Steve Rogers, wary of political agendas after discovering HYDRA's infiltration of S.H.I.E.L.D., believes that "the safest hands are still our own". He fears that oversight will prevent them from acting when they are truly needed. Key Plot Points
The only winner is Zemo, who achieved exactly what he wanted: the Avengers destroyed from within.
On the other side stood Steve Rogers (Captain America). Having witnessed the corruption of S.H.I.E.L.D. in The Winter Soldier , Rogers possessed a deep distrust of government oversight. He argued, "The safest hands are still our own." For Cap, the Accords represented a shift of responsibility that could prevent the Avengers from intervening where they were most needed, essentially turning them into a weapon for political agendas rather than a force for good. Captain America- Civil War
The ending of Captain America: Civil War is not a cliffhanger, but a conclusion. Steve drops his shield. Tony walks away limping. The Avengers are disbanded.
Zemo is the personification of the film's theme: collateral damage. He is the survivor left in the rubble of the Avengers' battles (specifically Sokovia), proving that the heroes' actions have real-world consequences that breed real-world hatred. Steve Rogers, wary of political agendas after discovering
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Enjoyed this breakdown? Like and follow for more MCU deep dives. On the other side stood Steve Rogers (Captain America)
This sequence also served as the spectacular introduction of (T’Challa) and the homecoming of Spider-Man (Peter Parker). While the fight starts with a sense of "pulling punches" among friends, the stakes escalate until the devastating injury of James Rhodes (War Machine), signaling that the fun is over and the consequences are real. The Personal vs. The Political
Steve Rogers didn't lose his shield because of a law; he gave it up because of a