

Captain America leads the fight for freedom in the action-packed blockbuster starring Chris Evans as the ultimate weapon against evil! When a terrifying force threatens everyone across the globe, the world's greatest soldier wages war on the evil HYDRA organization, led by the villainous red Skull (Hugo Weaving, THE MATRIX). Critics and audiences alike salute CAPTAIN AMERICA: THE FIRST AVENGER as "pure excitement, pure action, and pure fun!" (Bryan Erdy, CBS-TV/Movie Planet). Review: Two Words: Hayley Atwell - This is the best comic book movie to be released this summer. That is what it is, a comic book movie. It does not surpass that level but nobody ever said it had to. While not a Spider-man 2 or Dark Knight it fits in well as a first entry in an inevitable series. Perhaps not the fun, turn the formula on its head, film that Iron Man was, it is still an excellent comic book film that manages to have developed characters and a story actually propelled by plot rather than CG sequences (I'm looking at you Transformers 2 and 3). Still, even with all its positive attributes the film might've been largely a one time viewing for me, that is, if it hadn't been for Hayley Atwell as Peggy Carter. My personal, and largest, issue with comic book movies has been their seeming inability to cast memorable and talented women in the leading lady spot. While the leading lady role has frequently been nothing more than a damsel in distress (other than perhaps in team up movies such as X-men), something unfortunately true even of Nolan's gritty Dark Knight films, here we find that is not the case. Peggy Carter is a female character who stands out amongst the many comic book movie female characters. She is strong willed, independent, can handle herself, never asks for help, doesn't take any crap and does it all in a period where women were undeniably treated as less than men. She does all these things yet she can still walk into a bar in the middle of the film wearing a red dress that leaves everyone at a loss for words. Even better than Peggy Carter's character, and the reason I named the actress rather than the character in my review title, was the casting of Hayley Atwell in the role. The character could have become something much different without a capable actress to play the balance of tough yet feminine. Worse it could have been filled by some less capable big name actress for box office draw. For years in comic book movies I have either dreaded or at best barely stomached the casting of female leading roles. Kirsten Dunst had her moments in the Spidey films but then would come the time when she had to be kidnapped and scream and holler for help, she also always needed a man in her life, if not Peter then another stand in to take his place. Batman Begins casting of Katie Holmes always seemed strange to me, why in a film full of lower status but credible actors would Nolan cast a more household name with much less credibility? Whatever the reason, she played the part but it is not the role anyone remembers from that film. The same goes for the sequel, in which I had high hopes Maggie Gyllenhaal would make welcome changes to the previously pitchy character, unfortunately I dare say that Rachel Dawes only became more helpless and became the one negative to be found in The Dark Knight. More recently I was disappointed to find Gwenyth and Natalie both playing supposed strong women but one (Pepper Potts) who is subordinate to a man who treats her badly and still needs to be saved in the end and the other (Jane Foster) fairly shallow and school girlish overall. While Jane only likes Thor at first because of his muscles, Peggy meets Steve Rogers/The Cap when he is a ninety pound weakling. We see her first tinge of interest in him when he is still this small, all based on his philosophies on fighting and dating. It is this established connection before he becomes a perfect male specimen that cements the story and keeps us truly engaged. Peggy and Steve truly bring out the best in eachother and actually share a common bond of struggling to break free from their respective stereotypes that allows the audience to believe in their relationship, one that is actually formed out of friendship first. The film is great and a wonderful starting point for a series, the ending is unique if only a plot device required