The MCU is in a bit of a weird place lately. The Avengers as we knew them are basically gone following the events of Avengers: Endgame, and Marvel is still building towards the debut of iconic teams like the Fantastic Four and X-Men. This world needs protecting, and that responsibility might just fall on the shoulders of the Thunderbolts. But why are these washed-up heroes, former villains, and also-rans suddenly fighting together?
With the release of the Thunderbolts teaser trailer, we've gotten our first real look at the team in action: Julia Louis-Dreyfus's Contessa Valentina Allegra de Fontaine, David Harbour's Red Guardian, Hannah John-Kamen's Ghost, Wyatt Russell's US Agent, Olga Kurylenko's Taskmaster, Florence Pugh's Black Widow, Yelena Belova, Sebastian Stan's Bucky/Winter Soldier, and Lewis Pullman's "Bob"/The Sentry.
Paper Towns' Jake Schreier directs Thunderbolts, and Marvel boss Kevin Feige has confirmed that Thunderbolts will mark the end of the MCU's Phase 5, so let's brush up on the history of the team in Marvel's comics and why they could be a major game-changer in the MCU. These are the topics we cover here:
- Who Are the Thunderbolts?
- The Thunderbolts: The Origin of the Original Team
- The Many Incarnations of the Thunderbolts
- The Thunderbolts Marvel Movie
Who Are the Thunderbolts?
There have been many incarnations of the Thunderbolts over the past 25 years. There's only one common thread linking every version of the team in the comics – they're villains masquerading as heroes to further their own agenda. But though the various leaders of the Thunderbolts often have their own agendas, the team has a surprising habit of becoming a force for good. In the act of pretending to be heroes, the Thunderbolts often find themselves genuinely becoming heroes in the process.
Still, even at their most heroic, the Thunderbolts are more extreme and brutal in their methods than most superhero teams. The Thunderbolts' mission is best summed up by their slogan of choice – "Justice, like lightning."
The Thunderbolts: The Origin of the Original Team
The Thunderbolts were originally created by writer Kurt Busiek and artist Mark Bagley. Following an early teaser appearance in the pages of Incredible Hulk, the team made their proper debut in the first issue of The Thunderbolts in 1997.
Led by a mysterious, patriotic hero named Citizen V, the Thunderbolts make their debut in the aftermath of a devastating conflict with Onslaught. In this period, the Avengers and Fantastic Four have vanished (the premise behind Marvel's short-lived Heroes Reborn initiative), leaving a power vacuum the Thunderbolts are only too eager to fill.
However, despite presenting themselves as worthy successors to the Avengers, the Thunderbolts are hiding a dark secret that's revealed at the end of The Thunderbolts #1. They're all villains in disguise. Citizen V is actually Captain America's nemesis Baron Zemo. Many of Zemo's teammates are former Masters of Evil members using new costumed identities. Even 25 years later, that twist ending is widely regarded as one of the most memorable moments in Marvel Comics' history.
But though Zemo forms the team in order to win the public's trust and gather secrets about the superhero community that he can sell to the criminal underworld, the Thunderbolts find themselves warming to the idea of being superheroes. That shift continues even as the Thunderbolts are discredited following the return of the Avengers and Fantastic Four. By the time the team finally dissolves, even Zemo himself begins to flirt with the idea of redemption.
The Many Incarnations of the Thunderbolts
Though Zemo's version of the Thunderbolts disbands following the events of Marvel's 2006 Civil War crossover, that crossover also paves the way for a brand new incarnation of the team. After the victorious Tony Stark becomes director of SHIELD, Norman Osborn is tasked with leading a new version of the Thunderbolts comprised of incarcerated supervillains like Venom, Bullseye, Penance and Thunderbolts veterans Songbird and Moonstone.
That team is similar to DC's Suicide Squad in that it's a government-sanctioned black ops unit charged with hunting down heroes who violate the Superhuman Registration Act. Also like the Suicide Squad, the Thunderbolts are kept under strict surveillance and fitted with remote-controlled devices to prevent them from defying orders.
