Stephen McFeely

  • Core Identity: Stephen McFeely is one-half of the universally acclaimed screenwriting duo, alongside Christopher Markus, who served as the chief narrative architects for the Marvel Cinematic Universe's “Infinity Saga,” penning the stories for some of its most pivotal and highest-grossing installments.
  • Key Takeaways:
    • Franchise-Defining Partnership: McFeely's collaboration with Christopher Markus is one of the most successful and influential in modern blockbuster filmmaking. Their shared creative vision and meticulous process shaped the definitive on-screen versions of characters like Captain America, Bucky Barnes, and Thanos.
    • Master of Character and Tone: He is renowned for his ability to ground epic, universe-spanning stories with deeply personal, character-driven stakes. His scripts are celebrated for their seamless blend of sharp humor, emotional weight, and thrilling action, establishing a tonal blueprint for the MCU.
    • Architect of The Infinity Saga: McFeely co-wrote the screenplays for Captain America: The First Avenger, Captain America: The Winter Soldier, Captain America: Civil War, Avengers: Infinity War, and Avengers: Endgame. This unprecedented run of interconnected films represents the narrative backbone of the MCU's first major era, culminating in a cinematic event of historic proportions.

Stephen McFeely was born on February 24, 1970. He grew up in the San Francisco Bay Area, where his early creative inclinations began to form. He pursued his higher education at the University of Notre Dame, graduating with a B.A. in English in 1991. It was his postgraduate studies, however, that would set the course for his entire career. In 1994, McFeely enrolled in the creative writing program at the University of California, Davis. It was here that he met his future creative partner, Christopher Markus. The two found a shared sensibility in their storytelling interests and humor, quickly forming a close bond. They began collaborating on projects while at UC Davis, honing a creative process that would later define their professional success. Their partnership was founded on a mutual respect for character-driven narratives and a rigorous, structured approach to breaking down complex stories.

After graduating with their master's degrees in 1996, Markus and McFeely moved to Los Angeles to pursue screenwriting careers. Their initial years involved a series of unproduced scripts and the typical struggles of aspiring writers. Their breakthrough came with the 2004 HBO television film, The Life and Death of Peter Sellers. The script, which they co-wrote, earned them critical acclaim and, most significantly, a Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Writing for a Miniseries, Movie or a Dramatic Special. This project immediately established them as writers capable of handling complex biographical material with nuance and style. This success led to their first major studio feature film project: adapting C.S. Lewis's beloved fantasy novels. They co-wrote the screenplays for all three films in The Chronicles of Narnia series produced by Walden Media: The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe (2005), Prince Caspian (2008), and The Voyage of the Dawn Treader (2010). This experience was crucial, as it taught them how to manage large-scale fantasy worlds, adapt revered source material for a modern audience, and work within the machinery of a major studio franchise. Their work on the Narnia films demonstrated their ability to build expansive worlds while keeping the focus on the personal journeys of the central characters.

Entry into the Marvel Cinematic Universe

In the late 2000s, Marvel Studios, under the leadership of Kevin Feige, was building its ambitious shared universe. For the crucial origin story of Captain America, the studio needed writers who could deliver a heartfelt period piece that also served as a thrilling action film and a foundational story for a future leader of the Avengers. McFeely and Markus's work on Narnia, which combined classic storytelling with large-scale spectacle, caught Marvel's attention. They were hired to write the screenplay for Captain America: The First Avenger (2011). Their pitch successfully captured the earnest, heroic spirit of Steve Rogers, a character they felt was often misunderstood as “boring” or jingoistic. They leaned into the 1940s setting, crafting a sincere, pulp-adventure story that established Captain America not as a symbol of the government, but as a good man who refused to back down from a bully. The film's success, both critically and commercially, cemented their place within the Marvel creative trust and began their long and fruitful collaboration with directors Joe and Anthony Russo, who would join the franchise for the sequel.

Stephen McFeely's work, in tandem with Christopher Markus, is not merely a series of screenwriting credits; it represents the primary narrative throughline of the MCU's first decade. They were entrusted with the most complex character arcs and the most ambitious crossover events in cinematic history.

