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Everything to Remember About All the Members of the Thunderbolts* Team

Everything to Remember About All the Members of the Thunderbolts* Team

T hunderbolts*, out May 2, features Marvel's B-team superheroes—sidekicks and antagonists who have existed largely on the sidelines of the MCU for the past decade and a half. Now they are finally getting their moment to shine. The ragtag group joins together under the watchful eye of Valentina Allegra de Fontaine (Julia Louis-Dreyfus), a morally flexible private-sector spook who has been named the head of the CIA in the new film.
Valentina, who was first introduced in the Disney+ series Falcon and the Winter Soldier and appeared in Black Panther: Wakanda Forever as the ex-wife of Everett Ross (Martin Freeman), has quietly been gathering together a group of assassins to work on covert operations and now dreams of her own very public superhuman—or superteam—that she can control.
But if you missed movies like Black Widow or Ant-Man and the Wasp or TV shows like Falcon and the Winter Soldier, you may be confused as to who these antiheroes who Valentina has collected are, what they've been up to for the last several years, and whether they're good guys or bad.
Here is your spoiler-free guide to everything you need to know about the characters who make up the Thunderbolts team.
Yelena Belova
Introduced in Black Widow as the little sister of Natasha Romanoff (Scarlett Johanson), Florence Pugh's Yelena was raised from childhood to be an assassin in the Russian Red Room, just like Black Widow before her. Yelena and Natasha are not sisters by blood but by circumstance: When they were children they were sent as spies to America and lived with a fake family of other covert operatives. David Harbour's Alexei Shostakov or Red Guardian (more on him later) and Rachel Weisz's Melina Vostokoff acted as their parents until all four had to escape back to Russia.
The four reunite in Black Widow to eliminate the Red Room and save the women being brainwashed there. After the death of Natasha in Avengers: Endgame, Yelena became an assassin for hire working for Valentina Allegra de Fontaine, who in Thunderbolts* is trying to build (and control) her own superhuman.
Bucky Barnes / The Winter Soldier
Sebastian Stan has been playing Steve Rogers' best bud, Bucky Barnes, since 2011's Captain America: The First Avenger. A lot has happened to Bucky since he fought alongside Cap during World War II in that film. Bucky fell from a train in that movie, apparently dying, but his body was recovered by HYDRA, a science-minded organization within the Nazi party. Bucky was given supersoldier serum, brainwashed, and transformed into the Winter Soldier. He performed many dastardly deeds for HYDRA, including murdering Tony Stark's parents.
Steve eventually helped Bucky recover his memories and break free of HYDRA, and the Wakandans gifted Bucky an indestructible arm. Bucky fought alongside the Avengers against Thanos in Avengers: Infinity War and teamed up with Sam Wilson (The Falcon and, later, the new Captain America) in the Disney+ show, The Falcon and the Winter Soldier. Since then, apparently Bucky has become an elected official, representing Brooklyn in Congress. Whether his commitments to supersoldier-ing will interfere with his duties as an elected official remains unclear.
Alexei Shostakov/ Red Guardian
The USSR's answer to Captain America, Harbour's Red Guardian is a washed-up super soldier who dreams of his days of glory as a Russian emblem of strength. A surrogate father to Natasha and Yelena, he was living in an Eastern European prison when the two girls broke him out during the events of Black Widow.
John Walker
An antagonistic force in Falcon and the Winter Soldier, John Walker (Wyatt Russell) is a military vet who takes the supersoldier serum and, briefly, is dubbed by the U.S. government as the new Captain America. However, we learn that supersoldier serum has different effects on different people. In the scrawny but noble Steve Rogers, it brought out leadership qualities. For Walker, it enhanced his already-simmering rage and resentment. Though Walker isn't a bad guy, per se—he is in pursuit of justice—he doesn't have the moral compass of, say, Sam Wilson. Walker eventually kills an innocent man in front of a crowd in the streets, bloodying the sacred Captain America shield in the process.
Walker is stripped of his title after that incident. But Valentina Allegra de Fontaine recruits the shamed Walker to be part of her network of privately paid assassins.
Ghost
Another misunderstood villain, Ghost (Hannah John-Kamen) is one of the antagonists in Ant-Man and the Wasp. The daughter of a former colleague of Hank Pym, Ava Starr has an encounter with the Quantum Realm as a child that grants her "phasing powers"—she can disappear and walk through walls—but leaves her in chronic pain. She joins S.H.I.E.L.D. as an assassin in exchange for a suit that allows her to control her instability and the promise of a cure that never manifests. By the end of Ant-Man and the Wasp, Janet van Dyne (Michelle Pfeiffer) uses the power of quantum physics to stabilize Ava.
Taskmaster
Though she does not play as large a role as the rest of the team in The Thunderbolts, Taskmaster does work for Valentina too. Antonia Dreykov (Olga Kurylenko) is the daughter of General Dreykov, the head of the Red Room. During an assassination attempt targeting General Dreykov, Natasha Romanoff almost kills Antonia. Antonia still carries the scars from the explosion. General Dreykov then trained Antonia to become Taskmaster and used a substance to control her mind. In Black Widow, Natasha and Yelena redeem Natasha's near-murder of Antonia by freeing her from the Red Room to restart her life.
Bob
Bob (Lewis Pullman) is a new character in the Thunderbolts, a mysterious man who seemingly appears out of nowhere inside Valentina's secret bunker. We won't reveal more about Bob here to avoid spoiling the movie.

