Steve Rogers (Marvel Cinematic Universe)
Steve Rogers Captain America | |
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body double; The First Avenger) | |
Voiced by | Chris Evans (film video game) Josh Keaton (What If...?)[1] |
In-universe information | |
Full name | Steven Grant Rogers[a] |
Alias | Captain America |
Title | Captain (later honorary) |
Occupation |
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Affiliation |
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Weapon | |
Family | Brooklyn, New York , United States |
Nationality | American |
Abilities |
|
Steven Grant Rogers is a
for nearly seventy years until being revived in the 21st century.Rogers becomes a founding member and leader of the
Rogers is a central figure in the MCU, appearing in eleven films as of 2023. When first introduced in
Alternate versions of Rogers from within the MCU multiverse also appear in the animated series What If...? (2021), voiced by Josh Keaton. These versions include an incarnation of Rogers who instead of receiving the serum, wears a mechanized suit of armor and becomes the Hydra Stomper.
Fictional character biography
Origin
Steve Rogers was born on July 4, 1918, in
Becoming Captain America and battling Hydra
At the outset of
While
Adjusting to the modern era and the Battle of New York
In 2011, Rogers awakens in a 1940s-style hospital room. Deducing from an
Rogers learns that most of his World War II-era comrades are deceased, and he struggles to adjust to the modern world. In 2012, he is approached by Fury, who has activated the "
The Avengers become divided, both over how to approach Loki and the revelation that S.H.I.E.L.D. plans to harness the Tesseract to develop weapons much like Hydra had in the 1940s. Agents possessed by Loki, including
Sometime afterwards, Rogers records a number of
Dismantling Hydra and fighting the Winter Soldier
In 2014, Rogers works for S.H.I.E.L.D. in
Unable to decrypt the data recovered by Romanoff, Fury becomes suspicious about Insight and asks senior S.H.I.E.L.D. official
Rogers and Romanoff enlist the help of former
Leading the Avengers and combating Ultron
In 2015, in the Eastern European country of
In
Sokovia Accords
In 2016, Rogers, Maximoff, Romanoff, and Wilson stop Rumlow, now working as a mercenary, from stealing a
Rogers and Wilson go rogue; they recruit Barton,
Infinity War
In 2018, Rogers, Romanoff, and Wilson rescue Maximoff and Vision in
Returning to the Avengers Compound, Rogers and Romanoff assess the worldwide casualties and discover that Thanos destroyed half of all living things. They are met by Carol Danvers, who arrives answering Nick Fury's pager.[g] Rogers then shaves his beard, before hearing the Benatar arrive. He, Romanoff, Rhodes, Banner, and Rocket go outside and see Danvers bringing Stark and Nebula to the Compound. After making a plan, Rogers leads Rocket, Danvers, Thor, Romanoff, Rhodes, Banner, and Nebula into space on the Benatar to hunt Thanos at his garden planet. They confront and subdue Thanos and are horrified to learn that he destroyed the stones to prevent his mission from ever being undone. Rogers watches an enraged Thor decapitate Thanos.
Avenging the fallen
In 2023, Rogers leads a support group for grieving survivors in New York City. Rogers and Romanoff are shocked when Lang arrives at the Avengers Compound and explains that he has been trapped in the
They succeed in securing the Time Stone and the Mind Stone, with Rogers having to fight the 2012 version of himself to facilitate this. However, after the Space Stone plan goes awry, it necessitates a trip to 1970 so that Stark can recover it from
Rogers, Stark and Thor engage Thanos and during the fight, Rogers proves worthy to wield Thor's hammer
After attending Stark's funeral, Rogers reunites with Barnes, Wilson and Banner before returning the Infinity Stones and Mjolnir to their appropriate times and places. However, Rogers also decides to return to 1949 to reunite with Carter,[23] where he marries and lives a full life with her. Returning to Barnes, Wilson and Banner, he appears as an elderly man finally at peace, and passes his shield and mantle to Wilson.
