Comic book favorite Adam Warlock will not be Caught in the Act: Promiscuous Sex Life of My D-Cup Mother in lawswooping in to save our heroes in Avengers 4. Many fans suspected the character would appear due to his importance in The Infinity Gauntlet, which inspired much of Infinity War.
"Yeah [he]'s not showing up in our stories," Joe Russo told ComicBook.com. "Look, our job as we said a million times is to tell the story of the Marvel Cinematic Universe, not to do direct adaptations of the comics because we're comic book fans."
SEE ALSO: 'Avengers: Infinity War' is officially a billion-dollar movie"I have no interest as a director in telling a story that's already been told or in seeing one that's already been told," Russo added. "If I know all the events story as they're going to happen then what's the point of going to the film? We want to keep surprising audiences and continue the story that started with Iron Man."
Russo said as much earlier in the week, describing Adam Warlock as "a James Gunn thing," that was never supposed to be in the Avengersfilms. Gunn directed both Guardians of the Galaxyfilms and introduced Adam in the post-credits scene of Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 2. Before Infinity War, some fans even speculated that Adam might hold the key to the Soul Stone.
"We never intended to put Adam Warlock in Infinity War," Russo said at an Iowa high school. "We have so many heroes we have to service that you guys love and give them screen-time.”
Adam was always part of the Guardians universe, so now it's likely we'll first see him in the untitled Guardiansthreequel, due in 2020. The untitled Infinity Warsequel releases in 2019.
Topics Comics Disney Marvel
Looking for your next great binge? Head to Cameo.The 'queer aesthetic' is deeper than rainbow merchKingsley Amis’s James Bond NovelEpitaphic Fictions of Robert Louis Stevenson & Philip LarkinHow to add an admin to a Facebook pageThe Morning News Roundup for April 17, 2014One Week Left to Apply for Our WriterThe Story Behind “Cunning”On Talking in One’s SleepThe cookies in 'Only Murders in the Building' are a sweet Broadway Easter eggThe Morning News Roundup for April 30, 2014Epitaphic Fictions of Robert Louis Stevenson & Philip LarkinWhat Does Your Wireless Network Name Say About You?X is auctioning off memorabilia from the Twitter offices. Here's what's up for grabs.On Epitaphic Fictions: Ben Franklin, W. B. YeatsFrom our Archive: “Three Days with Gabo”How to block someone on FacebookBefore You Watch Mad Men TonightBest back to school deal: SereneLife Foldable Kick Scooter for $64The Morning News Roundup for April 30, 2014 Deep Emotion, Plain Speech: Camus’s The Plague by Laura Marris Unconditional Death Is a Good Title by Bernadette Mayer Hello, World! Part Four: George Dorn by Sheila Heti Beautiful Losers: On Leonard Cohen by Nell Zink Our Favorite Sentences by The Paris Review Diary, 1988 by Elif Batuman Cambridge Diary, 2014 by J. D. Daniels For the Record, the Review Has Not Abolished Fiction by The Paris Review Cooking with Cyrano de Bergerac by Valerie Stivers On Prince, Volcanologists, and Forsythe’s Ballets by The Paris Review Ben Lerner, Diane Seuss, and Ange Mlinko Recommend by The Paris Review Scenes from an Open Marriage by Jean Garnett Clipboard, 2022 by Jesse Ball Vivian Gornick Will Receive Our 2023 Hadada Award by The Paris Review Abandoned Books, Anonymous Sculpture, and Curves to the Apple by The Paris Review Bona Nit, Estimat (An Ordinary Night) by Robert Glück The Distance from a Lemon to Murder: A Conversation with Peter Nadin by Randy Kennedy Diary, 2001 by Molly Dektar Postcards from Ellsworth by Rebecca Bengal Everything But Money: On Katherine Dunn by Eric Rosenblum
2.2923s , 8202.2421875 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【Caught in the Act: Promiscuous Sex Life of My D-Cup Mother in law】,Wisdom Convergence Information Network