The world needs some good news. Thanks to a familiar and trusted source (the same L.A. based source who told me about Peyton Reed signing on for Season 2 of The Mandalorian), I have learned that Evan Peters (American Horror Story, X-Men) signed on for a key role in the Marvel Studios Disney Plus streaming series WandaVision. The 33-year old Peters landed the role late last year and filmed his scenes shortly after.
The nature of Peters’ role is being kept under wraps and that is likely to generate a great deal of excitement and confusion among fans given that the actor has thrice portrayed Wanda’s brother, Pietro, in Fox’s X-Men franchise. Of course Peters is also well-known for his portrayal of several terrifying villains over the course of 8 seasons of American Horror Story, opening up the possibility that he’s landed a role as WandaVision’s big bad. Given the nature of the series, Peters could be playing anyone from Nicholas Scratch to Mephisto.
The waters would seem to get muddy quickly should Peters be reprising his role as Pietro and then crossing over into the MCU, but rumors have persisted that WandaVision will somehow feature Wanda’s deceased brother though Aaron Taylor-Johnson, who played the speedster in Avengers: Age of Ultron, has made it very clear that we shouldn’t plan on seeing him suit back up as Quicksilver any time soon. So if Taylor-Johnson isn’t back and Quicksilver is, that would mean a recast, something Marvel Studios has done successfully in the past, and Peters would be an interesting choice given the majority of fans seem to gravitate towards his portrayal of the character. This is just one possible option, of course, and perhaps not even the most likely, but it’s the one that quickly comes to mind.
Time will tell exactly what role Peters is playing, but given his American Horror Story fan base and his resume as a superhero, this is, most definitely, some good news!
In considering what it would take to set Marvel Studios Nova film apart from its prior Cosmic offerings and prepare Richard Rider to ascend as the studios greatest Cosmic hero, I’ve found myself challenged over the past several days. The character of Richard Rider isn’t hard to crack, but there’s more to a film than its lead. Instead of trying to write up a script (I’m no script writer), I’m instead going to try to roll out a series of pieces explaining how I would chose to tackle some of these challenges I’ve encountered while imagining the Nova film.
In Part 1 (which you can read right here), I took a crack at solving the problems surrounding the Xandarian Worldmind, the Nova Force and Richard’s kid brother, Robbie. In Part 2 (which you can read right here) I tackled a whole new set of problems surrounding the Human Rocket including his origin, why he wasn’t around during the events of Avengers: Endgame and what it is about him that makes him human enough to make mistakes and learn from them. Part 3 (which you can read right here) took a step back from the main plot to set up the story around the story and introduce Recorder 451, the bard of Rider’s legend.
I’ll admit I lost quite a few hours of sleep in coming up with the villains of this piece. I had no fewer than 5 different options rolling around inside my head, but I ultimately chose the Supernovas.
If you are unfamiliar, the Supernovas are basically Novas gone bad. They found a way to hack the Worldmind and to gain access to greater power than it was giving each of them. Though eventually defeated, their super-powered black helmets lived on in the black ops division of the Nova Corps that became known as the Black Novas. If you’re a Sam Alexander fan, you’ll be familiar with the story and the black helmet and while I’m not going down a path that leads to Sam’s father Jesse Alexander being introduced in this film, the foundation is there for the story to be told at some point.
The Supernovas fit the Marvel Studios mold of the villains of the first film in a series being dark reflections of the hero. People get bored with it, but it’s an archetype that transcends culture and types of media. The idea that the heroes are facing off against similar characters allows the audience to think of how, had circumstances been different for the hero, maybe he’d be on the other side of things. Black Panther did this brilliantly. In this case, these Supernovas offer Rich, a kid who has struggled with his own perceived mediocrity, access to power, resources and spoils he’s never dreamed of. These guys aren’t bad guys, they’re fighting against a system that norms everyone, that doesn’t let anyone be any better than anyone else. Why should everyone only have an equal part of the Nova Force? This is the battle raging on inside Rich as he discovers these Supernovas and finds out what they’re up to. We all know Rich is a hero, here’s where he makes that choice.
Fighting the Supernovas also allows Rich to be able to come out his film as a hero without being the biggest Mary Sue in the history of films. You can’t introduce the helmet and the powers and realistically expect him to stop the Annihilation Wave in 2.5 hours. In fact, this origin film is going to see Rich stripped of the helmet for a while and have to survive on his own physical prowess (he’s been studying MMA for the past several years, remember). Obviously he’s going to get it back and we’ll definitely see some great shots of Rich using the Nova Force, but he’s going to win this battle through the sheer force of will riding on the back of that righteous anger boiling up inside.
In addition to the terrifying looking Mister Z’zz seen in the opening of the article, this team of Supernovas consists of Adomox, the mastermind of the operation; Titus, the cyborg muscle and the adorable Phlish, because we have to sell them toys.
