10 Biggest Controversies In The Marvel Cinematic Universe

2. The Overall Lack Of Female Representation

Brie Larson Captain Marvel
Marvel

The MCU is currently sixteen films strong, but it won't be until its twenty-first that we finally see Marvel craft a female-led standalone superhero movie, with Captain Marvel set to debut in 2019.

That's eleven years after the first movie in the franchise, Iron Man, opened in 2008.

The Marvel comics are packed with popular female heroes, from the aforementioned Captain Marvel, to She-Hulk, Spectrum and Singularity, so the fact that it's taken this long for a female-led movie is baffling, especially when you consider that the far-less successful DC Extended Universe beat the MCU to the punch with Wonder Woman.

In general, the women of the MCU haven't been given the best treatment. We've already mentioned Black Widow's romance woes, and on top of that, love interests Pepper Potts and Jane Foster have more or less been written out, Peggy Carter died, and Christine Palmer was only there to serve Doctor Strange.

Doctor Strange Benedict Cumberbatch Rachel McAdams
Marvel Studios

This poor female representation goes beyond the movies too. Fans were less-than pleased when they discovered that finding toys based on characters like Black Widow and Gamora was near-impossible, and, in some cases, the females had even been removed from toy sets that should have featured them, only to be replaced with a male hero.

Thankfully, with Captain Marvel on the horizon, characters like Valkyrie and Michelle being introduced, and Scarlet Witch becoming more and more important with each passing movie, things are looking up, and it appears as though Marvel are making steps to further please their female fans.

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Danny has been with WhatCulture for almost nine years, and is currently Doctor Who Editor and WhoCulture Channel Manager, overseeing all of WhatCulture's Whoniverse coverage. He has been writing and video editing for 10+ years, and first got a taste for content creation after making his own Doctor Who trailers and uploading them to YouTube (they're admittedly a bit rusty by today's standards). If you need someone to recite every Doctor Who episode in order or to tell you about the making of 1988's Remembrance of the Daleks, Danny is the person to ask.