What was the Kree's motivation in Captain Marvel?Is Captain Marvel as strong in the comics as Kevin Feige suggests she will be in the MCU?What and how much de-aging technology is applied in Captain Marvel?Why does Captain Marvel not age between the events of Captain Marvel and Avengers: Endgame?Why are the Captain Marvel trailers portraying the Kree as heroic?Are there any anachronisms in Captain Marvel?What's the big deal about a faster-than-light drive in Captain Marvel?Why did Marvel set 'Captain Marvel' largely in the 1990s?What was the implant device Captain Marvel was using?Why was Goose renamed from Chewie for the Captain Marvel film?When has Captain Marvel previously listened to Nirvana?

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What was the Kree's motivation in Captain Marvel?


Is Captain Marvel as strong in the comics as Kevin Feige suggests she will be in the MCU?What and how much de-aging technology is applied in Captain Marvel?Why does Captain Marvel not age between the events of Captain Marvel and Avengers: Endgame?Why are the Captain Marvel trailers portraying the Kree as heroic?Are there any anachronisms in Captain Marvel?What's the big deal about a faster-than-light drive in Captain Marvel?Why did Marvel set 'Captain Marvel' largely in the 1990s?What was the implant device Captain Marvel was using?Why was Goose renamed from Chewie for the Captain Marvel film?When has Captain Marvel previously listened to Nirvana?













7















In the Captain Marvel (2019) film, we learn of the Kree/Skrull war. Later in the film, we see that the Kree are




actually the villains, and have been trying to exterminate the Skrulls, a previously peaceful race. They called them "terrorists" but the film seems to portray this as false propaganda that the Kree use to outwardly justify their genocide against Skrull refugees.




Given that if their official reason is all a lie, why are the Kree actually trying to




exterminate the Skrulls?




Is this ever addressed in the film by anyone?










share|improve this question
























  • In the comics the Skrulls aren't exactly the good guys either...

    – Skooba
    Mar 11 at 15:30






  • 7





    I guess Talos addresses this in the movie. He says something like- “since the Skrulls did not bow down to accept the Kree rule, the Kree are determined to wipe off the skrulls from the universe”.. hence the hunt to exterminate all skrulls.

    – Shreedhar
    Mar 11 at 15:35















7















In the Captain Marvel (2019) film, we learn of the Kree/Skrull war. Later in the film, we see that the Kree are




actually the villains, and have been trying to exterminate the Skrulls, a previously peaceful race. They called them "terrorists" but the film seems to portray this as false propaganda that the Kree use to outwardly justify their genocide against Skrull refugees.




Given that if their official reason is all a lie, why are the Kree actually trying to




exterminate the Skrulls?




Is this ever addressed in the film by anyone?










share|improve this question
























  • In the comics the Skrulls aren't exactly the good guys either...

    – Skooba
    Mar 11 at 15:30






  • 7





    I guess Talos addresses this in the movie. He says something like- “since the Skrulls did not bow down to accept the Kree rule, the Kree are determined to wipe off the skrulls from the universe”.. hence the hunt to exterminate all skrulls.

    – Shreedhar
    Mar 11 at 15:35













7












7








7








In the Captain Marvel (2019) film, we learn of the Kree/Skrull war. Later in the film, we see that the Kree are




actually the villains, and have been trying to exterminate the Skrulls, a previously peaceful race. They called them "terrorists" but the film seems to portray this as false propaganda that the Kree use to outwardly justify their genocide against Skrull refugees.




Given that if their official reason is all a lie, why are the Kree actually trying to




exterminate the Skrulls?




Is this ever addressed in the film by anyone?










share|improve this question
















In the Captain Marvel (2019) film, we learn of the Kree/Skrull war. Later in the film, we see that the Kree are




actually the villains, and have been trying to exterminate the Skrulls, a previously peaceful race. They called them "terrorists" but the film seems to portray this as false propaganda that the Kree use to outwardly justify their genocide against Skrull refugees.




Given that if their official reason is all a lie, why are the Kree actually trying to




exterminate the Skrulls?