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Disney's ‘Snow White' Ends Theater Run. How Much Money Did It Lose?
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Disney's ‘Snow White' Ends Theater Run. How Much Money Did It Lose?

Cropped "Snow White" poster featuring Gal Gadot and Rachel Zegler. Rachel Zegler and Gal Gadot's Snow White — Disney's embattled live-action remake of Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs — is done playing in theaters. What is the breakdown of the film's losses? Rated PG, Snow White was released in theaters on March 21, following more than three years of controversies, including but not limited to Zegler's criticism of the 1937 animated classic and politically divisive social media posts. In addition, Peter Dinklage, the acclaimed Game of Thrones star born with a form of dwarfism, criticized the idea of Disney casting little people as the famed seven dwarfs from the famed Brothers Grimm tale during a 2022 interview with podcaster Marc Maron. Ultimately, Disney went the CGI route with the characters. Snow White stumbled out of the gate on its first weekend in theaters, earning $42.2 million domestically, a disastrous number considering the film's $269.4 million production budget before prints and advertising. The princess movie's business dropped 66% in its second weekend in theaters — losing its box office crown to Jason Statham's $40 million crime thriller A Working Man — and business rapidly dwindled from there. Now, roughly two and a half months after Snow White made its debut on the big screen, the film has finally completed its theatrical run. As indicated by The Numbers' weekly theater count list, Snow White's last day in theaters was Thursday, June 5. According to the box office tracker, the film earned $347 on Thursday from 25 North American theaters to bring its final domestic tally to $87,203,963. Coupled with the film's international ticket sales of $118,341,472, Snow White's worldwide box office gross comes to $205,545,435 against the $269.4 million production budget before prints and advertising costs. Rachel Zegler in "Snow White." Given the huge gap between the film's theatrical gross of $205.5 million and its production budget of $269.4 million, there's no arguing that Snow White ended its theatrical run deep in the red. The question that remains, however, is how muc those losses were. To begin with, the production needs to split its ticket sales with theater owners, which generally is a 50-50 split. On top of that, the film has marketing expenses, as well as residual payments and other expenses. In a post-mortem analysis by Deadline on March 31 — a mere 10 days after Snow White's release in theaters — the Hollywood trade publication crunched the numbers by forecasting that the film would finish with a worldwide box office gross of $225 million. Operating from that number, Deadline projected the film would eventually 'clear $295 million in revenues' from Snow White, which included '$101 million in global film rentals, $62 million in worldwide home entertainment, $130 million in streaming and TV revenues, and $2 million from merchandise.' Then, however, came the film's expenses, which Deadline estimated were $410 million for the production. In addition to the film's nearly $270 million price tag, Deadline noted that Disney spent $111 on global marketing costs and '$29 million in residuals and other expenses.' As such, Deadline concluded that Disney would lose $115 million on Snow White. However, since the March 31 analysis was based on a projection of $225 million worldwide theatrical gross, the worldwide tally of $205.5 million as of June 5 means the studio will lose even more. If there's any silver lining for Disney, the failure of Snow White is being followed by the success of the live-action version of Lilo & Stitch, which since its May 23 release has grossed $637 million globally against a $100 million production budget before prints and advertising, per The Numbers. Better yet, the film is eyeing its third consecutive weekend at No. 1 at the domestic box office and is no doubt in the running to become the highest-grossing film of the summer if not all of 2025.. Snow White, meanwhile, will make its transition to streaming on Disney+ on Tuesday, where the studio no doubt hopes the film will finally find an audience.

