9 / 10
I have watched Captain America: The First Avenger once. The 9 reflects honest evaluation of the most disciplined origin film in the Marvel Cinematic Universe and the entry that gave the franchise its moral center. Chris Evans’s Steve Rogers performance is the single most underrated leading turn in the MCU. Joe Johnston’s direction handles the World War II period material with the kind of seriousness most superhero films do not attempt. The film commits to a specific tone (1940s patriotic adventure) and sustains that tone for its entire runtime without irony. The result is one of the few MCU entries that survives multiple rewatches because the craft is consistent throughout.
The Setup
Steve Rogers is a small, sickly young man from Brooklyn during World War II who keeps failing physical examinations for military service. He keeps trying because he believes in fighting bullies, having grown up small and weak in a country at war. Dr. Abraham Erskine, a German scientist who defected to the Allies, recognizes in Rogers the moral qualities a super-soldier program requires and authorizes his enrollment despite his physical limitations. The Erskine serum transforms Rogers into a physically superhuman version of himself. Erskine is assassinated immediately afterward by a Hydra agent, eliminating the possibility of creating additional super-soldiers.
Rogers spends the middle act of the film as a propaganda figure performing in USO shows while the actual war continues without him. When he learns that his best friend Bucky Barnes has been captured by Hydra, he disobeys orders to mount a solo rescue mission that succeeds against impossible odds. Rogers becomes a frontline combat operator leading a special forces unit against Hydra. The climactic confrontation pits Rogers against Hydra’s leader, the Red Skull, whose own use of an inferior version of the Erskine serum has left him physically deformed and ideologically extreme. Rogers crashes a plane carrying weapons of mass destruction into the Arctic to prevent the weapons from being used on American cities and is presumed dead. The film ends with Rogers waking up seventy years later in a SHIELD facility to discover he has been frozen since 1945.
Chris Evans As Steve Rogers
Evans was thirty years old when this film shot. The performance is the most consistent character work across the entire MCU. Steve Rogers as written is a difficult role because the character’s moral certainty could easily read as bland or sanctimonious. Evans plays Rogers with the specific texture of a man whose moral certainty is hard-earned rather than inherited. The pre-serum Rogers is physically slight but emotionally formidable. The post-serum Rogers is physically formidable but emotionally unchanged. The character continuity across the physical transformation is what makes the performance work. Evans communicates that the serum amplified what was already there rather than creating something new.
The casting was contested before production began. Evans had previously played Johnny Storm in Fox’s Fantastic Four films and was associated with a more frivolous superhero register. The decision to cast him as Rogers required Marvel Studios to believe that Evans had range the previous casting had not allowed him to demonstrate. The bet paid off. Evans played Rogers across nine MCU films, from 2011’s First Avenger through 2019’s Endgame, and the character remained consistent throughout. The continuity of the performance across nearly a decade of films is one of the franchise’s quietly important achievements.
The pre-serum sequences required substantial visual effects work to digitally reduce Evans’s body to match the physical requirements of the small Rogers. The effects are remarkably effective. The small Rogers reads as a real person rather than as a CGI character. Evans’s performance choices (specific physical postures, specific vocal register, specific facial work) sell the smallness as character rather than as effects display. The early scenes in which small Rogers fails his physical examinations or refuses to back down from a bigger bully in an alley are some of the film’s most affecting material. The performance is doing as much work as the effects.
For Writers
Captain America: The First Avenger demonstrates that character continuity across physical transformation is the foundation of any believable transformation arc. Steve Rogers becomes physically different after the Erskine serum. Steve Rogers remains the same person. The film’s central craft achievement is showing that the moral and emotional qualities the audience invested in during the pre-serum sequences carry forward into the post-serum sequences without modification. The transformation is amplification, not replacement. The lesson for writers handling transformation arcs is that whatever changes must be measured against what stays the same. If everything changes, the audience loses the protagonist they were invested in. If nothing changes, the transformation was not real. The middle path is the difficult one: specific physical or circumstantial changes anchored to specific character continuities that the audience can recognize and trust. Steve Rogers shows this principle operating at the highest level. The pre-serum scenes establish the character. The post-serum scenes prove the character survived the change. The audience accepts the transformation because the audience can locate the protagonist on both sides of it.
The Period Filmmaking
Joe Johnston’s direction commits to the World War II period in ways most superhero films do not attempt. The production design includes specific 1940s technology, architecture, costuming, vehicles, and weaponry. The visual palette draws on the period’s actual film stocks and aesthetic conventions. The musical score by Alan Silvestri integrates patriotic march elements with action film conventions. The cumulative effect is a film that feels like a period adventure film with superhero elements rather than a superhero film with period setting.