The duo's most significant individual contribution to the MCU is arguably their handling of Steve Rogers. They took a character who could have been a one-dimensional patriotic symbol and transformed him into the moral and emotional heart of the entire saga.

Captain America: The First Avenger (2011)

For The First Avenger, McFeely's challenge was to sell a modern audience on a hero defined by old-fashioned virtues. Their script brilliantly focuses on the “man before the serum,” emphasizing Steve's unwavering courage and selflessness when he was just a scrawny kid from Brooklyn.

  • Key Narrative Choices:
    • Focus on “Who,” not “What”: The script repeatedly emphasizes Dr. Erskine's choice of Steve: “Not a perfect soldier, but a good man.” This became the defining thesis for the character across all his appearances.
    • The Love Story: The tragic romance between Steve and Peggy Carter provides the film its emotional core, a core that would pay off profoundly in Avengers: Endgame nearly a decade later.
    • Pulp Adventure Tone: By embracing the 1940s setting, they created a unique tone within the MCU, distinct from the modern-day tech of Iron Man or the cosmic fantasy of Thor.

Captain America: The Winter Soldier (2014)

Teaming up with the Russo Brothers, McFeely and Markus radically shifted genres from a war-time adventure to a 1970s-style paranoid political thriller. The Winter Soldier is widely regarded as one of the MCU's finest films, and the script is a masterclass in escalating stakes and deconstructing its hero.

  • Key Narrative Choices:
    • Deconstructing Trust: The central theme is Steve's struggle to find his place in a morally gray modern world. The script pits his black-and-white morality against the covert espionage of S.H.I.E.L.D..
    • The Fall of S.H.I.E.L.D.: The decision to have Hydra infiltrate and destroy S.H.I.E.L.D. from within was a seismic event that had permanent consequences for the entire MCU, impacting everything from the Avengers films to the Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D. television series.
    • The Personal Stake: The antagonist is not a faceless villain but Bucky Barnes, Steve's best friend, turned into a brainwashed assassin. This transforms the final conflict from a mission to save the world into a desperate attempt to save a single soul, perfectly encapsulating Steve's character.

Captain America: Civil War (2016)

Effectively serving as Avengers 2.5, this film presented McFeely with his most complex structural challenge yet: adapting a sprawling comic book event into a coherent, personal film while juggling a dozen superheroes.

  • Key Narrative Choices:
    • Ideology vs. Personality: The script cleverly grounds the ideological conflict of the Sokovia Accords in the deeply personal rift between Tony Stark and Steve Rogers. Tony's guilt and need for control clash with Steve's individualism and mistrust of authority.
    • The Villain's Goal: Baron Zemo is not a world-conquering megalomaniac. His goal is simply to destroy the Avengers from within. McFeely and Markus crafted a villain whose plan succeeds, leaving the heroes fractured and vulnerable at the absolute worst time.
    • The Final Act: The film's climax is not a city-destroying battle, but a brutal, ugly, and emotional fight between three men in a bunker. The reveal that the Winter Soldier killed Tony's parents transforms the political dispute into an irreconcilable personal tragedy, a choice that paid emotional dividends through to Endgame.

Beyond the Captain America trilogy, McFeely and Markus served as key creative consultants and writers on other projects, solidifying their role as trusted story architects for Kevin Feige.

Thor: The Dark World (2013)

While they do not have a final screenplay credit, McFeely and Markus were brought in for significant uncredited script rewrites and doctoring on Thor: The Dark World. Their work involved sharpening character dialogue, restructuring scenes, and injecting more of the humor and heart that had become their signature. This demonstrates the level of trust Marvel Studios placed in them to handle and refine key franchise properties.

Agent Carter (TV Series, 2015–2016)

As creators and executive producers, McFeely and Markus expanded the world they built in The First Avenger with the Agent Carter series. The show followed Peggy Carter's post-war career as she battles sexism and Cold War threats while founding S.H.I.E.L.D. It allowed them to explore themes of grief (over the loss of Steve), female empowerment, and the origins of the MCU's espionage world in greater detail than a film ever could.

