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==Appearances in other media==
==Appearances in other media==
===Movies===
===Movies===
A 1944 movie [[serial]] called ''Captain America'' portrayed the hero as a district attorney named Grant Gardner and arbitrarily removed many other important elements of the character, such as his shield and his sidekick, Bucky. The 1966 syndicated [[animated TV series]] ''Marvel Super-Heroes'' included "Captain America" segments. The primitive animation was largely composed of stills photostatted from Jack Kirby art. There were two unexceptional 1979 [[TV movies]], ''Captain America'' and ''Captain America II: Death Too Soon'' starring Reb Brown. A direct-to-video movie, ''Captain America'' (1991), starring [[Matt Salinger]], earned highly negative reviews. It depicted the hero's battle against the Red Skull, who in the film was an [[Italy|Italian]] [[fascism|fascist]] rather than a German Nazi. Rumours of a new Captain America movie have circulated since 2005, but have thus far not produced anything concrete.
A 1944 movie [[serial]] called ''Captain America'' portrayed the hero as a district attorney named Grant Gardner and arbitrarily removed many other important elements of the character, such as his shield and his sidekick, Bucky. The 1966 syndicated [[animated TV series]] ''Marvel Super-Heroes'' included "Captain America" segments. The primitive animation was largely composed of stills photostatted from Jack Kirby art. There were two unexceptional 1979 [[TV movies]], ''Captain America'' and ''Captain America II: Death Too Soon'' starring Reb Brown. A direct-to-video movie, ''Captain America'' (1991), starring [[Matt Salinger]], earned highly negative reviews. It depicted the hero's battle against the Red Skull, who in the film was an [[Italy|Italian]] [[fascism|fascist]] rather than a German Nazi. Rumours of a new Captain America movie have circulated since 2005, but have thus far not produced anything concrete.

In 2005 [[Variety]] reported that Marvel Comics had announced the formation of Marvel Entertainment, a business entity dedicated to film adaptations of Marvel Comics properties. Coinciding with the announcement was a list of Marvel properties being developed for production by the company's new film arm to be released through partnership with [[Paramount Pictures]]; that list included Captain America. Other properties specifically named in the press announcement are: [[the Avengers]], [[Nick Fury]], [[Black Panther]], [[Ant-Man]], Cloak and Dagger, [[Dr. Strange]], [[Hawkeye]], Power Pack, and Shang-Chi. Budgets for each film are expected to be between $45 million and $180 million. The first picture under the arragement is slated for release by 2008.


===Television===
===Television===

Revision as of 22:44, 28 January 2006

Captain America
Secret War #3 (October 2004).
Art by Gabriele Dell'Otto.
Publication information
PublisherMarvel Comics
First appearanceCaptain America Comics #1 (historical, March 1941), Avengers Vol. 1, #4 (modern, March 1964)
Created byJoe Simon
Jack Kirby
In-story information
Alter egoSteve Rogers
Team affiliationsThe Avengers
S.H.I.E.L.D., The Invaders
The Defenders
Notable aliasesNomad, The Captain, Cap
AbilitiesNo superhuman abilities, but does have artificially enhanced physiology at the maximum human level of strength, endurance and agility. Briefly had super-human strength.

Captain America, the alter ego of Steve Rogers (in some accounts Steven Grant Rogers), is a Marvel Comics superhero. Created by Joe Simon and Jack Kirby, he first appeared in Timely Comics' Captain America Comics #1 (March 1941).

Publication history

Captain America was one of the most popular characters that Marvel Comics (then known as Timely) had during the Golden Age of Comic Books. He was, if not the first, certainly the most prominent and enduring of a wave of patriotically themed superheroes that American comic book companies introduced just prior to and during World War II. With his sidekick Bucky, Captain America faced Nazis and Japanese troops during his 1940s heyday, but after the end of the war, his main reason for existence (as a fictional war hero) was gone, and the character's popularity faded. By the end of 1949, after the publication of Captain America's Weird Tales #74, Captain America had disappeared from comic book pages.