Is this ever addressed in the film by anyone?







marvel marvel-cinematic-universe captain-marvel-2019






share|improve this question















share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited Mar 11 at 15:19









TheLethalCarrot

46.7k17248296




46.7k17248296










asked Mar 11 at 15:17









TVannTVann

1,1281817




1,1281817












  • In the comics the Skrulls aren't exactly the good guys either...

    – Skooba
    Mar 11 at 15:30






  • 7





    I guess Talos addresses this in the movie. He says something like- “since the Skrulls did not bow down to accept the Kree rule, the Kree are determined to wipe off the skrulls from the universe”.. hence the hunt to exterminate all skrulls.

    – Shreedhar
    Mar 11 at 15:35

















  • In the comics the Skrulls aren't exactly the good guys either...

    – Skooba
    Mar 11 at 15:30






  • 7





    I guess Talos addresses this in the movie. He says something like- “since the Skrulls did not bow down to accept the Kree rule, the Kree are determined to wipe off the skrulls from the universe”.. hence the hunt to exterminate all skrulls.

    – Shreedhar
    Mar 11 at 15:35
















In the comics the Skrulls aren't exactly the good guys either...

– Skooba
Mar 11 at 15:30





In the comics the Skrulls aren't exactly the good guys either...

– Skooba
Mar 11 at 15:30




7




7





I guess Talos addresses this in the movie. He says something like- “since the Skrulls did not bow down to accept the Kree rule, the Kree are determined to wipe off the skrulls from the universe”.. hence the hunt to exterminate all skrulls.

– Shreedhar
Mar 11 at 15:35





I guess Talos addresses this in the movie. He says something like- “since the Skrulls did not bow down to accept the Kree rule, the Kree are determined to wipe off the skrulls from the universe”.. hence the hunt to exterminate all skrulls.

– Shreedhar
Mar 11 at 15:35










2 Answers
2






active

oldest

votes


















15














Through direct and indirect means, we find out of that the Kree-Skrull War is a result of the Skrulls refusing to submit to the Kree. During the reveal, Talos claims that the Kree have been exterminating his people because they did not surrender to the Kree Empire. In confrontations with Yonn-Rogg and the Supreme Intelligence, Carol repeats this claim and neither Yonn-Rogg nor the Supreme Intelligence refute it.



As a result, we can infer that the root cause of the Kree-Skrull War in the MCU is expansionist/imperialist motivations on the part of the Kree.






share|improve this answer

























  • This is different to the Kree - Skrull relationship in the comics continuity where the Skrulls were initially a more advanced race that discovered a barbaric Kree race who then went on to steal Skrull technology and turn themselves into a warlike spacefaring race, leading to the Kree-Skrull war.

    – Nathan Griffiths
    2 days ago


















5














tl;dr - War is good for business, and in keeping a government in power.



Some history - The Kree-Skrull War is a decades-old plot thread running in the Marvel Comics. In it, the Kree are seen as...well, maybe not the good guys as much as the far lesser of two evils. But the Skrulls are definitely portrayed as evil - they are out to conquer worlds via infiltration, pretty much exactly as portrayed in the movie. From their first appearance in Fantastic Four, the Skrulls are clearly shown to be evil and a destructive force. The war has spilled over to Earth many times over the years, in The Avengers comic and many other places, including, obviously, the various Captain Marvel books. The Kree are certainly the "good guys", but they're still willing to engage in some pretty heavy moves in their desire to win the war.



The change in the movie was (IMHO) to turn expectations on their heads, and to serve as a metaphor for the idea that war, especially very long wars, are bad. Hala and the Kree Empire are seen as very heavy users of propaganda on its people. So having a ready-made enemy in the Skrull "Empire" would be a perfect device to serve the cause of support to the Kree Empire. So the Skrulls are played up as horrific enemies, made easier by their scary "other"ness, and the paranoia-bating idea that they could be standing right next to you. That also allows for increased security over the populace.



