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* Following the mid-credit scene in ''[[Venom: Let There Be Carnage]]'', the universe-displaced [[Eddie Brock (Sony's Spider-Man Universe)|Eddie Brock]] and his [[Symbiote (comics)|symbiote]] [[Venom (Sony's Spider-Man Universe)|Venom]] have a conversation with a bartender and decide to find Spider-Man, but are suddenly returned to their universe due to Strange's spell, unknowingly leaving behind a part of the symbiote.<ref name="Variety 5-10-22"/><ref name="Time 7-12-2022"/> |
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* A teaser trailer for ''[[Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness]]'' is shown in the post-credits scene.<ref name="Variety 5-10-22"/><ref name="Time 7-12-2022"/> |
* A teaser trailer for ''[[Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness]]'' is shown in the post-credits scene.<ref name="Variety 5-10-22"/><ref name="Time 7-12-2022"/> |
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Revision as of 19:52, 5 December 2022
Mid-credits and post-credits scenes have been used in various Marvel Cinematic Universe (MCU) media, since the beginning of the franchise with the 2008 film Iron Man. The use of such scenes as a whole has changed movie-goer expectations, and has received both praise and criticism. Individual scenes have been widely discussed, ranked, and criticized.[1][2][3][4] In some cases, MCU films have multiple mid-credits and post-credits scenes, and MCU television series have employed them after some episodes. As of November 2022[update], the MCU has featured 70 post-credits scenes across 40 properties.
History
The first post-credits scene involving Marvel Comics characters occurred prior to the MCU, in the 2006 film X-Men: The Last Stand, showing Charles Xavier / Professor X to be alive after his apparent death by the hands of the Phoenix earlier in the film. This has been described as "Marvel's first post-credit scene".[5] A different version of Xavier, portrayed by the same actor, later appeared in the MCU film Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness (2022).
The MCU has made extensive use of mid- and post-credit scenes (often both) which typically serve as a teaser for a future Marvel Studios film. For example, the post-credits scene of Iron Man 2 (2010) shows S.H.I.E.L.D. agent Phil Coulson locating a large hammer at the bottom of a crater in a New Mexico desert, thus teasing the release of Thor the following year; while the post-credits sequence of Captain America: The Winter Soldier (2014) introduces the characters of Pietro and Wanda Maximoff, who join the franchise in Avengers: Age of Ultron (2015). Other times these mid- and post-credits scenes serve primarily as gags, such as the post-credits scene in The Avengers (2012), which has the team eating shawarma in a derelict restaurant in the aftermath of the film's climactic battle, or Spider-Man: Homecoming (2017), which features Captain America educating the audience on patience.[6][7][8]
The Incredible Hulk (2008) does not include a proper post-credits scene; however, its final scene, in which Tony Stark approaches Thunderbolt Ross in a bar, is considered one.[1] Avengers: Endgame (2019) also does not feature a post-credits scene, instead having the credits end with the sound of clanging metal first heard in Iron Man.[9] In addition to such scenes attached to films, the MCU has had post-credit scenes in most MCU television series, generally after the final episode of the series. The ubiquity of post-credit scenes in MCU properties was such that the producers of the television special Werewolf by Night (2022) felt the need to defend the absence of such a scene, noting that the final scene of the show itself had a feeling much like a typical post-credits scene, and that the characters were left not knowing what the future will bring.[10]
Scenes
The following table covers scenes featured in films, short films, television series, animated shorts, and television specials produced by Marvel Studios, and are organized chronologically by original release date.