Here’s how we get to the good stuff. The Nova Corps has been rebuilding since the planet was left in ruins following the attack by Thanos. The Worldmind was never a target, so it remains fully operational, but Xandar doesn’t exist as we once thought of it. By the time we get to see it in Nova, it has become a cluster of fragments held together through freaky space science, just like this great art from Annihilation: Prologue. In the 5 years that passed, the Worldmind hasn’t just rebuilt Xandar, it rebuilt the Corps. The Corps is now larger than it’s ever been and has taken an active role in policing the galaxy with active posts throughout.
When Rich arrives on Xandar and begins to really take in what he has become a part of (we’ll get to all that in Part 5), we immediately learn that there have been several outposts have been attacked over the past few weeks. Nova Corpsmen Z’zz and Phlish and Denarian Adomox are missing. Skrulls, who have begun to reemerge in various sects across the galaxy, are the primary suspects.
We meet Centurion Titus through Rich’s eyes and it’s not a good feeling. Rich’s xenophobia is intense and there’s nothing human looking about Titus. Shortly after their first meeting, Rich is greeted by two Xandarians who are much more human looking: Pyreus Kril and Gabriel Lan who Worldmind has sent to help Rich acclimate.
The Supernova plot plays out like this. Not too long after Rich is acclimated into the Corps, Worldmind assigns him to go with Titus and Kril as they inspect another outpost that’s been attacked. As they approach the site, they encounter what appears to be a stolen Nova Corps ship and enter into a little space dogfight while Kril stays on the planet to inspect. Rich, feeling the power at his disposal and the need to make an impression, leaves the ship to take on the ship on his own. Pretty cool fight, but the ship escapes as Titus has to save Rich and he is berated by Titus as they return to Xandar.
The third act is, of course, the big reveal and the big villain set piece. Titus led another team to another planet and has disappeared. A 6 man team, including Rich,Kril and Lan is sent to investigate above the Xandarian ship Way-Opener. As they come into proximity with the planet, Cygnet VII, their connection to the Worldmind is severed. They can no longer communicate with it or access the Nova Force. As they prepare to leave, a black helmeted Titus unleashes his increased share of the Nova Force on the ship, disabling it, before bringing it to rest on the planet. The crew is taken off the ship and their helmets are taken from them.
We learn that Adomox has learned how to hack the Worldmind to access greater power but it comes at the cost of the helmets of other Corpsmen. Some, like Z’zz and Phlish, are willing to give theirs up and join the cause, those who haven’t come along willingly have been disposed of. The third act will play out as sort of a mashup of Predator and Cliffhanger. The team is on the run, hunted by the Supernovas and cut off from the Worldmind (good thing Worldmind helped Rich and Robbie put together that super long distance communication device that Rich has and that Robbie uses to get a full on strike team to the rescue).
And so the final act becomes Rich having to survive, powerless for a while, until help arrives. Robbie and Rich are in communication throughout and Robbie determines he knows how the hack works and tells Rich if he gets a helmet, he can reconnect them to the Worldmind. A powerless Rich gets the jump on Z’zz and gets to show off some MMA moves after separating Z’zz from his helmet. At this point, Rich takes the helmet and gets his first taste of what the extra Nova Force can do (something you’ll want to be well aware of for the future).
Now powered up, Rich encounters 2 dead members of his team and a third (Nile) in bad shape. While tending to Nile, Rich makes short work of Phlish and then his makes his run on Adomox and Titus who have caught up with Kril and Lan and are giving them one last chance to join or become space dust. While Rich puts up a decent fight, he’s clearly not in the same league as Titus. He does get some “Han Solo shows back up in the Millennium Falcon” help when he’s able to blast Adomox, allowing Lan to pick up the helmet and use it in the fight against Titus. Lan takes a big hit, Rich makes one last run at Titus and fails and it looks like it’s over until Kril, Lan and the strike team of Novas, now all fully capable of accessing the Nova Force, take Titus down.
Rich is exhausted, but he held. Titus and Adomox survive and go to the Kyln located near the Crunch. Robbie, who geniused up some ideas, is brought to Xandar to work with the Worldmind to replicate the same hack and create the Black Novas. It’s a party. You can walk away from Nova knowing that Jesse Alexander could exist and that Robbie Rider could have an adventure of his own.
The Cameos
This doesn’t fit here, but it really doesn’t fit anywhere and it’s too short to have its own piece. In between Rich’s first trip with Titus and his last, Kril, Lan and some other Novas who you will meet in Part 5 take Rich to their favorite hangout: Starlin’s Bar. It’s very much an homage to the Mos Eisly cantina and Rich is going to be VERY uncomfortable. To add to that discomfort, Rich is going to bump into everyone’s filthy, degenerate troll, Pip, in the bathroom of all places.