Against all odds, Osborn's team succeeds and even become international heroes thanks to their role in repelling a Skrull invasion (learn more about the MCU's version of that story here). Osborn usurps Stark's position at SHIELD and transforms it into HAMMER. Many of his Thunderbolts graduate to the "Dark Avengers," a team where these villains usurp the names and costumes of heroes like Spider-Man, Hawkeye and Wolverine. Even Osborn steals Stark's tech and rebrands himself "Iron Patriot," though the Green Goblin side of his personality doesn't stay buried for long.
Osborn forms another new version of the Thunderbolts during this period, one that can carry out the missions too dirty for his public-facing team of Avengers. However, both teams implode after Osborn's true nature is finally exposed in 2010's Siege.
Since then, the Thunderbolts have undergone a number of evolutions and transformations. Luke Cage briefly lead the team as a more law-abiding alternative to the Osborn era. General Thunderbolt Ross, in his guise as Red Hulk, assembled a squad of skilled assassins that included Punisher, Venom, and Elektra. The Winter Soldier formed his own Thunderbolts that included many veterans of the original team. And most recently, Wilson Fisk spearheaded multiple versions of the Thunderbolts during his tenure as mayor of New York City.
The Thunderbolts Marvel Movie
Following a handful of appearances in animated projects like Ultimate Spider-Man and Avengers: Ultron Revolution, the Thunderbolts are making their live-action debut in the upcoming MCU movie. Paper Towns' Jake Schreier directs the film, with Eric Pearson (Black Widow) penning the screenplay.
Thunderbolts Cast
This is the line-up of the team:
- Julia Louis-Dreyfus's Contessa Valentina Allegra de Fontaine
- David Harbour's Red Guardian
- Hannah John-Kamen's Ghost
- Wyatt Russell's US Agent
- Olga Kurylenko's Taskmaster
- Florence Pugh's Black Widow/Yelena Belova
- Sebastian Stan's Bucky/Winter Soldier
- Lewis Pullman's "Bob"/The Sentry
It seems a bit surprising that Daniel Brühl's Baron Zemo will not be involved. Zemo has already been portrayed in a more sympathetic light in 2016's Captain America: Civil War and 2021's The Falcon and the Winter Soldier, and the Thunderbolts movie would've been a good place to see him continue to seek redemption for his past by spearheading a team of would-be heroes. Who knows, maybe he will yet show up.
Julia Louis Dreyfus' Contessa has appeared in several Phase 4 adventures already, recruiting characters like Florence Pugh's Yelena Belova and Wyatt Russell's John Walker to her mysterious cause. Contessa clearly seems to be responsible for forming the Thunderbolts, perhaps in response to the dissolution of the Avengers, hence why she wants a Black Widow and a Captain America of her own. But given the character's often treacherous nature in the comics, it's hard to say which side Contessa is truly on.
We previously thought that Shang-Chi and the Legend of the Ten Rings and the She-Hulk show may have been setting up the Thunderbolts movie, too, as Tim Roth's Abomination showed up in both. Oh well, maybe in the sequel!
In short, the MCU Thunderbolts are shaping up to be a fusion of several versions of the comic book team. As with the post-Civil War version, the team is probably a government-sanctioned alternative to the Avengers, rather than simply being a group of disguised villains. The real question is how heroes like Spider-Man, Doctor Strange and Thor will react to seeing this new team arrive on the scene.
Thunderbolts Release Date
Marvel's Thunderbolts will conclude Phase 5 of the MCU when it is released on May 2, 2025
Let's talk Thunderbolts in the comments! And be sure to check out all the new Marvel movies in 2024 and beyond.
Note: This article was originally published on June 16, 2022. It was updated on September 23, 2024, with the latest news about Thunderbolts.
Jesse is a mild-mannered staff writer for IGN. Allow him to lend a machete to your intellectual thicket by following @jschedeen on Twitter.
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