for the Avengers tie in and I truly can't wait to see where they take Captain America in his sequel. He has by the end of the film, especially thanks to Peggy Carter, become quite a different hero with quite a different chip on his shoulders than any we have yet to see. So I have wondered why comic book movies don't cast relatively unknown actresses to play these parts and allow them to really create a character. Finally Captain America has done just that with the lovely Hayley Atwell as Peggy Carter and I hope we see much more of it in future comic book films. The saddest part of Captain America and perhaps the thing that compells me to want to see it again Repeated times is that based on the ending it is very unlikely we will see the fantastic Peggy Carter/Hayley Atwell in all her glory in any of the sequels. They have some big shoes to fill when they inevitably try to create a Sharon Carter character, let's hope they take cues from however it was that they came to choose Hayley. **By the way, I would like it if Hayley or someone like her played Wonder Woman for DC, brits are already playing supes and batman might as well fill in the big three with a third, and let's not only have a more obscure actress with talent but one who can fill out the costume properly, no stick thing actresses such as when people were rallying for Megan Fox to play WW. Review: Awesome - This is the first movie in the MCU timeline if you want to watch the movies in chronological order and the fifth if you watch them in release order (after Iron Man, Hulk, Iron Man II, and Thor). It tells the story of Steve Rodgers, a short scrawny kid who wants nothing more than to enlist in the army and fight for the United States in World War II. The problem is that he is about 5'5", 100 pounds soaking wet, and has asthma. After getting rejected time after time trying to sign up, he meets a doctor (played by Stanley Tucci) who developed a super-soldier serum and is looking for a worthy candidate to test it on. After Steve proves himself to be heroic during basic training he is given the serum and transforms into a six-foot-tall muscle-bound super-powered hero. The film sports a great ensemble cast including Tommy Lee Jones (who brings his awesome dry humor as the unit commander Chester Phillips), Hayley Atwell as Peggy Carter, Hugo Weaving as the main villain, Red Skull, Dominic Cooper as a young Howard Stark, Sebastian Stan as Steve's best friend Bucky Barnes, and Toby Jones as Arnim Zola. Some of those characters, as anyone who has watched the movies and/or various TV series, would go on to have roles that were expanded well beyond what they are in this movie, and for other characters, this movie was a one-off. It is mostly an action movie, as you would expect, but also blends in drama, romance, and a lot of humor. Evans does a great job playing a goody-two-shoes character but giving him depth beyond just being a do-gooder. Atwell does a great job as Agent Carter, and Hugo Weaving pretty much steals every scene he is in. For those who get the 4k UHD set, the movie looks and sounds great in the format, especially if you have a big screen to watch it on. The picture is definitely an upgrade from the regular Blu-Ray. The UHD disc just has the movie itself, and then the second disc is the same regular Blu-Ray disc that was released before, which has the movie and the extras. The extras include a commentary track on the film by the director and the editor, then it has several making-of featurettes, the most interesting of which was, in my opinion, how they used a blend of CGI and practical effects to make Chris Evans look five inches shorter than he is in real life and emaciated at the beginning of the movie. Then there are some deleted scenes and trailers. So, if you like watching the bonus content, there is a lot there for you. The movie is very good and does a great job establishing the character of Captain America who, of course, is integral to every other movie that comes after it. If you watch this movie first it will make some things in other movies, namely the stand-alone Hulk movie, make more sense, but the post-credits scene which sets up The first Avengers movie will feel out of place. The 4K disc will probably be a double-dip for a lot of people who had already purchased the Blu-Ray, but I think the upgrade is worth it.

