Toronto Star

Captain America encounters country in doubt in new series

The cover art by Alex Ross for Captain America No. 1. Ta-Nehisi Coates goes inside the mind of a hero accused of betrayal

- DAVID BETANCOURT THE WASHINGTON POST

How does Steve Rogers handle an America that needs him to save the day but doesn’t want him to?

Ta-Nehisi Coates’s highly anticipate­d writing debut on a new Captain America series, complete with a Fourth of July release date and cover art from the legendary Alex Ross, arrives in print and digitally from Marvel Comics with the No. 1 Avenger unsure of the country’s trust in him.

Doubts and determinat­ion are establishe­d in Coates’s first issue of Captain America, beautifull­y illustrate­d by Leinil Francis Yu. The vibranium shield is still indestruct­ible, but the reputation of an all-American hero? Not so much. (That’s not to say we don’t see Rogers in action: The Captain and his shield come to the rescue multiple times.)

Coates places Captain America with familiar allies when he’s on the battlefiel­d (which, in issue No. 1, is Washington), teaming him up with his former sidekick Bucky Barnes/the Winter Soldier and Sharon Carter.

Some Americans still feel betrayed by Cap after a look-alike took over the nation with an iron grip in the Secret Empire story line. Coates uses Rogers’s voice in narrative captions to take us inside the mind of a hero determined to erase the doubts of a country.

In this issue, Captain America is on the front line of a terrorist attack in Washington, showing the compassion of a hero who is willing to negotiate with those putting people in harm’s way. Quick moments of attempted reason are followed by hard battlefiel­d decisions. While Captain America attempts the options that have less bloodshed while diving into a cell of evil, he’s not afraid to unleash retaliatio­n via the trigger finger of Barnes, who is always heavily armed and looking over his partner’s shoulder.

A highlight of the issue is the brief moment when we discover the effects that war has had on Captain America and his former sidekick: Cap always looks for a brighter and more inspiratio­nal way to do things in a fight. Coates paints Barnes, a former brainwashe­d assassin, as someone who has seen the worst of humanity and is numb to lethal decisions in battle.

Coates is giving us a Captain America that is out of place.

Now, equipped with an alltime Avenger, we can look at this new run by Coates and get a sense of what he feels it means to be an American superhero in these divisive times.

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MARVEL ENTERTAINM­ENT

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