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Guardians of the Galaxy
Guardians of the Galaxy (2014)
Credits
Title: Guardians of the Galaxy
Director: James Gunn
Writers: James Gunn; Nicole Perlman; Chris McCoy
Producers: Victoria Alonso; Kevin Feige; Alan Fine; Nikolas Korda; Jeremy Latcham; Stan Lee; Jonathan Schwartz
Composer: Tyler Bates
Cinematography: Ben Davis
Editors: Fred Raskin; Hughes Winborne; Craig Wood
Production
Distributed by: Marvel Entertainment
Walt Disney Studios Motion Pictures
Released: August 1st, 2014
Rating: PG-13
Running time: 121 min.
Country: USA
Language: English
Navigation
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Next: Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 2

Plot[]

Cast[]

Incomplete

Actor Role
Chris Pratt Star-Lord, Peter Quill
Zoe Saldana Gamora
Dave Bautista Drax the Destroyer
Vin Diesel Groot
Bradley Cooper Rocket
Lee Pace Ronan the Accuser
Michael Rooker Yondu
Karen Gillan Nebula
Benicio Del Toro The Collector
Djimon Hounsou Korath the Pursuer
John C. Reilly Rhomann Dey
Glenn Close Nova Prime
Laura Haddock Meredith Quill
Sean Gunn Kraglin/On-set Rocket
Peter Serafinowicz Denarian Saal
Christopher Fairbank The Broker
Krystian Godlwski On-set Groot
Wyatt Oleff Young Peter Quill
Gregg Henry Jason Quill
Janis Ahern Meredith's mother
Solomon Mousley Meredith's brother
Lindsay Morton Meredith's best friend
Robert Firth Doctor Fitzgibbon
Melia Kreiling Bereet
Tom Proctor Horuz
Nick Holmes Horuz' mate
Max Wrottesley Sacrifice Nova Corpsman
Stan Lee Xandarian ladies' man

Notes & Trivia[]

Comic connections[]

  • Drax the Destroyer: Drax the Destroyer was originally introduced as a quasi-antagonist in the pages of Iron Man, Volume 1 #55 in February, 1973. The comic version of the character was actually an Earth human named Arthur Douglas, who had been murdered by the Titan, Thanos. Thanos' father, A'Lars, retrieved Arthur's soul and placed it inside an artificial body made from soil, wherein he became the green-skinned muscular humanoid, Drax the Destroyer. A'Lars used Drax as a living weapon against Thanos. In the film however, no reference is made to Drax's connection to Earth, and it is implied that he is actually an alien.
  • Gamora: Gamora is an alien assassin-turned-freedom fighter. She first appeared in Strange Tales, Volume 1 #180 in June, 1975. Gamora is the last member of the Zen-Whoberian race. She was born on her people's homeworld of Zen-Whoberi some twenty years into the future of the modern era. The Universal Church of Truth committed a massacre on her world, wiping out nearly the entire Zen-Whoberi population. The demagogue Thanos rescued the infant Gamora and raised her as his own. Through Thanos, Gamora was trained in advanced combat fighting techniques and became a master assassin. Traveling backwards in the past with her, Thanos employed her services to eliminate threats to his ever-growing bid for power. Gamora eventually betrayed Thanos and struck out on her own. She aligned herself with Adam Warlock and eventually became a member of the Infinity Watch. She later joined a modern-era incarnation of the Guardians of the Galaxy.
  • Groot: Groot is a plant-like life-form of the Flora Colossus race from Planet X. The character was originally conceived as a non-Marvel Universe sci-fi monster by Stan Lee and Jack Kirby in 1960 in the pages of Tales to Astonish #13. For years, Groot was simply another of literally dozens of one-shot space monster villains, but like the others, was eventually included in canon continuity. He made his first official "canon" appearance in Incredible Hulk, Volume 2 Annual #5. He later became a member of the second iteration of the Howling Commandos (monster team) as well as one of the main members of the modern-era Guardians of the Galaxy.
  • Rocket Raccoon: Rocket Raccoon was introduced in the sixth story in Marvel Preview #7 in the Summer of 1976. The story was called "The Sword in the Star! Stave 2: Witchworld!" and was written by Bill Mantlo with artwork by Keith Giffen. Rocket was presented as an alien animal that bore a close resemblance to an Earth raccoon, but had been genetically altered by robots to have increased intellect and the ability to speak. Rocket then made his official debut as a Marvel Universe character in Incredible Hulk #271 in 1982, and also appeared in issues 272 and 279 before branching off into his own four-issue Rocket Raccoon limited series in 1985.

Recommendations[]

Films

See also[]

Media

The World of the Guardians

Meet the Guardians!

31st century team

Modern team

External Links[]

References[]