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Why does Captain Marvel assume the planet where she lands would recognize her credentials?


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30















I just watched Captain Marvel. Right after she crash-lands on planet C-53 (Earth), she walks right up to a security guard and introduces herself as "Vers" from "Kree Starforce." She continues to do this in a very conspicuous manner until she finally realizes that this planet knows nothing about Starforce or the Kree-Skrull War.



I know that Vers did not have contact with Starforce at that time, but I would assume that she would still try to keep quiet until she discovers what the people on the planet know. Why does Vers assume that people on Earth know about Starforce and the Kree-Skrull War?










share|improve this question




















  • 16





    I fail to see why this is receiving close votes as primarily opinion-based. Just because there isn't an explicit canon answer does not make a question POB. Voting to leave open.

    – Mithrandir
    yesterday











  • One would assume that since the inhabitants aren't Skrulls, they're almost certainly aligned with the Kree (or at least semi-friendly)

    – Valorum
    yesterday
















30















I just watched Captain Marvel. Right after she crash-lands on planet C-53 (Earth), she walks right up to a security guard and introduces herself as "Vers" from "Kree Starforce." She continues to do this in a very conspicuous manner until she finally realizes that this planet knows nothing about Starforce or the Kree-Skrull War.



I know that Vers did not have contact with Starforce at that time, but I would assume that she would still try to keep quiet until she discovers what the people on the planet know. Why does Vers assume that people on Earth know about Starforce and the Kree-Skrull War?










share|improve this question




















  • 16





    I fail to see why this is receiving close votes as primarily opinion-based. Just because there isn't an explicit canon answer does not make a question POB. Voting to leave open.

    – Mithrandir
    yesterday











  • One would assume that since the inhabitants aren't Skrulls, they're almost certainly aligned with the Kree (or at least semi-friendly)

    – Valorum
    yesterday














30












30








30


1






I just watched Captain Marvel. Right after she crash-lands on planet C-53 (Earth), she walks right up to a security guard and introduces herself as "Vers" from "Kree Starforce." She continues to do this in a very conspicuous manner until she finally realizes that this planet knows nothing about Starforce or the Kree-Skrull War.



I know that Vers did not have contact with Starforce at that time, but I would assume that she would still try to keep quiet until she discovers what the people on the planet know. Why does Vers assume that people on Earth know about Starforce and the Kree-Skrull War?










share|improve this question
















I just watched Captain Marvel. Right after she crash-lands on planet C-53 (Earth), she walks right up to a security guard and introduces herself as "Vers" from "Kree Starforce." She continues to do this in a very conspicuous manner until she finally realizes that this planet knows nothing about Starforce or the Kree-Skrull War.



I know that Vers did not have contact with Starforce at that time, but I would assume that she would still try to keep quiet until she discovers what the people on the planet know. Why does Vers assume that people on Earth know about Starforce and the Kree-Skrull War?







marvel marvel-cinematic-universe captain-marvel-2019






share|improve this question















share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited 33 mins ago









Community

1




1










asked yesterday









TemporaryIdentityTemporaryIdentity

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790312








  • 16





    I fail to see why this is receiving close votes as primarily opinion-based. Just because there isn't an explicit canon answer does not make a question POB. Voting to leave open.

    – Mithrandir
    yesterday











  • One would assume that since the inhabitants aren't Skrulls, they're almost certainly aligned with the Kree (or at least semi-friendly)

    – Valorum
    yesterday














  • 16





    I fail to see why this is receiving close votes as primarily opinion-based. Just because there isn't an explicit canon answer does not make a question POB. Voting to leave open.

    – Mithrandir
    yesterday











  • One would assume that since the inhabitants aren't Skrulls, they're almost certainly aligned with the Kree (or at least semi-friendly)

    – Valorum
    yesterday








16




16





I fail to see why this is receiving close votes as primarily opinion-based. Just because there isn't an explicit canon answer does not make a question POB. Voting to leave open.

