Does space travel in the MCU make any sense? – Space.com

Posted: October 11, 2021 at 10:16 am

As the Marvel Cinematic Universe keeps expanding in all directions, we often forget that space and magic in the films took a while to truly get off the ground. Phase 1 opened many doors with Thor and The Avengers, yet the lid didnt come off until Phase 2. James Gunns Guardians of the Galaxy took fans to another galaxy, Andromeda, and made us question how Marvels take on space travel works.

Now were officially in the middle of Phase 4 Multiverse is the new hot stuff, and heroes and villains have been bouncing around the universe like its nothing for years on the big screen (and now TV). While the Guardians films told us its all about wormholes of sorts, main Infinity Saga villain Thanos took an awful lot of time to get his armies to Earth. Was he just busy? Moreover, Captain Marvel doesnt need ships at all because Tesseract magic. And were keeping Doctor Strange and the wizards out of this because they operate on a whole other level.

Disclaimer: were going to try to make the most sense out of comic book nonsense that simply aims to tell entertaining space-jumping, reality-bending stories. Going all Christopher Nolan on this universe only leads to frustration. However, universes born from pulpy entertainment, such as this one or Star Wars, often almost nail the science anyway.

Watch all the Marvel Cinematic Universe movies on Disney Plus

The MCUs first ventures into outer space are kinda straightforward: Thor (2011) introduced audiences to the Nine Realms from Norse mythology, a set of planets scattered across different galaxies and connected thanks to the Tree of Yggdrasil. For Asgardians, the act of visiting these worlds depends on the Bifrost, Asgards Rainbow Bridge.

While Asgard is a highly fantastical setting and the Bifrost seems to draw energy from the center of Asgard itself, Jane Foster (Natalie Portman) describes the resulting phenomenon as a "wormhole" or "Einstein-Rosen bridge." Bifrost-powered travel is always depicted as near instantaneous, so thats probably the best guess in town.

It also seems logical that the fancy cannon-shaped Bifrost building harnesses a massive amount of Asgards energy and literally pokes a hole through space-time, shooting folks away and speedily fixing the tear afterwards. Furthermore, the whole mission in the third act is to stop Loki from destroying Jtunheim with a continuous blast of energy from the Bifrost this leads to Thor going "hammer time" on the bridge and cutting off Asgards connection with the other realms. Loki falls through the resulting (messy) wormhole, too.

The Avengers picked up right after the events of Thor, showing Loki return with "glorious purpose" thanks to some wild wi-fi manipulation across space through the Tesseract, one of the first Infinity Stones that appeared in the MCU. Almost the entire film is about stopping Loki from opening a bigger portal for Thanos armies, which are capable of space-travelling themselves, so this raises a major question: why did they need a wormhole at all?

As stated before, the Einstein-Rosen bridges are all about creating shortcuts for long journeys across the universe. At this point, we hadnt been exposed to the truly sci-fi side of the MCU yet, so Joss Whedon and everyone involved probably didnt think too hard about the Chitauri and their ships a massive portal above New York was a great threat with lots of possibilities for the films third act. Thats all that mattered.

Thor also returns to Earth under Odin and Friggas orders, who both used "dark magic" to learn about Lokis whereabouts and "cheat" transport to Earth while the Bifrost was being repaired. The dark magic trick comes up again in Infinity War when Heimdall conjures some remaining energy before being offed to send the Hulk to Earth (the Bifrost was destroyed forever in 2017s Thor: Ragnarok). This magic appears to be a variation of sorts of what the Bifrost works with, a hidden energy which is likely unstable and only used in emergencies by those able to manipulate it. Thankfully, Thor receives the Stormbreaker later because plot and can now create rainbow bridges himself. Rad.

Guardians of the Galaxy, which takes place in the Andromeda galaxy according to James Gunn, marked Thanos first major appearance; we see hes got quite a few allies who are perfectly capable of regular space travel. Infinity War then doubles down on the "typical alien invasion" angle, with Thanos finally taking the fight himself to Earth and other worlds that housed the Infinity Stones. So at least Thanos main force didnt need a wormhole at all, and the only reasonable in-universe explanation for the whole portal ordeal in Whedons Avengers is that they wanted to catch Earths defenses off-guard and not approach them from outer space. After all, the Other tells Thanos they maybe underestimated Earth and its heroes in the post-credits stinger, so it seems like they didnt have a lot of inside info about the current state of the planet ahead of that first invasion for some reason.

Yeah, the science and space-related plot points in these stories are all about what the narrative needs, about creating tension and stakes. If the script wants things to move slowly, well spend more time with our heroes and villains jumping through space. If the film needs an immediate threat, just throw a portal in there and get things going. That being said, were not done with this exploration yet.

So Thanos army didnt need a big wormhole after all, but that doesnt mean regular space travel in the MCU works differently. James Gunns Guardians films did most of the heavy lifting when it came to these matters. Mind you, most of the small nuggets of info werent too explicit, and the first installment doesnt show us how space travel across the galaxy works at all (yay ellipses), but it appears that Gunn heard those questions loud and clear, because Vol. 2 deals directly with how the ships zap across Andromeda.

Apparently, space-exploring civilizations built a highway of sorts which even connect different galaxies, with marked jump points that make travelling huge distances relatively easy as long as you stick to the road and follow the recommendations one of the films most hilarious scenes depicts the consequences of jumping too much too fast. Little more is said about the process, but the visuals support the idea these jump points are wormhole-based as well. They are more science-y (we might be able to replicate them at some point) and definitely arent as fast as Asgards magic-powered roads, or Doctor Strange and the wizards literal doorways, but they get the job done.

Somehow, theres an even cooler way to travel through Marvel Studios universe: simply speeding insanely fast and going all Star Wars with the help of the Tesseracts mysterious energy. As seen in the Thors post-credits scene and the beginning of The Avengers, SHIELD kept the Tesseract (the Space Stone) locked away since Red Skull toyed with it and disappeared, but of course they toyed with it themselves. The US Air Force, SHIELD, and NASA jointly put together Project PEGASUS in order to develop a light-speed engine powered by the Tesseract.

Kree scientist Mar-Vell (disguised, of course) was part of the project and worked on it because it could be the Skrulls way to exit the ongoing Kree-Skrull war and find a new home outside the charted "galactic highway" we previously talked about. Due to the Krees intervention, Carol Danvers, a pilot alongside Mar-Vell, absorbed the engines energy and gained superhuman abilities (like a ton of them).

Once Carol taps into her dormant powers later in that film, she becomes the Captain Marvel we all know from the comics, and the craziest thing is that she can zap through space at light-speed, allowing her to watch over faraway worlds outside the "space roads system." This is how she helps the Skrulls find a new home.

While Captain Marvel doesnt need external help to move across the vastness of space, it seems like it takes her some time to get places despite going above light-speed (wormholes rock), and thats the perfect excuse to have her miss some of the Avengers biggest battles she could deactivate most threats way too fast, as Endgame showed us.

Finally, its also interesting to consider why she doesnt seem to age at all, and it probably has to do (at least partly) with Einsteins theory of relativity, which claims that time is relative, moving "differently for objects in motion than for objects at rest," although this would have more complicated implications for both her and other space-faring MCU characters.

Watch all the Marvel Cinematic Universe movies on Disney Plus

Read more:

Does space travel in the MCU make any sense? - Space.com

Related Posts