Legacy
In spring 2024, Wilson struggles with the idea of taking up Rogers' title as Captain America and instead gives the shield to the U.S. government so it can be displayed in a
Barnes confronts Wilson, who reveals that he did not feel comfortable being Rogers' successor. Walker indicates his desire to fill Rogers' shoes but comes into conflict with Wilson and Barnes, who refuse to work with him and the
The
Students at
That same year, the Statue of Liberty is modified and undergoes construction to replace the torch with Captain America's shield.[24]
Additionally, a Broadway theatre production entitled Rogers: The Musical is created as an homage to Rogers.[25] While Barton is in New York City, he attends the musical with his family and is displeased with the musical's upbeat depiction of the Battle of New York.
A memorial plaque commemorating the first assembling of the Avengers is seen by the Grand Central Terminal, and as the leader, Rogers' name is on the top of the memorial.[26]
In 2025, a statue of Rogers is seen at the entrance of AvengerCon at the rebuilt Camp Lehigh.[j]
Alternate versions
Other versions of Rogers are depicted in the alternate realities of the MCU multiverse.
Fighting his future self
In an alternate 2012, Rogers, having successfully led the Avengers to victory over Loki, prepares to coordinate search and rescue of civilians when he encounters the time traveling 2023-Rogers in Stark Tower. 2012-Rogers, having heard that Loki escaped custody, believes 2023-Rogers is Loki using magic to disguise himself, and attacks him. After a brief confrontation, 2012-Rogers manages to put 2023-Rogers in a chokehold but is tricked into releasing him when 2023-Rogers, using his knowledge of future events, mentions Barnes being alive. 2023-Rogers uses Loki's scepter to render 2012-Rogers unconscious.
What If...? (2021–present)
Several alternate versions of Rogers appear in the animated series What If...?, in which he is voiced by Josh Keaton.[1]
- In an alternate 1943, Rogers gets shot by a Hydra agent before he can receive the Super Soldier Serum. Instead, Peggy Carter receives the serum, transforming into Captain Carter. After Carter recovers the Tesseract from Hydra, Howard Stark uses it to build a large mechanized suit of armor for Rogers. He is subsequently codenamed the Hydra Stomper. He and Carter bond and Rogers encourages her to prove her critics wrong. Rogers joins Carter's Howling Commandos on a mission to assassinate the Red Skull. Rogers is caught off-guard on a train loaded with explosives. They detonate, causing an avalanche after which Rogers is presumed dead. In a final mission to stop Hydra at their research facility, the Commandos find a captured Rogers and the Hydra Stomper suit. The Commandos use a generator to repower the suit, and Rogers rejoins the fight. The Red Skull opens a portal to another dimension using the Tesseract, and a tentacled creature travels through, killing him. Carter and Rogers fight together against the creature, but Rogers' suit runs out of power, and Carter chooses to push the monster back through the portal herself. In 2014, Carter and Romanoff find Rogers' Hydra Stomper armor aboard the Lemurian Star, with Romanoff revealing that someone was inside. This proves to be a slightly older Rogers who was captured in 1953 by the Red Room while destroying Hydra and brainwashed to be one of their assassins, becoming the world's most deadly killer and a terrorist. Rogers attacks the two women and later attempts to assassinate Barnes, who is now the Secretary of State, but he is captured by Carter and Romanoff. The two take Steve to a secret hideout in Scotland where they discover that biotech in the suit has prevented Rogers' aging, but is also the only thing keeping him alive. Awakening apparently free of the brainwashing, Rogers leads them to an abandoned test site in Sokovia used by the Red Room, reminiscing with Carter about how different the future is and admitting that he hadn't wanted to settle down with a normal life and a family unless it was with Carter. However, their reunion is interrupted by an attack by the Red Room. Reactivating Rogers' brainwashing, Melina Vostokoff reveals that his mission was always to capture Carter for the Red Room. During the battle that follows, Carter manages to break through the brainwashing and Rogers seemingly sacrifices himself to destroy the Red Room while dragging Vostokoff with him. However, Carter is not convinced that Rogers is dead and intends to find and save him.