McFeely and Markus were given the monumental, and seemingly impossible, task of writing the two-part conclusion to the entire 22-film Infinity Saga. They spent years in a writers' room meticulously plotting the narrative, balancing dozens of characters, and ensuring a satisfying payoff for a decade of storytelling.

Avengers: Infinity War (2018)

The solution to juggling an immense cast was to structure the film around the villain. Infinity War is, for all intents and purposes, Thanos's movie.

  • Key Narrative Choices:
    • Thanos as Protagonist: The script follows Thanos on his quest for the Infinity Stones, presenting him not as a cackling monster, but as a protagonist with a clear, albeit horrifying, goal. His “sacrifice” of Gamora is a twisted hero's moment, giving him emotional depth and making him a far more compelling antagonist.
    • The Inevitable Defeat: In a stunning subversion of blockbuster tropes, the film ends with the heroes' utter and complete failure. “The Snap” (or “The Decimation”) became an instant cultural touchstone, a shocking and bleak cliffhanger that left audiences devastated and desperate for the conclusion.
    • Pacing and Structure: The screenplay is a marvel of structure, cross-cutting between disparate groups of heroes (Team Cap, Team Iron Man, Team Thor) on different planets, yet maintaining a relentless forward momentum as Thanos acquires each stone.

Avengers: Endgame (2019)

The most anticipated film of its generation, Endgame had to resolve the cliffhanger of Infinity War, deliver satisfying conclusions for foundational characters, and serve as a celebration of the entire MCU to date.

  • Key Narrative Choices:
    • The Five-Year Jump: The script opens by immediately subverting expectations. The heroes find and kill Thanos, but it changes nothing. The subsequent five-year time jump forces the characters (and the audience) to live with the failure, grounding the fantastical story in real-world themes of grief, depression, and loss.
    • The “Time Heist”: Instead of a simple “undo” button, the writers devised the “time heist” plot. This allowed the film to function as a “greatest hits” tour of the MCU, revisiting key moments from past films like The Avengers, Guardians of the Galaxy, and Thor: The Dark World, providing both fan service and new character moments.
    • Character Payoffs: Endgame is built entirely around concluding character arcs.
      • Tony Stark: His journey from a selfish “genius, billionaire, playboy, philanthropist” to the man who sacrifices himself for the universe is completed with the iconic line, “I am Iron Man.”
      • Steve Rogers: After a lifetime of service and sacrifice, the man out of time finally gets to go home. The decision to have him live a full life with Peggy Carter was a poignant and fitting end, allowing him to finally get the dance he was promised.
      • Thor, Hulk, and others: The script also provided major developments for other characters, such as Thor's struggle with PTSD and depression (“Fat Thor”) and Bruce Banner finally merging his two halves into “Professor Hulk.”

The duo is famous for their highly disciplined and collaborative writing process. They typically work in a shared office, spending months outlining and “breaking” the story on massive walls covered in index cards. Each card represents a scene or story beat. They meticulously arrange and rearrange these cards until the entire film's structure is solid before ever writing a single line of dialogue. This “architectural” approach allows them to manage incredibly complex plots with numerous characters and subplots, ensuring that every element serves the larger narrative. They write scenes separately and then trade them back and forth for edits and polishes, resulting in a single, unified voice.

The core tenet of a McFeely/Markus script is that plot must emerge from character. They start with the question: “What is the character's emotional journey in this story?” The cataclysmic events of Civil War are a direct result of Tony's guilt and Steve's loyalty. The time heist in Endgame is not just a plot device; it's a mechanism to force characters to confront their past selves and traumas. This focus on internal motivation is what makes their epic stories feel so personal and resonant.

A key element of the MCU's success is its unique tone, and McFeely's scripts are a primary example of it. They possess an innate ability to find humor in even the darkest situations (e.g., the Avengers bickering during the time heist) without undermining the emotional stakes. This tonal dexterity allows the audience to experience the thrill of a superhero battle one moment and the gut-punch of a character's death the next. The final battle in Endgame is a perfect example, filled with crowd-pleasing moments of levity and triumph alongside moments of profound sacrifice and loss.