He was briefly revived, along with the original Human Torch and the Sub-Mariner, by Marvel's 1950s iteration, Atlas Comics, in Young Men #24 (December 1953) as an anti-Communist superhero. Captain America made several appearances over the next year in Young Men and Men's Adventures, as well as in three issues of his eponymous title, but sales were poor. After the publication of Captain America #78 (September 1954), the character disappeared again. In the 1970s, this version of Captain America would be retconned into a separate character—not Steve Rogers—who briefly took up the mantle.

In 1964, by which point Atlas had evolved into Marvel Comics, Captain America was revived with the explanation that he had fallen from an experimental drone plane into the North Atlantic in the final days of the war and spent the past decades frozen in a state of suspended animation. (Retellings sometimes place the event over the English Channel.) The hero found a new generation of readers as the leader of the all-star group the Avengers and in a new solo series.

Since then, Captain America has been a much more serious and less jingoistic hero. Writers have used the character to reflect the conflict between politics and ideology by placing him at odds with the United States government and angry and troubled about the state of the country. He considers himself dedicated to defending America’s ideals rather than its political leadership, a conviction summed up when Captain America confronted an army general who tried to manipulate him by appealing to his loyalty. Rogers responded, "I'm loyal to nothing, General.. except the Dream." (Daredevil #233, August 1986)

Marvel has repeatedly revised the Captain America continuity; the character's unbreakable ties to a specific time period make it particularly difficult for the series to avoid conspicuous anomalies and inconsistencies.

Character biography

1940s - Operation: Rebirth

File:Captainamerica1.jpg
Captain America Comics #1 (March 1941), art by Jack Kirby.

In current Marvel Universe history, Steven Rogers was a scrawny American fine arts student specializing in illustration in the early 1940s before America's entry into World War II. He was disturbed by the rise of the Third Reich enough to attempt to enlist only to be rejected due to his poor constitution. By chance, a US Army officer looking for test subjects for a top secret defense research project offered Rogers an alternate way to serve his country. This project, Operation: Rebirth, consisted of developing a means to create physically superior soldiers and Rogers was deemed ideal.

Rogers agreed to volunteer for the research and after a rigorous physical and combat training and selection process, was chosen as the first human test subject. He received injections and oral ingestions of a chemical formula that was termed the Super-Soldier Serum, which had been developed by the scientist Dr. Emil Erskine (who was code-named "Dr. Reinstein"). Rogers was then exposed to a controlled burst of "Vita-Rays" that activated and stabilized the chemicals in his system. Although the process was arduous physically, it successfully altered his physiology from its relatively frail form to the maximum of human efficiency, including greatly enhanced musculature and reflexes.

File:Captainamerica5.jpg
Captain America Vol. 5, #5, together with fellow Invaders Namor the Sub-Mariner and the Human Torch. Art by Steve Epting.

At this moment, a Nazi spy revealed himself and shot Erskine. Because the scientist had committed the crucial portions of the Super-Soldier formula to memory, it could not be duplicated. Rogers killed the spy in retaliation (retconned in the 1960s so that the spy accidentally killed himself by fleeing headlong into an "electrical omniverter") and vowed to oppose the enemies of America. The United States government, making the most of its one super-soldier, reimagined him as a superhero who served both as a counter-intelligence agent and a propaganda symbol to counter Nazi Germany's head of terrorist operations, the Red Skull. To that end, Rogers was given a costume modeled after the American flag, a bulletproof shield, a personal sidearm and the codename Captain America. He was also given a cover identity as a clumsy infantry private at Camp LeHigh in Virginia. Barely out of his teens himself, Rogers then made friends with the teenage camp mascot, James Buchanan "Bucky" Barnes.

Barnes accidentally learned of Roger's dual identity and offered to keep the secret if he could become Captain America's sidekick. Rogers agreed, and trained Barnes appropriately. By this time Rogers had met President Franklin D. Roosevelt, who presented him with a new shield made from a chance mixture of iron, vibranium and an unknown catalyst. The alloy was indestructible, yet the shield was light enough to use as a discus-like weapon that could be angled to return to him. (In several stories, due to writer error, the shield was described as an adamantium-vibranium alloy.) It proved so effective that the sidearm was dropped. Throughout World War II, Captain America and Bucky fought the Nazi menace both on their own and as members of the superhero team the Invaders (beginning with 1970s comics), which after the war evolved into the All-Winners Squad (in 1940s comics).