Now IMHO, this sort of wastes a classic villain for the MCU (espeically if god willing the Fantastic Four are on their way). But I imagine there's no reason they couldn't concoct some zealous offshoot that would prefer to fight back than to simply run and find a new home. That too could serve as another metaphor for the current world as well, I suspect.






share|improve this answer


















  • 2





    “espeically if god willing the Fantastic Four are on their way” — God won't get the Fantastic Four onto the MCU slate unless his meeting with Kevin Feige goes really well.

    – Paul D. Waite
    Mar 11 at 15:54






  • 1





    Considering who god IS in the MU, I think he's on their side... external-preview.redd.it/…

    – VBartilucci
    Mar 11 at 17:15











Your Answer








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2 Answers
2






active

oldest

votes








2 Answers
2






active

oldest

votes









active

oldest

votes






active

oldest

votes









15














Through direct and indirect means, we find out of that the Kree-Skrull War is a result of the Skrulls refusing to submit to the Kree. During the reveal, Talos claims that the Kree have been exterminating his people because they did not surrender to the Kree Empire. In confrontations with Yonn-Rogg and the Supreme Intelligence, Carol repeats this claim and neither Yonn-Rogg nor the Supreme Intelligence refute it.



As a result, we can infer that the root cause of the Kree-Skrull War in the MCU is expansionist/imperialist motivations on the part of the Kree.






share|improve this answer

























  • This is different to the Kree - Skrull relationship in the comics continuity where the Skrulls were initially a more advanced race that discovered a barbaric Kree race who then went on to steal Skrull technology and turn themselves into a warlike spacefaring race, leading to the Kree-Skrull war.

    – Nathan Griffiths
    2 days ago















15














Through direct and indirect means, we find out of that the Kree-Skrull War is a result of the Skrulls refusing to submit to the Kree. During the reveal, Talos claims that the Kree have been exterminating his people because they did not surrender to the Kree Empire. In confrontations with Yonn-Rogg and the Supreme Intelligence, Carol repeats this claim and neither Yonn-Rogg nor the Supreme Intelligence refute it.



As a result, we can infer that the root cause of the Kree-Skrull War in the MCU is expansionist/imperialist motivations on the part of the Kree.






share|improve this answer

























  • This is different to the Kree - Skrull relationship in the comics continuity where the Skrulls were initially a more advanced race that discovered a barbaric Kree race who then went on to steal Skrull technology and turn themselves into a warlike spacefaring race, leading to the Kree-Skrull war.

    – Nathan Griffiths
    2 days ago













15












15








15







Through direct and indirect means, we find out of that the Kree-Skrull War is a result of the Skrulls refusing to submit to the Kree. During the reveal, Talos claims that the Kree have been exterminating his people because they did not surrender to the Kree Empire. In confrontations with Yonn-Rogg and the Supreme Intelligence, Carol repeats this claim and neither Yonn-Rogg nor the Supreme Intelligence refute it.



As a result, we can infer that the root cause of the Kree-Skrull War in the MCU is expansionist/imperialist motivations on the part of the Kree.






share|improve this answer















Through direct and indirect means, we find out of that the Kree-Skrull War is a result of the Skrulls refusing to submit to the Kree. During the reveal, Talos claims that the Kree have been exterminating his people because they did not surrender to the Kree Empire. In confrontations with Yonn-Rogg and the Supreme Intelligence, Carol repeats this claim and neither Yonn-Rogg nor the Supreme Intelligence refute it.



As a result, we can infer that the root cause of the Kree-Skrull War in the MCU is expansionist/imperialist motivations on the part of the Kree.







share|improve this answer














share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer








edited Mar 11 at 16:36

























answered Mar 11 at 15:35









SteamSteam

2,9731947




2,9731947












  • This is different to the Kree - Skrull relationship in the comics continuity where the Skrulls were initially a more advanced race that discovered a barbaric Kree race who then went on to steal Skrull technology and turn themselves into a warlike spacefaring race, leading to the Kree-Skrull war.

    – Nathan Griffiths
    2 days ago

















  • This is different to the Kree - Skrull relationship in the comics continuity where the Skrulls were initially a more advanced race that discovered a barbaric Kree race who then went on to steal Skrull technology and turn themselves into a warlike spacefaring race, leading to the Kree-Skrull war.

