Falcon & Winter Soldier Scene Hints At Post-Blip World Crisis

The Falcon and the Winter Soldier returns viewers to the MCU post-Blip, and demonstrates that the world after Avengers: Endgame has some significant problems - problems which could lead to all-out anarchy. A scene where Sam Wilson is attempting to help his sister acquire a loan mentions that the concept of a credit history isn't designed to accommodate a five-year absence from existence. Although this would be bad enough by itself, it's safe to assume that if commercial banking can't make the arrangements that would allow it to survive the changes that have wracked the world, other systems might similarly lack that kind of flexibility.

Spider-Man: Far From Home mentioned the problem of housing in passing, with Aunt May running charitable events to help with the housing crisis once the world suddenly regained billions of people. It might be a good thing that the MCU skipped 2020, but problems like employment facing the world are still fairly desperate - those businesses that survived would have hired additional staff to replace their losses after five years. New businesses could and likely would spring up, but without the ability to secure loans, they would have difficulty competing. Personal property would have passed along through inheritance, or been sold or junked.

Related: Falcon & The Winter Soldier: Every MCU Easter Egg In Episode 1

The Blip may also explain the appearance of familiar faces in new projects as well. While the MCU doesn't have a huge history of imprisoning villains, with most lead villains failing to survive their film debuts, prison sentences would likely be appealed en masse, with prisoners making the reasonable argument that five years have passed without their involvement in society. Whether this grievance was treated as legitimate or not, the courts would be packed for years. This may explain Vulture's role in Morbius; whatever could be proved about his actions might not have more than a five-year sentence, or his case might not yet have gone to trial.

Although the Sokovia Accords don't guarantee a right to trial for "enhanced individuals" using alien technology, and they can be held indefinitely, there's the very real possibility that individual nations would wish to apply civil rights within their borders. If this is the case, supervillains who did end up imprisoned but who had not yet enjoyed a trial might need to be released on the basis of being imprisoned for five years without due process. Certainly, non-supervillain prisoners would be entitled to appeal for having served their time, and while the appeal could pass or fail, it would be a protracted case, with no real precedent. Vulture might not be subjected to the Sokovia Accords since he doesn't have superpowers, only operates a flight suit similar to Falcon's.

Depending on the populations affected by the Blip, other legal issues for imprisonment might have arisen - selected at random, it's entirely possible that prisoners remained but prison staff vanished, or other logistical issues pertaining to the penal system. While the MCU's treatment of prisoners with potential super-abilities is definitely harsh, their imprisonment was not intended to be a death sentence. Adding in that it would be difficult to distinguish between prisoners that had been snapped out of existence from prisoners that had taken advantage of the chaos to escape, and it's not hard to see why the remaining Avengers were working hard to keep up in Avengers: Endgame.

The charity that Aunt May was heading in Far From Home was intended to provide shelter and housing for the displaced - domestic strife accompanying global political shifts and allies becoming enemies. With massive international chaos, governments may have had a great deal more difficulty taking on the housing issue, requiring this kind of charitable intervention. It's far from the only problem of inheritance though; even if those who received goods as part of an inheritance from vanished family members or benefactors wanted to return them, those resources might not still exist. With the questions of criminal jurisprudence tying up courts, this kind of legal debacle would only add fuel to the flames.

Related: The MCU Finally Explores How Dark Avengers: Endgame's Blip Really Was

Displaced and disaffected Blip-returnees might find themselves not a little disillusioned by their government's failure to act on their behalf, which could give rise to support for groups like the Flag Smashers. National affairs could also hinge on the vanished - Wakanda's seat of power clearly went to Shuri, and while she might be willing to return it, power-struggles could give rise to internal wars. Iceland in the real world only has a little under 360,000 residents - entire nations of a similar size could have lost most or even all of their populations, which would make it next to impossible to repatriate lost goods if other nations took over the leaderless areas.

While Sam Wilson's sister has maintained their family business during the Blip, it's reasonable that a great many businesses would have gone under entirely. Those that did not - whether through luck, business acumen, or simply being large enough that their workforce was not entirely destroyed by the Blip - would have hired new workers in the interim. Some jobs might have become entirely obsolete, as five years of adjustment and upgrades might have rendered them unnecessary. The creation of new jobs would be a priority for almost any nation, but this would take time which the displaced would reasonably resent. Rallying to the Flag Smashers and their super soldier leader could be a reaction taken by those who feel left behind in their five year absence.

Reasonably employing even a significant percentage of the returned people would be a tremendous task. New businesses would take money to establish, for which loans are not available - even for superheroes like the Falcon. Some industries like construction might experience a boom - new buildings being needed, or old buildings being repaired up to a standard of habitability. Other industries would likely lag behind; entertainment and hospitality, chief among equals, would require a disposable income among the majority of its patrons. This would still be available to those that had survived the Blip, but likely beyond the reach of the returned.

These are only a few of the issues that a post-Blip world would encounter, but they're significant ones. Whatever positives the Blip might have had for the MCU, and whatever the Flag-Smashers might hope to see returned on the geopolitical landscape, the personal human cost would be high. Without significant intervention on a level that superheroes alone simply are not capable of providing, the world will likely slip into chaos, which helps to explain the focus on symbols like a new Captain America. Because of the scale of the problem, The Falcon and the Winter Soldier isn't likely to touch on all of these issues, but they've already shown, they're willing to at least address some of them.

Next: MCU's New Captain America Explained: Falcon & Winter Soldier Twist



from ScreenRant - Feed https://ift.tt/2NLJTcq

Post a Comment

0 Comments