Rogers was not the first to be given the Super Soldier formula. It was revealed years later that while Rogers was still being assessed, some military members of the project felt that a non-soldier was not the right candidate and secretly gave Erskine's incomplete formula to Clinton McIntyre. However, this made McIntyre violently insane, and he had to be subdued and placed in cold storage. The criminal organization AIM would later revive McIntyre as the homicidal Protocide. (Captain America Annual, 2000).

A beta version of the formula was given to Isaiah Bradley, who became the only survivor of a group of African-American soldiers that "Reinstein" and the military experimented on in 1942. After the last two members of his group were killed, Bradley stole the costume meant for Rogers and wore it on a suicide mission to destroy the Nazi super-soldier effort at a German concentration camp. Bradley was captured, but eventually rescued and court martialed. He was imprisoned for 17 years in Leavenworth until he was pardoned by President Eisenhower. By the time of his release, the long-term effects of the formula turned Bradley into a hulking, sterile giant with the mentality of a 7-year-old. Rogers would not find out about Bradley until decades later (Truth: Red, White and Black, 2003). The Patriot, a member of the Young Avengers, has been revealed to be the grandson of Isaiah Bradley.

According to files in the Weapons Plus Program, a clandestine government organization devoted to the creation of superhumans to combat and eventually exterminate mutants, Rogers was "Weapon I", the first generation living weapon. Following his disappearance, the following installments of the Weapon Plus Program moved on to new attempts to create the ultimate weapon, experimenting on animals, racial minorities, criminals and eventually mutants, with results such as Wolverine, Deadpool and Fantomex (New X-Men #145, October 2003).

In the closing days of World War II in 1945, Captain America and Bucky tried to stop the villainous Baron Zemo from destroying an experimental drone plane. Zemo launched the plane with an armed explosive device on it, with Rogers and Barnes in hot pursuit. They reached the plane just before it took off, but when Bucky tried to defuse the bomb, it exploded in mid-air. The young man was killed instantly, and Rogers was hurled into the freezing waters of either the North Atlantic or the English Channel (accounts differ). His body was not found, and he was presumed dead.

Late 1940s–1950s - After Steve Rogers

Fearing a blow to morale if the news of Captain America's demise was revealed, President Truman asked William Naslund, the Golden Age patriotic costumed hero known as the Spirit of '76, to assume the role, with a young man named Fred Davis as Bucky. They continued to serve in the same roles after the war with the All-Winners Squad, until Naslund was fatally injured in a battle with the android Adam II in 1946 (What If? #4, August 1977). With Naslund's death, Jeff Mace, also known as the Golden Age Patriot, took over as Captain America, with Davis continuing to act as Bucky. However, Davis was shot and injured in 1948 and forced to retire. Mace then teamed up with Betsy "Golden Girl" Ross, and sometime before 1953 gave up his Captain America identity to marry her. Mace contracted cancer and died some decades later (Captain America #285, September 1983).

In 1953, an unnamed man who idolized Captain America and had done his American History Ph.D. thesis on Rogers discovered some Nazi files in a warehouse in Germany, one of which apparently contained the lost formula for the Super Soldier serum. He took it to the United States government on the condition that they use it to make him the fourth Captain America. Needing a symbol for the Korean War, they agreed, and the man underwent plastic surgery to look like Steve Rogers, even assuming that name. However, the war ended and the project never went forward. "Rogers" found a teaching job at the Lee School, where he met Jack Monroe, a young orphan who also idolized Captain America. They decided to use the formula on themselves and became the new Captain America and Bucky, this time fighting the so-called Communist scourge (Young Men #24–28, Dec. 1953–May 1954). These stories were written by Stan Lee with art by a young John Romita Sr.