    – Nathan Griffiths
    2 days ago
















This is different to the Kree - Skrull relationship in the comics continuity where the Skrulls were initially a more advanced race that discovered a barbaric Kree race who then went on to steal Skrull technology and turn themselves into a warlike spacefaring race, leading to the Kree-Skrull war.

– Nathan Griffiths
2 days ago





This is different to the Kree - Skrull relationship in the comics continuity where the Skrulls were initially a more advanced race that discovered a barbaric Kree race who then went on to steal Skrull technology and turn themselves into a warlike spacefaring race, leading to the Kree-Skrull war.

– Nathan Griffiths
2 days ago













5














tl;dr - War is good for business, and in keeping a government in power.



Some history - The Kree-Skrull War is a decades-old plot thread running in the Marvel Comics. In it, the Kree are seen as...well, maybe not the good guys as much as the far lesser of two evils. But the Skrulls are definitely portrayed as evil - they are out to conquer worlds via infiltration, pretty much exactly as portrayed in the movie. From their first appearance in Fantastic Four, the Skrulls are clearly shown to be evil and a destructive force. The war has spilled over to Earth many times over the years, in The Avengers comic and many other places, including, obviously, the various Captain Marvel books. The Kree are certainly the "good guys", but they're still willing to engage in some pretty heavy moves in their desire to win the war.



The change in the movie was (IMHO) to turn expectations on their heads, and to serve as a metaphor for the idea that war, especially very long wars, are bad. Hala and the Kree Empire are seen as very heavy users of propaganda on its people. So having a ready-made enemy in the Skrull "Empire" would be a perfect device to serve the cause of support to the Kree Empire. So the Skrulls are played up as horrific enemies, made easier by their scary "other"ness, and the paranoia-bating idea that they could be standing right next to you. That also allows for increased security over the populace.



Now IMHO, this sort of wastes a classic villain for the MCU (espeically if god willing the Fantastic Four are on their way). But I imagine there's no reason they couldn't concoct some zealous offshoot that would prefer to fight back than to simply run and find a new home. That too could serve as another metaphor for the current world as well, I suspect.






share|improve this answer


















  • 2





    “espeically if god willing the Fantastic Four are on their way” — God won't get the Fantastic Four onto the MCU slate unless his meeting with Kevin Feige goes really well.

    – Paul D. Waite
    Mar 11 at 15:54






  • 1





    Considering who god IS in the MU, I think he's on their side... external-preview.redd.it/…

    – VBartilucci
    Mar 11 at 17:15
















5














tl;dr - War is good for business, and in keeping a government in power.



Some history - The Kree-Skrull War is a decades-old plot thread running in the Marvel Comics. In it, the Kree are seen as...well, maybe not the good guys as much as the far lesser of two evils. But the Skrulls are definitely portrayed as evil - they are out to conquer worlds via infiltration, pretty much exactly as portrayed in the movie. From their first appearance in Fantastic Four, the Skrulls are clearly shown to be evil and a destructive force. The war has spilled over to Earth many times over the years, in The Avengers comic and many other places, including, obviously, the various Captain Marvel books. The Kree are certainly the "good guys", but they're still willing to engage in some pretty heavy moves in their desire to win the war.



The change in the movie was (IMHO) to turn expectations on their heads, and to serve as a metaphor for the idea that war, especially very long wars, are bad. Hala and the Kree Empire are seen as very heavy users of propaganda on its people. So having a ready-made enemy in the Skrull "Empire" would be a perfect device to serve the cause of support to the Kree Empire. So the Skrulls are played up as horrific enemies, made easier by their scary "other"ness, and the paranoia-bating idea that they could be standing right next to you. That also allows for increased security over the populace.



Now IMHO, this sort of wastes a classic villain for the MCU (espeically if god willing the Fantastic Four are on their way). But I imagine there's no reason they couldn't concoct some zealous offshoot that would prefer to fight back than to simply run and find a new home. That too could serve as another metaphor for the current world as well, I suspect.






share|improve this answer


















  • 2





    “espeically if god willing the Fantastic Four are on their way” — God won't get the Fantastic Four onto the MCU slate unless his meeting with Kevin Feige goes really well.