Pip’s cameo is going to be taken directly from the pages of my own life story. When I was 11, I went to a Detroit Tigers game and went into the bathroom by myself. I can remember there being no fewer than 50 open urinals in the bathroom and I took the one at the end. Just as I started to pee, an old guy walked in, stood right next to me (huge violation of the code) and said, “So I guess this is where all the dicks come to hang out.” I didn’t finish that pee; neither will Rich. I can’t think of a better intro to Pip.
As Rich hurries out of the bathroom, we’ll meet our second cameo star and the Boba Fett of my Marvel Cinematic Universe. Rich will come face-to-face with Monark Starstalker.
Known to be in development for several years, Marvel Studios’ Young Avengers became a reality the moment Iman Vellani‘s Kamala Khan met Hailee Steinfeld‘s Kate Bishop in The Marvels.
In May 2024, it was reported that production on a Young Avengers film was expected to begin in 2025. Later in 2024, reports circulated that the studio had decided to retitle the project Champions.
In considering what it would take to set Marvel Studios Nova film apart from its prior Cosmic offerings and prepare Richard Rider to ascend as the studios greatest Cosmic hero, I’ve found myself challenged over the past several days. The character of Richard Rider isn’t hard to crack, but there’s more to a film than its lead. Instead of trying to write up a script (I’m no script writer), I’m instead going to try to roll out a series of pieces explaining how I would chose to tackle some of these challenges I’ve encountered while imagining the Nova film.
In Part 1 (which you can read right here), I took a crack at solving the problems surrounding the Xandarian Worldmind, the Nova Force and Richard’s kid brother, Robbie. In Part 2 (which you can read right here) I tackled a whole new set of problems surrounding the Human Rocket including his origin, why he wasn’t around during the events of Avengers: Endgame and what it is about him that makes him human enough to make mistakes and learn from them.
Something that became clear to me fairly early on in the process of writing this fan fiction was that I was crafting the origin story of a character who would ultimately participate in 5 or 6 films over a decade and ultimately leave his mark on the MCU as one of its greatest heroes. To me, the legacy of Richard Rider, the last great Nova Prime, had to be bulletproof and it had to be a story that could be told forever; in that way, it could never be told by an emotional being. That line of thinking took me pretty quickly to the only answer as to who would be narrating my Nova triology: Recorder 451.
Recorder 451 was created by one of my all-time favorite comic book writers, Kieron Gillen, and first appeared in issue #6 of his 2013 Iron Man. Gillen has said 451 was based on legendary sci-fi droids C-3PO and HAL-9000 among other influences. 451, as it turns out via Gillen’s retcon, has a whole lot to do with the Stark family and much of that is because he had a glitch in his AI that turned him against his very nature. Recorders were built by the Rigellian Empire to do explore the universe and record their observations; however, 451 decided to get a little too hands on in the comics and became something else and a very bit part of the Stark legacy. It looks like we won’t be getting that relationship here now that Iron Man is no more, but I love the character and, thanks to George Lucas, I may have found a way to sneak him in even it means changing him up.
In the 2014 book, How Star Wars Conquered the Universe, George Lucas told the book’s author, Chris Taylor, about what he called his “ultimate framing device.” The mythology Lucas developed for his Star Wars universe was incredible and while much of it never made it to the screen, it gave depth to films by providing a “lived-in” world. Par of this mythology was the Journal of the Whills, essentially a record of the events in that galaxy far, far away (the original title of Star Wars was Adventures of Luke Starkiller, as Taken from the Journal of the Whills, Saga I: The Star Wars) According to Lucas, the stories were recounted to the keeper of the journals all by the one and only entity there to see it all (in 2014 and in Lucas’s mind, there were only 6 films): R2-D2. Yep, when you watch Episodes I-VI, what you’re supposed to be getting is the story as told to the keeper of the journals by that feisty astromech droid. That tidbit of information has really stuck with me and as I searched for a way to tell the story of Richard Rider, I determined that this was it and that Recorder 451 was going to be my R2-D2.
This is a choice that really sets the film apart from any other MCU entry because Recorder 451 would be both narrator and participant in the Nova trilogy with all 3 films employing a “story-within-a-story” narrative style. So while we would first meet Recorder 451 in the opening moments of the film, we would also watch as he entered into Rich’s life in the main narrative.
The opening scene of the first Nova film takes place in the year 3007. Recorder 451 stands in front of a group (no matter how hard I try, I can’t stop imagining Harrison Ford’s lecture in Raiders of the Lost Ark, complete with the girl blinking here “I love you” eyelashes at Indy. In this case, Recorder would certainly find it curious.”