– Mithrandir
yesterday





I fail to see why this is receiving close votes as primarily opinion-based. Just because there isn't an explicit canon answer does not make a question POB. Voting to leave open.

– Mithrandir
yesterday













One would assume that since the inhabitants aren't Skrulls, they're almost certainly aligned with the Kree (or at least semi-friendly)

– Valorum
yesterday





One would assume that since the inhabitants aren't Skrulls, they're almost certainly aligned with the Kree (or at least semi-friendly)

– Valorum
yesterday










2 Answers
2






active

oldest

votes


















41














The only mistake Danvers makes is assuming this is a planet that knows about aliens, based on the fact that they're clearly not a stone age level society. Most civilizations will spend hundreds of thousands of years at stone age level technology, and hundreds of thousands of years at the level of knowing about aliens (at least in the MCU where aliens exist). The amount of time that any given civilization will have better than stone age technology but not know about aliens (relative to the overall lifetime of a species) is a tiny, tiny sliver of time.



On planets that DO know about galactic civilization, knowing about the Kree and Starforce would be like someone on Earth knowing about the United States and the Navy Seals (even if they're not from the United States) . It's just a piece of general knowledge that most adults would presumably have. In the comics, the Kree and the Skrulls* are actually two of the three biggest and most well known empires , so knowing a bit about them is even more likely.



Danver's has just landed on an inhabited planet that possesses some level of technology, so she assumes that they're advanced enough to know about the overall galactic civilization, because the odds of the planet being in the tiny window above are negligible.



*: The third one is the Shi'Ar, which haven't been seen up to now in the MCU because they're part of the X-Men properties to which Fox has the rights.






share|improve this answer





















  • 9





    Also of note is that people on Earth are aware of aliens, and have been for quite some time: at least part of HYDRA is aware, some of the Inhumans are aware of their origins, and so on. It's just they're keeping that secret (plus they don't actually know that it's the Kree who were mucking around on Earth). So Vers wouldn't be wrong in thinking people should know, she's just not considering the possibility some know and are keeping it a secret from the majority of the population.

    – Keith Morrison
    yesterday








  • 2





    Regarding your footnote - (and you may be aware of this already, but others may not) there's been a deal to sell Fox to Disney (Marvel's parent company) for ~2 years now. It's essentially approved and is expected to be officially complete this month (in fact, one of the last hurdles is expected to be cleared today), at which point the X-Men, Shi'Ar, and all the rest of Fox' holdings will be accessible to the MCU.

    – TylerH
    yesterday






  • 3





    @KeithMorrison Good point about brining up the Inhumans: After all, if she has a database or scanners which inform her there are part-Kree hybrids on the planet, she probably assumes that the Kree have made official contact...

    – Chronocidal
    18 hours ago






  • 1





    Worth noting that Skrull society in the MCU appears to be vastly different from that in the comics - it's implied that they don't even have an empire.

    – MartianInvader
    8 hours ago



















11














You're right that she likely ought to have kept quiet until she could assess her new surroundings... that's probably taught to all combat soldiers, with extra training for a small precision team such as the one Vers was one;




a team of 6 soldiers inserting alone on a hostile planet to carry out a secret recovery mission of a Kree spy is probably quite elite... like a SEAL team element-level of elite.




So this is probably a case of either the studio not having a consultant for these matters or of the plot being more important than the realism here.



In-universe, it's likely that most planets in the regions affected by the Kree-Skrull war are probably planets that are sufficiently advanced to be worth fighting over. A planet with a primitive civilization like Earth's is probably not on anyone's radar (in a manner of speaking).



Also, Vers learns that the Skrulls are seeking a scientist on C-53 (Earth) who is working on a lightspeed engine, which is incredibly advanced technology; it's something neither the Skrulls nor the Kree have access to (they have to use jump points, similar to what is shown in Guardians of the Galaxy 2).



When Vers hears about the lightspeed engine, she probably assumes the planet this mystery scientist is on is pretty advanced, considering a lightspeed engine is tech that is significantly beyond even the Kree Empire. So it makes sense they'd also be aware of the existence of other species and recognize the Kree Starforce name even if they're not part of the Kree Empire.