| ASIN | B00E5I2MEK |
| Actors | Chris Evans, Hayley Atwell, Hugo Weaving, Sebastian Stan, Tommy Lee Jones |
| Aspect Ratio | 2.35:1 |
| Best Sellers Rank | #11,909 in Movies & TV ( See Top 100 in Movies & TV ) #5,705 in DVD |
| Customer Reviews | 4.8 4.8 out of 5 stars (22,276) |
| Director | Joe Johnston |
| Dubbed: | English, French, Spanish |
| Is Discontinued By Manufacturer | No |
| Item model number | WD11899400DVD |
| Language | English (Dolby Digital 5.1), French (Dolby Digital 5.1), Spanish (Dolby Digital 5.1) |
| MPAA rating | PG-13 (Parents Strongly Cautioned) |
| Media Format | NTSC, Subtitled |
| Number of discs | 1 |
| Product Dimensions | 0.7 x 7.5 x 5.4 inches; 2.4 ounces |
| Release date | September 24, 2013 |
| Run time | 2 hours and 5 minutes |
| Studio | MARVEL |
| Subtitles: | English, French, Spanish |
| Writers | Christopher Markus, Stephen McFeely |
R**D
Two Words: Hayley Atwell
This is the best comic book movie to be released this summer. That is what it is, a comic book movie. It does not surpass that level but nobody ever said it had to. While not a Spider-man 2 or Dark Knight it fits in well as a first entry in an inevitable series. Perhaps not the fun, turn the formula on its head, film that Iron Man was, it is still an excellent comic book film that manages to have developed characters and a story actually propelled by plot rather than CG sequences (I'm looking at you Transformers 2 and 3). Still, even with all its positive attributes the film might've been largely a one time viewing for me, that is, if it hadn't been for Hayley Atwell as Peggy Carter. My personal, and largest, issue with comic book movies has been their seeming inability to cast memorable and talented women in the leading lady spot. While the leading lady role has frequently been nothing more than a damsel in distress (other than perhaps in team up movies such as X-men), something unfortunately true even of Nolan's gritty Dark Knight films, here we find that is not the case. Peggy Carter is a female character who stands out amongst the many comic book movie female characters. She is strong willed, independent, can handle herself, never asks for help, doesn't take any crap and does it all in a period where women were undeniably treated as less than men. She does all these things yet she can still walk into a bar in the middle of the film wearing a red dress that leaves everyone at a loss for words. Even better than Peggy Carter's character, and the reason I named the actress rather than the character in my review title, was the casting of Hayley Atwell in the role. The character could have become something much different without a capable actress to play the balance of tough yet feminine. Worse it could have been filled by some less capable big name actress for box office draw. For years in comic book movies I have either dreaded or at best barely stomached the casting of female leading roles. Kirsten Dunst had her moments in the Spidey films but then would come the time when she had to be kidnapped and scream and holler for help, she also always needed a man in her life, if not Peter then another stand in to take his place. Batman Begins casting of Katie Holmes always seemed strange to me, why in a film full of lower status but credible actors would Nolan cast a more household name with much less credibility? Whatever the reason, she played the part but it is not the role anyone remembers from that film. The same goes for the sequel, in which I had high hopes Maggie Gyllenhaal would make welcome changes to the previously pitchy character, unfortunately I dare say that Rachel Dawes only became more helpless and became the one negative to be found in The Dark Knight. More recently I was disappointed to find Gwenyth and Natalie both playing supposed strong women but one (Pepper Potts) who is subordinate to a man who treats her badly and still needs to be saved in the end and the other (Jane Foster) fairly shallow and school girlish overall. While Jane only likes Thor at first because of his muscles, Peggy meets Steve Rogers/The Cap when he is a ninety pound weakling. We see her first tinge of interest in him when he is still this small, all based on his philosophies on fighting and dating. It is this established connection before he becomes a perfect male specimen that cements the story and keeps us truly engaged. Peggy and Steve truly bring out the best in eachother and actually share a common bond of struggling to break free from their respective stereotypes that allows the audience to believe in their relationship, one that is actually formed out of friendship first. The film is great and a wonderful starting point for a series, the ending is unique if only a plot device required for the Avengers tie in and I truly can't wait to see where they take Captain America in his sequel. He has by the end of the film, especially thanks to Peggy Carter, become quite a different hero with quite a different chip on his shoulders than any we have yet to see. So I have wondered why comic book movies don't cast relatively unknown actresses to play these parts and allow them to really create a character. Finally Captain America has done just that with the lovely Hayley Atwell as Peggy Carter and I hope we see much more of it in future comic book films. The saddest part of Captain America and perhaps the thing that compells me to want to see it again Repeated times is that based on the ending it is very unlikely we will see the fantastic Peggy Carter/Hayley Atwell in all her glory in any of the sequels. They have some big shoes to fill when they inevitably try to create a Sharon Carter character, let's hope they take cues from however it was that they came to choose Hayley. **By the way, I would like it if Hayley or someone like her played Wonder Woman for DC, brits are already playing supes and batman might as well fill in the big three with a third, and let's not only have a more obscure actress with talent but one who can fill out the costume properly, no stick thing actresses such as when people were rallying for Megan Fox to play WW.