“Richard Rider was born on Earth at a time when the planet’s greatest heroes, either by birth, by accident or by choice, possessed incredible powers. In that way, Richard Rider was entirely insignificant for he had none of these. I did not know Richard Rider in his youth, but when I met him he told me he left Earth because he had no place there. Today, we begin our study of Richard Rider, the greatest and last Nova Prime who, until he gave his life to save the universe, set himself apart from all those who came before him and have come and gone since because of two things: a willingness to fly headlong into danger and deep and righteous anger that fueled him.”
At this point, we cut to Rich watching the destruction of New York in 2012 (detailed in Part 2) and get some other flashbacks to his youth. It was always key to Rich’s personality in the comics, and it will be here, that he never felt he was good enough, so we need to see that. We also need to give Rich a little bit of an edge physically for what’s coming (it’s so weird to right this out in parts knowing you guys don’t know what I mean) and I wanted to ground him in the types of things I think a typical kid his age who felt angry and underappreciated might do so I settled on having him take up a hobby that I see a lot of boys his age show interest in: mixed martial arts. Rich will need to be able to both take a punch and kick some ass down the road (I’ve always thought he has a little Rocky Balboa in him that way). We’ll then get to the Zorr origin also described in Part 2 and to the the snap.
Right here is where Part 4 would be really nice, but here’s what you need to know as it relates to Recorder 451: once Rich gets into space, his first mission with the Nova Corps, which has been rebuilding its ranks on Xandar since the 2018 attack by Thanos, will take him across the galaxy on a ship with a team that includes the first Rigellian to ever join the Nova Corps: Tana Nile. Many of you know this should be Irani Rael, but James Gunn used her up already and we’re unlikely to find a good use for Tana in the MCU so here we are. As the first Rigellian in the Corps, Nile is assigned a Recorder, 451, to observe and record her historical missions. And now you know how 451 and Rich come to know one another and how their lives become intertwined until the end.
“In this way, Nova Prime Rider preserved the Worldmind and prevented a wave of terror from spreading across the galaxy. Of course, as was seemingly always the case in the short 5 years Richard Rider served the Nova Corps, another, greater threat loomed right around the corner.”
“The Annihilation Wave?”
“No, Corpsman Maats. The Annihilation Wave, unknown to us at time, had only begun its work in the Negative Zone. What came next was, more terrifying, in a way, than the Wave because the Wave did not think, it only acted. The Universal Church of Truth, however, well that was an entirely different matter altogether.”
In considering what it would take to set Marvel Studios Nova film apart from its prior Cosmic offerings and prepare Richard Rider to ascend as the studios greatest Cosmic hero, I’ve found myself challenged over the past several days. The character of Richard Rider isn’t hard to crack, but there’s more to a film than its lead. Instead of trying to write up a script (I’m no script writer), I’m instead going to try to roll out a series of pieces explaining how I would chose to tackle some of these challenges I’ve encountered while imagining the Nova film.
In Part 1 (which you can read right here), I took a crack at solving the problems surrounding the Xandarian Worldmind, the Nova Force and Richard’s kid brother, Robbie. Now it’s on to a whole new set of problems surrounding the Human Rocket including his origin, why he wasn’t around during the events of Avengers: Endgame and what it is about him that makes him human enough to make mistakes and learn from them.
Richard Rider’s MCU origin will share one key point with that of his comic counterpart: it starts with an alien invasion of New York, just maybe not the one you’re thinking of. Marvel Studios Nova will begin in 2012 as an 11-year old Richard Rider, from the safety of his home in Hempstead, New York, just 45 minutes East of Manhattan, watches in horror and disbelief as Manhattan is destroyed by the Chitauri. As his younger brother, 6-year old Robbie, cries in terror, Richard cheers, almost violently, as the tide turns and the Avengers save the day. The trauma experienced here by Richard cements some key pieces of who he will become: a xenophobic response to otherworldly aliens and a drive to one day be the kind of hero the Avengers were. These are not only realistic repercussions of experiencing something like that as a young age, they are key to developing Rider over the course of 3-5 films and 10 years worth of adventures.
When we next catch up with Rich, it’s 2018 and he’s now a 17-year old high school junior who has become lost in the day-to-day routine of high school. It’s probably important here to connect with some more of Rider’s core personality traits. While not overtly suicidal, Rich is a classic case of a teenager mired in depression and, if not for his girlfriend Ginger Jaye, he might have fallen apart entirely. However, there’s one thing that’s even more important to Rich, even though he might not know it yet (but he’s about to find out): he’s an adrenaline junkie.
