apensivelady:

thekingandthelionheart:

buckysbaerns:

Sometimes I think you like getting punched.

#HOW AM I SUPPOSED TO FEEL CONFLICTED #WHEN THESE SCENES SO OBVIOUSLY PARALLEL EACH OTHER #LITTLE STEVIE BLOODY AND TIRED AND LIT UP #WITH DEFIANCE AND RIGHTEOUS ANGER #GETTING UP AGAIN AND AGAIN BECAUSE HE /KNOWS/ #HE’S FIGHTING FOR WHAT IS RIGHT #AND I’M NOT EVEN GONNA TOUCH BUCKY BARNES #PUTTING HIMSELF BETWEEN STEVE AND A PUNCH #I AM NOT EMOTIONALLY EQUIPPED TO HANDLE THIS (via @oldsouldier)

Time to bring up a post I wrote some weeks ago:

I can do this all day

Something that had already caught my attention when I first watched Captain America: Civil War, and that now receives my full love, is the scene at the end of the movie when Steve says “I can do this all day” once Tony tells him to surrender. While it is cool in itself that it mirrors skinny Steve from the 1940s, it is cooler to me for another reason.

As soon as Steve says “I can do this all day”, a heavily beaten Bucky lying on the floor, and devoid of his metal arm reaches for Tony’s leg, to stop him from hitting Steve. This mirrors the real Bucky, the guy who befriended Steve when both were children, the guy who always got Steve’s back, who didn’t care about Captain America but for the little guy from Brooklyn who was too dumb to run from a fight.

To me that’s the crucial Bucky moment of the whole movie. That’s the moment when you know why Steve is fighting for Bucky. Inside of that broken, pretty dehumanised man, is still that kid from Brooklyn who couldn’t bare to see his best friend hurting.

The follow up of the “I can do this all day” scene in Captain America: the First Avenger is this:

They did go to the future. Yes, things changed and both of them changed, but at the same time they are still the same. The tiny, skinny, sickly kid who would never run from a fight, and his best friend, who would be with him till the end of the line.

Some time ago there was a post on my dashboard saying that the Captain America trilogy is beautifully symmetric, for Steve Rogers picked up the shield for Bucky and gave the shield up for Bucky, becoming Captain America and retiring from that position because of his friend. But to me that’s not it.

To me this trilogy is beautifully symmetric because of those two mirroring scenes I talked about above. Because Steve Rogers can expend his whole day, not to say his whole life, fighting for what he believes is right, and Bucky Barnes will always get his back, till the end of the line. Be it in the 1940s or the 21st century.

Captain America is Steve Rogers. A shield doesn’t make him. Being able to “do this all day” is what makes Captain America, be it in the past or in the future. From beginning to end Steve Rogers is not a perfect soldier, but a good man. At the same time, Bucky Barnes is not what Hydra made of him, what it made him do. He isn’t just a perfect soldier. Inside the perfect soldier “ready to comply” has always been trapped a good man.

Steve: I can’t think straight when Bucky’s involved.
Sam: I know man, we get it, there’s a lot of history there, we don’t expect you to be objective when it comes to him
Steve: Thanks but I mean it’s hard for me to think straight…as in I really just want to kiss him

phdna:

It’s been five years and I still don’t know why people don’t think Bucky was such a vintage!geek in the 1940s

  • Knows by heart how many women there are in New York and casually throws that in a conversation he has when he’s on his way to a science fair
  • “LOOK AT THAT FUCKING FLYING CAR" “Holy cow” feels
  • Best friend is a kid who is into arts and takes books with him to the army
  • “STEVE YOU’RE KEEPING YOUR SUPER HERO OUTFIT RIGHT??”
  • Smithsonian tells me Bucky was “an excellent athlete who also excelled in the classroom” – like, his grades were good enough Smithsonian thought “hey we should mention that”
  • If my math teacher wasn’t lying to me, you needed some pretty great math skills to be a good sniper in WW2, so there’s also that

People say “Oh Bucky was into science” but no, god, he was a full-blown nerd

buckybarnesss:

assetandmission:

It’s interesting to see Steve’s insecurity about his friendship with Bucky. Bucky was his best friend, and presumably his only friend. Steve idolized him. As he told Natasha and Sam: even when he had nothing, he had Bucky.

But Bucky? Bucky had a family – parents, probably some siblings. He likely had friends from school, work friends, and friends from army training. He had endless girlfriends. We know he was popular. Bucky had an entire life, and objectively, Steve was only a part of it.

Before Captain America, Bucky was Steve’s world, but Steve may not have been Bucky’s. And because of that, you can see Steve constantly second guess Bucky’s love for him. During CATFA, he doesn’t know if Bucky will follow him into war. In the CATWS funeral flashback, he doesn’t want to intrude on Bucky’s life (even though if the situation were reversed, you know he’d never let Bucky ‘get by on his own’). Even during the final CATWS fight scene, he says ‘You’re my friend’ instead of ‘We were friends’. He’s horrified that Bucky died following him, because Bucky had a life outside of Steve. 

I don’t think Steve realized how important he is to Bucky until he broke the Soldier’s programming, just by existing. 

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