Chris Evans sheds light on the conflict between Captain America and Iron Man that fans will see in Captain America: Civil War.


While at Salt Lake City Comic Con actor Chris Evans spoke about Captain America: Civil War at one of his panels and gave some very interesting insight on the film. The actor offered fans a look at the conflict that has been brewing and will erupt in Civil War between Captain America and Iron Man. Chris Evans explains that,
"“Tony [Iron Man] actually thinks we should be signing these accords and reporting to somebody and Cap, who’s always been a company man and has always been a soldier, actually doesn’t trust anymore. Given what happened in ’Cap 2,’ I think he kind of feels the safest hands are his own. And these are understandable concerns, but this is tough, because even reading the script, you think, ’I think I agree with Tony in a way, and I do agree that to make this work, you do need to surrender to the group.’ It can’t just be one person saying this is right and this is what we’re going to do.”"
Evans continues to go on saying that Captain America,
"is a good man and his moral compass is probably the cleanest. This is a tough thing. This is what made it so interesting while we were filming, and it’s hopefully what will make the movie great — nobody’s right, nobody’s wrong. There’s no clear bad guy here. We both have a point of view, which is akin to most disagreements in life and politics.""
It is very interesting to see the actors opinion on the matter and to find out that he actually doesn't agree with his character on this one.

Adding one more look at the debate, Marvel Executive Editor and Senior VP Tom Brevoort expressed his thoughts on the comic storyline by stating,
"From the point of view of Captain America, [registering and getting trained by the government] was an infringement on the civil liberties of these people, this was overstepping turning all these super-powered individuals and turning them effectively into soldiers. Iron Man on the other hand, saw the validity of this. Just because a guy has powers and puts on a costume doesn't mean he is trained to use them responsibility, even if his intentions are good, people can get hurt," he said.
It is already known that the Marvel Cinematic Universe version of Civil War will be sightly different than the comic version so it'll be very interesting to see how all of this plays out. What side of this conflict are you taking; Captain America or Iron Man's?

Captain America: Civil War will be in theaters on May 6, 2016.

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Source: ABC News

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