Two Captain America Marvel Comics stories that could chart a path for Chris Evans to return to the MCU

Promo image from Captain America: The Winter Soldier
(Image credit: Marvel Studios)

It's been less than two yꩵears since actor Chris Evans stepped away from the role of Steve Rogers/Captain America following his character's apparent epilogue in , passing on his shield to Sam Wilson/The Falcon (at least that was his intention) and retiring with Peggy Carter to a "beautiful" life in what appears to be an alternate timeline. 

Steve Rogers and Peggy Carter dancing in Avengers: Endgame

(Image credit: Marvel Studios)

But now, despite Evans' seeming insistence that he was done with playing Steve Rogers in the MCU, reports surfaced a few weeks back that Evans is in talks to do exactly thatඣ, appearing as Captain Amer😼ica in a supporting role in another MCU property – if he hasn't secretly done so already.

simply "News to me," the day rumors broke of his MCU return as Captain America (remember that distinction - Evans denied a report he'd play Captain America).

And just recently Marvel Studios president Kevin Feige🎃 seems to p♊ut a kibosh on the report as well.

"I rarely answer no to anything🌄 anymore because things are always surprising me with what happens, but that rumor, I think, was dispelled rather quickly by the man himself," F🍬eige said.

And yet, with Feige's answer a hair short of definitive and 澳洲幸运5开奖号码历史查询:Marvel Studios' well-known knack for manipulating the public discourse (okay, outright f﷽udging) to hide their story secrets, the door seems to be open a tiny crack to an eventual return.

As we said, the initial report indicated Evans could return as Captain America - and Evans and Marvel may want to downplay any potential that his return to the MCU could be seen as supplanting Anthony Mackie's Sam Wilson, assuming Wilson fully takes on the role during and then after the Disney Plus series 澳洲幸运5开奖号码历史查询:The Falcon and the Winter Soldier.

And of course, the MꩲCU constantly introducing new conce🎃pts and stories that seem like possible in-roads to bringing Evans back as Steve Rogers doesn't help dissuade us from considering how it might look if he did return.

With꧃ Steve retired and in his old age per current MCU canon, the obvious questions become, how could Steve Rogers return, and if h๊e did, what version of Steve could it be?

Yeah, that's a valid question in the new time-travel-Quantum Rea♛lm-Mul🐭tiverse of Madness MCU. 

Given Marvel Studios' past M.O., it's worth considering if Evans could return in a project we already know about, including ones that have been completed or are cur🐓rently in production or about to♈ start. 

The Falcon and the Winter Soldier launches this week and is of course 100% Cap-preoccupied, and there'd be any one of dozens of ways to write him into ᩚᩚᩚᩚᩚᩚ⁤⁤⁤⁤ᩚ⁤⁤⁤⁤ᩚ⁤⁤⁤⁤ᩚ𒀱ᩚᩚᩚthe storyline. 

And since we're on the topic of Disney Plus, as it looks like something of an experimental playground for Mඣarvel Studios, some consideration woulꦫd have to be given to a series starring Cap and Peggy Carter in their alternate timeline.

Secret Empire #10 cover

(Image credit: Marvel Comics)

Cap indicated he lived a long, fulfilling life with Peggy at the end of Endgame, but it's hard to imagine a couple-of-action like them didn't have an adventure or two when the goings got roug🌳h in their timeline. 

2022's D🌌octor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness is set up for just about everything and anything, and in comic book vernacular, alternate universes and realities are almost always utilized to showcase fun spins on familiar concepts. How big of a ‘get’ would it be for director Sam Raimi and for the status of the franchise to have some of the bigger MCU stars play twisted versions of themselves?

There’s also the (maybe kinda slim) chance Marvel Studios could do what Marvel Comics did when Steve Rogers got old, and use a Cosmic Cube (or some other MacGuffin) to de-age and re-empower him. But that comic book story told in and the subsequent turned Steve Rogers into a secret Hydra agent under the control of the Red Skull, who was surrep𒐪titiously behind Steve&rsq𝓰uo;s reinvigoration.

Bringing Evans back as an evil, fascist Captain America would certainly make fans go ape-stuff, whether they loved or hated the idea.

On the other hand, there was a brief period before the Hydra reveal where both Steve Rogers and Sam Wilson operated side-by-side as Captains ﷽America with distinct costumes and shields (Sam kept the original, in that story). 

Marvel Comics seems to be channeling similar energy for the upcoming United States of Captain America li൩mited series which brings together Steve Rogers, Sam Wilson, Bucky Barnes, and John Walker (at least three of whom are central characters in The Falcon and the Winter Soldier) for an 80th anniversary Captain America ad🦂venture this June.

And of course, the Russos have, tongue-somewhat-in-cheek, said there to return Mjolnir and all the Infinity St🧜ones to the moments they were borrowed from, and how he ended up in an alternate reality and Peggy Carter could have their own life. 

But with all of that low-hanging fruit noted, here𒀰's a closer look at two comic book storylines that seem like a good fi🥂t for a returning Evans.

Avengers Forever (1998-1999)

Avengers Forever cover

(Image credit: Marvel Comics)

The original Evans-returns reports state that Evanᩚᩚᩚᩚᩚᩚ⁤⁤⁤⁤ᩚ⁤⁤⁤⁤ᩚ⁤⁤⁤⁤ᩚ𒀱ᩚᩚᩚs wouldn't return to star in a new headlining Captain America film, but would appear as a guest star or part of an ensemble in a supporting role, similar to Robert Downey, Jr.'s apꦰpearances as Tony Stark in Captain America: Civil War and Spider-Man: Homecoming.

What better ensemble to bring him into than an all-𓆉new Avengers (with som๊e classic overtones)?