If left up to me, I let the scene above play out as a direct translation of the comics. Rich and Ginger talk and establish his inferiority complex while we, as an audience, wonder what happened to that fiery little boy. This happens in high school: some kids are swallowed hole by it and never come out the same. If not for the events of this day, that may well have happened to Rich. Fortunately for him, instead of the high school bully, Mike, crashing his date with Ginger, it’s Zorr, another of Thanos’ children, whose battle with Nova Corps Denarian Rhomann Dey has found its way to Long Island.
For MCU fans who have never read Nova #1, it should suffice to say that Rich’s origin as the Human Rocket share a lot in common with Hal Jordan’s origins as the Green Lantern. As a lifelong fan of the comics, those similarities have always been fascinating to me because while it provides a common beginning, the two characters (and their space corps) have diverged and developed so differently that it serves as a really cool reminder as to how divergent two similar characters can become given the different imaginations that create them over time. However, as fun as it was in the comics as a kid, I want fans to be able to connect as little as possible to the abomination that was the Green Lantern film, so while I won’t entirely subvert the origin, I think there’s a way to make it authentic to the MCU by using the events of Avengers: Infinity War.
Unseen in Avengers: Infinity War was the attack on Xandar that left it in ruins and allowed Thanos to get the Power Stone. In comic canon, it’s pretty normal for Xandar to take be a target and it has been razed multiple times, so despite it getting pretty roughed up, I have no problem having it wrecked once again by Thanos: it fits and it opens a window of opportunity to get Rider a helmet. We are all well acquainted with the Black Order, the Children of Thanos: Gamora, Nebula, Ebony Maw, Proxima Midnight, Corvus Glaive and Cull Obsidian. 6 kids. 6 pretty badass kids, but a warlord like Thanos, who has conquered so many systems could certainly have taken in more and so…he did. While the Black Order are the tip of the spear, it would be revealed in Nova that once Thanos and the Black Order raze a planet, the Mad Titan sends in a second crew to complete the work. We glimpsed this crew at work in the flashback to Gamora’s own experiences and now we’ll see them again, this time led by Zorr. In the comics, Zorr was a Luphomoid and, allegedly, related to Nebula. I see no reason to veer from this here as we have evidence that Thanos would gladly take more than one warrior from each planet since Glaive and Obsidian were oprhaned brothers taken in by Thanos. And so, Zorr, a fellow Luphomoid of Nebula, is now the head of Thanos’ second wave kill crew and working his way through the wreckage of Xandar while his father and the Black Order head for the Space Stone.
Zorr as he appeared in Nova #1, 1976
Don’t sweat all the fine details here, but here’s the outline: Zorr and his crew do their work on Xandar. They kill half of what’s there, leaving the Worldmind intact because it serves them no purpose. Zorr packs up and while en route to meeting Thanos gets new coordinates: Earth. Denarian Dey is summoned back to Xandar by the Worldmind and finds it in ruins. Quickly Worldmind and Dey track Zorr the clean up crew and Dey heads to Earth. While Ebony Maw and Cull Obsidian have headed out to space, Dey has caught up to Zorr and crew as they are working their way through Manhattan. This takes place just a little less than 24 hours after the Maw and Obsidian were there. Dey works his way through the fodder before his battle with Zorr takes to the air again and finds them in Long Island, right in the middle of Rich’s date with Ginger. The images below are actually of Rich’s first flight as Nova where he took on Zorr, but for our purposes, imagine them as the kind of destruction done in front of Rich’s eyes.
Something in Rider changes as he connects the trauma of his youth to what he’s seeing here. As the ice cream parlor he and Ginger are in is reduced to rubble, Rich digs deep, grabs Ginger and makes a run for it. We see the battle from Rider’s eyes and Zorr and Dey wear each other down but also endanger every bystander, something that Rider cannot abide and while he’s helpless in the fight, he knows he can save those around him and so we see the beginnings of the legendary bravery of Richard Rider. By the time Rider gets to the final battleground of Zorr and Dey, both are dead. Still high from the adrenaline, Rider approaches the dead aliens. Dey’s helmet, which was removed from him during the fight intrigues Rich who decided to pick it up and inspect it before finally putting it on. Instead of getting another look at what Stark’s HUD might look like (and what audiences might expect) we get something very different as the quantum node that Rich just put on his head begins to connect and interface with his brain. It’s only seconds before Rich hears the Worldmind address him by name in his head and before Rich begins to become overwhelmed with the enormity of the information that’s been made available to him. Questions he hasn’t even fully formed yet are answered in his mind (Thanos, Infinity Stone, the Guardians of the Galaxy). As Ginger turns a corner and catches up to Rich, she screams his name, first in excitement, then in horror as Rich and the helmet crumble to dust and are swept away in the breeze.
A problematic origin story solved while setting the stage for some very important pieces of Rich’s future. Additionally, with Rich being snapped, we’ve eliminated another problem: why a Terran-based Nova wasn’t around to help out during Avengers: Endgame when his connection to the Worldmind would have absolutely alerted him to the events taking place on his home planet. Many more problems to go, however! Stay tuned.
