You Can’t Kill Captain America

I am not a fan of this move.

NEW YORK (CNN) — He fought and triumphed over Hitler, Tojo, international Communism and a host of supervillains, but he could not dodge a sniper’s bullet.

Comic book hero Captain America is dead.

After close to 60 years in print, Marvel Comics has killed off Steve Rogers, aka Captain America, one of its most famous and beloved superheroes amid an already controversial story line, “Civil War,” which is pitting the heroes of Marvel’s universe against one another.

In the comic series, Rogers was to stand trial for defying a superhero registration law passed after a hero’s tragic mistake causes a 9/11-like event.

Steve Rogers eventually surrenders to police. He is later mortally wounded as he climbs the courthouse steps.

Marvel says the comic story line was intentionally written as an allegory to current real-life issues like the Patriot Act, the War on Terror and the September 11 attacks.

“Every child knew about 9/11,” says Dan Buckley, president of Marvel Comics. “If [he] could see a TV he knew what 9/11 was. The other similarities [to] things going on are just part of storytelling.”

It was a violent and strange end for an American hero.

Captain America first appeared in 1941, just as the United States entered World War II. He was a symbol of American strength and resolve in fighting the Axis powers, and later Communism.

As originally conceived by creators Joe Simon and Jack Kirby, Rogers was a man born before the Great Depression in a very different America. He disappeared after the war and reappeared only recently in the Marvel timeline. For a superhero many thought perfect, it was perhaps a fatal flaw for “Cap,” as he became known.

“He hasn’t been living in the modern world and the world does move,” says Marvel Editor-in-Chief Joe Quesada.

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3 Comments

  1. Jack's Shack March 9, 2007 at 12:34 am

    Elie,

    It is sad.

    Sweet,

    Tell him that Cap will be coming back as part of a new series real soon.

  2. Sweettooth120 March 8, 2007 at 11:37 pm

    It does seem strange. I agree with elie.

    Now what do I tell my little boy when he puts on his special superhero Marvel underwear!

  3. Elie March 7, 2007 at 4:45 pm

    There’s a reason I gave up reading Marvel years ago. But I still can’t believe they would do this. How sad.

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