgame when Lang returned from the quantum realm and helped organize the time heist that un-did Thanos’s half-the-world-erasing snap.

Whether you’re a Marvel fan that hasn’t had a chance to re-watch everything in anticipation of the new release, a movie-goer that wants to jump in blind or a casual observer of MCU that can’t quite remember all the details of the story, we’re here to help.

In Ant-Man, we meet Scott Lang. He’s getting out of prison after a stint behind bars for essentially running the Office Space scheme and skimming pennies off the top from a company called Vista Corp. Lang is determined to stay clean and above board for his daughter, Cassie.

When he can’t find a job — Baskin Robbins always finds out — Lang’s friend Luis (Michael Peña) ropes him in for a heist that leads to him finding and wearing an elaborate suit created by Hank Pym (Michael Douglas). The suit allows Lang to shrink (or later get much, much larger) and uses the power of his ant-friends to fight the diabolical Darren Cross (Corey Stoll).

We see Ant-Man in Captain America: Civil War when Falcon enlists Scott’s help to assist Cap’s team in the battle against Iron Man and the other half of the Avengers. Lang ends up under house arrest as a result of breaking the Sokovia Accords, leading us to Ant-Man and the Wasp.

Hope Van Dyne (Evangeline Lilly), the daughter of Pym, teams up with her dad and Lang to attempt to retrieve her mother, Janet Van Dyne (Michelle Pfeiffer), from the quantum realm. Janet has been lost in space and time since a mission to save the world decades earlier. The mission was successful, and the ensuing experiments with the quantum realm gave Scott Lang the background to come up with the beginnings of a plan to go back in time to retrieve the Infinity Stones and foil Thanos’s plans.

As Scott spent time in the quantum realm during the five year span following the blip, his daughter Cassie (now played by Kathryn Newton) continued to grow, meaning he returned to essentially (and actor-wise) a whole new person.

That’s the quick and dirty recap getting us to now, but let’s dig into a few of the characters a little more.

Marvel Studios pushes The Marvels release date to November

We could see a few more titles pushed back as Marvel Studios and Disney spread out content.

You’re going to have to wait a little bit longer for the return of Carol Danvers, Monica Rambeau and Kamala Khan as Marvel Studios announced they’ll be pushing The Marvels back to a November 10 release date. The Marvels was originally scheduled for a July 8 release.

This aligns with the new strategy announced from both Disney CEO Bob Iger and Marvel head Kevin Feige in recent comments to the media about slowing down the release of content. Some of this is as a result of cost-cutting, but it also will cut down on Marvel fatigue and allow projects to have a moment to shine.

In 2020 and 2021, Marvel released seven movies and eight Disney+ shows. Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 3 is still slated to hit theaters May 5, but it’s unclear what will happen with the Secret Invasion and Echo series that were supposed to release mid-2023. The second season of Loki does not yet have a release date, but with its tie-ins to Kang — the big baddie of both Ant-Man and the Wasp: Quantumania and the next two phases — it likely won’t delay much.

Quantumania is in theaters now.

Jonathan Majors keeps breaking the internet with photo shoots

Most Americans have two questions on their mind: who is Jonathan Majors and how can I look at him more? We got you.

With both Ant-Man & The Wasp: Quantumania and Creed III hitting theaters over the next couple of weeks, many Americans have two questions on their minds: Who is Jonathan Majors and how can I look at him more?

You’re in luck, because in addition to being one of the most photogenic men in America, Majors is also one of the most photographed men in America as of late, posing for basically every major publication that still does photoshoots, including EBONY, Men’s Health and The Cut.

So whenever you see Majors trending on Twitter, don’t worry — he’s probably fine! All it means is there are new photos of him, a gift to the internet at large, and we have the privilege of seeing him again! But with different clothes and props and backdrops!

Anyway, enough talking. Here is Jonathan Majors.