S**R
Awesome
This is the first movie in the MCU timeline if you want to watch the movies in chronological order and the fifth if you watch them in release order (after Iron Man, Hulk, Iron Man II, and Thor). It tells the story of Steve Rodgers, a short scrawny kid who wants nothing more than to enlist in the army and fight for the United States in World War II. The problem is that he is about 5'5", 100 pounds soaking wet, and has asthma. After getting rejected time after time trying to sign up, he meets a doctor (played by Stanley Tucci) who developed a super-soldier serum and is looking for a worthy candidate to test it on. After Steve proves himself to be heroic during basic training he is given the serum and transforms into a six-foot-tall muscle-bound super-powered hero. The film sports a great ensemble cast including Tommy Lee Jones (who brings his awesome dry humor as the unit commander Chester Phillips), Hayley Atwell as Peggy Carter, Hugo Weaving as the main villain, Red Skull, Dominic Cooper as a young Howard Stark, Sebastian Stan as Steve's best friend Bucky Barnes, and Toby Jones as Arnim Zola. Some of those characters, as anyone who has watched the movies and/or various TV series, would go on to have roles that were expanded well beyond what they are in this movie, and for other characters, this movie was a one-off. It is mostly an action movie, as you would expect, but also blends in drama, romance, and a lot of humor. Evans does a great job playing a goody-two-shoes character but giving him depth beyond just being a do-gooder. Atwell does a great job as Agent Carter, and Hugo Weaving pretty much steals every scene he is in. For those who get the 4k UHD set, the movie looks and sounds great in the format, especially if you have a big screen to watch it on. The picture is definitely an upgrade from the regular Blu-Ray. The UHD disc just has the movie itself, and then the second disc is the same regular Blu-Ray disc that was released before, which has the movie and the extras. The extras include a commentary track on the film by the director and the editor, then it has several making-of featurettes, the most interesting of which was, in my opinion, how they used a blend of CGI and practical effects to make Chris Evans look five inches shorter than he is in real life and emaciated at the beginning of the movie. Then there are some deleted scenes and trailers. So, if you like watching the bonus content, there is a lot there for you. The movie is very good and does a great job establishing the character of Captain America who, of course, is integral to every other movie that comes after it. If you watch this movie first it will make some things in other movies, namely the stand-alone Hulk movie, make more sense, but the post-credits scene which sets up The first Avengers movie will feel out of place. The 4K disc will probably be a double-dip for a lot of people who had already purchased the Blu-Ray, but I think the upgrade is worth it.
