
That scene is a flashback to Bucky’s time spent in Wakanda, where he is taken to recover from the events in “Captain America: Civil War.” Ayo, the second-in-command of Wakanda’s security force, the Dora Milaje takes Bucky through a deprogramming ritual, seated by a raging fire. ‘Six days to the scene.'” Sebastian Stan in “The Falcon and the Winter Soldier” Courtesy of Disney+ Because you’re like, ‘Oh, my God, I have the scene.’ I had it marked on my calendar and then I was counting the days. “You’re like, ‘Oh, cool, I’m gonna get to do this.’ And then you’re really terrified about it. “It was one of those things where you read the scripts and it’s a scene that you feel grateful about as an actor,” Stan said during a recent interview with IndieWire. (He is 106 years old, after all.) That included finally being freed from the code words that had been implanted in the character’s brain by HYDRA to control him so many years ago, as depicted in an intensely emotional scene at the beginning of Episode 4.

Indeed, the beauty for many Marvel fans when watching “Winter Soldier” was the chance to see Bucky get some time to delve into the trauma he’s been carrying for decades upon decades. To him, it was just a path he just kept traveling down, but was very happy to be included and for the opportunity to continue exploring a character that only grew more complicated.

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For his part, when first drafted into the Marvel movie business, Stan had no idea he’d still be around 10 years later, still exploring Bucky’s history, and now, future.
