The Marvels is, first and foremost, a sequel to Marvel Studios' 2019 flick Captain Marvel, but it's also a follow-up to Disney Plus TV shows WandaVision, Ms. Marvel, and Secret Invasion. With that, it was impossible for director Nia DaCosta to base it on a sole comic, so she found inspiration in several.
While chatting with GamesRadar+, the filmmaker, who co-wrote the movie with Megan McDonnell and Elissa Karasik, revealed that 1982's Amazing Spider-Man Annual #16 had a big influence on the film, as did a more recent Captain Marvel run of Kelly Sue DeConnick's, which sees Carol Danvers struggling with sobriety.
"[There was] the first issue where we meet Monica Rambeau, which is in a Spider-Man issue and he's, well, he’s basically being such a creep," DaCosta laughs. "He's like, 'There's someone in this airport who's giving me vibes' and he sees her and he's like, 'I'm gonna follow her' and then, and the text just says 'who's that lady?' which I love.
"Then, for Captain Marvel, there's a moment, in one of [DeConnick's] issues where she's… falling? Basically she's a dry drunk, a recovering alcoholic, and she's falling to Earth because she cannot die and nothing can harm her, so it's the only way she can get a rush.
"I really liked that conceptually, that idea of her inner life so a lot of that went into this and building out more of Carol's character. Then, the first, I'd say, six issues of Ms. Marvel are just perfect, so we pulled them out, too."
Starring Samuel L. Jackson, Iman Vellani, Teyonah Parris, and Brie Larson, The Marvels takes place almost 30 years after the events of Captain Marvel, and sees Kamala Khan, Monica, and Carol forced to form an unlikely team when their light-based powers become inexplicably
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