Consider also that she had a universal translator in her suit that enabled her to ostensibly understand and speak with other species without difficulty. When you can easily communicate in your native tongue with a stranger, you tend to make a lot of assumptions that they understand or are at least familiar with your shared culture, and not just the words you're saying... it's probably the norm for her to land on a new planet and talk to locals who are aware of the Kree Empire (which spans many planets and species, according to various movies).



To analogize it, imagine it's the height of World War II and you're a pilot flying in a naval battle. You get hit by some flak and crash into the ocean, but survive. You wash up on a beach somewhere. This beach is on a small, remote island with a primitive civilization (if that)... you find them and ask who they're loyal to; Axis or Allies? They're probably going to look at you with the same bewildered look that the Rent-A-Cop gave Vers when she walked out of the Blockbuster.



It's also probably worth pointing out that she was




born a human and lived for ~20 years on Earth. She probably felt unconsciously "at home" on Earth, and felt that they must know of the Kree because that's been "home" for her for the last 6 years.







share|improve this answer





















  • 2





    Change that WWII reference to a WWI reference and you've got the start of the Wonder Woman movie. :)

    – wavetree
    12 hours ago






  • 4





    @wavetree The thought crossed my mind, but I opted against crossing my streams, so to speak :-)

    – TylerH
    12 hours ago











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41














The only mistake Danvers makes is assuming this is a planet that knows about aliens, based on the fact that they're clearly not a stone age level society. Most civilizations will spend hundreds of thousands of years at stone age level technology, and hundreds of thousands of years at the level of knowing about aliens (at least in the MCU where aliens exist). The amount of time that any given civilization will have better than stone age technology but not know about aliens (relative to the overall lifetime of a species) is a tiny, tiny sliver of time.



On planets that DO know about galactic civilization, knowing about the Kree and Starforce would be like someone on Earth knowing about the United States and the Navy Seals (even if they're not from the United States) . It's just a piece of general knowledge that most adults would presumably have. In the comics, the Kree and the Skrulls* are actually two of the three biggest and most well known empires , so knowing a bit about them is even more likely.



Danver's has just landed on an inhabited planet that possesses some level of technology, so she assumes that they're advanced enough to know about the overall galactic civilization, because the odds of the planet being in the tiny window above are negligible.



*: The third one is the Shi'Ar, which haven't been seen up to now in the MCU because they're part of the X-Men properties to which Fox has the rights.






share|improve this answer





















  • 9





    Also of note is that people on Earth are aware of aliens, and have been for quite some time: at least part of HYDRA is aware, some of the Inhumans are aware of their origins, and so on. It's just they're keeping that secret (plus they don't actually know that it's the Kree who were mucking around on Earth). So Vers wouldn't be wrong in thinking people should know, she's just not considering the possibility some know and are keeping it a secret from the majority of the population.

    – Keith Morrison
    yesterday








  • 2





    Regarding your footnote - (and you may be aware of this already, but others may not) there's been a deal to sell Fox to Disney (Marvel's parent company) for ~2 years now. It's essentially approved and is expected to be officially complete this month (in fact, one of the last hurdles is expected to be cleared today), at which point the X-Men, Shi'Ar, and all the rest of Fox' holdings will be accessible to the MCU.

    – TylerH
    yesterday






  • 3





    @KeithMorrison Good point about brining up the Inhumans: After all, if she has a database or scanners which inform her there are part-Kree hybrids on the planet, she probably assumes that the Kree have made official contact...

    – Chronocidal
    18 hours ago






  • 1





    Worth noting that Skrull society in the MCU appears to be vastly different from that in the comics - it's implied that they don't even have an empire.

    – MartianInvader
    8 hours ago
















41














The only mistake Danvers makes is assuming this is a planet that knows about aliens, based on the fact that they're clearly not a stone age level society. Most civilizations will spend hundreds of thousands of years at stone age level technology, and hundreds of thousands of years at the level of knowing about aliens (at least in the MCU where aliens exist). The amount of time that any given civilization will have better than stone age technology but not know about aliens (relative to the overall lifetime of a species) is a tiny, tiny sliver of time.



