Skip to main content

Captain Marvel’s original ending didn’t explain her absence in Infinity War

Skrull in Captain Marvel

Judging by the latest trailer, the Marvel Cinematic Universe’s latest superstar, Carol Danvers, will do whatever it takes to end Thanos’ threat in Avengers: Endgame, but dedicated MCU fans know that Captain Marvel wasn’t around for the Avengers’ first fight against the Mad Titan in Avengers: Infinity War. Captain Marvel, which is currently tearing it up at the box office, explained why. That wasn’t always the case. As Captain Marvel‘s editor reveals, the film’s original ending left the reasons behind Carol’s decades-long absence ambiguous.

Warning! Spoilers for Captain Marvel follow.

According to Debbie Berman, film editor on Captain Marvel, Black Panther, and Spider-Man: Homecoming, Captain Marvel’s origin story originally ended with Captain Marvel flying off into space all alone. “I found that a bit jarring. Like, where exactly was she going? And what was she doing?” Berman told ET. She argued that Captain Marvel needed “a stronger visual to assert a more specific justification for her leaving and disappearing for so many years.”

So, things changed. In the final cut of the movie, Carol joins Ben Mendelsohn’s Talos and his family on a quest to find the extra-terrestrials a new home. “It gave her more of a sense of purpose and made it easier to believe that she left her newfound life on Earth because she was with a friend we knew she cared about, and for a more specific mission,” Berman said. It also shows why Captain Marvel didn’t show up in Infinity War. After all, it’s hard to keep tabs on Earth when you’re house-hunting in space.

Captain Marvel stars Brie Larson as the titular superhero alongside Mendelsohn, Jude Law, Annette Bening, Lashana Lynch, and Samuel L. Jackson as a much younger Nick Fury. Not only is Captain Marvel Marvel Entertainment’s first female-led film, but it’s also the studio’s first movie with a woman director (Anna Boden, who co-directed with Ryan Fleck) and only its second penned by a female writer (Geneva Robertson-Dworet, who follows Guardians of the Galaxy‘s Nicole Perlman).

The film has been a big hit with audiences, raking in $500 million at the global box office, making it the second-biggest debut for a superhero movie ever. That’s good news for Marvel: Avengers: Endgame, the second half of the Infinity War saga, sees Larson reprise her role as Carol Danvers. It hits theaters on April 26.

Chris Gates
Contributor
Christopher Gates lives in Los Angeles, CA and writes about movies, TV, video games, and other pop culture curiosities. In…
Captain Marvel star Brie Larson joins Fast and Furious 10
Brie Larson at the 51st NAACP Image Awards.

There's no shortage of performers in the next installment of the Fast and Furious franchise. Now, there's another Oscar winner in the mix. Brie Larson has been added to the cast of Fast and Furious 10 in an undisclosed role.

Larson won the Academy Award for Best Actress for her portrayal of Joy Newsome in Room. Helen Mirren and Charlize Theron are the only other Oscar winners among the Fast Saga cast. But only Theron and Larson are confirmed to appear in the next film. Larson's other film credits include The Glass Castle, Kong: Skull Island, and Captain Marvel.

Read more
10 off-camera moments from the MCU that Marvel needs to explain
Loki Thanos

In film, as in all visual mediums, there's always a part of the story we're not actually seeing transpire. Sometimes directors purposely leave seemingly important moments off the screen to allow our imaginations to fill in the blanks. In other cases, there's just no time.

In Marvel's rapidly expanding on-screen universe, there are a surprising number of crucial or just interesting moments that we never get to see in the films. From decimations to destinies, and from cosmic investigations to the nightmares of monsters, here are 10 unseen moments from the Marvel Cinematic Universe we'd love to finally see.

Read more
Venom in the Marvel Cinematic Universe: Why it should (or shouldn’t) happen
Venom in his 2018 film.

Sony Pictures' Venom: Let There Be Carnage is almost here, and the film arrives at an interesting time for the Marvel Cinematic Universe.

The Venom follow-up is part of Sony's own cinematic universe based on Marvel characters that exist outside the MCU, but the movie premieres at a point when there's a recurring theme throughout Marvel's projects: That a multiverse of alternate timelines and realities exist in addition to the MCU we know. Teased in WandaVision, formally introduced in Loki and What If?, and expected to play a huge role in December's Spider-Man: No Way Home, Marvel's multiverse is the new Infinity Stone, and Hulk help any upcoming Marvel-related film or series that doesn't mention it.

Read more