The seeds of an all-time-great Avengers comic book story that could provide the perfect venue for Evans's return as Steve Rogers are already being planted in the MCU♌ as we speak – and this time, we don't mean those all-important Infinity Stones.

We're talking, of course, about : writers Kurt Busiek and Roger Stern, and artist Carlos Pacheco's '98-'99 12-issue saga about a time-spa☂nning team of Avengers from different eras past and future, united to🌠 defeat a threat great enough to destroy not just the Earth, but the entire timeline of the Marvel Universe.

At the heart of the team was none other than the longtime soul of the Avengers, Steve Rogers &nda☂sh; though not the contemporary Steve of the era, but a version of Steve from the past summoned forth to lead a group of Earth's Mightiest Heroes organized through the mysterious cosmic awareness of the psychic villain Libra of the Zodiac.

And the conflict that threatened time itself? A war between the time-traveling Avengers archenemy 澳洲幸运5开奖号码历史查询:Kang the Conqueror and his future self Imm🍸ortus,𓄧 a guardian of the timestream from the universe's end.

Here's where things get interesting for Steve'⛄s potential MCU futur𒀰e.

As fans wh🎃o follow MCU news know, , played by Lovecraft Country actor Jonathan Majors, adding the last and perhaps꧙ most important piece of the puzzle for adapting Avengers Forever into the MCU.

And of course, Wasp was a member of the Avengers Forever team, as were Giant-Man and Yellowjacket (though in this case, both were versions of Hank Pym taken𝓡 from different points in his history, rather than the villainous Darren Cross Yellowjacket of the first Ant-Man film).

In addition to the obvious hook of uniting a group of Avengers including well-known faces and potentially new heroes from the past and future such as Giant-Man, Wasp, Cap👍tain America, Clint Barton, and a version of Captain Marvel, there's the potential implication that adapting Avengers Forever into the MCU could form a larger scaffolding for an eventual movie to culminate the nex🐲t phase of the MCU, similar to the first Avengers film.

And just to keep this in mind, a loosely-adapted version pul🍸ling Cap out of, say, the World War II-era would open the door to pulling any Avenger from the past. 

Any Avenger from the past.

We'll leave that there.

Secret Wars (2015-2016)

Secret Wars (2015) promo art by Alex Ross

(Image credit: Marvel Comics)

On that note, there's a perhaps even bigger big picture for the eventual culmination 🦩of the next era of the MCU ꦗon the table, and that is of course the mother of all Marvel blockbuster crossovers (literally, as in it was the very first): Secret Wars.

The , published 💯in 12 issues across '84-'85, was a joint attempt by Marvel Comics and toymaker Mattel to challenge their rivals DC and Kenner, respectively. At the time, DC and Kenner had a hit toyline in Super Powers, which brought a𝓡 host of DC characters to life in plastic, complete with action features that represented their powers (hence the line's name). 

To take on Super Powers, Marvel and Mattel developed Secret Wars, a then-unprecedented limited series that brought Marvel's best-known heroes and villains to a faraway world where they were pitted against each other in combat by a mysterious being known as the Beyonder – complete with Mattel's accompanying to𝄹yline of the same name. And of course, in both the comic and the toyline, the leader of the superheroes was Captain America, Steve Rogers.

The concept of bringing together the c﷽oolest Marvel heroes and villains on-screen for an all-out fight could be a way to escalate the 'all-in' premise of Avengers: Endgame. But it's the later ' that shared the name and some concepts of the ‘80s orℱiginal, that could be the real key to adapting one of the most recognizable Marvel stories the MCU hasn't touched.

In the 2015 version, Docto♎r Doom uses the cosmic power of the Beyonder to save reality from destruction through the collapse of every world in the Marvel Multiverse – remaking reality in his own image in the process. The resulting planet, known as Warworld, was stitched together in a bizarre and sometimes volatile hodgepodge of Marvel's many Multiversal worlds and was subject to threats to Doom's rule from all sides.

In the end, a coalition of Marvel's greatest heroes led by Reed Richards of the Fantastic Four managed to wrench power from Doom – partially thanks to, what else, a version of the Infinity Gauntlet, wielded by Black Panther no less – and reform Marvel's Earth, with just a few key diff✤erences. Reed and his family then departed into the void left by the former Multiverse to rebuild the worlds that were destroyed through the cosmic power of Reed and Sue Richards' son Franklin ꦅand their enemy-turned-ally Molecule Man, a mission that kept them out of the core Marvel Universe for years.

With the Fantastic Four about to enter the MCU, opening the door to Doctor Doom, the idea of a full-on version of Secret Wars coming to film isn't that far🐻-fetched. Fantastic Four, which will be directed by Spider-Man: Homecoming/Far From Home's Jon Watts, puts all the pieces in place – and given both the apparent Multiversal elements coming to Watts's third, still-untitled Spider-Man film, there's some cause to speculate Marvel could be building toward the idea.

Steve Rogers and Sam Wilson in Avengers: Endgame

(Image credit: Marvel Studios)

And what better place to bring back Chris Evans as Steve Rogers than the comic book movie to end all comic book movies, even bigger than Endgame, where not just previous M🃏CU characters but previous characters from non-MCU Ma꧟rvel movies may all be on the table to appear?

Marvel Studios loves to cap off its Phases with big event films which they build toward throughout their films and shows – and Secret Wars could provide the perfect capstone to a Marvel Phase that seems to put the concept of the Multiverse at its center, and perhaps provide a way to come out with a cohesive🗹 MCU Earth featuring all of the🌜ir best-known characters side-by-side, down to a version of Peter Parker, the X-Men, Fantastic Four, and more.

Both Secret Wars are among the most impactful Marvel Comics events of all time.

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I've been Newsarama's resident Marvel Comics expert and general comic 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 th꧒e guitarist of many heavy riffs. (They/Them)