"Rogers" and Monroe did not know of and therefore did not undergo the "Vita-Ray" process, however. The imperfect implementation of the formula in their systems made them paranoid, and by the middle of 1954 they were irrationally attacking anyone they perceived to be a Communist. In 1955 the FBI placed them in suspended animation. The 1950s Captain America and Bucky would be revived years later after the return of Steve Rogers, go on another rampage, and be defeated by the man they had modeled themselves after (Captain America #153, Sept. 1972).

1960s–1970s - The return of Steve Rogers

Avengers Vol. 1, #4 (March 1964), art by Jack Kirby.

In Avengers #4 (March 1964), the Avengers discovered Steve Rogers's body in the North Atlantic, his costume under his soldier's uniform and still carrying his shield. Rogers had been preserved in a block of ice since 1945, which melted after the block was thrown back into the ocean by the Sub-Mariner, enraged that an Arctic tribe was worshipping the frozen figure. When Rogers revived, he related his last, failed mission in the closing days of the war. Rogers accepted membership in the Avengers, and although he soon adjusted to modern times well enough to eventually assume leadership of the team, he was plagued by guilt for not being able to prevent Bucky's death. He also undertook missions for the national security agency S.H.I.E.L.D., which was commanded by his old war comrade Nick Fury.

Captain America was once again given his own series (now in its fifth incarnation), which has lasted decades longer than its original run. The book initially enjoyed the artwork of Jack Kirby as well as a short run by Jim Steranko, and many of the industry's top artists and writers have worked on the book. It was in a storyline during the book's initial series that Rogers met and trained an African American, Sam Wilson, who became the superhero known as the Falcon. The Falcon was one of the few black superheroes in comic books at that time, and it began a long association between the two characters that has continued to the present day.

Cover to Captain America #180 (Dec. 1974). Captain America assumes the "Nomad" identity. Art by Gil Kane.

The most notable stories often had a political tone to them. For example, during Steve Englehart's stint as writer, Rogers encountered his revived 1950s counterpart and dealt with the Marvel Universe's version of the Watergate scandal. This last story so severely disillusioned Rogers that he abandoned his Captain America identity in favour of one called Nomad only to reassume it to face the menace of the Red Skull, this time as a symbol of America's ideals rather than its government. During this time, several men tried to assume the Captain America identity, all without success. Jack Monroe, cured of his mental instability, would, years later, take up the Nomad alias. (Captain America #176–#183, 1974–1975). For a time before and during this period, Rogers also gained (temporarily as it turned out) super strength.

1980s

In the 1980s, in a story written by Mark Gruenwald, Rogers chose to resign his identity rather than submit to the orders of the United States government and took the alias of "The Captain" instead. This extended story arc was intended to illustrate the difference of Captain America's beliefs from his replacement who was intended to illustrate the jingoistic attitude that the popular movie character Rambo embodied and which Rogers did not share. During this period, the role of Captain America was assumed by John Walker, the former Super-Patriot. When Rogers returned to his Captain America identity, Walker became the USAgent (Captain America #332–#351, 1987–1989).

1990s

Some time after returning to the position of Captain America, Rogers narrowly avoided the explosion of a methamphetamine lab, but it triggered a chemical reaction between the drug and the Super-Soldier serum in his system. To combat this reaction, the serum was removed from his system, and now Rogers had to train constantly to maintain his physical condition. The storyline was partly prompted by reader concerns that Captain America was effectively the beneficiary of steroid treatments. A retcon was then introduced to establish that the serum was not a drug, because if it were, Rogers' body would have metabolized it out of his system some time ago. It was revealed that the "serum" was in fact a virus that had affected a biochemical and genetic change, explaining how the Red Skull (who now inhabited a body cloned from Rogers' cells) also had the formula in his body.

However, because of his altered biochemistry which took the form of the "serum" in his blood work, Rogers's body began to deteriorate due to overuse of the "serum". For a time, he had to wear a powered exoskeleton to keep moving and eventually had to be placed again in suspended animation. During this time, he was given a transfusion of blood from the Red Skull, which cured his condition and stabilized the Super-Soldier serum/virus in his system. Captain America returned both to crime fighting and the Avengers (Captain America #425– 454, 1994–1996).

