Wonder Bros Pod

Episode 10: Guardians Of The Galaxy

1 h 2 min · 20. maj 2026
episode Episode 10: Guardians Of The Galaxy cover

Beskrivelse

Off-world for the first time — and almost everything about this movie shouldn't have worked. A talking raccoon. A walking tree. A 70s mixtape. A director who'd never made a blockbuster, a co-writer the studio didn't expect to pick this property, and a B-list cosmic team most of us couldn't have named before August 1, 2014. And yet — Guardians of the Galaxy became the proof of concept for the MCU's entire second decade. In Episode 10 of the Countdown to Doomsday, Cody and JD dig into what makes this movie tick — and what almost broke it. They trace Rocket's origin from a planet-sized insane asylum called Halfworld to Bradley Cooper's career-defining voice work, unpack Nicole Perlman's two-year, ten-draft journey through Marvel's internal screenwriting program (and the messy credit dispute that followed with James Gunn), and pull apart the moments that landed — the Morag dance, the Kyln escape, Rocket's drunk "I didn't ask to get made" — from the ones that didn't quite (Ronan, Nebula's emotion dialed past where the audience could meet it, that lull between act two and three). They go deep on grief as the engine driving every character in this film, the convoluted Quill-Yondu relationship that takes a whole trilogy to pay off, and the Walkman as the sound of a dead woman's love crossing decades and light-years. Plus: what if Thanos had been the villain? What if Peyton Reed had directed instead of James Gunn? And what if Rocket — the heart of the movie — had been cut entirely (which Marvel genuinely considered)? Next week: Avengers: Age of Ultron. The MCU starts to feel its own weight. Welcome to the Wonderkin. Permission to be a kid again. 🎧 wonderbrospod.com 📺 YouTube: @wonderbrospod 📱 IG / TikTok: @wonderbrospod

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Alle episoder

13 episoder

episode Episode 12: Ant-Man cover

Episode 12: Ant-Man

The last film of Phase Two. The smallest stakes the MCU has ever had. And the movie that secretly holds the entire Infinity Saga together.  This week, Cody and JD work through Ant-Man — the heist film that almost didn't happen, the comedy palate cleanser that turned out to be a load-bearing pillar, and the strangest behind-the-scenes drama in Marvel history. Edgar Wright developed this film for 8 YEARS before Marvel rewrote his script and he walked. He has never seen the finished version.  Along the way:  - The Edgar Wright saga — eight years, two months before cameras rolled, and a quote from Simon Pegg you have to hear  - Why JD calls Ant-Man "a story about being expendable" — and why that's actually a compliment  - The Hank Pym line that hit JD harder than any in the MCU so far: "I lost your mother. I didn't mean to lose you too."  - Scott Lang as the Bilbo Baggins of the MCU — the everyman who shouldn't be there but is the reason the Infinity Saga works  - The real quantum physics behind the Quantum Realm — and why JD's Navy nuclear background actually matters here  - The scene that made JD say the film jumped the shark — Darren Cross shooting an ant out of the sky from a moving helicopter at night with a handgun  - The grossest death in the entire MCU (and nobody talks about it)  - JD's takedown of meta-narration in writing — Bones, Stranger Things, and late-season Walking Dead all catch hands  Plus: the Falcon fight scene that exists because Adam McKay wrote it, the Robin Hood story underneath Scott Lang, and why Hope deserved the suit in this movie and didn't get it. Welcome to the Wonderkin. Permission to be a kid again. 🎧 wonderbrospod.com 📺 YouTube: @wonderbrospod 📱 IG / TikTok: @wonderbrospod

3. juni 20261 h 5 min
episode Episode 11: Avengers: Age Of Ultron cover

Episode 11: Avengers: Age Of Ultron

Tony Stark created Ultron. But the question this movie asks — and almost no one heard at the time — is what's actually the difference between them? This week, Cody and JD work through Avengers: Age of Ultron. The middle child of the MCU. The film that was bigger and louder than the first Avengers and somehow landed smaller. The film that broke Joss Whedon's relationship with Marvel — and the film that, in retrospect, is doing more thematic heavy lifting than anyone gave it credit for in 2015. Along the way: - The Roy Thomas comic book Ultron — Hank Pym's creation in the source material, and what changed when Marvel handed the role to Tony Stark - The Whedon-vs-Marvel battle over the Hawkeye farm and the Thor pool scene that should never have made the final cut - Why Wanda's line — "Ultron can't tell the difference between saving the world and destroying it. I wonder where he gets that from?" — is the entire thesis of the film - Ultron's loneliness as the most-missed gutter moment in the MCU - Tony Stark as an addict in recovery from being Iron Man, and the spiral dynamics that explain why every solution he builds creates the next monster - The Vision's opening monologue and what it sounds like in 2026 when AI companies admit they can't say their models aren't self-aware - Hawkeye as the human anchor, Black Widow as the most underused Avenger in the movie, and Captain America trying to be funny when he absolutely should not - The retroactive Doomsday Clock tick we owe this film — and what it means Plus: a hot take on whether She-Hulk actually happened, the toy leak that hints Bruce Banner Hulks out in Brand New Day, and a third (or fourth?) reference to Hulk's dick. Welcome to the Wonderkin. Permission to be a kid again. 🎧 wonderbrospod.com 📺 YouTube: @wonderbrospod 📱 IG / TikTok: @wonderbrospod