If you’ve never read an installment of Connecting Imaginary Dots, allow me to explain the idea. Connecting Imaginary Dots was the title I came up with for my speculation pieces when I was writing at MCU Exchange. These types of pieces basically allow me to unload a bunch of junk that’s circulating in my brain in a way that should never be confused for things I actually expect to happen. I basically take a bunch of facts that are almost always entirely unrelated and do my best to connect the dots with by stretching my imagination. In the past these types of pieces have resulted in me theorizing that the Spider-Man sequel which became Far From Home might end up being a team-up outing of Spidey and Hulk in the Savage Land; however, I also wrote one theorizing that Sterling K. Brown would be playing the father of Erik Killmonger in Black Panther LOOOOOONG before anyone else was considering it and one in which I theorized that Annette Bening was actually Mar-Vell when everyone else still thought Jude Law was playing the character. The bottom line is this: these are fun spec pieces that allow me to just be a fan. With that out of the way…
At the end of April, in another Connecting Imaginary Dots piece, the detective work of Liz led to some evidence-based speculation that we might see some Wakandans in the upcoming Marvel Studios Disney Plus streaming series The Falcon and The Winter Soldier. Key to the premise was an Instagram post by stunt double Jenel Stevens which indicated she was in Prague at the same time as the series was filming there. In the photo, she is seen with stunt double Vanessa Cater who is confirmed to be working on the series.
Stevens is once again central to today’s premise as an update to her IMDB account not only lists her as working on The Falcon and The Winter Solider, but also shows her doubling for someone fans will absolutely recognize:
Stevens IMDB indicates the presence of 2 new actresses in the cast: Indya Bussey, who is relatively unknown, and Florence Kasumba, who we would expect to be reprising her role as Ayo, one of King T’Challa’s Dora Milaje! We here at Murphy’s Multiverse are all well aware the IMDB can often times be misleading, so we looked a bit deeper.
A quick check of Bussey’s Instagram shows that she was indeed in Prague during the time the series was filming there. And while Kasumba’s Instagram does not show her there nor reveal a location, the actress posted this posted this photo during the time period production was occurring in Prague, perhaps an indication of her returning to the role.
As was discussed in the first Connecting Imaginary Dots and followed up on in the episode of Murphy’s Law that followed, Bucky’s role as Wakanda’s White Wolf (traditionally the leader of the Wakandan secret police) and the nation’s interest in Zemo, who was responsible for the death of King T’Chaka, give us more than enough reason to accept the fact that the Wakandans would be present in The Falcon and The Winter Soldier and, as the title indicates, the evidence is absolutely backing that up.
In considering what it would take to set Marvel Studios Nova film apart from its prior Cosmic offerings and prepare Richard Rider to ascend as the studios greatest Cosmic hero, I’ve found myself challenged over the past several days. The character of Richard Rider isn’t hard to crack, but there’s more to a film than its lead. Instead of trying to write up a script (I’m no script writer), I’m instead going to try to roll out a series of pieces explaining how I would chose to tackle some of these challenges I’ve encountered while imagining the Nova film.
The biggest stumbling block is elevating the Nova Corps from James Gunn’s mall cops to the high powered, intergalactic police force fans know and love. The answer lies (as I’m sure so many of you have considered as well) in the Power Stone. The conclusion of 2014’s Guardians of the Galaxy saw the Nova Corps entrusted with the purple stone following Ronan’s defeat on Xandar. As far as we know, the Nova Corps had no powers and the Worldmind didn’t exist. For those of you you unfamiliar with the Worldmind, it is a sentient supercomputer that holds the entirety of Xandar’s history inside itself and provides the Nova Corps with a connection to the Nova Force. With no Worldmind and no Nova Force, there’s also no reason to make a Nova film, so how can we get there?
The answer, an answer that ironically enough will also provide a window to introduce Richard’s younger brother Robbie to the MCU, lies in quantum computing (do you guys put the word quantum in front of everything?). I’ll leave the fine details to the experts, but as it stands now, we Earthers are still in the early days of using quantum technology and while some don’t believe efficient quantum computers can ever be built, it hasn’t stopped people from trying. One of the biggest challenges facing those chasing the prize is the amount of energy used in the process. It’s not that the actual process takes more energy than traditional computers, it’s that it takes an incredible amount of power to cool the device. If you’re talking about building something on the scale of the Xandarian Worldmind, you’d need an almost endless amount of power, the kind that might come from the purple Power Stone.