    – Paul D. Waite
    Mar 11 at 15:54






  • 1





    Considering who god IS in the MU, I think he's on their side... external-preview.redd.it/…

    – VBartilucci
    Mar 11 at 17:15














5












5








5







tl;dr - War is good for business, and in keeping a government in power.



Some history - The Kree-Skrull War is a decades-old plot thread running in the Marvel Comics. In it, the Kree are seen as...well, maybe not the good guys as much as the far lesser of two evils. But the Skrulls are definitely portrayed as evil - they are out to conquer worlds via infiltration, pretty much exactly as portrayed in the movie. From their first appearance in Fantastic Four, the Skrulls are clearly shown to be evil and a destructive force. The war has spilled over to Earth many times over the years, in The Avengers comic and many other places, including, obviously, the various Captain Marvel books. The Kree are certainly the "good guys", but they're still willing to engage in some pretty heavy moves in their desire to win the war.



The change in the movie was (IMHO) to turn expectations on their heads, and to serve as a metaphor for the idea that war, especially very long wars, are bad. Hala and the Kree Empire are seen as very heavy users of propaganda on its people. So having a ready-made enemy in the Skrull "Empire" would be a perfect device to serve the cause of support to the Kree Empire. So the Skrulls are played up as horrific enemies, made easier by their scary "other"ness, and the paranoia-bating idea that they could be standing right next to you. That also allows for increased security over the populace.



Now IMHO, this sort of wastes a classic villain for the MCU (espeically if god willing the Fantastic Four are on their way). But I imagine there's no reason they couldn't concoct some zealous offshoot that would prefer to fight back than to simply run and find a new home. That too could serve as another metaphor for the current world as well, I suspect.






share|improve this answer













tl;dr - War is good for business, and in keeping a government in power.



Some history - The Kree-Skrull War is a decades-old plot thread running in the Marvel Comics. In it, the Kree are seen as...well, maybe not the good guys as much as the far lesser of two evils. But the Skrulls are definitely portrayed as evil - they are out to conquer worlds via infiltration, pretty much exactly as portrayed in the movie. From their first appearance in Fantastic Four, the Skrulls are clearly shown to be evil and a destructive force. The war has spilled over to Earth many times over the years, in The Avengers comic and many other places, including, obviously, the various Captain Marvel books. The Kree are certainly the "good guys", but they're still willing to engage in some pretty heavy moves in their desire to win the war.



The change in the movie was (IMHO) to turn expectations on their heads, and to serve as a metaphor for the idea that war, especially very long wars, are bad. Hala and the Kree Empire are seen as very heavy users of propaganda on its people. So having a ready-made enemy in the Skrull "Empire" would be a perfect device to serve the cause of support to the Kree Empire. So the Skrulls are played up as horrific enemies, made easier by their scary "other"ness, and the paranoia-bating idea that they could be standing right next to you. That also allows for increased security over the populace.



Now IMHO, this sort of wastes a classic villain for the MCU (espeically if god willing the Fantastic Four are on their way). But I imagine there's no reason they couldn't concoct some zealous offshoot that would prefer to fight back than to simply run and find a new home. That too could serve as another metaphor for the current world as well, I suspect.







share|improve this answer












share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer










answered Mar 11 at 15:33









VBartilucciVBartilucci

9,16211742




9,16211742







  • 2





    “espeically if god willing the Fantastic Four are on their way” — God won't get the Fantastic Four onto the MCU slate unless his meeting with Kevin Feige goes really well.

    – Paul D. Waite
    Mar 11 at 15:54






  • 1





    Considering who god IS in the MU, I think he's on their side... external-preview.redd.it/…

    – VBartilucci
    Mar 11 at 17:15













  • 2





    “espeically if god willing the Fantastic Four are on their way” — God won't get the Fantastic Four onto the MCU slate unless his meeting with Kevin Feige goes really well.

