If you haven’t seen “Captain America: The Winter Soldier” yet and wish to not have any of the movie ruined for yourself, tread carefully. Spoilers ahead!
While Joe and Anthony Russo’s “Captain America: The Winter Soldier” is certainly a complete, three-act structured film, that doesn’t mean it doesn’t leave a couple of loose threads dangling. We can see that The Winter Soldier survives throughout the whole movie, and this leaves us intrigued.
A bit of information was leaked out to by the Russo brothers to Movies.com, which grabbed a quote confirming that The Winter Soldier will be back for “Captain America 3.”
“That character is a wonderfully, beautifully tragic figure in the sense of is he the world’s most feared assassin or is he the world’s longest serving POW.”
“Is he innocent by reason of insanity or the equivalent of it because he’s been mind controlled or is he irredeemable? Is he ever going to be acceptable to Cap again as the friend that he used to be before he was the Winter Soldier? These are very philosophical, emotional questions that pique our interest and definitely form one layer of the next movie.”
It’s certainly nice to now have confirmation from the Russos that Bucky Barnes will play a key role in “Captain America 3,” but it’s also not that much of a surprise.
Back in April, actor Sebastian Stan shocked the collective comic book-movie fan world when he revealed that he has a nine-picture deal with Marvel Studios, and at that time most of us assumed that the third film in that deal would be “Captain America 3.”
Beyond that, there have also been some hints that Sebastian Stan’s Bucky Barnes could eventually replace Chris Evans’ Steve Rogers as Captain America, which is an arc that plays out in the comics following Steve Rogers‘ death.
All that on the table, another big question that remains is exactly how the subject will be handled in Joss Whedon’s “The Avengers: Age of Ultron.” Is Steve just going to forget about Bucky when the time comes to team up with Iron Man and the gang again? Hopefully the film will at the very least address the matter.