dimanche 27 novembre 2016

MCU Head-Canon and/or fan theories

Anyone want to talk Head-Canon? Y'all can delve into other Marvel movies. But I'm gonna stick with the MCU.

If needed: Urban Dictionary definition of head-canon :P
[SPOILER]Used by followers of various media of entertainment, such as television shows, movies, books, etc. to note a particular belief which has not been used in the universe of whatever program or story they follow, but seems to make sense to that particular individual, and as such is adopted as a sort of "personal canon". Headcanon may be upgraded to canon if it is incorporated into the program or story's universe.[/SPOILER]
The Incredible Hulk
The majority of the movie takes place long before Iron Man (2008), I'd say... between 2000 and 2002. Thus the disparity in Bruce's appearance in TIH (age ~35) and The Avengers (age ~45).

Thor
Each of the 9 realms refers to a habitable planet with sentient humanoid life in 9 different galaxies. "Midgard" being synonymous with "Milky Way" as well as "Earth" for ease of reference. The bifrost is a pre-established "bridge" or teleportation device that allows for intergalactic travel. Essentially this explains why the infinity stones (6 universal singularities created at the big bang) are all centralized to the characters in these films. Yggdrasil may also have some connection to the infinity stones.

Odin chose to put the Tesseract on Midgard because it had the least intelligent/corruptible life on it in (at the time) and it was relatively safe there to begin with. Its existence on earth spurred funding for Nazi Germany to seek it out and fund Erskine's work (in other words the catalyst for the entire MCU).

The Avengers
Coulson did die on the helicarrier. Agents of SHIELD is a "Jacobs Ladder" dream-like moment (as stated "jokingly" by Whedon) leading up to his death. The majority of Coulson's dream involves his obsession with heroes/desire to put a team of heroes together, his own paranoia about Hydra having taken over SHIELD, and random memories and concepts his brain put together (i.e. Sif) eventually culminating in the paranormal (Ghost Rider) as he gets closer to death. Granted, he does have remarkable foresight for a dead guy.

Iron Man 3
Killian was naive and figured "The Mandarin" was a myth/ghost story. He piggybacked off that name. Much to the chagrin of the real Mandarin (as seen in the one-shot).

The "brain slot" he mentioned while discussing Extremis was the same that allowed Strucker to enhance the Maximoff's brains/DNA using the mind stone.

Age of Ultron
Natasha was primarily using her innate talents in her "romance" with Banner as an asset to the team's overall success (similarly to how she did in IM2 with Tony). In other words, whether she was interested in him or not, she was just being a team player and was never serious about it.

Banner says "Ultron was just a myth." But the original idea came from Hank Pym earlier on in Pym's career. That's why these two world-renowned scientists are both aware of the concept.

Ant-Man
"The Quantum Realm" is one of the infinite dimensions discussed in Doctor Strange.


I think I have more that I can't think of right now. I'll add them as I think of them. I'd like to hear others if anyone's got em.


MCU Head-Canon and/or fan theories

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