Year | Title | Medium | Description of scene(s) |
---|---|---|---|
Phase One | |||
2008 | Iron Man | Film | S.H.I.E.L.D. director Nick Fury visits Tony Stark at home to discuss the Avengers Initiative.[1][2][3] |
2010 | Iron Man 2 | In a cut-down scene from Thor, S.H.I.E.L.D. agent Phil Coulson reports the discovery of Mjolnir at the bottom of a crater in a desert in New Mexico.[1][2][3] | |
2011 | Thor | Erik Selvig is taken to a S.H.I.E.L.D. facility, where Fury opens a briefcase and asks him to study the Tesseract, which Fury says may hold untold power. An invisible Loki prompts Selvig to agree, and he does.[1][2][3] | |
Captain America: The First Avenger | In a cut-down scene from The Avengers, Steve Rogers converses with Fury at a gym.[1][2][3] | ||
2012 | The Avengers | ||
Phase Two | |||
2013 | Iron Man 3 | Film | Tony finishes telling this story to Bruce Banner, who had fallen asleep near the beginning. Stark starts telling the story again.[1][2][3] |
Agent Carter | One-Shot | Dum Dum Dugan sits beside a pool with Howard Stark, marveling at two women wearing the newly created bikinis. | |
Thor: The Dark World | Film | ||
2014 | All Hail the King | One-Shot | In prison, Justin Hammer complains about Trevor Slattery and talks about the parallels between himself and Tony Stark. |
Captain America: The Winter Soldier | Film |
| |
Guardians of the Galaxy |
| ||
2015 | Avengers: Age of Ultron | Frustrated with his minions' lack of progress in collecting the Infinity Stones, Thanos vows to get the rest himself.[1][2][3] | |
Ant-Man |
| ||
Phase Three | |||
2016 | Captain America: Civil War | Film | |
Doctor Strange |
| ||
2017 | Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 2 |
| |
Spider-Man: Homecoming |
| ||
Thor: Ragnarok | |||
2018 | Black Panther | ||
Avengers: Infinity War | Before Fury disintegrates in the Blip, he uses a pager to call Carol Danvers.[1][2][3] | ||
Ant-Man and the Wasp |
| ||
2019 | Captain Marvel | ||
Spider-Man: Far From Home | |||
Phase Four | |||
2021 | WandaVision episode 7: "Breaking the Fourth Wall" | TV series | Monica Rambeau discovers the lair of Agatha Harkness lair but is caught by "Pietro". |
WandaVision episode 8: "Previously On" | S.W.O.R.D. director Tyler Hayward reactivates "The Vision", with a now all-white, reassembled original body. | ||
WandaVision episode 9: "The Series Finale" | |||
The Falcon and the Winter Soldier episode 6: "One World, One People" | After receiving a full pardon, Sharon Carter rejoins the CIA and makes a phone call to an unknown person, stating that she intends to use this access to sell government secrets and resources.[1] | ||
Loki season 1, episode 4: "The Nexus Event" | Loki, having been "pruned" by the TVA, awakens surrounded by several other Loki variants. | ||
Black Widow | Film | After Natasha Romanoff's death, Yelena Belova encounters Contessa Valentina Allegra de Fontaine at Romanoff's grave and receives her next assignment: take down Clint Barton, the man "responsible" for Romanoff's death.[1][2][3] | |
What If...? season 1, episode 9: "What If... the Watcher Broke His Oath?" | TV series | In an alternate timeline, Captain Peggy Carter and Natasha Romanoff discover the Hydra Stomper armor with someone inside.[1] | |
Shang-Chi and the Legend of the Ten Rings | Film |
| |
Eternals |
| ||
Hawkeye episode 6: "So This Is Christmas?" | TV series | The cast of the fictional Rogers: the Musical performs the number "Save the City".[11][1] | |
Spider-Man: No Way Home | Film |
| |
2022 | Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness |
| |
Moon Knight episode 6: "Gods and Monsters" | TV series | Arthur Harrow is taken out of a psychiatric hospital and brought into a limousine where he is killed by Jake Lockley, the third alter of Marc Spector, who is still working with Khonshu.[1] | |
Ms. Marvel episode 1: "Generation Why" | At the Damage Control Headquarters, agents P. Cleary and Sadie Deever discover a recording of Kamala Khan's incident at the New Jersey AvengerCon upon social media, and plan to capture her. | ||
Ms. Marvel episode 6: "No Normal" | Khan's power-bestowing bangle emits a strange glow before she suddenly switches places with Danvers. | ||
Thor: Love and Thunder | Film | ||