As Epic Universe draws hype, what's next for Tampa's hometown park?
As Epic Universe draws hype, what's next for Tampa's hometown park?

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As Epic Universe draws hype, what's next for Tampa's hometown park?

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21 Nostalgic Sounds Younger Generations Will Never Hear
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21 Nostalgic Sounds Younger Generations Will Never Hear

Recently, Reddit user u/Repulsive-Pitch2555 asked an extremely nostalgic question, "People over 30: What's a sound from your childhood that younger generations will never hear?" Here are the top-voted nostalgic sounds that millennials and Gen-Xers can hear just like it was yesterday: "The clink of those heavy metal seat belt buckles. Bonus points if it branded the GM logo into your leg because it was 9,000 degrees." —KillerKowalski1 "For me, it's the screeching dial-up internet sound. I can still hear it in my soul." —Repulsive-Pitch2555"EEEEEEEEEerrrrrrrrrrbimbahmbindahmeeeeeeee."—BonerTurds"Poing-Poing-whap-PSSSSHHHHHHHHHH."—nmezib "That squeaky sound of the AIM chat door opening when your friend logged on." —ParcOSP"Or when it slammed shut and it was your crush who logged off 😭😂"—peacelovetacos247 "Static from the TV on the wrong channel or when the antenna wasn't adjusted properly." —StringSlinging "The opening of a VHS case. Also, the rewinding of a VHS tape." —leafer91 "The sound of someone slamming the phone when hanging up." —Rivas-al-Yehuda"And the satisfaction."—ladydrybones "The Windows 95 start-up sounds have been BURNED INTO MY SOUL." —Xeroxitosis "If you'd like to make a call, please hang up and try again. If you need help, hang up and then dial your operator." —cheesechimp"And the three weird little discordant tones that preceded it."—onlymemes-plz "The cassette rewinding faster and faster and faster until that final thump, and then a whine as it tries to keep rewinding and can't." —ledow"Alternatively, the horrifying sound of the cassette player devouring your tape before you can run across the room to stop it. Followed by the sad sounds of twisting and twisting the little wheel thingie with your finger as you attempt to respool the tape into the cassette."—shugersugar"I always kept a ✏️ nearby for just that that section of tape was forever garbled."—Sweet-Competition-15 "The cha-chunk of a manual credit card machine thingy." —Edward_the_Dog "This is so silly, but the squeak of the crank windows on cars takes me back." —Rockelle_Americano"Also, the sound old-fashioned analog blinkers made. New cars try to imitate it, but they don't quite hit the spot. And then the way old windshield wiper motors sounded — they were so loud that they drowned out the noise of the rain."—Me66 "Disney movie trailers voiced by Mark Elliott. If you don't know his name, you've definitely heard his voice in Disney trailers from the '90s and 2000s. He died in 2021, so younger generations will never hear him promote a new Disney thing." —PurpleDreamer28"Omg yes — 'Coming soon to own on video and DVD…' was literally a genre of trailer on its own. RIP to the voice of childhood."—Repulsive-Pitch2555 "The staticky sound from those grey computer speakers when a call was coming in." —will2165"Ditadit ditadit ditadit diiiiiiiiii...."—Pigheaded40something "N-Ni-Nic-Nick-N-Nic-Nick-Nick-NICKELODEONNNN." —Key-Cap3156"There's a documentary called The Orange Years that's all about Nickelodeon from the early '80s until about 2000. It's a really nostalgic trip for anyone who grew up in that timeframe."—Seahearn4 "You've got mail." —StagWants2Party"The AOL voice! That 'welcome' still lives rent-free in my brain. 😅"—Repulsive-Pitch2555 "After these messages, we'll be right back." —NBAccount "Downloading a corrupted file on Limewire and getting the good old 'I did not have sexual relations with that woman.'" —DueSink728 "The sound of someone blowing into a Nintendo cartridge." —DesignerCampaign2567 "Waking up at 3 a.m. on the couch to, 'How will I ever live without you! ULTIMATE LOVE SONG COLLECTION OF THE '80s." —zRustyShackleford "The sound of clapping out the chalkboard erasers." —Hikikomori_Otaku "Opening a glass bottle of Snapple. That popping sound." —MrCrix What other nostalgic sounds from your childhood do you miss? Let us know in the comments!

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