2000s

Eventually, Rogers went public with his identity again, and established a residence in the Red Hook neighborhood of Brooklyn, New York. Most recently, he has discovered evidence that Bucky may have survived, and may be the mysterious Winter Soldier.

Powers and abilities

Rogers in the regular Marvel Universe has no superhuman powers. However, as a result of the Super-Soldier serum, he was transformed from a frail young man into a "nearly perfect" specimen of human development and conditioning, making him able to lift (press) 800 lbs over his head with extreme effort. He has also been depicted curling 500 lbs numerous times in a workout routine. Captain America is as strong, fast, agile, and durable as it is possible for a human being to be without being considered superhuman. The formula enhances all of his metabolic functions and also prevents the build-up of fatigue poisons in his muscles, giving him endurance far in excess of an ordinary human being.

Mentally, his battle experience and training has also made him an expert tactician and an excellent field commander, with his teammates frequently deferring to his orders in battle. Rogers's reflexes and senses are also extraordinarily keen. He has mastered boxing, jiu-jitsu and judo, combined with his virtually superhuman gymnastic ability into his own unique fighting style. Years of practice with using his indestructible shield has made it practically an extension of his own body, and he is able to aim and throw it with almost unerring accuracy and ricochet the shield to hit multiple targets. He is also one of the best hand-to-hand combatants in the Marvel Universe.

Weapons and equipment

Captain America has used many shields over the years, the most traditional of which is an indestructible discus-shaped shield made from a vibranium/steel alloy. This alloy was accidentally created and never duplicated, although efforts to reverse engineer it resulted in the creation of adamantium.

His costume is made of a fire-retardant material. He also wears a light weight "duralumin" chainmail beneath his costume for added protection. As a member of the Avengers, Rogers has his Avengers priority card, which also serves as a communications device, on his person at all times.

Alternate Captain Americas

Ultimate Captain America

The Ultimate Marvel Universe version of Captain America has superpowers, is more reactionary than his counterpart and is more prone to violent solutions as well as morally old-fashioned.

In this version, Steve Rogers was a frail volunteer who underwent months of steroid treatment, surgery, and the Super-Soldier formula to become Captain America. Bucky was a childhood friend who followed him on his missions as a photographer and not a costumed sidekick. Rogers' last mission as Captain America sent him deep into Nazi Germany to stop a prototype hydrogen bomb created with alien technology. He caused the rocket carrying the bomb to explode, but fell into the freezing cold Arctic Ocean; rather than die from hypothermia, Rogers fell into suspended animation until a fishing trawler pulled him out of the water 57 years later. Bucky survived the war, and, thinking that Rogers had been killed in action, married Rogers' fiancée, Gail.

Rogers became one of the first members of the Ultimates, S.H.I.E.L.D.'s answer to battle posthuman terrorism. He began adjusting to life in the 21st century, although he still longed for older times and values, spending much time with Bucky and Gail (now senior citizens) as well as going to WWII veterans' reunions. Recently, events made it appear that Captain America was the one who had repeatedly betrayed the team over the course of the past year. The real traitor has since been revealed to be the Black Widow.

Rogers is at least as skilled in combat as his Earth-616 counterpart. In addition, his strength is superhuman rather than just at peak human levels. In the Ultimate Universe, Bruce Banner became the Hulk as a result of his experiments to recreate the Super-Soldier serum. Despite the Hulk being one of the strongest characters in the Ultimate Universe, Rogers was able to defeat Banner in hand-to-hand combat, bringing the Hulk down and out of the fight for a moment. In addition, Rogers was also able to defeat Henry Pym in melee combat while Pym was in his Giant Man form, a size almost 60 feet high.

Others

Other alternate Captain Americas include several seen in issues of What If, a comic featuring tales of alternate realities. In the Spider-Ham comic books, the funny animal version of Captain America is Steve Mouser, an anthropomorphic cat that works for the Daily Beagle, who is also secretly Captain Americat. In a recent House of M crossover issue, another alternate Steve Rogers was featured, one who lived through World War II and was not frozen.