The commitment to the period gives the film its specific identity within the MCU. Subsequent Captain America films would operate in contemporary settings (Winter Soldier in modern Washington, Civil War in modern international locations, Brave New World in the near-future). The First Avenger remains the only Phase One film entirely set in a period before 2008. The period commitment provided the franchise with a tonal alternative to its contemporary entries that subsequent Phase One films benefited from establishing. The audience that watched The Avengers in 2012 understood that the MCU could operate in multiple time periods because The First Avenger had demonstrated the capability.
The USO show sequence in the middle act is one of the franchise’s most quietly inventive set pieces. Rogers, having received the serum, is initially used as a war-bond marketing figure rather than as a soldier. The USO numbers feature Rogers in a stage Captain America costume performing musical numbers for civilian audiences. The sequence is comedic, character-developing, and structurally important. Rogers’s frustration at being a performance rather than a soldier sets up his eventual disobedience to mount the Bucky rescue mission. The sequence also gives the audience visual familiarity with the Captain America persona before Rogers earns the right to actually be Captain America in combat. The structural elegance is rare in superhero filmmaking. Most origin films skip equivalent material in favor of accelerating to combat sequences.
Hugo Weaving As Red Skull
Hugo Weaving plays Johann Schmidt, the Hydra leader who becomes the Red Skull after his own use of an inferior version of the Erskine serum. The performance is one of the better MCU villain turns and is underrated relative to subsequent franchise antagonists. Weaving plays Schmidt with the specific theatrical intensity that has defined his career through The Matrix, Lord of the Rings, and V for Vendetta. The character has clear ideological positions, specific physical capabilities, and a coherent antagonistic relationship to Rogers. Weaving commits to the material with operatic seriousness that contrasts effectively with the more grounded heroism Evans is playing.
The Red Skull makeup work is some of the best practical-effects villain design in modern superhero film. The character’s deformation reads as the consequence of his own moral choices rather than as decorative monstrosity. The visual presents him as what he has made himself into rather than as what fate did to him. The contrast with Rogers, whose transformation was the consequence of moral selection rather than personal choice, gives the antagonism thematic weight. The two characters represent the two possible outcomes of the same scientific process applied to different starting moral conditions.
Weaving did not return as Red Skull in subsequent MCU films, leading to a recasting when the character reappeared in Infinity War. The recasting was unsuccessful. The Red Skull who appears in Infinity War and Endgame is played by Ross Marquand and operates as a generic spirit guide rather than as the threatening antagonist Weaving had established. The franchise lost something specific by not retaining Weaving. The original performance remains the canonical version of the character.
Bucky Barnes And The Supporting Cast
Sebastian Stan plays James Buchanan “Bucky” Barnes, Steve Rogers’s best friend from Brooklyn who joins the war effort as a sergeant. The character functions in this film as the emotional motivation for Rogers’s character development. Bucky’s capture by Hydra prompts Rogers’s first combat mission. Bucky’s apparent death during a train sequence in the third act drives Rogers’s grief through the remainder of the film. Stan plays the character with specific warmth that establishes the friendship as real before the film ends his arc. The performance becomes more important in retrospect because Bucky returns as the Winter Soldier in subsequent films, and the audience’s investment in his original characterization depends substantially on Stan’s work in this first film.
Hayley Atwell plays Peggy Carter, a British military intelligence officer assigned to the super-soldier program. The performance is one of the most successful female-lead introductions in the early MCU. Carter is competent, romantically reciprocal with Rogers without being subordinate to him, and physically capable in combat situations. Atwell brings the kind of period-appropriate grace and directness that the character requires. The Rogers-Carter relationship is the franchise’s only sustained heterosexual romance that operates as actual character development rather than as decorative subplot. Carter returns in subsequent MCU films and in her own Marvel One-Shot short film, and the foundation Atwell built in this first appearance is what makes the later projects work.
Tommy Lee Jones plays Colonel Chester Phillips, the army officer overseeing the super-soldier program. The performance is precisely calibrated. Phillips begins the film skeptical of Rogers’s selection and concludes the film as one of his strongest supporters. Jones plays the trajectory through specific verbal register and physical economy rather than through expository dialogue. The character is functional rather than central but the performance is one of the film’s quiet pleasures.
Stanley Tucci plays Dr. Abraham Erskine in his brief appearance before being assassinated. The role is small but essential. Erskine identifies the moral qualities in Rogers that the serum will amplify. His death immediately after Rogers’s transformation eliminates the possibility of additional super-soldiers and gives the franchise its single-Captain-America structure. Tucci plays the role with specific dignity that elevates what could have been a generic mentor character into someone the audience mourns when he dies. The death scene is one of the film’s most affecting moments.