27. maj 20261 h 22 min
episode Episode 10: Guardians Of The Galaxy cover

Episode 10: Guardians Of The Galaxy

Off-world for the first time — and almost everything about this movie shouldn't have worked. A talking raccoon. A walking tree. A 70s mixtape. A director who'd never made a blockbuster, a co-writer the studio didn't expect to pick this property, and a B-list cosmic team most of us couldn't have named before August 1, 2014. And yet — Guardians of the Galaxy became the proof of concept for the MCU's entire second decade. In Episode 10 of the Countdown to Doomsday, Cody and JD dig into what makes this movie tick — and what almost broke it. They trace Rocket's origin from a planet-sized insane asylum called Halfworld to Bradley Cooper's career-defining voice work, unpack Nicole Perlman's two-year, ten-draft journey through Marvel's internal screenwriting program (and the messy credit dispute that followed with James Gunn), and pull apart the moments that landed — the Morag dance, the Kyln escape, Rocket's drunk "I didn't ask to get made" — from the ones that didn't quite (Ronan, Nebula's emotion dialed past where the audience could meet it, that lull between act two and three). They go deep on grief as the engine driving every character in this film, the convoluted Quill-Yondu relationship that takes a whole trilogy to pay off, and the Walkman as the sound of a dead woman's love crossing decades and light-years. Plus: what if Thanos had been the villain? What if Peyton Reed had directed instead of James Gunn? And what if Rocket — the heart of the movie — had been cut entirely (which Marvel genuinely considered)? Next week: Avengers: Age of Ultron. The MCU starts to feel its own weight. Welcome to the Wonderkin. Permission to be a kid again. 🎧 wonderbrospod.com 📺 YouTube: @wonderbrospod 📱 IG / TikTok: @wonderbrospod

20. maj 20261 h 2 min
episode Episode 9: Captain America: The Winter Soldier cover

Episode 9: Captain America: The Winter Soldier

Captain America: The Winter Soldier might be the moment Marvel grew up. Released in 2014 during the Edward Snowden leaks and built on the bones of 1970s political thrillers like All The President's Men, this is the MCU's hard pivot from popcorn superhero flick to government-conspiracy spy movie — and it absolutely sticks the landing. Cody and JD break down the Russos' debut Marvel film, why their Community paintball episode landed them the directing gig, and the massive creative risk of breaking the comics industry's "Bucky Clause" — the unwritten rule that Bucky Barnes, Jason Todd, and Uncle Ben were the three characters who could never come back from the dead. They unpack the elevator scene as a masterclass in tight cinematography and storytelling, the practical stunt work that had Chris Evans literally pulling a bicep holding a real helicopter, and the Filipino martial arts move Sebastian Stan executes flawlessly in the street fight. JD makes the case that this isn't actually a movie about Bucky at all — pulling from a Thomas Paine quote about the Revolutionary War to argue that Captain America himself is the real winter soldier. The conversation goes deeper than the action. As a military veteran, JD takes on the moral weight of watching thousands of humans fall from those helicarriers, why we never think about the stormtroopers on the Death Star, and what it means to watch Project Insight's predictive-targeting algorithm in 2026 when surveillance AI is no longer science fiction. They connect Steve Rogers being a "man out of time" to the throughline of the entire character arc, and dig into why Zola's reveal lands so hard. Plus: the Ezekiel 25:17 tombstone Easter egg that hits different when you remember who quotes that verse in real life, Sharon Carter's introduction (with all its uncomfortable implications), and why the Maximoff twins post-credits scene was Marvel laying groundwork they legally couldn't acknowledge yet. This is the Wonder Bros at their most thematically dialed-in.  Next week: Guardians of the Galaxy and Marvel's biggest left turn. Welcome to the Wonderkin. Permission to be a kid again. 🎧 wonderbrospod.com 📺 YouTube: @wonderbrospod 📱 IG / TikTok: @wonderbrospod

13. maj 20261 h 21 min
episode Episode 8: Thor: The Dark World cover

Episode 8: Thor: The Dark World

Phase Two has to end somewhere — and Thor: The Dark World is the somewhere most MCU fans pretend doesn't exist. This week, Cody and JD work through the most forgettable film in the franchise. Three directors. A reshot ending. A villain in seven hours of makeup with no name on the marketing materials. And one Tom Hiddleston Comic-Con moment so legendary that the actual movie couldn't live up to it. Along the way: - The Walt Simonson comic run that gave us Malekith — and what the film stripped out - Why Patty Jenkins walked away (and what her version would have been) - Director Alan Taylor's quote about "a different movie from the one I made" - The Frigga death scene that quietly carries the entire film - The two ways into Valhalla, according to actual Norse mythology - The Ravens that aren't there — the visual clue Loki was Odin the whole time - Why Jane Foster could hold the Reality Stone when Peter Quill couldn't hold the Power Stone - Whether this is actually a Loki movie wearing a Thor costume Plus: Cody admits he was on his phone for half the rewatch. JD makes the case that Loki finally gets his throne. And we agree on one thing — Captain America: The Winter Soldier next week is going to be a much better conversation. Welcome to the Wonderkin. Permission to be a kid again. 🎧 wonderbrospod.com 📺 YouTube: @wonderbrospod 📱 IG / TikTok: @wonderbrospod

6. maj 20261 h 0 min