Appearances in other media

Movies

A 1944 movie serial called Captain America portrayed the hero as a district attorney named Grant Gardner and arbitrarily removed many other important elements of the character, such as his shield and his sidekick, Bucky. The 1966 syndicated animated TV series Marvel Super-Heroes included "Captain America" segments. The primitive animation was largely composed of stills photostatted from Jack Kirby art. There were two unexceptional 1979 TV movies, Captain America and Captain America II: Death Too Soon starring Reb Brown. A direct-to-video movie, Captain America (1991), starring Matt Salinger, earned highly negative reviews. It depicted the hero's battle against the Red Skull, who in the film was an Italian fascist rather than a German Nazi. Rumours of a new Captain America movie have circulated since 2005, but have thus far not produced anything concrete.

In 2005 Variety reported that Marvel Comics had announced the formation of Marvel Entertainment, a business entity dedicated to film adaptations of Marvel Comics properties. Coinciding with the announcement was a list of Marvel properties being developed for production by the company's new film arm to be released through partnership with Paramount Pictures; that list included Captain America. Other properties specifically named in the press announcement are: the Avengers, Nick Fury, Black Panther, Ant-Man, Cloak and Dagger, Dr. Strange, Hawkeye, Power Pack, and Shang-Chi. Budgets for each film are expected to be between $45 million and $180 million. The first picture under the arragement is slated for release by 2008.

Television

Captain America was featured in the 1970s in a couple live action television specials. The character was slightly different than the comics, both in his origin and his operations. Besides his shield, this Captain America also made significant use of a specialized van and motorcycle which was memorable for its ability to operate silently.

Animation

Captain America was one of several Marvel Comics characters which were portrayed in animation in the late 1960s. Captain America’s show even had a theme song, which included the lyrics:

When Captain America throws his mighty shield,
All those who chose to oppose his shield must yield.

The Captain America character also made two appearances in the 1980s animated series Spider-Man and His Amazing Friends, in the episodes "7 Little Superheroes" and "Pawns of the Kingpin". He also appeared in one episode of the syndicated Spider-Man series, where he and Spider-Man fought the Red Skull. Captain America appeared in the fifth season of the X-Men animated series to fend off Nazis as a fellow soldier and friend of Wolverine in the episode "Old Soldiers".

Captain America appeared in the 1990s Spider-Man animated television series, in the "Six Forgotten Warriors" and "Secret Wars" story arcs. In this version, while the original formula was lost, scientists were able to create five similar doses, which were given to five other Americans. The formula, being imperfect, gave them all slightly different abilities and was also temporary. The other five could turn off their powers using special rings, to keep from wasting them. The six fought together in World War II, until Captain America and the Red Skull are trapped in an extra-dimensional stasis device, eternally fighting until they are briefly released.

Captain America (along with Nick Fury) also made an appearance in the animated series X-Men: Evolution. In the episode "Operation Rebirth", Rogers got his abilities from a machine used as part of "Project: Rebirth". During World War II, he participated in a joint operation with a Canadian soldier named Logan to liberate a concentration camp. One of the prisoners was a boy named Erik Lehnsherr. After the attack, it was revealed that the Rebirth process was killing Rogers, so he and Logan destroyed the machine and Rogers was cryogenically frozen until a cure could be found. Lehnsherr would grow up to become Magneto and acquire a duplicate of the Rebirth technology, having discovered it could be used safely on mutants to prolong their life and vitality. The duplicate technology was destroyed by Wolverine, Rogue, and Nightcrawler.

The Ultimate Marvel version of Captain America will appear in an animated straight-to-video release, Ultimate Avengers, slated for release in 2006.

Novels

Captain America has also appeared in several (prose) novels, notably 1998's Captain America: Liberty's Torch by Tony Isabella and Bob Ingersoll, in which the hero is put on trial for the imagined crimes of America by a hostile militia group.