For Writers
The Erskine selection sequence is a masterclass in establishing protagonist moral foundation through specific test rather than through dialogue. The film does not have Erskine tell the audience that Rogers is a good person. The film has Erskine test Rogers across multiple specific situations and demonstrates Rogers’s moral capacity through Rogers’s responses. The fake grenade in the training yard is the central test. Rogers throws himself on the grenade to protect his fellow soldiers, demonstrating self-sacrifice as instinct rather than as calculation. The other soldiers run for cover. Erskine selects Rogers because the test revealed the moral foundation the serum requires. The lesson for writers is that character can be established more efficiently through demonstrated action than through stated quality. If your script has characters declaring that the protagonist is brave or kind or honest, your script is showing weakness. The audience needs to see the bravery, the kindness, or the honesty in specific situations the character did not know were tests. Captain America: The First Avenger shows this principle operating at multiple points and the cumulative effect is a protagonist the audience trusts because the audience has seen him pass specific moral tests rather than been told he would pass them.
The Action Sequences
The action sequences are competent without being among the franchise’s most spectacular. The film’s commitment to the period setting limits the visual register to practical-effects-driven combat with period-appropriate weaponry. The result is action that feels grounded in physical reality rather than in visual-effects spectacle. The Hydra base infiltration sequences, the train ambush where Bucky falls, the climactic confrontation with Red Skull on his plane: all of these are kinetically composed and effectively staged. None of them reach the visual ambition of later MCU climaxes. The trade is intentional. The film prioritizes character and tone over spectacle and the priorities show in the action choreography.
The aerial sequence in which Rogers crashes the Hydra weapon plane into the Arctic is one of the franchise’s most emotionally weighted action moments. Rogers chooses self-sacrifice to prevent weapons of mass destruction from reaching American cities. The radio conversation between Rogers and Peggy Carter as the plane goes down is the film’s most affecting beat. Rogers tells Carter that he is going to need a rain check on their dance. The conversation establishes that the romance is real and that Rogers’s loss matters. The crash sequence transitions directly into the modern-day awakening that sets up The Avengers and the subsequent MCU. The structural elegance of the final sequence is one of the film’s most successful achievements.
Craft: The Origin Film That Built A Moral Foundation
Craft Note
Captain America: The First Avenger is the MCU’s most disciplined origin film and the entry that gave the franchise its moral foundation. The discipline shows in specific choices that other superhero origin films routinely fail to make.
The film commits to its period setting without irony for the entire runtime. The audience receives the 1940s as a real time rather than as a stylistic affectation. The film commits to its central character’s moral seriousness without undercutting it through comedic deflation. Rogers is allowed to be earnest, brave, and honorable without the script signaling embarrassment about these qualities. The film commits to its supporting characters as real people rather than as functional roles. Erskine, Carter, Bucky, and Phillips all have specific texture that the script honors. The film commits to its central transformation through extended setup, careful execution, and consistent character continuity across the physical change.
The cumulative discipline produced the character who would anchor the MCU’s moral framework for the next decade. Steve Rogers became the franchise’s most consistently respected protagonist across multiple films because the foundation built in this first film was sturdy enough to support extensive subsequent development. Iron Man gave the MCU its commercial viability. Captain America: The First Avenger gave the MCU its moral compass. The franchise needed both. The combination of Stark’s complexity and Rogers’s clarity is what made the Avengers ensemble work and what gave the Civil War conflict its dramatic weight.
The lesson for franchise filmmaking is that the moral center of a serialized franchise is not optional. Audiences will tolerate flawed protagonists, antiheroes, and complicated central figures for a limited time. Audiences will lose interest in franchises that cannot offer at least one character whose moral compass can be trusted. Steve Rogers was the MCU’s trusted compass for over a decade. The franchise’s subsequent decline correlates with the absence of a comparable replacement after Rogers’s Endgame retirement. Sam Wilson’s transition into the Captain America identity has not produced equivalent audience trust. The Phase Four collapse partly reflects the franchise’s failure to maintain a moral center after the original moral center exited. The First Avenger established what the franchise depended on without fully recognizing what it had received. The film deserves credit for what it built that subsequent films inherited.
Captain America: The First Avenger connects to the broader Infinity Saga arc through the establishment of Steve Rogers as the moral center the franchise would build around. For the larger structural analysis of how the franchise concluded that arc, see The Snap, The Blip, And The Catastrophe The MCU Refused To Show.
The Verdict
A 9. Captain America: The First Avenger is the most disciplined origin film in the MCU and one of the franchise’s quietly important achievements. Chris Evans’s Steve Rogers performance established the character who would anchor the franchise’s moral framework for over a decade. Joe Johnston’s direction handled the World War II period material with sustained seriousness. Hugo Weaving’s Red Skull is one of the better MCU villain performances. Hayley Atwell’s Peggy Carter, Sebastian Stan’s Bucky Barnes, Tommy Lee Jones’s Colonel Phillips, and Stanley Tucci’s Dr. Erskine all contribute specific texture to the supporting cast.