On planets that DO know about galactic civilization, knowing about the Kree and Starforce would be like someone on Earth knowing about the United States and the Navy Seals (even if they're not from the United States) . It's just a piece of general knowledge that most adults would presumably have. In the comics, the Kree and the Skrulls* are actually two of the three biggest and most well known empires , so knowing a bit about them is even more likely.



Danver's has just landed on an inhabited planet that possesses some level of technology, so she assumes that they're advanced enough to know about the overall galactic civilization, because the odds of the planet being in the tiny window above are negligible.



*: The third one is the Shi'Ar, which haven't been seen up to now in the MCU because they're part of the X-Men properties to which Fox has the rights.






share|improve this answer





















  • 9





    Also of note is that people on Earth are aware of aliens, and have been for quite some time: at least part of HYDRA is aware, some of the Inhumans are aware of their origins, and so on. It's just they're keeping that secret (plus they don't actually know that it's the Kree who were mucking around on Earth). So Vers wouldn't be wrong in thinking people should know, she's just not considering the possibility some know and are keeping it a secret from the majority of the population.

    – Keith Morrison
    yesterday








  • 2





    Regarding your footnote - (and you may be aware of this already, but others may not) there's been a deal to sell Fox to Disney (Marvel's parent company) for ~2 years now. It's essentially approved and is expected to be officially complete this month (in fact, one of the last hurdles is expected to be cleared today), at which point the X-Men, Shi'Ar, and all the rest of Fox' holdings will be accessible to the MCU.

    – TylerH
    yesterday






  • 3





    @KeithMorrison Good point about brining up the Inhumans: After all, if she has a database or scanners which inform her there are part-Kree hybrids on the planet, she probably assumes that the Kree have made official contact...

    – Chronocidal
    18 hours ago






  • 1





    Worth noting that Skrull society in the MCU appears to be vastly different from that in the comics - it's implied that they don't even have an empire.

    – MartianInvader
    8 hours ago














41












41








41







The only mistake Danvers makes is assuming this is a planet that knows about aliens, based on the fact that they're clearly not a stone age level society. Most civilizations will spend hundreds of thousands of years at stone age level technology, and hundreds of thousands of years at the level of knowing about aliens (at least in the MCU where aliens exist). The amount of time that any given civilization will have better than stone age technology but not know about aliens (relative to the overall lifetime of a species) is a tiny, tiny sliver of time.



On planets that DO know about galactic civilization, knowing about the Kree and Starforce would be like someone on Earth knowing about the United States and the Navy Seals (even if they're not from the United States) . It's just a piece of general knowledge that most adults would presumably have. In the comics, the Kree and the Skrulls* are actually two of the three biggest and most well known empires , so knowing a bit about them is even more likely.



Danver's has just landed on an inhabited planet that possesses some level of technology, so she assumes that they're advanced enough to know about the overall galactic civilization, because the odds of the planet being in the tiny window above are negligible.



*: The third one is the Shi'Ar, which haven't been seen up to now in the MCU because they're part of the X-Men properties to which Fox has the rights.






share|improve this answer















The only mistake Danvers makes is assuming this is a planet that knows about aliens, based on the fact that they're clearly not a stone age level society. Most civilizations will spend hundreds of thousands of years at stone age level technology, and hundreds of thousands of years at the level of knowing about aliens (at least in the MCU where aliens exist). The amount of time that any given civilization will have better than stone age technology but not know about aliens (relative to the overall lifetime of a species) is a tiny, tiny sliver of time.



On planets that DO know about galactic civilization, knowing about the Kree and Starforce would be like someone on Earth knowing about the United States and the Navy Seals (even if they're not from the United States) . It's just a piece of general knowledge that most adults would presumably have. In the comics, the Kree and the Skrulls* are actually two of the three biggest and most well known empires , so knowing a bit about them is even more likely.