- In an alternate 2011, most of the original candidates for Fury's Avengers Initiative are killed by a vengeful Asgardianarmy. The Watcher brings in a Romanoff from another universe who subdues Loki using his Scepter.
- In an alternate 2018, Rogers leads the Avengers to San Francisco to respond to a quantum virus outbreak, but are infected upon arrival and transform into zombies. When a group of survivors attempt to escape New York by train, a zombified Rogers infects Sharon Carter before fighting Barnes, who slices Rogers in half using his shield.
- In an alternate 2015, Rogers, alongside Thor, Banner, and Stark are killed by Ultronwho successfully uploads his consciousness into a new vibranium body, becoming powerful enough to eradicate all life on Earth.
- In another universe, footage of Rogers being inaugurated as President of the United States is shown in Times Square during Ultron's fight with the Watcher.[27]
- In an alternate 2014, Rogers dresses up as a Darcy Lewis that he was Hogan. They see that Justin Hammerhad actually attacked the Tower. After Hammer is apprehended by Freak who saved him from falling off Avengers Tower, they have their annual Christmas party.
- In an alternate 2018, Rogers fights against Thanos in the battle of Wakanda. During his fight, Rogers strikes the Time Stone in the Infinity Gauntlet with his shield, causing a temporal anomaly and sends him to 1602 and compresses 1602 and 2018 together, threatening to destroy the universe. Rogers then becomes known as "Rogers Hood" (a homage to Captain Carter. Rogers is in disbelief because his Carter known as Maid Margaret (similar to Maid Marian) died but expresses excitement to meet her. They all go to a pub, where he asks her about her universe's Rogers. The Royal Yellowjackets attack on Sir Harold "Happy" Hogan's command to arrest Carter and Rogers helps fight them off before leaving. He, Barnes, and Lang later regroup with Carter, Stark, and Banner and they make a plan to take Thor's Scepter. In the courtroom, Rogers helps Barnes fight off Red Skull, before Hogan, as the Freak, engages in a fight with Rogers. After Carter puts the Scepter's Time Stone in Stark's device, Rogers is identified as the time-displaced person setting off the incursion and Carter sends him back to his time via the Time Stone, restoring everything to normal.
Concept and creation
Captain America was first conceived as a comic book character in 1940,[28] as a direct response to the military actions of Nazi Germany, prior to the United States entering World War II.[29] The initial introduction of the character included the concepts of a soldier named Steve Rogers being given a serum bestowing enhanced strength and agility, wearing a patriotic red, white and blue uniform, carrying a shield, and having as a sidekick, a teenaged Bucky Barnes. In the 1960s, Marvel decided to test bringing the character back as part of the Avengers, with the premise that the character had been frozen for the two decades since the war, and was "haunted by past memories, and trying to adapt to 1960s society".[29] Live-action performances of the character in television and film serials began within a few years after its creation, with a 1990 feature film resulting in critical and financial failure.[30]
In the mid-2000s,
"Casting Captain America was super hard. I started to think, 'Are we not going to be able to find Captain America, and if we can't, what are we going to do with Avengers? Is the whole thing going to fall apart?' And, then, finally opening ourselves up to Chris Evans, who we had initially sort of just looked past because he was Johnny Storm in a Fantastic Four franchise. Then, bringing him in and showing him the artwork, showing him what was happening in this movie, and he took a weekend to decide."