Computer games

File:Cap.gif
Capcom fighting game version

Captain America has appeared in several video games. He was one of four playable characters in Captain America and the Avengers (1991). He later appeared in Capcom's Marvel Super-Heroes and the subsequent Marvel vs. Capcom series, as well as Maximum Carnage and Marvel Super Heroes: War of the Gems.

Pop culture references

Music

The phrase "Captain America" has been used to refer ironically to American patriotic values, especially in rock music.

  • The 1978 Kinks song "Catch Me Now, I'm Falling", about the ailing U.S. economy in the late 1970s, refers to "Captain America calling".
  • Jam band moe. composed a song called "Captain America" which deals with Captain America as an authority figure.
  • Jimmy Buffett recorded a song in 1977 titled "Captain America," offering a tongue-in-cheek tribute to the hero, replete with a kazoo solo and the phrase, "He wears a mask, his clothes are weird, and some folks call him hokey. But he is hip, he just can't dig the Okie from Muskogee."
  • The Guns N' Roses' song "Paradise City" also contains a reference to Captain America ("Captain America's been torn apart...").
  • The Roadrunner United album features a song titled "I Don't Wanna Be (A Superhero)" which contains the line, "They came from sea and they from the sky, Captain America is going to die."

Literature

  • Early Doonesbury strips have Zonker Harris referring sardonically to B.D., captain of the football team on which they both play, as "Cap'n America sir!"

Cinema

  • Peter Fonda's character in the iconic 1969 feature film Easy Rider was nicknamed Captain America. According to the "making of" feature on the DVD edition of the film, director Dennis Hopper described the two motorcyclists of the film to actor Robert Walker, Jr., who said "they sound like Captain American and Bucky", and Hopper liked the name.
  • In the 1997 film Men in Black, Will Smith's character refers to an overzealous Army lieutenant as "Captain America".
  • In Armageddon, an overzealous military man is referred to as "Captain America".

Other

Appearances in comic books

  • Captain America Comics #1–75 by Joe Simon and Jack Kirby (March 1941–February 1950)
  • USA Comics #6–17 (December 1942–Fall 1945)
  • Captain America Comics #76–78 (May 1954–September 1954)
  • Tales of Suspense #59–99 (November 1964–March 1968)
  • Captain America (1968 series) #100–454 (April 1968–August 1996)
  • Giant-Size Captain America (December 1975)
  • Marvel Treasury Special: Captain America's Bicentennial Battles (June 1976)
  • Marvel Fanfare (1982 series) #5, 18, 26, 29, 31–32
  • What If... (1984 series) #5, 26, 38, 44
  • What If... (1989 series) #3, 28–29, 67–68, 103
  • What If... (2006 #1, "What if Captain America had lived in the American Civil War?"
  • Adventures of Captain America - Sentinel of Liberty (1991 series) #1–4 (October 1991–January 1992)
  • Captain America: The Medusa Effect (March 1994)
  • Captain America: Drug War (April 1994)
  • Captain America (1996 series) #1–13 (November 1996–November 1997)
  • Captain America (1998 series) #1–50 (January 1998–February 2002)
  • Captain America Sentinel of Liberty (1998 series) #1–12 (September 1998–August 1999)
  • Captain America: Dead Men Running (2002 series) #1–3 (March 2002–May 2002)
  • Captain America (2002 series) #1–32 (June 2002–October 2004)
  • Truth: Red, White and Black by Robert Morales and Kyle Baker (2003 series) #1–7
  • Captain America: What Price Glory? (2003 series) #1–4 (May 2003)
  • Captain America & The Falcon (2004 series) #1— (April 2004—)
  • Captain America by Ed Brubaker and Steve Epting (2004 series) #1— (November 2004—)
  • Marvel Team-Up #6, 10 by Robert Kirkman and Scott Kolins (2005-current series)
  • Marvel Team-Up #14 by Robert Kirkman and Cory Walker (2005-current series)
  • New Avengers #14 by Brian Michael Bendis and Cory Walker (2005-current series)
  • New Avengers #1-15 by Brian Michael Bendis and David Finch (2005 series)