Danver's has just landed on an inhabited planet that possesses some level of technology, so she assumes that they're advanced enough to know about the overall galactic civilization, because the odds of the planet being in the tiny window above are negligible.



*: The third one is the Shi'Ar, which haven't been seen up to now in the MCU because they're part of the X-Men properties to which Fox has the rights.







share|improve this answer














share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer








edited yesterday

























answered yesterday









JhericoJherico

804610




804610








  • 9





    Also of note is that people on Earth are aware of aliens, and have been for quite some time: at least part of HYDRA is aware, some of the Inhumans are aware of their origins, and so on. It's just they're keeping that secret (plus they don't actually know that it's the Kree who were mucking around on Earth). So Vers wouldn't be wrong in thinking people should know, she's just not considering the possibility some know and are keeping it a secret from the majority of the population.

    – Keith Morrison
    yesterday








  • 2





    Regarding your footnote - (and you may be aware of this already, but others may not) there's been a deal to sell Fox to Disney (Marvel's parent company) for ~2 years now. It's essentially approved and is expected to be officially complete this month (in fact, one of the last hurdles is expected to be cleared today), at which point the X-Men, Shi'Ar, and all the rest of Fox' holdings will be accessible to the MCU.

    – TylerH
    yesterday






  • 3





    @KeithMorrison Good point about brining up the Inhumans: After all, if she has a database or scanners which inform her there are part-Kree hybrids on the planet, she probably assumes that the Kree have made official contact...

    – Chronocidal
    18 hours ago






  • 1





    Worth noting that Skrull society in the MCU appears to be vastly different from that in the comics - it's implied that they don't even have an empire.

    – MartianInvader
    8 hours ago














  • 9





    Also of note is that people on Earth are aware of aliens, and have been for quite some time: at least part of HYDRA is aware, some of the Inhumans are aware of their origins, and so on. It's just they're keeping that secret (plus they don't actually know that it's the Kree who were mucking around on Earth). So Vers wouldn't be wrong in thinking people should know, she's just not considering the possibility some know and are keeping it a secret from the majority of the population.

    – Keith Morrison
    yesterday








  • 2





    Regarding your footnote - (and you may be aware of this already, but others may not) there's been a deal to sell Fox to Disney (Marvel's parent company) for ~2 years now. It's essentially approved and is expected to be officially complete this month (in fact, one of the last hurdles is expected to be cleared today), at which point the X-Men, Shi'Ar, and all the rest of Fox' holdings will be accessible to the MCU.

    – TylerH
    yesterday






  • 3





    @KeithMorrison Good point about brining up the Inhumans: After all, if she has a database or scanners which inform her there are part-Kree hybrids on the planet, she probably assumes that the Kree have made official contact...

    – Chronocidal
    18 hours ago






  • 1





    Worth noting that Skrull society in the MCU appears to be vastly different from that in the comics - it's implied that they don't even have an empire.

    – MartianInvader
    8 hours ago








9




9





Also of note is that people on Earth are aware of aliens, and have been for quite some time: at least part of HYDRA is aware, some of the Inhumans are aware of their origins, and so on. It's just they're keeping that secret (plus they don't actually know that it's the Kree who were mucking around on Earth). So Vers wouldn't be wrong in thinking people should know, she's just not considering the possibility some know and are keeping it a secret from the majority of the population.

– Keith Morrison
yesterday







Also of note is that people on Earth are aware of aliens, and have been for quite some time: at least part of HYDRA is aware, some of the Inhumans are aware of their origins, and so on. It's just they're keeping that secret (plus they don't actually know that it's the Kree who were mucking around on Earth). So Vers wouldn't be wrong in thinking people should know, she's just not considering the possibility some know and are keeping it a secret from the majority of the population.

– Keith Morrison
yesterday






2




2





Regarding your footnote - (and you may be aware of this already, but others may not) there's been a deal to sell Fox to Disney (Marvel's parent company) for ~2 years now. It's essentially approved and is expected to be officially complete this month (in fact, one of the last hurdles is expected to be cleared today), at which point the X-Men, Shi'Ar, and all the rest of Fox' holdings will be accessible to the MCU.

