Captain America 2 - Open Spoilers

Originally it was Supreme Headquarters, International Espionage, Law-Enforcement Division. Then it was Strategic Hazard Intervention Espionage Logistics Directorate. The new meaning is for the MCU.

In the comics, from 1965 (and I quote Wikipedia) :
“The acronym originally stood for Supreme Headquarters, International Espionage, Law-Enforcement Division. It was changed in 1991 to Strategic Hazard Intervention Espionage Logistics Directorate.
Within the various films set in the Marvel Cinematic Universe, as well as multiple animated and live-action television series, the acronym stands for Strategic Homeland Intervention, Enforcement, and Logistics Division.[1]”

It’s always sounded too Soviet for my tastes.

Okay, I was going from memory when I wrote my post. Based on what you saw, the Winter Soldier’s appearance was possible (at least possible within the realm of what’s possible in an action movie).

Again, someone REALLY wants that acronym to spell SHIELD.

I know it’s changed over the years but I don’t know why they had to. Supreme Headquarters, International Espionage, Law-Enforcement Division sounds cool to me.

Well I will be dipped in dogshit. That’s exactly what happened. My apologies.

I almost forgot to mention that my Wife and I enjoyed the film very much.

Some little points which stick with me:

  • The armament on the Helicarriers really brought back impressions of WWII battleships.
  • I thought the Lucasesque setting for the computer core was pretty cool
  • I understand he was a continuing character from one of the films I have not seen, but Gary Shandling’s portrayal of the banality of evil was brilliant.
  • HYDRA is usually more subtle than multi-block running gunfights, but I presume that since they anticipated immanent success within a day or so they allowed themselves a bit more visibility. I also must assume they blocked communications for legitimate first responders.
  • They broke into a secure facility to steal the flight pack off-screen. That’s how cool they are, and how much bigger a threat they are facing than conventional forces could counter.
  • Lot of Chevys in the film.
  • They sure did like to drop him from very high places, didn’t they.
  • Why is it only the Evil Scientists who wear bow ties?
  • Zola must have a back-up stored somewhere; with current data storage density they might be able to upload him into a mobile unit (with a monitor in its chest).

My theory is that we’ll be seeing that in the deleted scenes on the DVD…

I don’t think so. Our Heroes are too cool. :wink:

My wife is certain that Zola is still around. He wouldn’t suicide just to keep Steve and Natasha busy so they could get IRBMed. He’s backed up somewhere.

That’s a lot of paper tape.

(Hm, guess I didn’t actually post before after all)
Didn’t Zola actually say how many feet of tape his mind was stored on? It shouldn’t be too hard to convert that to megabytes.

Hey! I got that reference!

:smiley:

200,000, I believe.

So - about the size of a thumb drive - inserted into a random USB port… hmmmm…

If so, then at maximum density his personality takes up 11.393 gigabytes of storage.

I’d say “Supreme” is a little too comicy sounding for a modern military organization.

“Supreme Headquarters” sounded fine in the '60s to men who had been in The War. Supreme Headquarters Allied Expeditionary Force (SHAEF) was where Ike worked after Operation Overlord.

It sounds almost quaint today.

And it still exists in today’s NATO as Supreme Headquarters, Allied Powers, Europe (SHAPE) and the Supreme Allied Commander, Europe (SACEUR).

Just that it does not really make sense for* the organization itself *to be called “Supreme Headquarters”.

Even before: Supreme Headquarters Allied Expeditionary Force - Wikipedia.

The top NATO military command still uses the word “Supreme”: Supreme Headquarters Allied Powers Europe - Wikipedia