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Why Captain America: Civil War Is Hitting All the Right Notes

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Submitted By himatsingka
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Some superhero films make you sit back and appreciate what is being played out on the silver screen. Some make you sit back and grimace at the predictable plot and has-been scenarios. Some are capable of dividing opinions of loyal fans, teetering on the good and the bad. But, occasionally, one such film will come along that is less about superheroes with some human emotions, and more about humans with super abilities, forcing you to acknowledge that superheroes are people too, and say, “Now, that, was a movie.”
Because at its heart, that’s what Captain America: Civil War is all about. Real people in real situations with some superhuman powers thrown in for good measure. The heart of the conflict is an ideological difference of opinion between the two sides, and in a surprising turn of events, it’s our very own law-abiding, orders-following Captain who’s opposing the decisions of the Government to pass the Sokovia Accords in the aftermath of their epic battle in Sokovia as shown in Age of Ultron.
Thus, the Avengers, for the first time in Marvel history, stand divided, but it is heart-warming to see that despite it all, there exists zero animosity; it’s friends against friends, and no Accord can strain that relationship over a single night. But add to that a conspiracy involving Cap’s Achilles Heel, Bucky (played by the dashing Sebastian Stan), and you have Captain and his team rallying to protect him from being wrongfully tried for a crime he didn’t commit, turning them into outlaws, vigilantes, criminals…you name it.
Jaw dropping action sequences have always been Marvel’s plus-point, and Civil War does not fail to disappoint in that (or any) category. Love Bucky or hate him, but you can’t not emit a gasp when he punches off a guy driving a motorcycle in full speed , and then hops astride it in one swift move. IN SLOW MOTION. And you can’t not grip the armrest (or your partner’s hands, whatever suits you) when Captain holds on to the helicopter with one hand, and the railings on the terrace of the Avengers’ HQ with the other, flexing those biceps and giving off serious “I’m hot and I know it but fawn over me later when I’m not busy saving the world” vibes.
But best action sequence? It’s hands down the one where ALL twelve super-humans are involved (Bruce Banner and Thor are, sadly, missing), facing off against their friends. Natasha’s haste to confirm if she and Clint were still friends after she knocks him down in a swift punch both tickles and warms the cockles of your heart. So we have Team Captain America, with Falcon, Hawkeye, Scarlet Witch, Ant Man, The Winter Soldier, and, of course, the Captain himself, whereas Iron Man is joined by Black Widow, Vision, War Machine, Black Panther, and the best addition of them all- Spiderman. Turns out, all you need is one good looking teen + said teen spouting hilariously naive dialogue – the overdone origin story, and there you have the perfect formula for successfully incorporating “Spidey” as smoothly as spinning a web into your average superhero movie.
That being said, this is no average movie. It’s everything you’ve been dreaming about- and more. It’s going to make fans glad they’re fans, and it’s going to make indifferent naysayers smack themselves in the head for being indignant naysayers.That’s the power this gem of a movie directed by the Russo brothers holds. It somehow manages to incorporate everything you’ve wanted to see in an internal battle of the Avengers, and a whole lot more. You keep wishing till the end that something happens between Vision and Scarlet Witch a.k.a. Wanda, and if you look close enough, in those few scenes scattered here and there, it does. Sharon makes an appearance, and she’s gorgeous as always, along with the too-handsome-to-exist Captain, and every girl (or guy, whatever be your preference) wishes it was them in place of her, kissing Cap.
You shed a silent tear in the final sequence, where it’s just Steve and Tony battling it out, and not because they were instructed to, but because they have their own reasons, and in that moment, you side with both, because in this film, both sides are heroes, not villains. They’re just people doing what they think is right to protect the ones they love.
Because it doesn’t matter if you’re Team Cap or Team Iron Man, because technically, they’re all ONE team, sticking to what they believe in. And that’s what matters. As Peggy used to say – “Compromise where you can. But where you can’t, don’t. If someone asks you to move, and if you can, then move. But if you can’t, you look them in the eye and say ‘No, you move.'”

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