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For Comic Geeks: Captain America Dies!

CougarKing

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Is it time to call in Captain Britain and Excalibur or Alpha Flight and Wolverine? (yes he was in it before and was Canadian as opposed to the way he's depicted in the current movies) hehehe...

Don't tell me Stan Lee or whoever authors the comic killed him to boost lagging sales the same way DC killed Superman for the same reasons? Oh well...la di da

http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20070307/ap_on_en_ot/captain_america

Report: Captain America dies on the page 1 hour, 14 minutes ago


NEW YORK - Captain America has undertaken his last mission — at least for now.

The venerable superhero is killed in the issue of his namesake comic that hit stands Wednesday, the New York Daily News reported. On the new edition's pages, a sniper shoots down the shield-wielding hero as he leaves a courthouse.

It ends a long run for the stars-and-stripes-wearing character, created in 1941. Over the years, some 210 million copies of Captain America comic books, published by New York-based Marvel Entertainment Inc., have been sold in 75 countries.

But resurrections are not unknown in the world of comics, and Marvel Entertainment Editor-in-Chief Joe Quesada said a Captain America comeback wasn't impossible.

Still, the character's death came as a blow to co-creator Joe Simon.

"We really need him now," said Simon, 93, who worked with artist Jack Kirby to devise Captain America as a foe for Adolf Hitler.

The superhero was spawned when a scrawny arts student named Steve Rogers, ineligible for the army because of his poor health but eager to serve his country, agreed to a "Super Soldier Serum" injection. The substance made him a paragon of physical perfection, armed only with his shield, his strength, his smarts and a command of martial arts.

In the comic-book universe, death is not always final. But even if Captain America turns out to have met his end in print, he may not disappear entirely: Marvel is developing a Captain America movie.
 
Shocking event for Captain America

http://www.cnn.com/2007/SHOWBIZ/books/03/07/captain.america/index.html

NEW YORK (CNN) -- He fought and triumphed over Hitler, Tojo, international Communism and a host of supervillains, but he could not dodge a sniper's bullet.

Comic book hero Captain America is dead.
 
I bought the comic today I haven't read it yet. ;D
 
They've killed off comic heroes before.  Superman, Green Lantern, Flash...

They all come back in one shape or form.  Remember "Vibe".  They never brought him back lol.
 
Sorry guys, it is just a marketing ploy by Marvel.
Captain America is one of Marvels biggest titles and w/ Brubaker writing it I can't see them killing him off.

I figure he will come back as "Ronin" now that Echo (Maya Lopez) has stopped being Ronin.
Newsarama
http://forum.newsarama.com/showthread.php?t=104117
Marvel
http://www.marvel.com/news/comicstories.879



 
Found this today about the "New Captain America"

http://forum.newsarama.com/showthread.php?t=104938

889new_storyimage3793928_full.jpg


Frank Castle as Captain America, very scary but cool.


 
Is Captain America to be resurrected? Don't get your hopes up yet, folks! Not quite yet...  ;)

http://www.military.com/NewsContent/0,13319,155907,00.html?wh=wh
Captain America Back From the Dead? Associated Press  |  November 10, 2007
DALLAS - Captain America may not be back from the dead, but he's back - sort of.

After Marvel Comics unexpectedly killed off the champion of liberty and the American way earlier this year, he appears in a comic made exclusively for U.S. Soldiers. He is seen on a videotape made before his death.

One million copies of "The New Avengers: The Spirit of America," the fifth in Marvel's series for the military, will be available free starting Saturday at military base stores worldwide.

The star-spangled Avenger's appearance is expected to create a demand for the comic, once word spreads among collectors.

"If you really, really want one, you need to know someone in the military," said Jim Skibo, director of support for the Dallas-based Army & Air Force Exchange Service, which is distributing the comic.

Captain America, whose secret identity was Steve Rogers, was felled by an assassin's bullet on the steps of a New York federal courthouse in a March issue after 66 years of battling villains from Adolf Hitler to the Red Skull.

Captain America is not being resurrected in "Spirit of America," said Bob Sabouni, Marvel's vice president of business development.

But when AAFES asked Marvel officials to include the hero in the latest military issue to be released before Veterans Day, they agreed because no other character better symbolizes the heroism and patriotism of the American Soldier, Sabouni said.

The story begins with Captain America on a videotape asking his fellow Avengers to protect a Soldier serving overseas and her brother, a National Guard member stationed in the U.S., from a terrorist organization.

Marvel Comics previously announced that another person will take over the mantle of Captain America early next year. His identity has not been revealed, and the costume will be revised, said Michael Pasciullo, Marvel's vice president of merchandising and communications.

Marvel Comics started the military series in 2005 after getting a call from a young boy, saying he could no longer afford to send comics to his two brothers serving in Iraq, Sabouni said.

Marvel sent the boy a box of comics but wanted to do more, so the company started working with AAFES to develop something just for Soldiers. The military series has been very popular, with books selling quickly after their release.

"You have the fantasy aspect, but they're staying true to our culture," said Lt. Col. William Thurmond, an AAFES spokesman. "You can't ask for anything more if you're a comic book fan."
 
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