– TylerH
yesterday





Regarding your footnote - (and you may be aware of this already, but others may not) there's been a deal to sell Fox to Disney (Marvel's parent company) for ~2 years now. It's essentially approved and is expected to be officially complete this month (in fact, one of the last hurdles is expected to be cleared today), at which point the X-Men, Shi'Ar, and all the rest of Fox' holdings will be accessible to the MCU.

– TylerH
yesterday




3




3





@KeithMorrison Good point about brining up the Inhumans: After all, if she has a database or scanners which inform her there are part-Kree hybrids on the planet, she probably assumes that the Kree have made official contact...

– Chronocidal
18 hours ago





@KeithMorrison Good point about brining up the Inhumans: After all, if she has a database or scanners which inform her there are part-Kree hybrids on the planet, she probably assumes that the Kree have made official contact...

– Chronocidal
18 hours ago




1




1





Worth noting that Skrull society in the MCU appears to be vastly different from that in the comics - it's implied that they don't even have an empire.

– MartianInvader
8 hours ago





Worth noting that Skrull society in the MCU appears to be vastly different from that in the comics - it's implied that they don't even have an empire.

– MartianInvader
8 hours ago













11














You're right that she likely ought to have kept quiet until she could assess her new surroundings... that's probably taught to all combat soldiers, with extra training for a small precision team such as the one Vers was one;




a team of 6 soldiers inserting alone on a hostile planet to carry out a secret recovery mission of a Kree spy is probably quite elite... like a SEAL team element-level of elite.




So this is probably a case of either the studio not having a consultant for these matters or of the plot being more important than the realism here.



In-universe, it's likely that most planets in the regions affected by the Kree-Skrull war are probably planets that are sufficiently advanced to be worth fighting over. A planet with a primitive civilization like Earth's is probably not on anyone's radar (in a manner of speaking).



Also, Vers learns that the Skrulls are seeking a scientist on C-53 (Earth) who is working on a lightspeed engine, which is incredibly advanced technology; it's something neither the Skrulls nor the Kree have access to (they have to use jump points, similar to what is shown in Guardians of the Galaxy 2).



When Vers hears about the lightspeed engine, she probably assumes the planet this mystery scientist is on is pretty advanced, considering a lightspeed engine is tech that is significantly beyond even the Kree Empire. So it makes sense they'd also be aware of the existence of other species and recognize the Kree Starforce name even if they're not part of the Kree Empire.



Consider also that she had a universal translator in her suit that enabled her to ostensibly understand and speak with other species without difficulty. When you can easily communicate in your native tongue with a stranger, you tend to make a lot of assumptions that they understand or are at least familiar with your shared culture, and not just the words you're saying... it's probably the norm for her to land on a new planet and talk to locals who are aware of the Kree Empire (which spans many planets and species, according to various movies).



To analogize it, imagine it's the height of World War II and you're a pilot flying in a naval battle. You get hit by some flak and crash into the ocean, but survive. You wash up on a beach somewhere. This beach is on a small, remote island with a primitive civilization (if that)... you find them and ask who they're loyal to; Axis or Allies? They're probably going to look at you with the same bewildered look that the Rent-A-Cop gave Vers when she walked out of the Blockbuster.



It's also probably worth pointing out that she was




born a human and lived for ~20 years on Earth. She probably felt unconsciously "at home" on Earth, and felt that they must know of the Kree because that's been "home" for her for the last 6 years.







share|improve this answer





















  • 2





    Change that WWII reference to a WWI reference and you've got the start of the Wonder Woman movie. :)

    – wavetree
    12 hours ago






  • 4





    @wavetree The thought crossed my mind, but I opted against crossing my streams, so to speak :-)

    – TylerH
    12 hours ago
















11














You're right that she likely ought to have kept quiet until she could assess her new surroundings... that's probably taught to all combat soldiers, with extra training for a small precision team such as the one Vers was one;




a team of 6 soldiers inserting alone on a hostile planet to carry out a secret recovery mission of a Kree spy is probably quite elite... like a SEAL team element-level of elite.




