Board Thread:Movies/@comment-3048593-20170411234907/@comment-3048593-20170925190645

I've seen Civil War around 10 times ever since I got my Blu-ray copy of it (which I collect all of the MCU-films in so far, and I will try to do with the shows soon enough), so I don't really get the complaints from a plot perspective of Zemo being "too lucky", and definitely not the complaint of "there was no reason for them to fight each other", when it was made abundantly clear.

The only real complaint I can think of has to do with both Clint and Scott, and that has to do with their previously established families. In 'Ant-Man', at the end it was clear that Scott managed to improve his relations with his family, after having spent time and prison and saving their lives from Yellowjacket, and also earning the respect Maggie's new step-dad. And in 'Age of Ultron', after Clint's final mission he would retire to settle down with his family and help raise his newborn son Nathaniel.

While I'm not against the idea of the latter getting out of retirement just to help his friends in need, I do find it odd that both of them were so willing to help Cap and his team, who were at that point essentially war criminals (though I guess Scott at that point didn't know what he was getting into when Clint picked him up on Sam's request). And while Cap would later break them out of the Raft so they wouldn't have to spend the rest of their life incarcerated there, they are essentially at this point fugitives and on the run from international law, and forced to stay in Wakanda as asylum seekers, away from the families that they care about.

Although it does make me interested in seeing how that will play out in future films for both those characters, especially for Scott in the upcoming 'Ant-Man and the Wasp', if he has to fight with Hope as the Wasp against the villains, while underground away from the law.