5 Implausible The Avengers 2 Rumours

4. Ms. Marvel Is an Absolute, Definite No-Go

Why It's Rumoured: Because no one has said anything about it, yet. Why It's Implausible: So, granted, I don't have much evidence to bring up the point that Joss Whedon, Kevin Feige and others have sat down and said, "Yes, let's bring Carol Danvers onscreen." However, I will look at the facts in the following respects: People still don't believe that Black Widow in the first film did an adequate job of holding her own on the Avengers' roster. Joss Whedon didn't get a chance to make his Wonder Woman film. Item 47 Now, you might be looking at that last point and scratch your head saying, "Huh?" Well, if you didn't know, Item 47 is a one-shot, short film about a couple that decides to rob a bank using the Chitauri weapons left behind after the events of The Avengers. If you know anything about Ms. Marvel, then you know she's got a pretty heavy back story that hasn't been touched on, yet, in the movies. It involves the alien species of the Kree and how, after sustaining injuries in an Kree-explosion, she ultimately gets her powers. In fact, here's the Wikipedia short-version of her introduction in the 1960s: "So?" You may be thinking to yourself. Well, remember all the speculation about who the alien threat was going to be in The Avengers, and how for a long time, people suspected either the Skrulls or the Kree? It ended up being a turn-around in that Whedon decided to use the Chitauri, because they needed less set-up. Here's what I'm thinking (and you may chalk this up to irrational, fan-boyism): Item 47 obviously shows the after-effects of what happens when Chitauri weapons and technology are left out in the open. It shows two people taking advantage of this once they get it to work. So, who's to say someone can't have an "accident" with this found technology, sustain injuries from it, only to wake up and reveal they now have cosmic powers? Sound familiar? It'd be an easy way not only to tie in Ms. Marvel to the short film, but to give Whedon a chance to work with the Wonder Woman character he never got with Warner Brothers. Just keep it in mind.
Contributor
Contributor

Cameron Carpenter is an aspiring screenwriter, current film and journalism student, and self-diagnosed cinephile, which only sounds bad in certain circles. Devoted fan of comics, movies, theater, Jesus Christ, Sidney Lumet, and Peter O'Toole, he sometimes spends too much time on his Scribd and comicbookmovie.com, but doesn't think you're one to judge, devoted reader. You can follow him on Twitter to watch him talk to people you didn't know exist. Oh, and Daredevil is quite the big deal around here (my head).