—Kevin Feige, President of Production for Marvel Studios, on casting Chris Evans as Captain America.[35]
Originally, the film would stand alone; Feige said "about half" the movie would be set during World War II before moving into the modern day.[36] Producer Avi Arad said, "The biggest opportunity with Captain America is as a man 'out of time', coming back today, looking at our world through the eyes of someone who thought the perfect world was small-town United States. Sixty years go by, and who are we today? Are we better?" He cited the Back to the Future trilogy as an influence, and claimed he had "someone in mind to be the star, and definitely someone in mind to be the director".[37] In February 2006, Arad hoped to have a summer 2008 theatrical release date.[38] In April 2006, David Self was hired to write the script.[39] Joe Johnston met with Marvel to discuss directing the film and signed on in November 2008,[40] hiring Christopher Markus and Stephen McFeely to rewrite.[41]
Variety reported in March 2010 that Chris Evans was cast as Captain America;[42] Ryan Phillippe and John Krasinski were also considered for the role.[43] Evans, who previously worked with Marvel as the Human Torch in the Fantastic Four film series, initially declined the part three times before signing a six-picture deal with Marvel,[44] saying, "I think Marvel is doing a lot of good things right now, and it's a fun character. ... I think the story of Steve Rogers is great. He's a great guy. Even if it [were] just a script about anybody, I would probably want to do it. So it wasn't necessarily about the comic itself."[45] In April, it was reported that Joss Whedon would rewrite the script as part of his negotiation to write and direct The Avengers. Whedon said in August, "I just got to make some character connections. The structure of the thing was really tight and I loved it, but there were a couple of opportunities to find his voice a little bit —and some of the other characters'— and make the connections so that you understood exactly why he wanted to be who he wanted to be. And progressing through the script to flesh it out a little bit".[46]
Film appearances
Chris Evans portrays Steve Rogers in the Marvel Cinematic Universe films Captain America: The First Avenger (2011),[42] The Avengers (2012), Captain America: The Winter Soldier (2014),[47] Avengers: Age of Ultron (2015),[48] Captain America: Civil War (2016),[49] Spider-Man: Homecoming (2017),[50] Avengers: Infinity War (2018), and Avengers: Endgame (2019).[51] In addition, Evans makes uncredited cameo appearances as the character in Ant-Man (2015)[52] and Captain Marvel (2019),[53] and as Loki impersonating him in Thor: The Dark World (2013).[54]
Evans confirmed that he intended to retire from the role after the fourth Avengers film, leading to speculation that the character would die over the course of the final film;
References in other films
- In Pepper Potts spots him.[62]
- In Dr. Erskine in the comics— referenced as its inventor.[63] In the film's deleted opening, Bruce Banner goes to the Arctic to commit suicide but transforms into the Hulk, smashing a glacier. A buried human figure and shield are visible, who are meant to be Rogers and his shield. The scene was omitted from the final film at Marvel Studios' request, as at that time they had not figured out the specifics regarding how to introduce the character into their plans for a larger shared film universe.[64]
- In S.H.I.E.L.D. agent Phil Coulson discovers an incomplete replica of Captain America's shield inside a box. When he asks Tony Stark if he knows what it is, Tony tells him that it's "just what [he] need[s]" and places the shield underneath his particle collider to level it.[65]
- In Stark Industries.[66]Captain America wearing his Avengers-style uniform in a series of educational PSAs is shown at various points to the students of Midtown School of Science and Technology, on topics such as fitness, detention and puberty, culminating in a post-credits stinger gag showing him talking about how patience isn't always rewarded.
- In Spider-Man: Far From Home (2019), Rogers, whose married life with Carter is not known in the main timeline besides Sam Wilson and Bucky Barnes, is shown in a memorial slideshow alongside Stark, Romanoff, and Vision as heroes who lost their life due to the Infinity War.[67]
- In Ikaris replies that he could do it.[68]
Other media
- The 2013 Marvel One-Shot short film Agent Carter features the exploits of Peggy Carter one year after the events of Captain America: The First Avenger, and features a flashback of Carter's final communication with Steve Rogers.[69] The scene was also shown in the first episode of Agent Carter.
- In John Walkertheir new Captain America and he is given the shield.