When adapting decades of comic book history, McFeely and Markus operate under the philosophy of “honoring the spirit, not the letter.” They identify the core emotional or thematic truth of a classic storyline—like the ideological divide of Civil War or Thanos's quest in The Infinity Gauntlet—and then rebuild the plot to best serve the established continuity and character arcs of the MCU. They are not afraid to make significant changes (e.g., the nature of the Sokovia Accords vs. the Superhuman Registration Act, or Zemo's motivations) if it results in a more streamlined and emotionally coherent film story.

Following the monumental success of Endgame, McFeely and Markus, along with the Russo Brothers, co-founded the independent studio AGBO (an acronym for their Gozie Agbo production company). As co-presidents of story, they oversee the narrative development of the studio's slate of films and television shows. Their first major post-MCU screenwriting credit under the AGBO banner was the Netflix action-thriller The Gray Man (2022), which reunited them with the Russo Brothers as directors. They have also been involved in producing other AGBO projects like Extraction and Cherry. Their work at AGBO allows them to create original IP and tackle different genres outside the superhero space.

Stephen McFeely's legacy is inextricably linked to the success of the Marvel Cinematic Universe. His work proved that long-form, serialized storytelling could be achieved on an unprecedented cinematic scale.

  • The Shared Universe Blueprint: The narrative cohesion of the Captain America trilogy and its seamless integration into the larger Avengers storyline became the gold standard that other studios have tried, often unsuccessfully, to replicate.
  • Emotional Stakes in Spectacle: McFeely and Markus demonstrated that blockbuster films could be both visually spectacular and emotionally profound. The success of Endgame was driven not just by its massive final battle, but by audiences' deep emotional investment in characters they had followed for over a decade.
  • Redefining Captain America: Perhaps his single greatest achievement was taking a character many considered a jingoistic relic and making him a universally beloved symbol of integrity, morality, and quiet heroism for a new generation.

McFeely's work, particularly within the MCU, has garnered numerous award nominations and wins, reflecting both popular and critical acclaim.

Award Year Film Category Result
Hugo Award 2012 Captain America: The First Avenger Best Dramatic Presentation, Long Form Nominated
Hugo Award 2015 Captain America: The Winter Soldier Best Dramatic Presentation, Long Form Nominated
Saturn Award 2017 Captain America: Civil War Best Comic-to-Film Motion Picture Won
Writers Guild of America Award 2017 Captain America: Civil War Best Adapted Screenplay Nominated
Saturn Award 2019 Avengers: Endgame Best Comic-to-Film Motion Picture Won
Hugo Award 2019 Avengers: Infinity War Best Dramatic Presentation, Long Form Nominated
Hugo Award 2020 Avengers: Endgame Best Dramatic Presentation, Long Form Nominated
Critics' Choice Movie Awards 2020 Avengers: Endgame Best Adapted Screenplay Nominated
Primetime Emmy Award 2005 The Life and Death of Peter Sellers Outstanding Writing for a Miniseries, Movie or a Dramatic Special Won

1)
McFeely and Markus have a brief cameo in Captain America: The Winter Soldier. They can be seen as two of the S.H.I.E.L.D. agents in the facility where Zola's algorithm is being held.
2)
During the development of Infinity War and Endgame, the writers' room had access to extensive data from Marvel Studios, including every character's screen time across all previous films, to help balance the massive ensemble cast.
3)
The line “On your left” was a key recurring phrase they used to bookend Captain America's relationship with Sam Wilson, from their first meeting in The Winter Soldier to Sam's triumphant return in Endgame.
4)
In an interview, McFeely stated that the five-year time jump in Endgame was one of the earliest and most critical ideas they locked into, as they felt it was essential to show the real, lasting consequences of the snap.
5)
The decision to have Captain America wield Mjolnir was planned for years. The moment in Avengers: Age of Ultron where the hammer slightly budges was a deliberate seed planted by Joss Whedon, which McFeely and Markus decided to pay off in the most epic way possible.
6)
Their original drafts of Captain America: The First Avenger were reportedly much more integrated with the larger Marvel universe, featuring cameos from a young Hank Pym and even a tease of Wolverine, but these were streamlined to keep the focus squarely on Steve Rogers' story.