

It's questions like this that give the disagreement some real weight among our heroes. What if they're lives lost because of his selfish motivations to be a superhero? While Steve Rogers doesn't feel comfortable being sent into a battle in which he may not have any stake in, Tony Stark ( Robert Downey Jr.) thinks they need to be kept in check after a heartfelt encounter finally instills in him the responsibility he should have for the lives he isn't able to save. This is the straw that breaks the camel's back that causes the government to intervene with the Sokovia Accords, creating a rift between our superheroes. Keep reading our Captain America Civil War review after the jump. It's the perfect model for what serial comic book movies can be.

Directors Anthony & Joe Russo have pulled together a movie that brings as much hard-hitting drama to the table as much as it does astounding action. This is a comic book film where the action is just as harrowing as it is entertaining due to the care and respect that we've come to have for these superheroes after spending a total of 11 films (not counting Guardians of the Galaxy) with them in the Marvel cinematic universe. The result is a sharp, astounding, action-packed summer blockbuster that's the kind of superhero movie you've been waiting to see your whole life. (or Hydra) before it, and that's what leads to the titular superhero conflict in Captain America: Civil War.

But not all our heroes are ready to blindly follow the commands of an organization that could just as easily have an agenda like S.H.I.E.L.D. After the collateral damage caused by the previous efforts of the Avengers proves to be too much for the world's governments, the United Nations comes together to introduce the Sokovia Accords, a resolution that will turn the superheroes into a task force supervised and directed by the UN itself.