I have watched it once. I would watch it again. The 9 is the right rating. The point withheld from a perfect score is for the period-limited action register, which is competent rather than spectacular. A film that committed more fully to spectacle would have produced more memorable action sequences. The trade was intentional and was the right trade for what this specific film was trying to accomplish. The MCU built itself on the foundation this film provided. The film deserves more critical attention than it has received in the years since release.
FAQ
Why is this rated higher than most subsequent MCU films?
Because the craft discipline is consistent throughout. Most MCU films succeed in some dimensions and fail in others. The First Avenger commits to period setting, character continuity, moral seriousness, and supporting cast specificity at the same level across the entire runtime. The aggregate effect is a film that holds together better than most of its successors. The 9 reflects this consistency rather than any single spectacular element.
Is Chris Evans’s performance really that good?
Yes. The role required range across physical transformation, sustained moral certainty across multiple decades of MCU appearances, and emotional capacity that the early MCU rarely demanded of its leads. Evans delivered all three across nine films from 2011 through 2019. The performance was widely undervalued during its run because the character was less flashy than Tony Stark or Thor. The retrospective evaluation has been more favorable. Steve Rogers is now widely considered one of the franchise’s most fully realized characters and Evans’s contribution to that achievement is increasingly recognized.
What is the Erskine serum?
A scientific process developed by Abraham Erskine that amplifies the physical and moral qualities present in its subject. The serum applied to Steve Rogers produced a physically superhuman version of an already morally exceptional person. The serum applied to Johann Schmidt earlier in the timeline produced the Red Skull, whose moral deficiencies were amplified along with his physical capabilities. The thematic point is that the serum reveals what is already there rather than creating new qualities. The mechanism gives the film its moral structure and provides the contrast between Rogers and Schmidt.
How does the film handle the Bucky death?
Bucky falls from a moving train during a Hydra base assault in the third act. Rogers attempts to grab him but cannot reach in time. Bucky falls into a frozen ravine and is presumed dead. The scene is filmed with specific gravity and is one of the film’s most affecting beats. Rogers’s grief drives the remainder of the film. Bucky’s actual survival is not revealed until the post-credits material and the subsequent Winter Soldier film. The “death” sequence as filmed lands as a real loss because the film does not telegraph that Bucky will return. The audience experiences the moment as Rogers experiences it.
What is the post-credits scene?
The film’s post-credits sequence shows Rogers waking up in a SHIELD facility seventy years after the Arctic crash. Nick Fury approaches him and explains the situation. The scene also includes footage from The Avengers, scheduled for release the following year. The post-credits material established the connection between The First Avenger and the subsequent ensemble film. The convention had been established by Iron Man and was now an expected element of MCU releases. The First Avenger’s post-credits material is one of the more emotionally weighted examples of the convention because Rogers’s displacement from his own time is the actual subject of the moment.
Does the film work for viewers who do not like superhero films?
Yes, more than most MCU entries. The period setting, the disciplined direction, the sustained character work, and the absence of franchise self-reference all combine to produce a film that operates as a standalone World War II adventure with superhero elements. Viewers who do not engage with superhero film conventions can still engage with the film through its period-adventure register. The First Avenger is one of the few MCU films that works without the franchise context surrounding it.
How does this compare to subsequent Captain America films?
The Winter Soldier in 2014 is the franchise’s peak film and is a different kind of accomplishment (1970s political thriller in superhero clothing). Civil War in 2016 represents the beginning of the franchise’s moral confusion and is rated significantly lower. Brave New World in 2025 represents the franchise’s continued attempts to recover the Steve Rogers register without the actor or the character. The First Avenger and Winter Soldier are the two peaks of the Captain America sub-franchise. The subsequent entries have not matched either.
Why didn’t Hugo Weaving return as Red Skull?
Public reports cite Weaving’s stated dissatisfaction with his Red Skull experience and his general reluctance to commit to long-term franchise obligations. He declined to return for subsequent films and was eventually recast for the character’s reappearance in Infinity War. The recasting was widely considered unsuccessful. The replacement Red Skull operates as a generic spirit guide rather than as the threatening antagonist Weaving had established. The franchise paid a creative cost for the recasting that Marvel Studios’ negotiation with Weaving could have potentially avoided.
Is this film worth watching for non-MCU fans?
Yes. The period setting, the disciplined direction, and the sustained character work make this one of the few MCU films that can be recommended to viewers who do not engage with the broader franchise. The film operates as a complete experience without requiring familiarity with other MCU material. Viewers who watch only this film from the entire franchise will have received one of the better period adventure films of the 2010s.