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The fictional timeline of the Marvel Cinematic Universe (MCU) media franchise and shared universe is the continuity of events for several feature films, television series, television specials, short films, and the I Am Groot shorts, which are produced by Marvel Studios, as well as a group of Netflix series produced by Marvel Television.
The eight-part series takes place in a timeline where Marvel superheroes are members of Elizabethan society. The characters featured are mainly from the Silver Age of Comic Books and include Nick Fury , the X-Men , the Fantastic Four , Spider-Man , Doctor Doom , and Magneto .
Real name / Team / Series Hero name Year debuted Creator/s First appearance Namor McKenzie: Sub-Mariner 1939 (April) Bill Everett: Motion Picture Funnies Weekly #1 Jim Hammond: The Human Torch 1939 (October) Carl Burgos: Marvel Comics #1 Thomas Halloway: Angel 1939 (October) Paul Gustavson: Marvel Comics #1 Jim Gardley: Masked Raider 1939 ...
The Marvel Cinematic Universe as we know it is coming to an end in "Avengers: Endgame." But… how did it begin? When did any of the series’ major events actually happen?
Marvel Studios president Kevin Feige produces every film and series from that studio for the MCU. The shared universe, much like the original Marvel Universe in comic books, was established by crossing over common plot elements, settings, cast, and characters.
On March 18, 2014, ABC aired a one-hour television special titled Marvel Studios: Assembling a Universe, which documented the history of Marvel Studios and the development of the Marvel Cinematic Universe and included exclusive interviews and behind-the-scenes footage from all of the films, One-Shots, and Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D., and sneak peeks ...
The Time Variance Authority (TVA) first appeared in Thor #372 (October 1986). [1] Created by Walt Simonson and Sal Buscema, the TVA originally paid homage to long-time Marvel writer/editor and continuity expert Mark Gruenwald: the TVA staff were all visually designed as clones of Gruenwald (the classification system for alternate realities—the Marvel multiverse—was devised, in part, by ...
[198] [199] Marvel Studios explored opportunities to integrate other characters of the Marvel Cinematic Universe into future Spider-Man films financed, distributed, and controlled by Sony Pictures, [198] with Robert Downey Jr. the first confirmed to reprise his role as Tony Stark / Iron Man in Spider-Man: Homecoming (2017). [200]