I Am Groot episode 5: "Magnum Opus" | Short | Groot's drawing of the Guardians is seen adrift in space. | |
She-Hulk: Attorney at Law episode 1: "A Normal Amount of Rage" | TV series | Banner reveals to Jennifer Walters that Rogers had lost his virginity to a girl on the USO tour in 1943, to Walters' delight. | |
She-Hulk: Attorney at Law episode 2: "Superhuman Law" | Walters uses her She-Hulk form to help her parents with chores around the house like mounting a flat-screen TV and moving large bottles of water. | ||
She-Hulk: Attorney at Law episode 3: "The People vs. Emil Blonsky" | Walters twerks with Megan Thee Stallion. | ||
She-Hulk: Attorney at Law episode 4: "Is This Not Real Magic?" | Wong and Madisynn King watch television on Wong's couch. | ||
She-Hulk: Attorney at Law episode 9: "Whose Show Is This?" | Emil Blonsky, having been returned to prison for violating his parole by becoming Abomination, is again broken out by Wong. | ||
Black Panther: Wakanda Forever | Film | Shuri travels to Haiti where she burns her funeral ceremonial robe, finally allowing herself to grieve and mourn T'Challa. There, she is met on a beach by Nakia and learns that Nakia and T'Challa have a son, Toussaint, who Nakia has been raising in secret far from the pressure of the throne. Toussaint reveals his Wakandan name is T'Challa. | |
The Guardians of the Galaxy Holiday Special | Marvel Studios Special Presentation | Rocket and Cosmo are decorating Groot as a Christmas tree; Groot drops his arms, causing the decorations to fall off, leading Cosmo to say that Groot has ruined Christmas, and Rocket to break the fourth wall and say that now they will need to do another special.[12] |
Reception
The MCU has been described as having "made the post-credits scene commonplace",[13] and as being the media that "uses them to the greatest effect", and having "reset moviegoers' expectations about when a film is actually over".[14] Post-credit scenes often contain humor,[13] or Easter eggs referencing matters ranging from the significant to the obscure that would be of interest to fans of the media. Peter Cullen Bryan "examines the interplay within modern superhero blockbusters, which grants the geek a degree of social power: Marvel’s use of the post-credits scene is indicative of the larger process, creating a ritual enacted by fans, who interpret the scene for the uninitiated".[15] In the MCU, these scenes often "tease future plotlines and characters that will be introduced down the road".[13]
Post-credit scenes have also often been used in the MCU to highlight new releases that are still forthcoming at the time that the media containing the post-credit scene is released, a practice that has been criticized as detracting from the importance of the films to which the scenes are attached.[16] Such scenes are also criticized on the grounds that they usurp meaningful film endings with cheap gags; a review in The Guardian stated that "if you can't find a way to incorporate it into the actual movie instead of ruining its afterglow, maybe it wasn't meant to be in there".[17] A 2022 review in Total Film observed that "[t]he recent wave of Marvel post-credits scenes do not seemingly lead into any known sequel, instead offering a scattergun approach to the future".[18]
The post-credit scene for the MCU television series, Hawkeye (2021) finale, "So This Is Christmas?", features the cast of the fictional Rogers: the Musical performing the number, "Save the City", first seen in a shorter form in the premiere episode.[11] At over four minutes, this was the longest post-credits scene of any MCU production to date, and was received with sharply divided opinions by fans, as it did not advance any MCU storyline.[11] The television series She-Hulk: Attorney at Law (2022) had the largest number of post-credit scenes, including them in the first four episodes and the final episode.[19]
Outside the MCU
A number of films and television series not occurring in the MCU, but featuring characters from Marvel Comics, have also had post-credit scenes. In some cases, the relationship between these properties is blurred because the characters have later appeared in the MCU, or because the post-credit scenes themselves implicate events in the MCU.