- In Boastful Loki claims to have vanquished Captain America alongside the rest of the Avengers in his timeline. In the season finale, "For All Time. Always.", archival audio of Rogers from numerous films throughout the MCU can be heard during the opening logos alongside other reused audio from characters in the films.[70][71]
Characterization
Outward appearance and equipment
Costume designer
For Captain America: The Winter Soldier (2014), Evans trained in parkour, Brazilian jiu-jitsu, karate, boxing, kickboxing, and gymnastics, as the Russo brothers believed that bringing Rogers into the modern day also meant that he had studied and mastered modern fighting styles and techniques. The filmmakers also looked to make the character's shield, which has traditionally been used for defense, a more offensive weapon.[75] For Avengers: Age of Ultron (2015), Evans said that he was able to maintain the strength he built up for The Winter Soldier by working out up to an hour a day.[76] Evans didn't want to take a step back from the skills shown in The Winter Soldier, and made sure Rogers' fighting style advanced, showing "a consistent display of strength" and having Rogers utilizing his environment.[77] Evans' training regimen to get in shape for the role included weight lifting, which consisted of "the classic bodyweight and bodybuilding stuff", gymnastics and plyometrics, while staying away from cardio-based exercises, along with a high-protein diet.[78] For Civil War, his costume in the film received "subtle changes to all the details and cut" as well as its color, becoming a combination of the stealth suit from Winter Soldier and the Avengers: Age of Ultron (2015) suit.[79] In Avengers: Infinity War (2018), Rogers receives new vibranium gauntlets from Shuri to replace his traditional shield.[80]
In his civilian attire throughout the series, it has been noted that Rogers "tends to go for a very low key look ... based around very simple pieces that work together".[81] In his earliest appearance, designed by Sheppard, "post-serum Steve was All-American in a devastatingly tight white tee and khaki pants",[82] while in The Avengers Byrne made him "sophisticated enough to beautifully blend plaids and stripes."[82] Costume designer Judianna Makovsky described his fashion evolution between Winter Soldier and Captain America: Civil War (2016) as becoming increasingly comfortable in his clothes.[83] A New York magazine article, however, criticized his clothing across the series as being "bereft of patterns, graphics, imagery or anything you couldn't color in with one singular crayon".[84]
In The First Avenger, Rogers uses a weaponized 1942
Personality
In Captain America: The First Avenger (2011), Steve Rogers begins as a frail, sickly young man who is enhanced to the peak of human ability by an experimental serum in order to aid the United States in World War II.[42] Regarding the extent of the character's abilities Evans remarked, "He would crush the Olympics. Any Olympic sport he's gonna dominate. He can jump higher, run faster, lift stronger weight, but he can be injured. He could roll an ankle and be out for the season. He's not perfect, he's not untouchable. So a lot of the effects, if I'm going to punch someone they're not going to put them on a cable and fly them back 50 feet, but he's going to go down, probably not getting back up, which I think humanizes it. It makes it something that, again, I think everyone can relate to a little bit more, which I really like."[89]