    – Paul D. Waite
    Mar 11 at 15:54






  • 1





    Considering who god IS in the MU, I think he's on their side... external-preview.redd.it/…

    – VBartilucci
    Mar 11 at 17:15








2




2





“espeically if god willing the Fantastic Four are on their way” — God won't get the Fantastic Four onto the MCU slate unless his meeting with Kevin Feige goes really well.

– Paul D. Waite
Mar 11 at 15:54





“espeically if god willing the Fantastic Four are on their way” — God won't get the Fantastic Four onto the MCU slate unless his meeting with Kevin Feige goes really well.

– Paul D. Waite
Mar 11 at 15:54




1




1





Considering who god IS in the MU, I think he's on their side... external-preview.redd.it/…

– VBartilucci
Mar 11 at 17:15






Considering who god IS in the MU, I think he's on their side... external-preview.redd.it/…

– VBartilucci
Mar 11 at 17:15


















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Kathakali Contents Etymology and nomenclature History Repertoire Songs and musical instruments Traditional plays Styles: Sampradayam Training centers and awards Relationship to other dance forms See also Notes References External links Navigation menueThe Illustrated Encyclopedia of Hinduism: A-MSouth Asian Folklore: An EncyclopediaRoutledge International Encyclopedia of Women: Global Women's Issues and KnowledgeKathakali Dance-drama: Where Gods and Demons Come to PlayKathakali Dance-drama: Where Gods and Demons Come to PlayKathakali Dance-drama: Where Gods and Demons Come to Play10.1353/atj.2005.0004The Illustrated Encyclopedia of Hinduism: A-MEncyclopedia of HinduismKathakali Dance-drama: Where Gods and Demons Come to PlaySonic Liturgy: Ritual and Music in Hindu Tradition"The Mirror of Gesture"Kathakali Dance-drama: Where Gods and Demons Come to Play"Kathakali"Indian Theatre: Traditions of PerformanceIndian Theatre: Traditions of PerformanceIndian Theatre: Traditions of PerformanceIndian Theatre: Traditions of PerformanceMedieval Indian Literature: An AnthologyThe Oxford Companion to Indian TheatreSouth Asian Folklore: An Encyclopedia : Afghanistan, Bangladesh, India, Nepal, Pakistan, Sri LankaThe Rise of Performance Studies: Rethinking Richard Schechner's Broad SpectrumIndian Theatre: Traditions of PerformanceModern Asian Theatre and Performance 1900-2000Critical Theory and PerformanceBetween Theater and AnthropologyKathakali603847011Indian Theatre: Traditions of PerformanceIndian Theatre: Traditions of PerformanceIndian Theatre: Traditions of PerformanceBetween Theater and AnthropologyBetween Theater and AnthropologyNambeesan Smaraka AwardsArchivedThe Cambridge Guide to TheatreRoutledge International Encyclopedia of Women: Global Women's Issues and KnowledgeThe Garland Encyclopedia of World Music: South Asia : the Indian subcontinentThe Ethos of Noh: Actors and Their Art10.2307/1145740By Means of Performance: Intercultural Studies of Theatre and Ritual10.1017/s204912550000100xReconceiving the Renaissance: A Critical ReaderPerformance TheoryListening to Theatre: The Aural Dimension of Beijing Opera10.2307/1146013Kathakali: The Art of the Non-WorldlyOn KathakaliKathakali, the dance theatreThe Kathakali Complex: Performance & StructureKathakali Dance-Drama: Where Gods and Demons Come to Play10.1093/obo/9780195399318-0071Drama and Ritual of Early Hinduism"In the Shadow of Hollywood Orientalism: Authentic East Indian Dancing"10.1080/08949460490274013Sanskrit Play Production in Ancient IndiaIndian Music: History and StructureBharata, the Nāṭyaśāstra233639306Table of Contents2238067286469807Dance In Indian Painting10.2307/32047833204783Kathakali Dance-Theatre: A Visual Narrative of Sacred Indian MimeIndian Classical Dance: The Renaissance and BeyondKathakali: an indigenous art-form of Keralaeee

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