He fought in wars dating back to World War II, where he was imprisoned and experimented on, receiving a serum that gave him super strength. Jackson iteration of the character is based off Fury from The Ultimates, the 2000s-era alternate universe version of the Avengers. Oh, and how’d he lose that eye? His good friend Goose. He eventually renames it The Avenger Initiative” after looking at a picture of Carol Danvers by her jet, and seeing that her nickname was Avenger. In the movie: Fury is an Agent of SHIELD, who ends up getting the idea for “The Protector Initiative” after learning there are extraterrestrial threats out there. He’s a relatively minor character who’s re-appeared a number of times since in all kinds of places, not least the recent Howard the Duck comic book series.
Talos - AKA “Talos the Tamed,” a reference to the fact that he had been captured by the Kree during the Kree/Skrull War - debuted in an issue of The Incredible Hulk in the 1990s as a depressed wedding guest whose suicide attempt was interrupted by the Hulk, leading to a fight that redeemed his standing in Skull culture.
In the comics: Talos is genuinely an unexpected choice to pull from Marvel’s cast of comic book Skrulls, because he’s not that well known. In the movie: He turns out to be a good guy who is just trying to help his family find a new home. (Don’t worry, they’re all fine and went to good homes eventually.
Chewie can also lay hundreds of eggs to propagate her species, as the Guardians of the Galaxy know to their bitter experience. There is, however, a Chewie the Cat, who also happens to be a Flerken, which once again happens to be an alien that looks and acts like a cat except with additional superpowers - which, for Chewie, means the power to store objects inside its body thanks to some helpful pocket dimensions. In the comics: There is no Goose the Cat in the comic book Captain Marvel mythos. In the movie: He’s a Flerken! An alien with powerful powers that helps our heroes right when he needs them - and also stores the Teseract (AKA the Space Stone) inside himself, later barfing it up like a hairball. Let’s take a closer look at the characters of Captain Marvel, and how they were changed from the comics, starting with the clear breakout star … Which one is more unlikely, it’s unclear. Although the Air Force background was present from her comic book debut, it was far from a constant as a career she’s also been a space pirate and magazine editor. Marvel to Binary and Warbird before eventually taking on the Captain Marvel title in 2012. She used those powers under a variety of different superhero identities, from Ms. The comic book Carol Danvers was originally the head of security on the USAF base that Mar-Vell’s secret identity worked at, a job that got her into the position where a scheme to attack Mar-Vell ended with her DNA getting altered to be part-Kree, giving her superpowers. In the explosion, she ends up absorbing the engine’s power, losing her memory n the process. As they try to escape Kree who want the engine, Mar-Vell (Annette Bening) is gunned down and Carol shoots the engine to keep it out of the hands of the Kree. In the Brie Larson film, Carol Danvers is a fighter pilot who helps her mentor (a Kree defector named Mar-Vell) test a light-speed engine.