Enter the Sokovia Accords. Drafted by the United Nations and supported by 117 countries, the Accords state that the Avengers will no longer operate as a private organization but as a UN-sanctioned entity, answerable to a governing panel. The brilliance of Captain America: Civil War lies in its screenplay (written by Christopher Markus and Stephen McFeely), which ensures that neither side is explicitly "wrong." Both Tony Stark (Iron Man) and Steve Rogers have valid, heartbreaking reasons for their stances. The Case for Regulation (Team Iron Man) Tony Stark is a man defined by guilt. His arc has been one of atonement—trying to clean up the messes created by his own technology and his father’s legacy. Haunted by the casualties in Sokovia and the mother of an American student who confronted him in the film’s opening act, Tony realizes that unchecked power is dangerous.
The film opens with a visceral, grounded sequence in Lagos, Nigeria. The Avengers, led by Steve Rogers (Captain America), are attempting to stop Brock Rumlow (Crossbones) from stealing a biological weapon. The mission is successful, but the cost is high. In the chaos, Wanda Maximoff (Scarlet Witch) attempts to redirect an explosion upward, inadvertently destroying a floor of a nearby building, killing several Wakandan humanitarian workers. Capitan America- Civil War
In the grand tapestry of the Marvel Cinematic Universe (MCU), few films have carried as much weight, emotional gravity, or narrative consequence as Captain America: Civil War . Released in 2016 and directed by the Russo Brothers, this was marketed not merely as a superhero sequel, but as a cinematic event. It was a film that promised to shatter the status quo, pitting hero against hero in a conflict that had been brewing since the Battle of New York. Enter the Sokovia Accords