Evans said that Rogers is much darker in The Avengers (2012): "It's just about him trying to come to terms with the modern world. You've got to imagine, it's enough of a shock to accept the fact that you're in a completely different time, but everybody you know is dead. Everybody you cared about ... He was a soldier, obviously, everybody he went to battle with, all of his brothers in arms, they're all dead. He's just lonely. I think in the beginning it's a fish-out-of-water scene, and it's tough. It's a tough pill for him to swallow. Then comes trying to find a balance with the modern world."[90] Regarding the dynamic between Rogers and Tony Stark, Evans said, "I think there's certainly a dichotomy—this kind of friction between myself and Tony Stark, they're polar opposites. One guy is flash and spotlight and smooth, and the other guy is selfless and in the shadows and kind of quiet and they have to get along. They explore that, and it's pretty fun."[91] A key moment in The Avengers occurs when Stark, who had been dismissive of Rogers at earlier points in the film, defers to Rogers as leader of the newly formed team to defend New York against a large-scale attack.[92] Describing his character's continuing adjustment to the modern world in Captain America: The Winter Soldier (2014), Evans said, "It's not so much about his shock with [technology]... It's more about the societal differences. He's gone from the '40s to today; he comes from a world where people were a little more trusting, the threats not as deep. Now, it's harder to tell who's right and wrong. Actions you take to protect people from threats could compromise liberties and privacy. That's tough for Steve to swallow."[93]
In his next appearance, in Avengers: Age of Ultron (2015), Rogers is the leader of the Avengers.[94][95] Evans stated that since the fall of S.H.I.E.L.D., Rogers has been left to depend on his Avenger teammates without the structure of military life and is now "looking to understand where he belongs, not just as a soldier, as Captain America, but as Steve Rogers, as a person."[96] In Captain America: Civil War (2016), Rogers becomes the leader of a faction of the Avengers against regulation.[97][98] Director Anthony Russo described Captain America's character arc in the film as taking him "from the most ra-ra company man" and "a somewhat willing propagandist" to "an insurgent" at the end of the film.[99] Unlike the comics' Civil War, the film was never going to kill Rogers, as the directors thought that was "an easy ending ... The more difficult and more interesting place to leave a family fight is: can these important relationships ever be repaired? Is this family broken permanently?"[100]
Director Joe Russo said that after the events of Civil War, Rogers struggles with the conflict between his responsibility to himself and his responsibility to others.
In Avengers: Endgame (2019), Christopher Markus described Rogers as someone who is "moving toward some sort of enlightened self-interest." McFeely knew Rogers "was going to get his dance" he promised Peggy Carter in The First Avenger. He initially planned to complete Rogers's story arc by killing him off, given the character's elongated life for his occupation, before deciding to have Rogers abandoned his shield.[104]
Differences from the comic books
The origin story of Captain America follows that of the comic books, particularly Ultimate Marvel for certain elements like growing up in Brooklyn and Bucky being a childhood best friend rather than being met later, but diverges from there. Rogers is also a founding Avenger, unlike in the comics where he is a later addition to the roster and the formed Avengers are the ones who thaw him out of the ice.[105] In the comic books, Steve Rogers is murdered at the event of the Civil War storyline, leading to Bucky Barnes becoming the next Captain America. In the MCU, Rogers survives Civil War,[106] eventually passing the mantle of Captain America to Sam Wilson in Avengers: Endgame.[56] In the comics, Wilson became Captain America in 2014 after Rogers' aging accelerated to be the real age of 90.[107]
Reception
Evans' portrayal of the character has been positively received by fans and critics. Roger Moore of the Orlando Sentinel positively reviewed Evans' performance as Steve Rogers, writing that Evans "brings a proper earnestness to the character".[108] Roger Ebert described the character as "a hero we care about and who has some dimension".[109] Likewise, in his review of Avengers: Endgame, Joe Morgenstern of The Wall Street Journal lauded both actor and character, calling "Chris Evans's effortlessly likable Steve Rogers/Captain America, the team's natural leader."[110]