So this is probably a case of either the studio not having a consultant for these matters or of the plot being more important than the realism here.



In-universe, it's likely that most planets in the regions affected by the Kree-Skrull war are probably planets that are sufficiently advanced to be worth fighting over. A planet with a primitive civilization like Earth's is probably not on anyone's radar (in a manner of speaking).



Also, Vers learns that the Skrulls are seeking a scientist on C-53 (Earth) who is working on a lightspeed engine, which is incredibly advanced technology; it's something neither the Skrulls nor the Kree have access to (they have to use jump points, similar to what is shown in Guardians of the Galaxy 2).



When Vers hears about the lightspeed engine, she probably assumes the planet this mystery scientist is on is pretty advanced, considering a lightspeed engine is tech that is significantly beyond even the Kree Empire. So it makes sense they'd also be aware of the existence of other species and recognize the Kree Starforce name even if they're not part of the Kree Empire.



Consider also that she had a universal translator in her suit that enabled her to ostensibly understand and speak with other species without difficulty. When you can easily communicate in your native tongue with a stranger, you tend to make a lot of assumptions that they understand or are at least familiar with your shared culture, and not just the words you're saying... it's probably the norm for her to land on a new planet and talk to locals who are aware of the Kree Empire (which spans many planets and species, according to various movies).



To analogize it, imagine it's the height of World War II and you're a pilot flying in a naval battle. You get hit by some flak and crash into the ocean, but survive. You wash up on a beach somewhere. This beach is on a small, remote island with a primitive civilization (if that)... you find them and ask who they're loyal to; Axis or Allies? They're probably going to look at you with the same bewildered look that the Rent-A-Cop gave Vers when she walked out of the Blockbuster.



It's also probably worth pointing out that she was




born a human and lived for ~20 years on Earth. She probably felt unconsciously "at home" on Earth, and felt that they must know of the Kree because that's been "home" for her for the last 6 years.







share|improve this answer





















  • 2





    Change that WWII reference to a WWI reference and you've got the start of the Wonder Woman movie. :)

    – wavetree
    12 hours ago






  • 4





    @wavetree The thought crossed my mind, but I opted against crossing my streams, so to speak :-)

    – TylerH
    12 hours ago














11












11








11







You're right that she likely ought to have kept quiet until she could assess her new surroundings... that's probably taught to all combat soldiers, with extra training for a small precision team such as the one Vers was one;




a team of 6 soldiers inserting alone on a hostile planet to carry out a secret recovery mission of a Kree spy is probably quite elite... like a SEAL team element-level of elite.




So this is probably a case of either the studio not having a consultant for these matters or of the plot being more important than the realism here.



In-universe, it's likely that most planets in the regions affected by the Kree-Skrull war are probably planets that are sufficiently advanced to be worth fighting over. A planet with a primitive civilization like Earth's is probably not on anyone's radar (in a manner of speaking).



Also, Vers learns that the Skrulls are seeking a scientist on C-53 (Earth) who is working on a lightspeed engine, which is incredibly advanced technology; it's something neither the Skrulls nor the Kree have access to (they have to use jump points, similar to what is shown in Guardians of the Galaxy 2).



When Vers hears about the lightspeed engine, she probably assumes the planet this mystery scientist is on is pretty advanced, considering a lightspeed engine is tech that is significantly beyond even the Kree Empire. So it makes sense they'd also be aware of the existence of other species and recognize the Kree Starforce name even if they're not part of the Kree Empire.



Consider also that she had a universal translator in her suit that enabled her to ostensibly understand and speak with other species without difficulty. When you can easily communicate in your native tongue with a stranger, you tend to make a lot of assumptions that they understand or are at least familiar with your shared culture, and not just the words you're saying... it's probably the norm for her to land on a new planet and talk to locals who are aware of the Kree Empire (which spans many planets and species, according to various movies).



