

(A Natasha Romanoff character focus) Series On cold nights, Natasha dreamed of ballerinas: porcelain, exquisite, their ribs jutting out stark under their skin. He had left her there, breathing, and the Winter Soldier didn’t leave witnesses. He hadn’t pulled the car transmission out, after all, hadn’t stripped the cell phone in the victim’s pocket, or shot up the rocks at the side of that road outside Odessa.

They were animate objects, both of them, useless in the witness stand. The bullet holes in her abdomen had healed, and she knew this thing did not consider itself a person. Years later, Natasha watched the Soldier slam into the freeway concrete. Was Natasha an exception? Or did she not count as a witness? Had he looked at her and seen the same black button eyes reflected back at him, the on/off switch, the tick of clockwork? The Winter Soldier did not leave witnesses, but he had left her by that cliff outside of Odessa. Natasha told herself that and fingered her scar. The Winter Soldier did not waste bullets, time, or death. Language: English Words: 3,932 Chapters: 1/1 Collections: 1 Comments: 81 Kudos: 1378 Bookmarks: 180 Hits: 15727ĭirgewithoutmusic Fandoms: The Avengers (Marvel Movies), Iron Man (Movies), Captain America (Movies), Captain America - All Media Types, Marvel Cinematic Universe Sharon carried all of those with her, into the lies of pink nurses' scrubs and the chaos of SHIELD's fall, into everything that came afterwards. Her father told her stories about talking elephants and singing mice who built treehouses together. Her aunt had told her stories about a skinny kid who hated bullies, and a crew of wisecracking soldiers who followed his lead-about Steve and Bucky and all the Howling Commandos out to save the day and chase away each of Sharon’s nightmares. Her mother had told her bedtime stories about Aunt Peggy saving the world. She’d read the comics, sure, but to Sharon, who had heard all the stories (and to Peggy, who had told them), Steve Rogers would always be 5’4” and breakable, had always been a hero. When Sharon finally met Captain Rogers, she was almost startled at his size. Some aunts take you to mass, but Sharon’s took her to the shooting range. Sharon Carter expected to pull a gun in the line of duty.
#BRINGING IT HOME THE MOVIE ARCHIVE#

To this day, they dug into their position and refused to give any real reason why the plant was shut down, especially after a recent positive earnings report. The announcement also meant breaking up families or forcing families to move away from the home they knew all their lives. Workers had to make the tough decision to either uproot their lives and move to a different GM plant in another state or leave GM and potentially lose health insurance or their relatively comfortable salaries. What Bring It Home does is show the effect that this announcement had on the workers and communities. “GM turned its back on its loyal employees despite the great financial benefits it received.” GM turned its back on its loyal employees despite the great financial benefits it received. Barra made the official announcement in November 2018 after a massive tax cut by the Trump Administration and several billions of dollars in state and local government bailout. First and foremost, the film focuses on the strange circumstances surrounding the closure. If you’ve followed the auto industry over the last five or six decades, you know plant closures are a common occurrence. Carl Kriss’ documentary for the WORLD channel, Bring It Home, follows five families from the GM Lordstown, Ohio, plant as CEO Mary Barra announces the closure of this longstanding plant. It’s no secret that thanks to foreign competition and cheap overseas labor, many of these communities have begun slowly disappearing, leaving behind poverty and empty factory buildings. The United States is the birthplace of the automobile, and many cities were built and prospered around this industry.
