![]() ![]() Perhaps most shockingly, unless Secret Invasion season 2, or another future MCU project addresses Fury's crimes and holds him accountable in a way Secret Invasion failed to, the former SHIELD director will get away with it. In that respect, there is no way Fury’s storyline would ever have passed the CCA’s strict code of regulations, which expressly ruled out criminal activity that was “justified” as a means to an end:Ĭrimes shall never be presented in such a way as to create sympathy for the criminal, to promote distrust of the forces of law and justice, or to inspire others with a desire to imitate criminals. ![]() Fury, it turned out, was a commander of assassins and not just spies. ![]() Shockingly, Gravik (Kingsley Ben-Adir) revealed in Secret Invasion’s final episode that his human form was modeled on the first person Fury sent him to kill, as a reminder of what he’d been forced to do. Secret Invasion’s shocking Avengers retcons unveil the truth of Nick Fury’s backstory and his use of the Skrulls as extra-legal operatives taking out targets and identifying ways to strengthen Fury and SHIELD’s position in the absence of an effective Avengers Initiative in the wake of the events of Captain Marvel. ![]() But the regulations expressly forbade some do the moral ambiguity and outright criminal activity that Samuel L Jackson's MCU Nick Fury relied on to gain his exalted position. In the 1950s, moral panic about comic book content led to the industry adapting a version of the movie world’s self-censoring Hays Code, very much on a voluntary basis. The first rules of the CCA regulations focus on the portrayal of crime. ![]()
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