J**B
Super film
M**T
Zum Inhalt des Filmes denke ich, brauche ich nichts sagen. Worum es geht kann man gut am Trailer, der hier bei Amazon zu sehen ist, erkennen. Ich möchte mich auf die Qualität, dem Steelbook und des Geschmackes widmen. ::: Qualität/ Geschmack des Filmes ::: Wie ich finde ist es ein Typisch Amerikanischer Film, in dem EIN MANN (in dem Fall ein Superheld) gegen alle anderen Kämpft und überlebt. Captain America ist eben ein Superheld wie Thor, der Hulk, Iron Man und Co. Und genau darin erkennt man, das sich die Story in Form von Action Einlagen ähnelt aber in keinster Weise bekannt oder uninteressant wirkt. Ebenso ist Captain America der letzte Action Film der Marvel Studios, der einen der vielen Superhelden in ihrer Eigenen Geschichte darstellt. Besonders Interessant an Captain America ist, das dieser mitunter die Basis für den neuen Film "The Avengers", indem alle Superhelden wie Iron Man, der Hulk, Thor und natürlich Captain America zu sehen sein werden, liefert und einen sehr guten Übergang aller Filme zum neuen "The Avengers" gibt. Captain America verbindet ebenso zu dem letzten Projekt "Iron Man 1 & 2". Wer also an "The Avengers" interssiert ist und in Vergangenheit auch nur annähernd einen der genannten Superhelden geguckt hat, muss sich Captain America ansehen ... und dass ist wirklich ganz großes Action Kino. Jedoch von Unrealismus geprägt, aber das sind Iron Man und Co. ebenso. Das ist eben genau das, was diese dargestellten Figuren ausmacht und so eigenartig macht. ::: Steelbook ::: Als Sammler schöner und seltener Steelbooks kann ich dieses nur Empfehlen. Es ist wunderbar lakiert und der Schriftzug "Captain America plus zusatz" ist wunderbar in das Steelbook geprägt. Es wirkt sehr hochwertig und ist für Präsentationen in Regalen oder Vitrinen hervorragend geeignet. Die Einlagerung der Medien in das Steelbook ist ausreichend und schutzig. Die BluRayŽs respektive die DVD lassen sich leicht per Knopfdruck entfernen. Was die Darstellung und bedruckung der Medien angeht ist eher Sparflamme angesagt. Außer den Aufdrucken des Film Titels plus FSK Logos und den Infos um welches Medium es sich handelt, sehen sie sehr schlicht aus. Wie es auch schon bei dem von Paramount veröffentlichten Transformers 3 - Dark of the moon (limitiertes Steelbook inkl. DVD & Digital Copy) [Blu-ray ] ::: Fazit ::: Diese Version ist in jedem Fall für alle Sammler solcher Versionen aber auch für einfache Action Fans geeignet. Das Preis/Leistungs Verhältnis ist auf jedenfall Fair!
T**R
During World War II, Steve Rodgers wants nothing more than to join the army and to fight for his country but is unable to due to being a weak and sickly young man. He eventually gets a chance to prove himself when he is chosen to be part of an experiment to create a serum that could conceivably create the perfect soldier. Meanwhile in Europe Johann Schmidt, head of an organization called HYDRA, discovers an ancient and powerful device that could change the course of the war. The last of the individual films that lead up to the 'Avengers' movie, 'Captain America' is a greatly entertaining film and is probably one of my favourite Marvel film to date. Although the film itself is somewhat unsophisticated in its plot or execution, it still has some nice action scenes as well as some good humour and having a nice tone for the entire film. Chris Evans is good as Captain America himself, and Tommy Lee Jones is as great as always as Colonel Phillips, but it is Hugo Weaving who gives the best performance in the film as he hams it up (seemingly channelling the late Raul Julia in places) as the villainous Johann Schmidt, the Red Skull. The film isn't without its problems as some of the special effects are a little of a let-down and some of the tactics used in the battle scenes are rather simple. As well as this, there are moments in the film where it feels like it is doing nothing more than setting things up the 'Avengers' movie. These are relatively minor problems with an otherwise greatly entertaining film that is easily worth a full five stars.
J**A
Very Good movie, excellent DVD print, comes in hard dvd box/case and subtitles in many languages. I bought it at very low price which was not available later on.
F**N
A strong origin story that introduces Steve Rogers and sets the stage for the wider MCU. Chris Evans delivers a solid performance, convincingly portraying both the vulnerable, earnest Steve and the heroic Captain America. The film balances action, character development, and 1940s period detail effectively. Some of the villains and plot points feel a bit predictable, and the pacing is slower in the middle, but it remains a satisfying and inspiring superhero story. A must-watch for fans of the MCU’s early phase.
Trustpilot
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