The Xandarians are already an advanced culture, so finding a way to transfer and store energy from the Power Stone would be a relatively simple task for them; therefore, in time between the end of Guardians of the Galaxy and the beginning of Avengers: Infinity War when Thanos takes the stone from them, we’ll understand that they have found a way to transfer and store the energy, engineer the Worldmind and, given its advanced AI and the fact that it’s a collective of all the greatest minds (we’ll say that the Xandarians were forward thinking and had already thought to store the consciousnesses of their brightest and best as they attempted to find a way to build something along the lines of the Supreme Intelligence used by their enemy, the Kree) it has also found a way to become self-sustaining meaning (stupid plot hole fix) it doesn’t need the Power Stone to fuel is anymore. The Worldmind is a massive undertaking and it has advanced the civilization (maybe it would be akin to a Type II on the Kardashev Scale). Now that it has an essentially unlimited amount of energy, the Worldmind makes the move to militarize the Nova Corps.
In this scenario, as in the comics, the helmets of the Nova Corps the key. In the MCU, the helmets work as a conduit by actually interfacing with the Corpsmens’ nervous system. We’ve heard about Elon Musk wanting to put chips in humans’ heads to speed up the process of accessing the internet; this is more like putting your head into a chip. The interface would allow each Corpsman to have immediate access to knowledge that the Worldmind has, appropriate to their own station, and also serve as their connection to the Nova Force (which will obviously be purple now). The key to this is is transmission via quantum entanglement meaning the entirety of the Nova Corps, while wearing their helmets, become a quantum system. This is heavy science and, since it’s not yet been mastered on Earth, I suppose it’s science fiction. It’s complicated but it’s key to the audiences understanding of how Rider can do what he does and the connectivity of one Corpsmen to another will factor into things down the line, so the audience needs to understand it. Enter Robbie Rider.
Robbie Rider is the younger brother of Richard and, you guessed it, a genius. In the comics, Robbie was developing software and making money on it at a young age, so it’s no (quantum) leap here to have him on the leading edge of quantum computing on Earth in the MCU. The details of this will come in a future piece, but here is what you need to know about Richard and Robbie. Richard struggles with school and while threatened by his intelligence, he loves him fiercely and has defended him from school bullies all his life. My idea for this film will see a pretty major paradigm shift for Richard. He will become Nova just moments before the snap meaning we’ll see him in the helmet just long enough for him to make a connection to the Worldmind before turning to dust. During the 5 years he’s gone, Robbie continues on in school and becomes one of MIT’s youngest and brightest students thanks to his work in the field of quantum computing. When Richard comes back, it will be Robbie that helps him crack the mystery of his helmet and surmises that somewhere there must be a massive quantum processor on the other end, sending Richard into space and setting up Robbie for some adventures of his own down the road (who knows, maybe he’ll intercept the Datasong or something).
Three problems up, three problems down. Of course solving those problems leads to further complications, questions and confusions and you still don’t know how the movie starts, but for now we’ve retconned James Gunn’s mall cops, created the Worldmind, explained the origins of the Nova Force and given the audience the expository device it needs!
Now, thanks to a Murphy’s Multiverse reader known as Danny, we have an unprecedented look at Atlanta set that became Madripoor. The photos reveal new locations and give us a sense of the scope of the set. While it’s possible that these locations may just be Easter Eggs, there’s always the possibility that one of them may end up being a spoiler of some sort, so proceed at your own risk.
The first photo gives another, closer look at a location that first indicated to me that the set was indeed Madripoor. Patrons of mine might remember that in mid-December, before the set leaks confirmed Madripoor, I teased that there was a spoiler in one particular set photo that I had shared.
The above photo gives us a look at a sign for Stinger’s Strip House. It was this Stinger’s sign that first gave away Madripoor to me and that now, in light of the recent news of Marvel Studios developing a slew of new shows, might turn out to be more than a great, obscure Easter Egg.
During Jonathan Hickman’s 2009-2011 run on Secret Warriors, he introduced some appendices that included some “top secret” information about the team and a slew of secret bases kept by Nick Fury. Top on the list and indelibly etched into my mind despite never playing a big role in the series is Stinger, a safe house located in…you guessed it…Madripoor.
The inclusion of Stinger’s Strip House is either an incredible coincidence or an example of some deep cuts being added into The Falcon and The Winter Soldier. Given what we’ve already seen from the production, I’m inclined to believe it’s the latter and, I think that if Stinger’s is actually one of Fury’s safe houses, it works nicely to move the plot along. We’ve all wondered just what the boys (Bucky, Sam and Zemo) are doing together in Madripoor; maybe now we know that they hit up this safe house while on the run (and they’re not running from who you think they are! Their pursuer was actually seen in those Daily Mail set photos).
The idea of Stinger’s being one of Fury’s safe houses is even more interesting when we consider that since these shots were taken, Marvel Studios has begun development on a Secret Warriors project meaning we might just get even deeper into Nick Fury’s world! All speculation of course but it’s really hard not to start connecting those dots.
