Lan says things which makes me think she’s seen some of the marvel movies before and just pretends it’s her first time lol
fan
2026-01-13 01:49:40 +0000 UTC
FALCON
Judd Osborne
2026-01-12 07:53:32 +0000 UTC
The twins are mutants from X-Men but do to the movies being owned at the time from different studios the could not call them mutants
Jeremy McCabe
2026-01-10 23:50:43 +0000 UTC
Very nice
Finn Aries
2026-01-10 17:33:09 +0000 UTC
Thanks for the information!
Gaëtarrow
2026-01-10 07:14:38 +0000 UTC
They should also try James bond's movies, if they like spies movies.
Gaëtarrow
2026-01-10 07:11:39 +0000 UTC
There are several real-world references that helped to make these movies seem more familiar. A couple references you may not get.
1) Sam Wilson was Air Force Pararescue. Air Force Pararescue is one of the 7 special forces groups of the US military. Each special forces group has a unique mission, but they go through the same physical and mental hell during training--many apply, but only a few are selected. Pararescue is unique because their specialty is combat medicine and life saving skills--not just shooting the hell out of the enemy. They also do rescue operations of civilians like the others, it all depends on the circumstances of the mission. Basically, when the Navy Seals or Delta Force need to call 911 for an ambulance, Air Force Pararescue shows up. So Sam's struggle made a lot of sense since special forces has to deal with some very nasty stuff for a living.
2) Operation Paperclip actually happened. At the end of World War 2, the United States already knew the Soviet Union had been spying and stealing information (like how to build an atomic bomb, the first Soviet atomic bomb was almost a perfect replica of the bomb the US dropped on Nagasaki). The United States and Soviet Union also knew that the Nazis had developed and researched technology beyond what either side possessed. The United States and Soviet Union both raced to capture as many Nazi scientists and major industrial leaders in order to prevent the other side from getting that information. The United States military and intelligence departments (the new CIA), basically faked a bunch of information so they could sneak former Nazi scientists and industrial leaders into the United States after World War 2. The American space program, from the start all the way to the 1970s, was based on the work of Wernher von Braun who created the V-2 rockets that the Nazis used to attack Great Britain. There were many others, some that worked with Hitler personally. The life support and aero-medicine technology (how to keep pilots and aircraft crews healthy in the air and space) used by the US Air Force and NASA came from the research of a Nazi scientist that tortured Jewish prisoners in vacuum chambers, freezers, and in close proximity to things like radar dishes (microwave ovens were born from radar technology, so yeah, a very painful method of torture and death).
An author/journalist had slowly collected all the clues and stories and figured out the truth. In the 1990s, the US Congress investigated what happened and most of Operation Paperclip was declassified. The American public of the 1990s had no idea that some of the plaques in various medical training facilities and credits in books were being given to Nazi war criminals that were secretly living in the United States. President Clinton had issued several mandates that any and all plaques or 'honorable credits' to the Nazi scientists and industrial leaders be permanently removed and destroyed. Several of the former Nazis were also deported from the United States in the 1990s, several being sent to Argentina. They were sent to Argentina only because Argentina has a large German community, not because Argentina was in favor of Nazis. Any families or descendants were allowed to stay in the United States as they committed no crime. There was a book written called, "Operation Paperclip: The Secret Intelligence Program that Brought Nazi Scientists to America" by Annie Jacobsen. It is a very good book. To correct what some have mentioned, the Soviet Union was doing just as many bad things with the Nazi scientists they captured--and most of those Nazi scientists ended up tortured, brainwashed into Soviet spies, or executed after they were no longer useful. Great Britain also had its own little program which produced some of the technology used by the British intelligence agency known as MI6.
I read the book, and since I'm a retired Air Force veteran, I also looked up some of the historical info I can access--being a veteran has its perks. It is truly disgusting what happened during Operation Paperclip. It felt like a betrayal of everything I believed in. After giving it some thought, I have to admit that what happened at the end of World War 2 was a necessary evil. The Soviet Union was already focused on world domination and occupied a good portion of eastern Europe. If the Soviet Union had captured all of the Nazi scientists, the world we live in today would be a very dark, unhappy place. Some of the Nazi scientists knew what the Soviets would do to them if they were captured, and several found a safe place and surrendered to the United States on purpose--Wernher von Braun was one of them. It is just a page in the history books, but its a page that most people aren't aware of. Google AI doesn't even give correct answers about it, that's how obscure Operation Paperclip was--but then again, Google AI is kind of dumb anyway.
Robert Mrowiec
2026-01-10 05:08:09 +0000 UTC
Winter Soldier is such a great movie. I always say it's the Marvel equivalent of DC's Batman: The Dark Knight.
It's not only a good comic book movie but also a good spy/action movie.
So, are you two Team Captain America now?😉
Since you liked the spy elements so much, maybe you should check out the Mission: Impossible movies.
Probably the best Spy Movies in recent time. Great stories with lots of twists and turns, some of the craziest and best stunt scenes ever, and great action, plus Tom Cruise.
I highly recommend the movies for your reaction.
That was a great reaction, as always, Angels.💜
Digitalversager
2026-01-10 03:51:33 +0000 UTC
All I will say is that while this is one of my favorite MCU films overall (it works really well as a "standalone" film) there's plenty of amazing movies coming up in the MCU...it's just getting rolling!!
Also you were both SUPER early at picking up on it being Bucky compared to others that have reacted to it, you're both very quick to pick up on things!
Someone else mentioned that Chris Evans and Scarlett Johansson are very good friends for a long time, there's also a clip of both of them playing the original Game Boy together.
Chris Lane
2026-01-10 01:42:25 +0000 UTC
Great reaction
christopher brown
2026-01-10 00:57:12 +0000 UTC
You girls are true comedians. The ' F... the laundry...' ' He's Robocop..' 'So you're Steven Hawking' ...and you both about the uniform ? :)) ' He looked like Snoop Dog' 'We got voodoo magic' ...You are so funny.
Rene Petitclerc
2026-01-09 23:19:36 +0000 UTC
Hello Captain Tien and Winter Lan,
I think Marvel does a pretty good job of adding new elements to a basic superhero movie to keep things fresh. This is a like a spy movie but add superheroes.
I think is one of the better Marvel movies.
OH, one more thing....Hail Hydra.