![]() The difference is Bucky stayed “free” for decades while Isiah went to prison for 30 years for being a super-soldier. He doesn’t like Bucky because they used to be old Hydra buddies. Isiah (Carl Lumbly of Alias fame) doesn’t like Bucky very much (I love the cliche of an old friend who hates their guts). Sam calls upon an old friend who Bucky just happens to know from the Korean War. All four hitch a ride back into town and Walker makes a plea to Sam that he is, “Trying to be the best Captain America I can be and it will be a whole lot easier with Cap’s wingmen by my side.” Sam, smiles turns away and laughs. Poor Redwing was destroyed, and the boys get their asses handed to them. John Walker shows up with his right-hand man, Lemar Hoskins/Battlestar, and they more than hold his own. They think they found a hostage on board, a young girl played by Erin Kellyman, but she smiles wickedly and kicks Bucky out of the truck and into a windshield. They jump in the bad guy’s trucks because they are probably smuggling weapons, but they find out it’s a lot, I mean, A LOT, of vaccines. He falls through some trees, with his titanium arm. He doesn’t need it anyway is what he says. He jumps out of the plane without a parachute because, you know, Sam has wings. The Falcon and The Winter Soldier season 1, episode 2 recap: Munichīucky joins Sam over his objections. They hop on a plane based on Redwing’s intel, they these smashers, who are too strong and too fast to be your average criminal. Bucky tells him that is crazy, he read Lord of the Rings, brand new back in 1937, and there is no such thing as a wizard. They argue that these Flag Smashers have to be aliens, androids, or wizards. Their trademark bitter banter is back in heavy doses this episode, thank goodness. Government has resurrected a fallen hero (apparently they haven’t caught the inaugural episode of WandaVision). Sam/The Falcon (Anthony Mackie) and Bucky/The Winter Soldier (Sebastian Stan) still can’t believe that the U.S. He is honest, humble, and knows he has the guts to do the job. Being “The Star-Spangled Man” is in the job description. ![]() “Everyone in the world expects me to be something… and I don’t want to fail them.” His friends tell him to just be himself, which seems like bad advice - or is it? If he is as morally heroic as the original, shouldn’t he? And if he is not, then he wasn’t worthy to carry the shield to begin with. Oh, he’s also tall and looks the part, so that helps. John Walker, like most great heroes, doesn’t know if he deserves to wear the shield of Captain America. The Falcon and The Winter Soldier season 1, episode 2 recap: Captain America: Light
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