In addition to Stinger’s, there’s one more location in Madripoor that I believe to have been taken right from the pages of the comics: the Brass Monkey Saloon. The saloon, which has also been called the Bronze Monkey, made it’s first appearance in Captain America #363, Moon Over Madripoor, and written by Mark Gruenwald whose run is clearly the basis for much of The Falcon and The Winter Soldier. The Brass Monkey also popped up recently in Mark Waid’s Invisible Woman series and while it’s never been a major location, it’s a place where Lowtown’s shady characters assemble, punches get thrown and no questions get asked.
In the first picture above, you’d be hard pressed not to notice that the original sign of the bar was a brass monkey head. You may notice a similar, less subtle motif in this next set of exclusive set photos.
If that’s not an outdoor version of the Brass Monkey, then I don’t know what it is. It’s possible that the boys pass through here and may even come into conflict with some of Lowtown’s less desirable inhabitants; it’s also possible it’s just a very cool nod to Gruenwald’s 2 issue arc that saw Cap chasing Crossbones into Madripoor after he had abducted Diamondback. Either way, these photos show an incredible level of detail and preparation that went into a temporary set.
There are several more photos here that show a Casino, a tattoo parlor and do a great job of showing the fine details on the Madripoor set.
The level of detail and effort to build Madripoor into a multicultural crime den is incredible. We don’t know right now when we will see The Falcon and The Winter Soldier, but for MCU fans who aren’t avid comic book readers, it looks like their introduction to Madripoor is going to be memorable!
Note: most of this was written in advance of today’s news. I had no intention of actually publishing it, but the news makes it seem fairly important now.
Every now and then I come across some information the veracity of which can be confirmed by a second source. What happens FAR more often is that I come across some information that while believable and from trustworthy sources, cannot be confirmed by other sources for various reasons. Typically, when the second scenario occurs, I move on and forget about the information unless, in rare instances, it turns out to be proven true somewhere down the road. For instance, on February 19th, I wrote this piece relaying some rumors I’d heard about Marvel Studios updating its Disney Plus slate; the next day, the news broke that a special Disney Plus event would be held in London on March 5th where it is expected that Marvel Studios and Star Wars slates will be updated.
Today’s news that Marvel Studios has essentially delayed their entire slate by one date (ie Black Widow is taking Eternals date while Eternals is taking Shang-Chi’s) makes this potential tidbit, which I referenced on my Twitter feed earlier this week, a little more relevant and gave me enough motivation to finally get back on the keyboard.
A thing I heard this week: one potential timeline being discussed at Marvel Studios is returning to work in September.
While the world is experiencing the historical COVID-19 pandemic, we are all waiting for news on our favorite distractions and, at this time, none of the news looks too good. As Marvel Studios has suspended productions all over the world, the heads have convened and began studying models that might allow them to determine when they can get back to work. One current projection being talked about in both Atlanta and Los Angeles is a September return to work.
Obviously this has a ton of ramifications IF IT IS TRUE. Eternals hasn’t completed reshoots; Shang-Chi hasn’t completed filming; Doctor Strange 2, Spider-Man 3, Thor 4 and all the Disney Plus shows will be pushed and there will be a tremendous domino effect that will see things moved in sequence (probably including the Disney Plus shows) and even off the schedule (note, as of publishing this actually happened to Ant-Man 3…sadness).
We’ll have to see if this turns out to be true or not, but it seems that, at this point, Marvel Studios is sticking to plans for theatrical releases for all their films and is willing to wait this out.
In anticipation of the continued spread of COVID-19, Marvel Studios has informed crew members via email that their current 4-week hiatus has been extended indefinitely. A copy of the email was shared with me and while I was asked not to share it in its entirety, I am able to share a few key points:
All active Disney Plus productions, which include The Falcon and The Winter Soldier, WandaVision and Loki, are now delayed indefinitely with crew members being informed they “no longer believe a 4-week suspension is realistic” and that they will restart production “when the global health environment allows.” It’s worth noting that these are the only productions detailed in the email which means that there are no crew members currently working on other projects.
Crew members were notified that, as of April 3rd, they will no longer be employed on their particular project.
It is assumed that this indefinite delay is also in effect for all films in production as well, meaning Shang-Chi and The Legend of The Ten Rings will be further delayed as well. Its impact on the production timeline of Doctor Strange: In the Multiverse of Madness, Spider-Man 3 and Thor: Love and Thunder is unknown at this point.
Given the uncertainty around the spread of the virus, speculation as to the duration of the extension is foolhardy; however, it is clear that, contrary to popular opinion, work on WandaVision has not yet been completed. Stay tuned to Murphy’s Multiverse for updates on this developing situation.
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