Peter DeBruge, writing for
Rogers' elderly appearance at the end of Avengers: Endgame has been noted to resemble
Accolades
Year | Film | Award | Category | Result | Ref(s) |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
2011 | Captain America: The First Avenger | Teen Choice Awards | Choice Summer Movie Star: Male | Nominated | [116] |
Scream Awards | Best Science Fiction Actor | Nominated | [117] | ||
Best Superhero | Won | ||||
Fight Scene of the Year (with Hugo Weaving) | Nominated | ||||
2012 | People's Choice Awards | Favorite Movie Superhero | Nominated | [118] | |
MTV Movie Awards | Best Hero | Nominated | [119] | ||
Saturn Awards | Best Actor | Nominated | [120] | ||
The Avengers | Teen Choice Awards | Choice Movie: Male Scene Stealer: Male | Nominated | [121] | |
2013 | People's Choice Awards | Favorite Action Movie Star | Nominated | [122] | |
Favorite Movie Superhero | Nominated | ||||
MTV Movie Awards | Best Fight (with cast) | Won | [123] | ||
2014 | Captain America: The Winter Soldier | Teen Choice Awards | Choice Movie Actor: Sci-Fi/Fantasy | Nominated | [124] |
Choice Movie: Chemistry (with Anthony Mackie) | Nominated | ||||
Choice Movie: Liplock (with Scarlett Johansson) | Nominated | ||||
Young Hollywood Awards | Super Superhero | Nominated | [125] | ||
2015 | Critics' Choice Awards | Best Actor in an Action Movie | Nominated | [126] | |
People's Choice Awards | Favorite Movie Duo (with Scarlett Johansson) | Nominated | [127] | ||
Favorite Action Movie Actor | Won | ||||
Saturn Awards | Best Actor | Nominated | [128] | ||
MTV Movie Awards | Best Fight (with Sebastian Stan) | Nominated | [129] | ||
Best Kiss (with Scarlett Johansson) | Nominated | ||||
Avengers: Age of Ultron | Teen Choice Awards | Choice Movie Scene Stealer | Won | [130] | |
2016 | Kids' Choice Awards | Favorite Movie Actor | Nominated | [131] | |
MTV Movie Awards | Best Hero | Nominated | [132] | ||
Captain America: Civil War | Teen Choice Awards | Choice Movie Actor: Sci-Fi/Fantasy | Won | [133] | |
Choice Movie: Chemistry (with cast) | Nominated | [134] | |||
Choice Movie: Liplock (with Emily VanCamp) | Nominated | ||||
Critics' Choice Awards | Best Actor in an Action Movie | Nominated | [135] | ||
2017 | People's Choice Awards | Favorite Action Movie Actor | Nominated | [136] | |
Kids' Choice Awards | Favorite Movie Actor | Nominated | [137] | ||
Favorite Butt-Kicker | Won | ||||
Favorite Frenemies (with Robert Downey Jr.) | Nominated | ||||
#Squad (with cast) | Nominated | ||||
Saturn Awards | Best Actor | Nominated | [138] | ||
2018 | Avengers: Infinity War | Teen Choice Awards | Choice Action Movie Actor | Nominated | [139] |
2019 | Kids' Choice Awards | Favorite Movie Actor | Nominated | [140] | |
Favorite Superhero | Nominated | ||||
Avengers: Endgame | MTV Movie & TV Awards | Best Fight (with Josh Brolin) | Nominated | [141] | |
Teen Choice Awards | Choice Action Movie Actor | Nominated | [142] | ||
Saturn Awards | Best Actor | Nominated | [143] | ||
People's Choice Awards | Action Movie Star of 2019 | Nominated | [144] | ||
2020 | Kids' Choice Awards | Favorite Movie Actor | Nominated | [145] |
See also
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Notes
- ^ As stated when Rogers is inaugurated President of the United States in the What If...? episode "What If... Ultron Won?".
- ^ In an alternate reality through time travel,[6][7] or in the past in the main timeline.[8]
- ^ As stated in the letter he wrote to Tony Stark at the end of Captain America: Civil War.
- ^ As seen in a museum exhibit shown in Captain America: The Winter Soldier.
- post-credit scene of Spider-Man: Homecoming(2017)
- post-credit scene of Ant-Man(2015)
- mid-credit scene of Captain Marvel(2019)
- ^ As mentioned in the Eternals (2021)
- ^ As depicted in Spider-Man: Far From Home (2019)
- ^ As depicted in the first episode, Generation Why, of Ms. Marvel (2022)
External links
- Steve Rogers on Marvel Cinematic Universe Wiki, an external wiki
- Steve Rogers on Marvel Database, a Marvel Comics wiki
- Steve Rogers on Marvel.com