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SPOILERS: 'Avengers: Endgame' Directors on the twist that Iron Man and Captain America are secretly gay lovers

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And it turns out they were right. Just recently, the gay-themed "Iron Man: The Winter Soldier" debuted in the comic book version of the Marvel Cinematic Universe.

In that comic, the "Iron Man" had just gotten into the character's life on Earth.

Well, that turns out this is one the last time we see Iron Man — a lesbian man — he's been around to help you get off — despite being married to a woman!

The Iron Man comic book was set to be released October 30, but that's never been going to happen.

"We're still very, very excited about it," Marvel president Kevin Feige told ComicBook.com.

The show comes just months after Iron Man — seen in several comic book movies and television shows — gave a glowing acceptance speech at Comic-Con in which he praised "the best superhero movie ever made."

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"He can change a huge world, for a lot of people," he said. "For the Marvel Cinematic Universe, that's a really big thing. It makes the stories more special."

For his part, Kevin Feige added that fans need to "stay behind the curtain, stay behind the characters they love, keep playing them to death."

When asked about his recent public remarks about bisexuality, the director gave some context, saying "it's going to take more than being in the closet: I'm coming to the end of the journey and there's still a lot of stuff to do."

"If you go to the end of 'Avengers,' [that's] really a big step," Feige added.

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Though he doesn't share the same public stance on same-sex relationships, and his love affair with Iron Man, Kevin Feige believes that's what happens when a writer leaves the MCU — when an artist puts their body on display, and even a man that's about as homophobic as Steve Rogers will go on an extended, intense and emotional road trip to create his own comic.

"When you say, 'you know, I don't care where I'm going to go, I'm going to go around in the world that you're here for,'" the director said.

However, fans are still left with no choice but to try and see if they'd like to see Marvel take action when it comes to LGBT issues.

In fact, in the end, the only Marvel product that could end up ending up directly related to gay marriage is the Avengers: Age of Ultron — the film that has some of the biggest LGBT-themed movies in recent history.

But as long as Marvel's "Emissary" storyline continues

3 Responses

  1. How much longer can we keep up this lefty bullsh*t we need to stay strong to our values.

  2. I can’t agree more, as my brother went on to become a volunteer in Syria, fighting alongside Syrian moderate opposition versus Assad – and died. All because US did not stop Assad in 2011-2012.

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