In X-Men: The Last Stand (2006), Charles Xavier is shown to be alive after his apparent death by the hands of the Phoenix earlier in the film. Screen Rant later described this as "Marvel's first post-credit scene", and noted that this is one of several significant post-credits scenes that were not followed up on in later films.[5]
Deadpool (2016), featured the title character appearing in a bathrobe and telling the audience that the movie is over, identical to the post-credits scene in the 1986 comedy, Ferris Bueller's Day Off, while also saying "What are you expecting Sam Jackson to to show up in a eye patch?", referencing the appearance of Nick Fury in the Iron Man post-credits scene.[20]
The Good, the Bart, and the Loki, a 2021 Disney+ short featuring The Simpsons and tied into the first season of Loki, features a mid-credits scene of Loki disguised as Moe Szyslak giving patrons at Moe's Tavern free drinks. In two post-credits scenes, Ralph Wiggum as the Hulk smashes Loki similarly to a scene from The Avengers, and Loki stands before Ravonna Renslayer at the Time Variance Authority, where she finds him guilty of his various crimes, such as crossing over to the Simpsons universe.[21] A review noted that the scene "pokes fun at the MCU post-credits scenes with an extended credits reel that hides a good couple of reference heavy clips".[21]
In the Sony's Spider-Man Universe (SSU) film Venom: Let There Be Carnage (2021), Eddie Brock and Venom decide to take a tropical vacation while they ponder their next steps. As Venom tells Brock about the symbiotes' knowledge of other universes, a blinding light transports them from their hotel room to another room where they watch J. Jonah Jameson talk about Spider-Man's identity as Peter Parker on television. Similarly, in Morbius (2022), the first mid-credits scene features Adrian Toomes finding himself transported to the SSU, while in the second, Toomes approaches Dr. Michael Morbius, suggesting they should form a team.[22]
See also
References
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai aj ak al am an ao ap aq ar as at au av aw ax ay az ba bb bc Vary, Adam B. (May 10, 2022). "Every Marvel Studios Post-Credits Scene, Ranked From Worst to Best". Variety.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai aj ak al am an ao ap Keane, Sean (September 3, 2021). "Marvel Cinematic Universe post-credits scenes ranked as Shang-Chi hits theaters". CNET.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai aj ak al am an ao ap aq ar as at au av aw Dockterman, Eliana (July 12, 2022). "Breaking Down Every Single Marvel Post-Credits Scene". Time.
- ^ Allan, Scoot (December 22, 2021). "10 Worst Marvel Post-Credits Scenes, Ranked". CBR.
- ^ a b MacReady, Melody (June 17, 2022). "10 Post-Credit Scenes From Marvel & DC That Have Never Been Followed Up". ScreenRant.
- ^ Chitwood, Adam (2019-04-02). "Every Marvel After-Credits Scene Explained". Collider. Retrieved 2019-04-07.
- ^ O'Callaghan, Lauren (2018-08-17). "Every Marvel post-credits scene and what they mean". Gamesradar. Retrieved 2019-04-07.
- ^ Bleznak, Becca (2018-05-20). "Every Marvel Cinematic Universe End Credits Scene Explained". The Cheat Sheet. Retrieved 2019-04-07.
- ^ Russell, Bradley (August 13, 2019). "Avengers: Endgame post-credits scene explained: what the final sound means". gamesradar.
- ^ Milheim, Russ (October 10, 2022). "Marvel Producer Defends Werewolf by Night's Post-Credits Exclusion (Exclusive)". The Direct.
- ^ a b c Hargrave, Sam (January 13, 2022). "Hawkeye's Post-Credits Scene Makes MCU History". The Direct.
- ^ Barnhardt, Adam (November 27, 2022). "Does the Guardians of the Galaxy Holiday Special Have a Post-Credits Scene?". Comicbook.com.
- ^ a b c Surrey, Miles (April 25, 2018). "Every Post-Credits Scene From the Marvel Cinematic Universe, Ranked". The Ringer.
- ^ Abad-Santos, Alex (January 26, 2022). "The rise of the post-credits scene, explained". Vox.
- ^ Bryan, Peter Cullen (October 29, 2018). Lane, Kathryn E. (ed.). Age of the Geek: Depictions of Nerds and Geeks in Popular Media. Springer International Publishing. pp. 149–165. doi:10.1007/978-3-319-65744-8_8 – via Springer Link.
- ^ "It's Time to Stop Making Post-Credits Scenes". Esquire. November 3, 2021.
- ^ Hoffman, Jordan (May 9, 2017). "Why post-credits scenes are slowly ruining blockbusters". The Guardian.
- ^ Russell, Bradley (July 18, 2022). "Marvel's post-credits scenes are fast becoming one of the MCU's biggest problems". gamesradar.
- ^ Bucksbaum, Sydney (October 13, 2022). "All the 'She-Hulk: Attorney at Law' post-credits scenes explained". EW.com.
- ^ Acuna, Kirsten (February 12, 2016). "'Deadpool' has two end-credits scenes — here's what they mean for the sequel". Business Insider.
- ^ a b Russell, Shania (July 8, 2021). "The Post-Credits Scene In 'The Good, The Bart, And The Loki' Was Created In Less Than A Week". /Film.
- ^ Ordoña, Michael (March 31, 2022). "'Morbius' end credits scenes explained: Let's sink our teeth into the MCU connections". Los Angeles Times.