To analogize it, imagine it's the height of World War II and you're a pilot flying in a naval battle. You get hit by some flak and crash into the ocean, but survive. You wash up on a beach somewhere. This beach is on a small, remote island with a primitive civilization (if that)... you find them and ask who they're loyal to; Axis or Allies? They're probably going to look at you with the same bewildered look that the Rent-A-Cop gave Vers when she walked out of the Blockbuster.



It's also probably worth pointing out that she was




born a human and lived for ~20 years on Earth. She probably felt unconsciously "at home" on Earth, and felt that they must know of the Kree because that's been "home" for her for the last 6 years.







share|improve this answer















You're right that she likely ought to have kept quiet until she could assess her new surroundings... that's probably taught to all combat soldiers, with extra training for a small precision team such as the one Vers was one;




a team of 6 soldiers inserting alone on a hostile planet to carry out a secret recovery mission of a Kree spy is probably quite elite... like a SEAL team element-level of elite.




So this is probably a case of either the studio not having a consultant for these matters or of the plot being more important than the realism here.



In-universe, it's likely that most planets in the regions affected by the Kree-Skrull war are probably planets that are sufficiently advanced to be worth fighting over. A planet with a primitive civilization like Earth's is probably not on anyone's radar (in a manner of speaking).



Also, Vers learns that the Skrulls are seeking a scientist on C-53 (Earth) who is working on a lightspeed engine, which is incredibly advanced technology; it's something neither the Skrulls nor the Kree have access to (they have to use jump points, similar to what is shown in Guardians of the Galaxy 2).



When Vers hears about the lightspeed engine, she probably assumes the planet this mystery scientist is on is pretty advanced, considering a lightspeed engine is tech that is significantly beyond even the Kree Empire. So it makes sense they'd also be aware of the existence of other species and recognize the Kree Starforce name even if they're not part of the Kree Empire.



Consider also that she had a universal translator in her suit that enabled her to ostensibly understand and speak with other species without difficulty. When you can easily communicate in your native tongue with a stranger, you tend to make a lot of assumptions that they understand or are at least familiar with your shared culture, and not just the words you're saying... it's probably the norm for her to land on a new planet and talk to locals who are aware of the Kree Empire (which spans many planets and species, according to various movies).



To analogize it, imagine it's the height of World War II and you're a pilot flying in a naval battle. You get hit by some flak and crash into the ocean, but survive. You wash up on a beach somewhere. This beach is on a small, remote island with a primitive civilization (if that)... you find them and ask who they're loyal to; Axis or Allies? They're probably going to look at you with the same bewildered look that the Rent-A-Cop gave Vers when she walked out of the Blockbuster.



It's also probably worth pointing out that she was




born a human and lived for ~20 years on Earth. She probably felt unconsciously "at home" on Earth, and felt that they must know of the Kree because that's been "home" for her for the last 6 years.








share|improve this answer














share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer








edited 12 hours ago

























answered yesterday









TylerHTylerH

1,4581026




1,4581026








  • 2





    Change that WWII reference to a WWI reference and you've got the start of the Wonder Woman movie. :)

    – wavetree
    12 hours ago






  • 4





    @wavetree The thought crossed my mind, but I opted against crossing my streams, so to speak :-)

    – TylerH
    12 hours ago














  • 2





    Change that WWII reference to a WWI reference and you've got the start of the Wonder Woman movie. :)

    – wavetree
    12 hours ago






  • 4





    @wavetree The thought crossed my mind, but I opted against crossing my streams, so to speak :-)

    – TylerH
    12 hours ago








2




2





Change that WWII reference to a WWI reference and you've got the start of the Wonder Woman movie. :)

– wavetree
12 hours ago





Change that WWII reference to a WWI reference and you've got the start of the Wonder Woman movie. :)

– wavetree
12 hours ago




4




4





@wavetree The thought crossed my mind, but I opted against crossing my streams, so to speak :-)

– TylerH
12 hours ago





@wavetree The thought crossed my mind, but I opted against crossing my streams, so to speak :-)

– TylerH
12 hours ago


















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