Pizza Dog could be the real star of the MCU's newest Disney Plus series Hawkeye
If Marvel Studios really wants fans to love their Haw๊keye show, they'll give Pizza Dog his due

Pizza Dog - it's a name that strikes fear into the hearts of villains everywhere, for all those who would do harm to Clint Barton and 澳洲幸运5开奖号码历史查询:Kate Bishop🥃, the two heroes known as Hawkeye, must alsoꦏ face Lucky, the Pizza Dog.
Lucky is one of the goodest good boys in all of Marvel Comics, and now he's made the jump to the MCU thanks to Disney Plus' Hawkeye streamin♎g series - which has already established Lucky's legendary love of pizza, the source of his meme-worthy nickname.
But Pizza Dog is more than just a mascot for Hawkeye. He's one oᩚᩚᩚᩚᩚᩚᩚᩚᩚ𒀱ᩚᩚᩚf Clint and Kate Bishop's closest pals, and even an ally against the criminal forces that are out to get them - and he's the star of one of the most innovative, critically acclaimed issues of Matt Fraction and David Aja's , one of the main inspirations for Disn💯ey Plus' Hawkeye.
Thus far, Lucky has only had a few scenes in Hawkeye - but we're sitting patiently like well-trained pups for 澳洲幸运5开奖号码历史查询:Marvel Studios to serve up a 🔯treat in the form of a Pizza Dog-centric episode.
If Marvel Studios really wants to capture the true essence of what made Hawkeye's most beloved comic 💝run as groundbreaking and just plain fun as it stays to this day, they could do a lot worse than leaning into Lucky's beloved reputation and translating the innovation of Fraction and Aja's story to the screen.
Here's why.
Who is Pizza Dog?
Clint Barton adopted Lucky - whose original name was, ironically, Arrow, until Clint decided that was too cute even for him and renamed him - after Lucky🍸 saved Clint's life from an attack by th🧜e so-called 'Tracksuit Mafia' that wishes him dead. Though Lucky saves Clint, he's gravely injured himself.
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After some intensive veterinary care, Lucky comes home with Clint and Kate, becoming their stalwart companion - though he forged a special bond with Kate Bishop, who has ev♑en relocat🌌ed Lucky with her to and from Los Angeles a few times.
2013's ജ puts the spo♔tlight on Lucky amid Clint's clashes with the 'Tracksuit Mafia' gangsters who are trying to force him out of his apartment building.
When one of Hawkey♎e's neighbors is murdered by the enigmatic assassin known as the Clown (who will likely appear in the show as well), Lucky takes on the case of tracking the murderer in an issue told entirely through the dog's point of view - down to the way the issue is colored, and the way dialogue is presented.
Hawkeye #11's story 'Pizza is My Business' sounds a bit like an absurd diversion for a superhero comic, focusing on a detective dog rather than the title's human stars. But drawing on a penchant for innovativ൲e visual storytelling, writer Matt Fraction and artist David Aja put together a unique one-off issue that ༺is as innovative and exciting as it is cute and kinda kitschy.
As Lucky hunts the apartment building for clues, his thought p꧂rocess is depicted through a series of images denoting what he smells, and how perceives what each smell means.
Coupled with a color palette that sticks mostly to the blue and yellow hues that primarily color a dog's eyesight (and which,ꦺ appropriately enough, match Hawkeye's aesthetic), 'Pizza is My Business' does the utmost to present an adventure through the eyes of a dog, utilizing the dog's own perception and point of view.
Pizza Dog in the MCU
Would 'Pizza is My Business' translate directly to Disney Plus' Hawkeye? It's hard to say, in that it seems like changing the entire color palette, sound design, and visual communication of the show might prove much more jarring than adding an experimental story into a𝕴n ongoing comic book run.
But at the same time, given the family-oriented n🃏ature of Hawkeye's MCU tale, the holiday trappings of the show, and sense of humor and heart that has permeated it so far, there may be plenty of room for a slightly more straightforward take on one of Marvel Comics' most unique and beloved single issues.
Could the MCU deliver on an adaptation of an unlikꦍely fan-favorite comic book issue, in a way that continues the studio's penchant for twisting genre conventions and mashing up new ideas into cinematic superhero stories?
Well, maybe they will, if we're lucky.
Marvel Studios has shown they're drawing directly on Hawkeye: My life is a Weapon by embracing the comic's themes and aesthetic for the show.
I've been Newsarama's resident Marvel Comics expert and general com🧔ic book historian since 2011. I've also been the on-site reporter at most major comic conventions such as Comic-Con International: San Diego, New York Comic Con, and C2E2. Outside of comic journalism, I am the artist of many weird pictures, and the guitarist of many heavy riffs. (They/Them)